Wednesday, July 02, 2008
In case you missed the latest Onion videos...
Bush Tours America To Survey Damage Caused By His Disastrous Presidency
Today Now!: How To Pretend You Give A Shit About The Election
Diebold Accidentally Leaks Results Of 2008 Election Early
Friday, May 16, 2008
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
What do you Know About Iraq?

It takes a commitment to understand the ongoing impact of the war and occupation in Iraq. Here is a test you can take to measure how well you have kept up with events.
1) How much does the U.S. pay per day for the war in Iraq?
a) $100 million
b) $270 million
c) $525 million
d) $720 million
2) If the U.S. spent $1 per day in Iraq, how much would go to repair and humanitarian assistance?
a) 7 cents
b) 13 cents
c) fraction of one penny
d) 1 penny
3) What is the population of Iraq?
a) 53 million
b) 12 million
c) 27 million
d) 100 million
4) How many Iraqis have been displaced from their homes?
a) 8 million
b) 100,000
c) 5 million
d) 3 million
5) How many Iraqi have been killed?
a) 750,000
b) 1 million
c) 500,000
d) 17,000
6) How many Iraqis are now refugees outside the country?
a) 3.7 million
b) 750,000
c) 900,000
d) 2.4 million
7) How many Iraqi refugees has Syria accepted?
a) 75,000
b) 1.4 million
c) 500,000
d) 900,000
8) How many Iraqi refugees has the U.S. accepted?
a) 750
b) 100,000
c) 725,000
d) 1,700
9) How many U.S. troops are in Iraq? (Not including mercenaries and private contractors.)
a) 50,000
b) 325,000
c) 700,000
d) 165,000
10) What countries border Iraq?
a) Lebanon, Palestine, North Korea, Pakistan
b) Yemen, Sudan, Somalia
c) Jordan, Syria, Turkey, Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia
d) Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tajikistan
Answers coming soon!
Monday, April 21, 2008
Friday, March 14, 2008
Sunday, March 02, 2008
Must See TV
I can't say how proud I am of the good folks up in Montana who have organized such a tremendous response. :)
Thursday, February 21, 2008
Hope
Monday, February 18, 2008
Happy Feminist Birthday
Friday, February 15, 2008
This is Interesting.
Date Time WebPage
February 14th 2008 16:06:11 No referring link
February 14th 2008 18:19:46 No referring link
February 14th 2008 18:41:35 No referring link
February 14th 2008 18:43:14 No referring link
February 15th 2008 09:18:20 No referring link
Seems as though nobody's been looking at my blog.
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Unbelievable

Rep. Denny Rehberg (R-Mont.) recently played a gag on Rep. Mike Simpson
(R-Idaho) on their Middle East congressional delegation trip last month.
Rehberg left an “Idaho Travel Package” on Simpson’s airplane
seat.
Contents included a stuffed sheep with gloves attached to it (draw your
own conclusions), a Village People CD, books on cross-dressing and sign language
and a T-shirt that reads, “My senator may not be gay, but my governor is
Butch.”
Rehberg is proud of the gift bag. “I spent a bit of time putting the
things together,” he boasted.
Simpson was amused but not surprised that Rehberg was the bearer of
such presents. “You can always find those materials in Montana,” he said,
laughing.
Mr. Rehberg, you disgust me. You are an embarrassment to your elected office and to your constituients, and you disgrace the public trust with your blatent disregard for the dignity and worth of all Montana's citizens.
(H/T Matt Singer at Left in the West)
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Alka Seltzer Solution
The new word of the week is "economic stimulus package."Everyone is for it.
The President wants it if only because he knows a worsening economic crisis will leave his Administration in deep doo-doo, the way it did his dads' back in '92. Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, is all for it if only because all of his rate cuts and "injections" of money into the financial system have not turned the US economy around.
He told Congress Thursday: "put money into the hands of households and firms that would spend it in the near term." This is likely to take the form of tax rebates and direct assistance.
And all the candidates-well most of them---want it too. Or at least they want something upbeat that will stimulate voters. John McCain lost Michigan, it is said, because he was too negative. Mitt Romney won because he promised to wave a magic wand, repeal Globalization and make Detroit what it one was.
Dream on.
The stimulus idea is simple-give people some money to spend and, presto, our problems will disappear. This is the "Alka Seltzer solution." Take one tablet and when it fizzes, you're better in the morning.
The only problem is that the real world isn't so simple and simplistic solutions will not work.
We didn't get into this mess because one thing went wrong. Many things went wrong -and over a long time.
This crisis may seem brand new. It isn't. And please dump that word "recession" because it doesn't do justice to what we are talking about here. The highest inflation rate in 17 years and the biggest housing crisis in a quarter of a century didn't just happen. Major banks writing down billions of dollars practically every week is not normal. Wall Street going from boom to gloom almost overnight was not caused by somebody making a mistake.
The political causes of this are deep and long standing. Writer Robert Kuttner calls this "the most serious downturn since the Great Depression." He blames the rise of right-wing ideology, and "the domination of our politics by a financial elite, and the lack of a true opposition party."
You can't fix that with pathetic stimulus packages and minor tinkering.
This is a structural crisis that's been spawned by decades of shifting our economy from making things to buying things, from production to consumption. It has spawned "financialization' a well heeled credit and loan complex powered by legal and illegal shenanigans in an unregulated market-driven environment. Both parties have benefited from it and are complicit in its consequences. All of our biggest banks were part of the subprime/subcrime-led credit collapse which enriched so many before bringing so many down.
This crisis is still unfolding, rippling, and infecting more sectors of the economy. It is a "contagion" that has yet to be contained.
Writes the Mclatchey Newspapers: "The unwinding of debt is all-encompassing. It's from the little homeowner out there to the big corporation," said Larry Moss, senior vice president for the Raymond James investment firm in Birmingham, Mich.
The credit crunch overlaps with other negative trends, most noticeably the poor housing market and weakening consumer spending. The fear is that tighter credit and weaker spending will reinforce and amplify each other, creating a downward spiral leading to a recession.
"Once you get in that cycle, then it becomes really, really scary," said Amiyatosh Purnanandam, a professor of finance at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan who has studied tight-credit periods."
For starters we need some stimulus from a study of history to understand how greed and corruption of any and all ethical principles stimulates this type of frightening business cycle. We need to stimulate a deeper debate.
Writes Satyajit Das, author of Traders, Guns & Money, explains: "Recent history has been a period of 'too much' and 'too little' - too much liquidity, too much leverage, too much complex financial engineering, too little return for risk, too little understanding of the risk."
He told one of India's leading newspapers, The Hindu, "This will reduce economic growth (the US looks likely to slow down sharply) and asset prices (houses and shares) around the world. It is perhaps the most serious crisis that we have faced in a very long time."
Let's break this down: Lets say we give every household $1000 bucks ($800 is the number under discussion). What happens? What do will recipients do first? What will they/we stimulate?
Will they rush out to the mall and buy the latest and the greatest? Unlikely. Why? Because so many of us are already in hock beyond our ears. Millions are drowning in debt and barely hanging on to homes, cars or even student loans. We are groaning under the burden of higher interest, higher prices and higher fees, as a recent study by United for A Fair Economy explained:
"Increases in the cost of housing, education, and health care, paired with an increase in payroll taxes of 25%, and massively decreased government investment in affordable housing, employment, and job training, have left most of America cash poor. Americans found the liquidity needed to pay daily bills through debt: credit cards, refinancing, subprime loans. The American middle and working classes are maintaining their lifestyle on a foundation of quicksand (debt they cannot afford).
If current indicators are correct it is quite possible that the entire US economy will sink into the debt that the middle and working class have developed over the last twenty years."
This is not a very 'stimulating' environment. No wonder most Americans think the country is going in the wrong direction and have lost confidence in the economy. No wonder, crime is rising along with foreclosures. Let's not forget the wars that are also draining the economy, growing the deficit and pouring billions of dollars and so many lives into a rat hole without end.
So, please candidates, loose the cheery rhetoric of economic stimulus. Do nothing about the debt burden and you do nothing. We don't need stimulus; we need economic change, and economic justice. We need white-collar predators in jail. We need restructuring, not repossessions. We need mechanisms for the redistribution of wealth from the greedy to the needy. And just like the folks in Africa living under a crushing burden of debt we need genuine debt relief. We need to buck this system, not get a few bucks in the mail.
If we have any hope of getting out from under, we also need a media to tell the truth about how this crisis happened, and investigate those that profited on the destruction of our economy, the bankers and brokers that stole our treasure and future. We need movements to fight back and politicians that will stand up for economic fairness, especially on the day we honor Dr. Martin Luther King and the movements he led.
News Dissector Danny Schechter directed the film IN DEBT WE TRUST (http://www.indebtwetrust.com/) which forecast this crisis. He explores the roots of the problem in a new e-book SQUEEZED (Downloadable from Coldtype.net)
Thursday, January 17, 2008
A Reversal of Questions
- What do you think caused your heterosexuality?
- When and how did you first decide you were a heterosexual?
- Is it possible your heterosexuality is just a phase you may grow out of?
- Is it possible your heterosexuality stems from a neurotic fear of people of the same sex?
- Isn't it possible that all you need is a good, gay lover?
- Heterosexuals have histories of failures in gay relationships. Do you think you may have turned to heterosexuality out of fear of rejection?
- If you've never slept with a person of the same sex, how do you know you wouldn't prefer it?
- If heterosexuality is normal, why are a disproportionate number of mental health consumers heterosexuals?
- To whom have you disclosed your heterosexual tendencies?
- Your heterosexuality doesn't offend me as long as you don't try to force it on me. Why do you feel compelled to seduce others into your sexual orientation?
- If you choose to nurture children, would you want them to be heterosexual, knowing the problems they would face?
- The great majority of child molesters are heterosexuals. Do you really consider it safe to expose your children to heterosexual teachers?
- Why do you insist on being so obvious and making a public spectacle of your heterosexuality? Can't you just be what you are and keep it quiet?
- How can you ever hope to become a whole person if you limit yourself to a compulsive, exclusive heterosexual object choice and remain unwilling to explore and develop your normal, God-given homosexual potential?
Homophobia: A Self-Assessment
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Google Has a Sense of Humor

Love Poems for when ur in a Fight
into their Google search engine.
Not only did they find MY site...they found THIS post.
Wonder if it helped. :)
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
Happy Hero Birthday

Friday, November 30, 2007
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Daily Dose of E-Activism
From the Human Rights Campaign:Thursday, November 22, 2007
Give Thanks

Look at how those nice English colonists are
taking good care of those hungry, heathen, brown people.
Kara posted the real story over at her place last year.
(Buy the book here.)
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
In Memoriam

I’m scrolling and scrolling,
Today is the ninth anniversary of the Transgender Day of Remembrance.
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Thank You...
Today's observance was intended not to glorify war, but as a solemn way to recognize its end. In that spirit, today I continue my commitment to advocate for a peaceful resolution to end the war in Iraq, and prevent war with Iran. We do not need more veterans. Instead, we need to honor those we have by fully funding services designed to meet the challenging and diverse needs of the men and women who have served in our military. Sunday, November 04, 2007
Happy Pride!









Audre Lorde said, “It is not our differences that divide us. It is our inability to recognize, accept, and celebrate those differences." Today my community celebrated the rich diversity it contains and I was so proud.
(More pictures coming soon!)
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Boo!
I don't know how you're feeling, but I am having trouble imagining anything scarier than the current condition of our foreign policy and Bu$hCo's drumbeat for war with Iran. It's our very own reality show nightmare.
Personally, I'm neck-deep in my thesis draft, so I won't be attending any festivities this year. Though, the kid in me has reserved a prime-time hour to watch It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. It's an annual tradition.
Here's wishing everyone has as much fun as a World War I Flying Ace. (And of course, by this, I am referencing Snoopy's imagination and am not, in any way, meaning to imply that any of our military service persons are having fun...Yes, someone did send me a comment about this.)










Update: Here's a link to someone who really knows how to carve a pumpkin, though none of them are nearly as good as this one:

Sunday, October 28, 2007
Killing Me Softly
In 1999, Jean Kilbourne published her now famous book Can't Buy My Love: How Advertising Changes the Way We Think And Feel. In it, she outlines her observations of advertising's images of women. If you haven't read it, please take the time to watch this 34-minute lecture during which the author outlines her central thesis:
And, if anyone STILL doesn't think that this stuff as a real, measurable effect on the way we think and feel, think again.
Friday, October 26, 2007
Dumbledore is WHAT?!?!?!?
So, there's a woman in my school program who posted this up on her MySpace blog. She has a better sense of humor than I do, and her tongue-in-cheek writing left me in stitches. I loved it and hope you will too.My friends, JK Rowling has outed Dumbledore as a flaming homosexual.
:)
In front of a full house of hardcore Potter fans at Carnegie Hall in
New York, Rowling, sitting on the stage on a red velvet and carved wood throne,
read from her seventh and final book, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," then took questions. One fan asked whether Albus Dumbledore, the head of the famed Hogwarts School of Wizardry and Witchcraft, had ever loved anyone. Rowling smiled. "Dumbledore is gay, actually," replied Rowling as the audience erupted in surprise. She added that, in her mind, Dumbledore had an unrequited love affair with Gellert Grindelwald, Voldemort's predecessor who appears in the seventh book. After several minutes of prolonged shouting and clapping from astonished fans, Rowling added. "I would have told you earlier if I knew it would make you so happy."
But, really, who didn't know that? The oh-so-mahvelous robes? The weird relationship with Grindewald that no one really understood? Okay, so most people probably didn't pick up on those hints at the time. What is hilarious are the reader's comments on all of these article that always begin with the words (in one form or another) "I'm not homophobic, but..." and then go into detail proving exactly how homophobic they are:
"why did there have to be a gay character at all?"
For that matter, why do we have to have BLACK people in our movies and
books??? Why can't the whole world just be rich, white, republican
assholes who look and think and act EXACTLY like me? OR you can stop being
so terrified of everyone who isn't exactly like you and become an actual, decent
human being! Whichever.
"why did Dumbledore have to be gay, why not some other
[background] character? Now I can never look at him the
same!"
So what you're saying is that you don't mind if people are gay, as
long as you have no interaction or emotional attachment to them? WOW,
that's so progressive and compassionate of you!
"homosexual characters have no place in a children's
book."
In that case, we should ban every story ever written about a prince
rescuing a "helpless" princess and marrying her. Since you seem to have
such a problem with your children knowing anything about families that don't
look like yours, maybe you should just keep them from reading (or watching t.v.)
altogether, we wouldn't want them to, you know, think critically about how
jacked up your morals are.
"this ruins the whole series for me."
Good you bigot. I don't want to think that we have the same
taste in literature. I mean, Seriously? the fact the you found out a
character is gay (after the series was over and said series never made a single
reference to the character's orientation), ruins it for you? remind me
never to come out to your judgemental ass.
Oh, and I especially love this comment:
"umm...i guess i now understand why dumbledore spent so much time
with harry alone in his office.... :/ "
Cuz, you know.... gay = pedophile.
Thursday, October 25, 2007
For People of Difference

of difference,
people of color,
people of poverty,
gay and straight,
black, white, Asian, Hispanic,
jew, Christian, Muslim,
or whoever you are,
hitherto invisible ones,
stand together and
affirm yourselves,
in your difference,
and in your unity.
Do not accept for
one more minute
the insidious forces
that hold you back
by act, word, or tone.
Forge a chain and
break the chains,
you do not stand alone.
And to you beyond the walls,
in mental hospitals,
in prison stalls,
in chairs of steel,
in hospice beds,
in boxes made of cardboard,
or numbered by substances that
eat away at brain and heart,
for you who bear the stigma
of difference
and the judments of all,
join together, make it start!
Do not go silently;
do not withdraw;
do not say "yes sir"
even once more.
Trust what you think
and what you know and feel.
Cry, shout, scream,
find your anger,
dare to dream,
find your strength locked
arm in arm.
Do not go gently or in shame.
You have a legacy of hope,
of courage more than pain.
Monday, October 22, 2007
Equal Opportunity - Unless You're GLBT
This comes from Human Rights Campaign:Sunday, October 21, 2007
Happy Birthday to MY Dad
Saturday, October 20, 2007
I take it back.
"I am SO sick of bean burritos and Velveeta Shells and Cheese. I just want something good to eat!!"
Then I read this.
I have never been this hungry.
What the AP fails to mention is that the person in this story is not alone. It is estimated that there are more than 38 million Americans who are "food insecure."
In fact, according to this national survey, requests for emergency food assistance increased an average of 12 percent in 2005. That same year, 18 percent of all requests for emergency food assistance went unmet. In more than half of the cities participating in the survey, food assistance facilities were not able to provide an adequate quantity of food. 68% of cities report either decreasing the quantity of emergency food assistance distributed or putting limits on the numbers of bags distributed or decreasing further the number of times families and/or individuals can come to get food.
Forty-three percent of the cities report that emergency food assistance facilities may have to turn away those in need because of lack of resources.
In 87 percent of the cities, families and individuals relied on emergency food assistance facilities
both in emergencies and as a steady source of food over long periods of time.
That's some report card for the land of plenty we call the greatest nation in the world.
My mom used to encourage me to eat brussel sprouts with gratitude because, "there are starving children in China." She forgot to mention that there are starving children in America.
I have never been this hungry.
I take it back.
About Me
- msliberty
- Student, feminist, activist.
On My Nightstand
Blogs I Love
- A Poetic Justice
- Allegory of the Cave
- Beltway B@stard
- Bluegrrrrl
- Carbon Paper
- Constantly Amazed, Yet Never Surprised
- Freethinking Nonsense
- Get Your Own
- It's My Right To Be Left Of Center
- Moxiegrrrl
- My Sick Mind
- My Thinking Spot
- Online With Zoe
- Open Letters to George W. Bush
- Politics Plus
- Professor Zero
- Quaker Agitator
- Rancho La Luna
- Reconstitution
- RW Researcher
- Shakespeare's Sister
- The Divided States of Bu$hmeriKa
- The Future Was Yesterday
- This Old Broad (The Former Hill)
- Unapologetic Mexican
- Undeniable Liberalism
Well-behaved Women Rarely Make History
People Doing Good Work
- ACORN
- Center for Law and Social Policy
- Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
- Central Valley Air Quality Coalition
- Cesar Chavez Foundation
- Children's Defense Fund
- Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice
- Families United Against Hate
- Human Rights Campaign
- Northwest Treeplanters and Farmworkers United
- PROMO
- Southern Poverty Law Center
- Street Roots
- Trust for Indigenous Cultures and Health
- War Resisters League
Where I Get My News










