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Below are the 20 most recent journal entries recorded in Hasan Diwan's LiveJournal:

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    Monday, June 30th, 2003
    3:33 pm
    Weblog's moving...
    I've set up movable type at HQ. I now have an RSS/RDF feed available and categories for entries, so now people like Phoenix won't be complaining regarding the pervasiveness of news comments. I'll try to move over the entries from this blog to the other one soon.

    Current Mood: informative
    Friday, June 27th, 2003
    3:29 pm
    Mad Dog in the Fog

    Priscilla feels well enough to go out again! So tonight, I'm taking her to The Mad Dog in the Fog. Will try to remember to post feedback. Also, have dressed up a little as a surprise for her (pictures to be posted later tonight), so let's hope she notices and appreciates it. Well, here's to hoping Priscilla's a lady of her word. Cheers!



    Current Mood: ecstatic
    Tuesday, June 24th, 2003
    1:49 pm
    MoveOn.org Primary

    The first primary competition is being held on the internet! The group MoveOn (http://www.moveon.org) is holding a primary competition to determine who their organization and PAC will support. If a single candidate gets 50% or more of the vote, that candidate will receive the "nomination".

    It's a interesting example of the internet as a political tool.

    Complete with allegations about "vote rigging" by Gephardt, at http://www.moveonpac.org/moveonpac/062203_pr.phtml.

    NOTE : registration is only allowed through midnight tonight.

    Remember to vote!!!

    Vote for Dean!!!


    Current Mood: indifferent
    10:35 am
    FinanceX
    FinanceX 1.3 has just been uploaded. Drag and drop now works both to and from the tableview. There is an entry in the code for a Service, which isn't working yet. I'll try to get that working for 1.4. Also, there's a simple Dock Menu (just accounts and transactions -- nothing fancy). Let me know about bugs, feature requests, etc. I know there's a request to port it to Linux, and I would do that, save for I don't have a PC.

    Current Mood: ecstatic
    Monday, June 23rd, 2003
    10:38 pm
    Tonight
    This evening, I took off work early, got home at 4, went to get my hair cut and a new Cell # (my Swisscom balance FINALLY expired). Now I'm wondering what is my phone's email address? Didn't go out with Priscilla, but she's not feeling well. I love her.

    Current Mood: ecstatic
    Sunday, June 22nd, 2003
    1:09 am
    Social Calendar

    My social calendar next week:-

    1. Monday- Howard Dean's candidacy reception at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco... Perhaps will go with Priscilla, take her to dinner at the Equinox on top of the Hyatt.
    2. Tuesday- the Electronic Frontier Foundation volunteer meeting.
    Work owes me a day off for all the overtime I put the other week, so I've told Priscilla I'd be spending it with her. So, will see if I can squeeze it in, which will be great.

    Innocent came up this evening! It was the first time I'd seen him in a while. Oh... and my father may be coming to town mid-July.



    Current Mood: ecstatic
    Current Music: Something-Lasgo
    Saturday, June 21st, 2003
    11:54 pm
    Third time's a charm!
    Priscilla and I are on good terms again! I told her that I can't deal with someone so flakey that she can't tell me that she's busy 15 minutes before I'm to pick her up and she said she was sorry and that it wouldn't happen again.

    Current Mood: ecstatic
    Current Music: Satify You-Puff Daddy Feat. R.kelly
    11:52 pm
    The damn corkscrew
    I just bought a bottle of wine last night as I finished the Black Swan shiraz the night before. I pulled out the corkscrew, poured the wine, and had some trouble getting the corkscrew back on. So I ended up reshaping the corkscrew into a pointed cylinder to the halfway mark. That way, it goes into the wine bottle easily and is guided in by the shape, once it hits the full diameter of the hole, it may be pushed in. This system works remarkably well. I may try to get a patent on it . Thanks Lester!

    Current Mood: frustrated
    Current Music: Eternal Flame-Bangles
    Friday, June 20th, 2003
    1:07 pm
    What happened to Gary Hart's blog?
    One of my favourite politicians, Gary Hart, seems to have dropped off the face of the Earth. His blog, at garyhartnews.com, hasn't been updated since May 16th. Now, I know what happened in 1984, and Hart has lots of baggage, but he's a prolific thinker with lots of interesting ideas.

    Current Mood: informational
    Thursday, June 19th, 2003
    9:21 am
    [from the Financial Times] Intolerable Secrecy Intolerable secrecy
    Normally, I don't blanket-mirror editorials from papers. It strikes me as funny that the United States is supposed to have the freest press, yet journalists are afraid to criticise the Bush administration.

    Intolerable Secrecy

    Case by case, week by week, a complaisant US judiciary is gradually abdicating its responsibility to uphold basic freedoms guaranteed by the constitution and the law.

    The latest egregious example came on Tuesday when the US Court of Appeals overturned a lower court ruling that the government must release the names of people it detained in the months after the terrorist attacks of September 11 2001.

    More than 900 suspects were arrested and held on immigration violation investigations as law enforcement worked feverishly in the wake of the attacks to head off the risk of further terrorist plots. While it released the names of those eventually charged with criminal offences, the government declined to give basic details - names, places of arrest - of more than 700 who were not criminally charged but merely found in breach of immigration laws. The government argued that making such information public could give al-Qaeda and other terrorist operatives valuable knowledge about the scope of the investigations.

    But such a blanket refusal to provide information, as a lower court judge ruled last year, impeded the ability of the public to know whether the government was operating within "the statutory and constitutional constraints that distinguish a democracy from a dictatorship."

    This week's reversal by a split three-judge appeals panel in effect handed over all judgments in such cases to the government on the old cold war grounds that only the authorities could determine whether the threat to national security was so grave as to warrant secrecy.

    But while there might indeed be a case for making specific exemptions to the well-established principle of open disclosure, the burden should be on the government to demonstrate that releasing information about individual detainees would be harmful to its investigation. The idea that the authorities should simply arrest people and keep all their identities secret on a catch-all defence of national security undermines the most basic principles of accountable law enforcement.

    Worse, we know - thanks to a report this month by the Justice Department's own inspector-general - that many of the detainees were indeed mistreated by the government: some were physically abused. Many have since been deported.

    The very idea of secret arrests conjures up images of the police state; democracies should only ever use them in the most extreme of cases. They should not be a routine exercise justified by some general and vague assertion of national security interests. The only protection against such abuse is judicial scrutiny. As David Tatel, the dissenting judge in the case, said, by its decision this week the court "has converted deference into acquiescence". It is not too late for the Supreme Court to overturn this latest erosion of American liberties.



    Current Mood: informational
    12:47 am
    FinanceX 1.2
    FinanceX 1.2 is out. New features include:
    • Balance check - Just select a row and click on the amount to drop a sheet stating the total in the account.
    • Help menu - two options, one opens the homepage for the program and the other opens your email reader to send the author an email.
    • About menu item - the about menu item has been refactored into its own Nib
    • Plug-in API - there's a simple plug-in API and a protocol. This is yet to be documented, preferably by a better writer than myself.

    Download it, work with it, figure out how to make it better, let me know. This was originally designed by me for myself, but I have no reason not to make it work for others.

    This is a tool to learn Cocoa for me, and I'll add features as I figure them out.



    Current Mood: informational
    Current Music: Not Enough-Van Halen-Balance
    Wednesday, June 18th, 2003
    7:29 pm
    [Via Khalifah] WeaponsGate: The Coming Downfall of Lying Regimes

    I don't quite know how to react to this piece from Khalifah. On one hand, I'm happy the Neocons are in trouble in the US. On the other, I'm concerned with the long-term level of honesty in the United States and Europe. Anyone who knows me knows I have a great deal of respect for certain politicians, even if they aren't entirely good for human rights (Laloo Yadav in India, Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore, General Park Hwee-Chung in South Korea, Mikhail Gorbachev, Deng Xiaoping, Nelson Mandela in South Africa, and a few others). With regards to the Bush regime, this outright lie may mobilise voters in 2004 to throw him out of power, which I'd welcome with open arms.


    Read more... )

    Current Mood: amused
    Current Music: Don't Mess With My Man-Nivea feat. Jagged Edge-Nivea
    10:52 am
    Where's Priscilla?
    No one's answering at home, she isn't answering her cell. Last night, her mother said she was out, so I tried her cell. No answer. I'm thinking it's out of battery power. We're supposed to go out tonight to Kennedy's with Urban Diversion. Monday, she says she was free tonight. Yesterday and today, I didn't hear anything, so I'm not sure anymore. :( I'm probably gonna go home relatively early today (1700). So I'll call her when I get back.

    Current Mood: nonchalant
    Current Music: Bombs Over Baghdad-Outkast
    Monday, June 16th, 2003
    5:26 pm
    Now I'm mad!!
    You all probably noticed that the last entry was practically identical to the two before it, I don't know, I hit submit on iJournal, it says "post failed". Confused, I enter it through the web, lo and behold, I realise that Livejournal isn't on drugs, but iJournal seems to have a bug. Oh, and to top it off, when I go to edit an entry, it doesn't retrieve it in iJournal and the web interface says "Database unavailable" or some garbage. Oh, well, let's see if this entry gets through. Oh, yes, I am probably moving my blog (yes, again, I'm sorry) cause I'm sick and tired of having no way to search for previous entries.

    Current Mood: pissed off
    5:16 pm
    Mondays suck

    Looking at my schedule, there's nothing to do Mondays. There's something to do every other evening after work and all day on weekends. What is this aversion to scheduling things on Monday? There's nothing happening with either of the campaigns I'm involved in (the Dean (those meetings are on Wednesdays) and Clark campaigns), the EFF meetings are Tuesdays, hell, even Urban Diversion's not doing anything tonight. Of course, my team at work don't have lives (or have families, which amounts to the same thing from my perspective). I guess KumiKumi was right, not being married in a married world truly does limit your options for a social life. Especially on bloody Mondays!

    No, I'm not going to ask anyone to marry me or do anything quite so spontaneous. I will, however, get my haircut and call some people, see what they're up to, I should be able to get together with Susanne, even though, I did so last night.

    To make matters worse, livejournal isn't accepting this post from iJournal, so I can't even rant!!! Grrr...

    2:21 am
    Urban Diversion
    I took Susanne here tonight. Had lots of fun. Met a bunch of interesting people (read drinking buddies :) ) and a few nice girls (Xixi, Linda, Toby). Xixi is a web programmer at a development shop in San Francisco proper. Linda teaches French to little kids and is from Montreal. Toby's studying Biotechnology while working at a consultant group for Biotechnology products (read Priscilla's job!). Also, a Briton who designs "Go" lights at traffic intersections. Kumiko was dressed wonderfully as usual. Was so busy meeting people that I couldn't take pictures of anyone. Oh well, hopefully Wednesday, Priscilla and I will go to Kennedy's with this bunch. I did, however, get the feeling that they were a single's club where everyone was sizing each other up. Oh well, we'll see... =)

    Current Mood: happy
    Current Music: All My Life-K-Ci & JoJo
    Saturday, June 14th, 2003
    4:17 pm
    Town's End Cafe
    Priscilla wanted to go here, so I obliged. The place closes at 1430 for lunch (we arrived at 1428, talk about excellent timing per usual!). We talked a little. I met her brother's dog, Ginger. She seemed disappointed in the food and especially the coffee! *sigh* We have tentative plans to go to Kennedy's Pub on Wednesday. We'll see, if it works out.

    Current Mood: okay
    Friday, June 13th, 2003
    1:23 pm
    [from AlterNet] a 12 step Program for Regime Change
    BY DON HAZEN

    Each day, millions of frustrated Americans engage in discussions about how our country has gone off course and how ultraconservatives have taken over our government. As we put our hearts and souls into figuring out how to achieve regime change at home in November 2004, these conversations are growing in volume.

    How we engage this election will speak volumes about the future of our country. Our passion in this political moment feels unprecedented. Yet, because we feel a lot of anxiety about all that's happened to our country since 9/11, we don't yet know our strength. We forget, for example, that the things we believe in -- equality, fairness, justice, dignity, and ultimately kindness and love -- inspired the greatest moral and political achievements of the 20th century: civil rights, women's equality, the right to organize, and the growth of the environmental movement. These values make our society strong and appealing to the rest of the world. We must protect and promote them in the 21st century as well.

    Some of us have been discouraged by the increasingly conservative corporate media, which try to marginalize us. We become alarmed as our government ratchets up the fear quotient and we watch the irrational effect the scare tactics have. At these moments, we can forget to turn to each other for support.

    But we must claim our power and overcome our doubts and fears -- as well as our bad habits. We need to feel proud and joyful, not just angry and defensive. We must work together, as one huge family, knowing that if we don't, we cannot win.

    We must be united to fight for regime change at home, not just to prevent more bloodshed, empire building and cruel policies, but to protect virtually all the progress we've made over the past 40 years. Environmentalists alone cannot ensure clean air and water; union members alone cannot protect the right to organize; civil libertarians alone cannot defend the Constitution and the Bill of Rights; seniors on their own cannot protect Social Security; feminists alone cannot defend Roe v. Wade; and African-Americans and Latinos alone are not going to ensure fairness and equality and stop a wide range of cruel budget cuts.

    But, by focusing on what we have in common -- the clear-cut goal of defeating Bush in 2004 -- we can all succeed. How important is this? It feels more important than anything we will do for a very long time.

    To help us chart our course, what follows is a 12-step program to achieve regime change. As in all such efforts for change, we need to take an inventory of our strengths and our weaknesses, confront our bad habits and addictions, reach out to others, and recover our power.

    Step #1: Recognize Our Strengths

    Let's start with traditions that serve as our foundation. Social critic Colin Greer reminds us that Martin Luther King Jr.'s work evolved from his initial civil rights struggles into protecting poor people of all colors and then to insisting on peace in Vietnam. An overriding framework of concern linked all of these causes into one "Beloved Community." Greer notes how the values of progressive America inspire millions of people every day: health care advocates; members of environmental, civil rights and civil liberties groups; volunteers at food banks and women's shelters; people working for their children's education, and many more. As he says, "We have to communicate our history and our strength."

    Progressives are potentially stronger now than at any time in the past 30 years. Breakthrough efforts like the fast-growing True Majority, and Move On, with its 1.3 million members, have significant capacity to reach and motivate new people. The MoveOn.org PAC can also raise large amounts of money. Millions of unaffiliated middle-class progressives are ripe for organizing. The Win Without War coalition, made up of 40 national membership groups, has committed itself to regime change with a major investment in media. Many increasingly sophisticated national organizations are already gathering and dedicating themselves to the work ahead, focusing on voter registration and education and Get Out the Vote (GOTV) strategies in key states.

    In the battle ahead, we are unified. From progressive to moderate, virtually all of us agree that regime change is our common goal. Support for third party politics is invisible, even among those who voted for Nader in 2000.

    We were part of a tremendous effort to halt the invasion of Iraq, supported by many tens of millions of people across the globe. Most of the world is with us, and for much more than a peace movement; for a movement for sanity, human values and the future.

    We also need to tap into our deepest, most magnanimous courage to help us give up old habits and narrow agendas, and sacrifice more for the whole. One woman with a lot of courage is Doris "Granny D" Haddock, who at age 95 is still raising hell; just a few years ago she walked across the country to promote campaign finance reform. She recently reminded us of something profound. During the recent peace marches, despite the angry speeches and the losses to be suffered by so many, she said: "The people in the marches were joyful. Did you notice that? Did you feel it yourself? The best smiles I've seen in years." She went on to state that this time can also be "about something far deeper than the Bush attack du jour... Did you not hope, as a child, that one day it would be in your hands to save the world? Is it not indeed joyful to embark on a life of great meaning? Aren't we joyful for this moment, when all is at stake? We are, we are. And do not stand in the way of our joy."

    Step #2: Acknowledge What We Are Powerless to Change

    We can't change the fact that September 11 happened and fundamentally transformed the nature of American politics. We need to face the reality of our defeat in trying to stop the attack on Iraq. We never stood a chance. The rules have changed. We were playing by the old rules, advocating for inspections and multilateralism, thinking that politics is about negotiation and listening to constituencies. Now it's about raw power, and we need to exercise our own power in the campaign to defeat Bush. The conservatives effectively established new rules of engagement: Anything goes; be as radical and as unreasonable as you can get away with; play the fear card; and count on the corporate media to carry the message. Conservatives got away with invading Iraq, and the only way to stop them is to defeat them in the election of 2004.

    The conservatives have invested enough money particularly by wealthy right-wingers in think tanks and communications over the past 40 years to reach the point where, according to the New York Times, they believe that they have initiated "an era of dominance" -- despite the fact that significant majorities oppose their positions. We can't change the fact that the conservatives are likely to raise half a billion dollars to support the Bush candidacy; or that the corporate media, especially radio networks and television networks like Fox and NBC/General Electric, will work hard to get Bush reelected.

    If we are to succeed, we must recognize some important truths. Politically, the "facts" will not set us free, and issues alone will not win us elections. The other side thinks very differently than we do. Forty percent of the U.S. population will accept virtually anything that Bush and Co. say. Most of these people get all their news from television. This 40 percent of the population will never agree with us, and there is nothing we can do about it. They will not change, nor will they see the light. They are the fundamentalists of America, the religious shock troops, the millions of fearful, and the conservative wealthy who fund and fuel the current conservative efforts at hegemony.

    It's not easy to write off 100 million people. In our own stubborn way, we liberals and progressives think everyone can change.

    If you don't accept the depth of this conservative hold on 40 percent of the population, read "Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think," by University of California linguistics professor George Lakoff. The book explains how conservatives think profoundly differently than progressives and why white males vote against their economic interests. It also offers insights into how we might frame our own issues.

    Still, none of the things we can't change matter as much as what we can do, by educating, mobilizing, motivating, sacrificing, sharing and setting good examples. We will use plain old people power to rise up and regain balance in our country. We have the numbers, we have the truth, and we have the vision for a better world. We need the confidence, the discipline, and the smarts to pull it off.

    Step #3: Communicate Our Vision

    To be successful in American politics, we need undecided voters to come over to our side. We must communicate a positive vision of the future. Most Americans like to be on the winning team, so we need winning ideas and stars who can carry the message forward. Going negative doesn't help. When we attack the conservative frame, we actually reinforce their messages. We need our message.

    A strong vision would draw on the deep history and powerful metaphor of people working together to make this country strong, to protect ourselves and one another, to care about the health and safety of all our people.

    Giving one example of a big picture vision is Granny D: "We are the people who believe in a world of environmental beauty, of happiness and not exploitation, of justice and not oppression and torture. A world safe for children. Government budgets that invest in our smart babies, not smart bombs. We believe in international law and cooperative action."

    Step #4: Confront Our Weaknesses

    To be honest with ourselves, we have to confront our seeming compulsion to repeat the same strategies, no matter how many times they fail. We specialize in large single-issue membership organizations. We pride ourselves on our unswerving dedication to myriad idealistic issues. Our organizations at times become little more than self-perpetuating efforts to secure funding dollars.

    This may sound harsh. Many of these issues are important in their own way, but now, with so much at stake, the many do not add up to the whole.

    Moving forward requires acknowledging what's not serving us. Single-issue politics is the Achilles' heel of progressive Democrats. Conservatives understand that individual issues need to be linked to an overall moral and ethical perspective. As George Lakoff explains, "They fit the issues together, develop conservative value-based language, and then highjack American virtues like freedom and compassion and give them conservative definitions...Progressives in contrast are hampered by the plethora of issues, rather than the overarching value perspective that rationalizes the polices."

    The longstanding approach of "letting a thousands flowers bloom" has not added up. Battles on hundreds of fronts, competing for attention and funding, will not bring us political power. Too many voices often cancel each other out, and the confusing cacophony can send people away. We have to rethink change and appreciate that by gaining political clout our issues have a better chance of winning.

    Step #5: Practice Being Realistic

    A big behavioral change for many will be diving into electoral politics. Many of us have viewed elections as tainted, trivial or hopelessly uncool. We may have preferred the detachment of the cynical or the purity of issue advocacy. After decades of attacking the political system as hopelessly corrupted by campaign financing, we regard politics as dirty and impervious to change. But alas, despite its enormous flaws, it is the only system we've got.

    Author Jonathan Schell says, "Elections are a fabulous tool for bringing about change -- if you use them! You have to infuse them with your energy. There's something tautological about rejecting elections. It's like an admission of defeat. It's very bad to admit defeat when you're in a movement. It's a big mistake. You should try to win. You may fail; there's no victory guaranteed in this world, in life. But you should aim to win and really change things."

    When we opt out of campaigns, the political consultants and media buyers take over. These guys just add to the nasty image of politics, particularly with their multi-million dollar hit ads, often designed to turn people off voting altogether and leave them confused, discouraged and disgusted.

    We'll also need to sacrifice some of our purity. As Granny D put it, "Politics is about winning. For us, it is about winning to save lives and raise people up from poverty and illness and loneliness and injustice."

    Finally, we need to shake our frequent paralysis regarding public educational activity of non-profits. The outrageously partisan behavior of Pat Robertson's and other conservative groups operating as tax exempt ultimately prevailed in the courts. Still, many liberal foundations and their grantees remain gun-shy about aggressive public education.

    Some estimate that just a top group of the largest liberal non-profit organizations has as much as $2 billion dollars in operating budgets. Although tax laws prohibit organizations from advocating for specific candidates, they can still do a lot of public education offering workable models and far different approaches to current domestic and foreign policies. And staff are free to be partisan on their own time.

    Step #6: Stop Squabbling and Make Amends

    You may have heard the joke: What's a progressive firing squad? Answer: A circle.

    Enough! Or, as progressive leader and communications guy Dan Carol says: "Kumbaya dammit. There are ways to stand for principles without fighting over crumbs. Start with everyone sharing their vision of what they want and need ... and check your passive aggressiveness at the door. Let's not forget that the perfect is the enemy of the good."

    It is time to declare an amnesty. If South Africa can have a reconciliation, why not progressives? Let us join our competitors and our former enemies in new collaborations toward victory.

    Step #7: Think Strategically

    If you have read this far, you are probably part of the core Democratic vote. Not enough of us have been active in Democratic Party politics or elections. Let's make that history.

    Make no mistake; we are not a majority. Clinton won the '92 presidential race with 43 percent of the vote (with Perot in the race against Bob Dole). We hover around 40 percent of the electorate. The conservatives and Republicans are also close to 40 percent. To become a majority, we need to reach swing voters. Electoral College rules mean that the Democratic candidate could win the popular vote by a million votes in 2004 and still lose the election. We need to win a couple of red states while hanging on to the blue states Gore won in 2000.

    Do you know which states are red? Which are swing states? Which voters are swing voters? It's time to get strategic! Below is a list. If you live in a swing state, get to work; if you don't live in a swing state, start visiting and finding all your friends and relatives who are in one.

    Swing State Line Up:

    The Blues: In 2000, Al Gore really won 10 states by less than 6%: Florida (which was given to the Republicans by the Supreme Court); New Mexico, Wisconsin, Iowa and Oregon (by less than 1%); Minnesota (by 2.5%); and Pennsylvania, Michigan, Maine and Washington (by about 5%). The Reds: George W. Bush won eight states by less than 6.5% (not counting Florida), five of those by less than 5%: New Hampshire (which he won by only 7,200 votes, or 1.3%); Ohio, Nevada and Missouri (by about 3.5%); Tennessee (4%); Arkansas (5.5%); Arizona and West Virginia (about 6.5%). </p>

    Step #8: Deal With the Politics of Fear

    Fear is the subtext of American politics. The Republicans know that fearful people tend to vote conservative, so generating and exploiting fear will be high on their agenda. Expect every kind of Republican surprise: Code Reds, new acts of terrorism, invasions of other countries, the sudden capture of Osama bin Laden or Saddam Hussein. There may be dirty tricks in this election.

    Even though some of us don't feel it acutely, fear is a fundamental issue in America. It's no accident that we have more than 11,000 gun deaths a year while neighboring Canada has far fewer with as many guns per capita. America just passed the 2 million mark in the number of people incarcerated in prisons. While violent crime goes down, the presentation of violent crime in the media escalates.

    Generating fear of "the other" is a staple of Republican politics. Only united can we can fight it. But this isn't simple and requires a lot of discussion, thought and creative ideas. The main point is to acknowledge that fear is on people's minds and not trivialize or deny it. The antidote to fear is joy and courage. It is mutual support and protection and a clear, forthright policy on national security. Progressive values are about protecting our families, our communities, making our lives safe and fulfilling. But we're not interested, as the Bush administration insists is necessary, in trading freedom for security. As Move On's Wes Boyd notes: "Luckily, Americans are made of sterner stuff and we'll continue to protect freedom and it will make us strong."

    Step #9: Examine Our Privilege and Embrace Diversity

    This step is particularly aimed at those of us in the social change business. Are we too aloof from the grittiness of electoral politics and face-to-face organizing and talking with people who don't agree with us? Most of the millions of people who make up the leadership and rank and file of non-profits and foundations are highly educated, have health insurance and many have family support. Even when we have risen from the working class, we have the privilege of networks and access to mentors and support.

    When the economy gets worse, when Medicare and Medicaid are cut, when the minimum wage is stuck way below the living wage, when tax breaks go to the rich, most of us remain untouched. In some cases, we actually benefit from political crises; our organizations can raise more money. But poor people and many people of color have no such luxuries. They can't criticize elections as a distraction on the road to political change, as a prominent peace leader did recently. They have to deal with the political reality.

    Diversity is a fundamental progressive value, just like fairness and protection of families. Our hybridness is a strength. The mix of our skills, talents, experiences, histories and colors makes us much more than the sum of our parts and imbues us with the power to defeat the more homogeneous and rigid conservatives.

    We also need to keep in mind that many of our brilliant and exciting current efforts are white and middle class. We learned from the 2002 primary elections that ignoring the base and running to the middle will lose elections, as minority voters stayed home in droves and resources didn't make it into their communities. Hopefully 2002 was the aberration, and the powerful voter registering and organizing work that was done in Florida (e.g., that won that state for Gore, until the Supreme Court decided otherwise) will be the model across the country. African Americans were far ahead of other groups in opposing the invasion of Iraq, and the rapidly growing Latino population is very concerned about the impact of war budgets and tax cuts on services their communities desperately need. Minority communities represent the strongest element in the quest for regime change. It is crucial that diversity issues be addressed at the beginning of any broad-based planning for 2004, and not as an afterthought.

    Step #10: Create an Independent Power, Not Reliant on Parties or Candidates

    To help us win in 2004, how about organizing a progressive electoral movement that becomes a force in the election by not picking one of the candidates in the primaries? Instead we'll raise money, develop an active base nationwide and effectively target key swing states. We earn our credibility by working while the primaries are underway, building an infrastructure that is ready to roll the last four months of the campaign on behalf of whomever the Democrats nominate.

    All the Democratic candidates are superior to George W. Bush; even Joe Lieberman, the guy progressives love to hate. Domestically, all these candidates believe in fundamental values and issues that if framed effectively can appeal to a wide cross-section of Democrats and swing voters. These are themes, values and positions that Bush clearly does not support. In addition, a forceful progressive presence will help keep candidates on message, give them backbone on issues, and balance the inevitable challenges from the media and the conservative Democrats when candidates take strong populist positions. Of course many progressives will support candidates closest to them on key issues. But no matter who gets nominated, we need to get the nominee elected.

    It would be a bold move to quickly organize and grow a large-scale independent campaign for regime change at home. Let's call it the "Independent Force." It would counter the stereotypes that progressives can't work together and that partnerships don't travel well across race, class and issue lines. If key leadership groups bought in, such a formation could, by effectively using the Internet, number five million and be well funded with $10 million by next summer. No, that wouldn't be enough. Yet, big organizations and coalitions of insiders wielding large amounts of money may not be the best way to engage the rank and file.

    A regime change movement would: a) ensure an organizational infrastructure, especially in swing states, to help elect the Democratic nominee; b) coordinate and articulate a clear vision of the values and principles generally shared by all the Democratic candidates and strongly desired by millions of independent and progressive Democrats; and c) create a way for the progressive and activist universe to exercise political influence after the election. It would hold the Democratic nominee accountable during the election (and hopefully afterward). It would create effective new ways to work together in the event of Bush's reelection.

    Progressives need to be a vigilant counterweight to the bad habits of Beltway thinking, potential big organization in-fighting, and the influence of some of the Democratic Party's wealthy donors. Ingrained attitudes that take the base of voters for granted, depend on negative campaigning, run to the middle, instead of standing for issues clearly and firmly, have led to failure in the past, but not this time if we succeed.

    Step #11: Use and Trust Independent Media

    The Republican-controlled FCC has decided to make media more conservative, more corporate and more concentrated. Given the media system we have already, that's hard to swallow. Now we'll have more nightmares like Clear Channel, which owns more than 1,200 stations and is infamous for dumbing down radio and organizing pro-war rallies.

    But even before this latest stage, the "Fox effect" pushed news coverage to the right. Rupert Murdoch's pending purchase of Direct TV exponentially increases the power of conservative TV. This is all wrong and unacceptable, but by everyone's estimation, changing the media system is a long-term struggle. The corporate media system is likely to get worse as far as the eye can see.

    We don't have time to wait. Yes, we should work the contradictions in corporate media as best we can, since the media system needs a semblance of objectivity to be credible enough to make their profits. But also we need to use our own independent media system, which, with the help of the Internet, has grown tremendously, risen in quality and reaches many more people than ever before. AlterNet.org, where I work, Common Dreams, Tom Paine.com, the Nation, Salon, Pacific News Service and many more (including WireTapmag.org, the feisty youth site), are powerful daily information sources. When added up, the independent media often do much more than the corporate media in presenting details and diversity of voices.

    It is important to have alternative perspectives and viable options in play. Michael Moore, progressive media's superstar, has shown that it's possible to reach millions with a very strong populist message. (Moore's next film is in the works and will calculate the tremendous loss of political freedom since 9/11 while tracing the relationship of the bin Laden and Bush families, all in time for the 2004 election.) But there are dozens of other voices also reaching millions, because the Internet makes it possible to amplify radio shows, columns, speeches and great journalism every day.

    Many of us have become "connectors," zipping the best ideas, analysis and personal voices around the web so we all know what Robert Scheer, Arianna Huffington, Molly Ivins, Arundhati Roy, Amy Goodman and numerous others are writing, thinking and saying. Worldlink TV and FreeSpeech TV, our only progressive TV networks, are improving everyday. (Sure, you have to get a satellite dish to watch them, but you'll also get "The Sopranos," so why not?)

    When Greg Palast was asked how his current "alternative ' book became a bestseller, he told the interviewer the alternative press needs to change its name: "It reaches more people than the mainstream."

    Step #12: Make a Commitment

    Activist Harriet Barlow has started talking to friends about the "5 percent" plan. If you are really serious about defeating Bush, she says, commit 5 percent of your income and 5 percent of your time to the cause; more if you can afford it. And start now. Many others are in tune with Barlow. If you can, why not vacation or even temporarily relocate to key swing states like Ohio, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Florida and Nevada, especially if you are from there or have family or friends there? Dedicate a portion of your time to what will be the most important election of our lives. If idealistic young people can travel to Iraq and Palestine, why not to Kansas City, Cleveland, Pittsburg or Jacksonville?

    Dropping everything and moving to a swing state may seem extreme, but there are many steps along the way. One thing we need to do is get together and talk about what's at stake and give each other encouragement. Regime Change house parties, salons and picnics can become the rage. Progressive leaders travel all the time and are aching for invitations -- give them a call, especially if you are in a swing state. Plan on facilitating an exchange of ideas and information, not just hosting a speech. We need more interaction and voices, fewer speeches.

    Many organizations with people on the ground, such as ACORN, NAACP, Greenpeace, League of Conservation Voters, Rock The Vote and Win Without War and their affiliates will have local efforts going across the country. Check out their websites, volunteer, send them money if you can.


    Don Hazen is the executive director of the Independent Media Institute (IMI). This article was written independently of AlterNet. The opinions expressed in this article in no way reflect the positions of IMI or AlterNet.

    © 2003 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.

    Current Mood: okay
    Current Music: Holding Out For a Hero-Bonnie Tyler
    11:30 am
    Tax Cuts

    Tax Cuts

    BY HASAN DIWAN
    Prevailing US economic theory states that tax cuts are good for the economy. But there is no mention of what time period the theory refers to. While, they'll stimulate the economy short-term, I believe they will lead to inflation long-term. I'll illustrate this using a mathematical example (using MathML), but first I'll explain the assumptions which must be made in order for this model to hold.</p>

    We must first assume that a tax cut will lead to no increase in saving. While I realise this is not a realistic assumption, the only change one has to make is take a fraction of the total tax cut amount for individuals.

    On to the model, assume the US government decides to give every taxpayer a $500 tax credit. Based on our assumption above, this means that an individual's disposable income goes up $500. This injects $500 x 300 million or 150 billion dollars into the economy. Savvy shopkeepers will quickly realise that they'll make more profit by increasing their prices next time they are updated (this is referred to as "menu cost"). This is what economists call inflation.

    Most economists acknowledge that long-term inflation is not a good thing. So, long-term, the country will need a tax increase to keep the money supply constant.

    So, why do Republicans scream about tax cuts? It's good politics. Take the 2002 tax cuts, for instance. They are only in effect till 2006. At which point, there will have to be a tax increase. Also, since Bush doesn't get to run for a third term as president, he won't care.


    Please leave comments in the appropriate section of the blog


    Current Mood: okay
    Current Music: Money Ain't a Thing-Jermaine Dupri and Jay-Z-Life in 1472
    Wednesday, June 11th, 2003
    11:38 am
    To-Do list
    There's a party at Moscone Centre as part of JavaONE from 1900~2300. I may go and get entertained (not pissed, I'm not quite that depressed). There's a basketball game starting at 1730 that I'd like to watch. Priscilla's got plans all week and I'm too in love with her to apply the three-strikes rule. As for travel plans, I need to pick a flight around mid-July and report it to Tracy at the travel office to book the flight so I can spend a month in Copenhagen, Denmark. It'll be an enjoyable trip. The remainder of my todo list is boring: close the Wells Fargo account, make sure Informatica deposits my paycheck into Netbank properly, stop mail delivery for the time I'm away, get plug converters for my devices (laptop, cell phone, iPod), give Priscilla the keys so she can come check on my apartment, give the apartment building managers the rent check for August, and look at my packing list to see if I have to buy anything from Wallgreen's before I leave. Any tips or requests for little gifts are welcome... No promises, but if I see them, I'll be happy to pick them up and bring them home.

    Current Mood: amused
    Current Music: Baby Got Back-Sir Mix-a-Lot
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