Archive for February, 2017

Phillips: Unions made this man a lifelong Democrat – Quad City Times

I drove up to John Shaws house, not quite sure what to expect, and when he answered the door, he admitted he was a little nervous about inviting me into his dining room to talk about his deepest held beliefs. Well figure it out together, we said with a laugh.

Thanks to Shaws easy manner and his ability to put strangers immediately at ease, we slipped quickly and comfortably into conversation about life.

Its a funny thing to be 80, he said. Youll see. It happens fast.

Shaw has an American flag hanging by the front door of the Davenport home where he and his wife have lived for 50 years. Theres a sign in the yard, Proud Union Home. He was the first person to volunteer for my What You Dont Know About Us experiment to turn this column into a Quad-Cities listening tour, talking to people about what they believe and why they believe it.

Shaws political views, he told me, took shape when he was a child, listening to stories about his father. His father worked in the brickyard in Shale City, Illinois, three miles from Viola. As Shaw tells it, his father worked 12-hour days, seven days a week, only taking the first Sunday of the month off when his shift changed. He made $800 a year, Shaw said. My father had a fifth-grade education, but he was a hard worker.

By the time John Shaw was born in 1936 the seventh of seven children his father was better off. His father had a job with a steady wage and steady hours as a member of Local 537 (now International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150). But Shaws brother, Bob, kept the stories alive of how hard his dad had worked in those early years. Bob drove John to the site of the brickyard and the tiny house where they had lived, then to the tile factory in Matherville and the coal mine near Geneseo where his father had also worked. Bobs words were a drumbeat about hard work, about what it means to be a man, and most importantly, what it means to have union representation. Johns father retired at 71 years old and lived off his huge garden and a $100-a-month pension.

Shaw grew up in Green River, Illinois, and graduated from Geneseo High School in 1954. Because he was the youngest, he watched his brothers go off to war. Not all of them returned.

John Shaw looks at this area and sees a place that his family had a hand in building, a place that he literally helped to build. His great-grandfather, Anson Calkins, founded the village of Alpha, Illinois, in Henry County. And Shaw spent his career as a union operator of heavy equipment, running cranes and backhoes.

Like many in the Quad-Cities, Shaw was out of work for a couple years in the 1980s. To get by I did odd jobs for $5 an hour for one woman, and she told seven other women, he said. That was the darkest time of my life and my marriage. I saw other people lose their jobs, their homes, their marriages. The good thing was that a lot of people started businesses of their own when the work didnt come back.

Then unions got stronger, got bigger. I can only remember being on strike for one day in my whole life. We had good representation.

Shaw is and has always been a Democrat, based in large part on his belief in unions. He voted for Hillary Clinton and has voted for the Democrat in every presidential election, except for once when he voted for Republican Richard Nixon. In local and county races, he said, he doesnt vote by party, but for the best candidate, which has included many Republicans. In 52 years of marriage, he said, his wife, Mary, has never told him whom she voted for.

Shaw is motivated by kindness to the poor and tries to be generous. Otherwise, we didnt talk about social issues. Shaw grew up in a church-going household and is an active member of the Methodist church, but Ive never put religion and politics together.

Its an interesting time to be a Democrat, or to be political for that matter. Shaw meets a group of eight or 10 men every morning at Hy-Vee for coffee. The group is about half Democrat, half Republican. A couple of the men like to poke at him for supporting Clinton, but mostly, they tiptoe around the topic. Since Trump was elected, tempers flare quickly on both sides, and men who value each others friendships change the subject to sports or grandchildren or fishing when things get heated.

Politics are so confrontational now, Shaw said. Its more divided now than ever.

If youd like to sit down with me for this What They Dont Know About Us series, send an email to aphillips@qctimes.com or give me a call at 563-383-2264.

Excerpt from:
Phillips: Unions made this man a lifelong Democrat - Quad City Times

Close to Home: Threaten Iran? Here we go again – Santa Rosa Press Democrat

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PD Editorial: First, define sanctuary citys scope

Sundays Letters to the Editor

Gullixson: Waging war against Muslims, the media and Agnes Grill

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Close to Home: Threaten Iran? Here we go again

DONNA BRASSET- SHEARER

DONNA BRASSET-SHEARER IS A CULTURAL-ANTHROPOLOGIST WITH A BACKGROUND IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS. | February 5, 2017, 12:05AM

| Updated 3 hours ago.

National Security Adviser Michael Flynn has the idea that Irans recent missile test warrants a strong notice to Iran to be very careful about provoking the ire of the Trump administration. The critics of Flynns warning to Iran arent against the idea that the United States has a right to defend itself against an enemy provocation. On the contrary, they are concerned that Flynns hard-line rhetoric against Iran can inadvertently invite a counterproductive escalation of the already frayed tensions between the two countries.

It took years of a hard-won struggle with European allies to negotiate the 2015 Iran deal, which secured an arrangement by which Iran agreed to cease all efforts to advance any nuclear weapons work for 10 years in exchange for much- needed sanctions relief. As a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, Iran was compelled largely against the wishes of its own hard-line factions to comply with the terms of the agreement, even when it meant unrelenting, intensely intrusive inspections of its military arsenals over an entire decade. Countries that have not signed the non-proliferation treaty Israel, North Korea and Pakistan are not under the same obligation or scrutiny to reassure the world that they will not build or use nuclear weapons in a hypothetical war with a rival state.

If there is any doubt that Flynns warning to Iran is not ideologically based, consider his comments in his recent book Field of Fight: How We Can Win the Global War Against Radical Islam and its Allies, co-authored by his colleague Michael Ledeen. The U.S. is confronted with an international alliance of evil countries and movements that is working to destroy us, they wrote.

In her New York Review of Books appraisal of Field of Flight, national security expert Jessica Matthews notes that Flynn and Ladeen have singled out Iran, North Korea, China, Russia, Syria, Cuba, Bolivia, Venezuela and Nicaragua as emblematic of the evil countries the U.S. should take to task, lest they eventually succeed in defeating, dominating and destroying the U.S. Both Flynn and Ledeen have been advocating for some time that the nuclear issue aside the goal of U.S. policy toward Iran should be regime change, an idea that has had Iranian hardliners on defensive alert ever since the Islamic Revolution in 1979. In a now infamous quote, Ledeen caught the attention of Irans defense ministry a few years back for its rarely articulated arrogance: Every 10 years or so, the United States needs to pick up some small crappy little country and throw it against the wall, just to show the world we mean business.

These are the kinds of sentiments evoked by the new administrations Make American great again trope, even as it reveals a remarkably ahistorical perspective on world affairs. One wonders where the learning curve is regarding the utility of throwing a weaker country Vietnam? Iraq? against the wall, or where the rationality lies in listing China or Russia among the evil countries that Flynn believes require every dimension of American national power in a cohesive synchronized manner similar to the effort during World War II to fight an impending war that would be international in scale.

If, in his new role as national security adviser, Flynn continues to hold or worse, to act upon the near apocalyptic worldview expressed in his book, the world is in for some dark times.

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As Mathews concludes in her review, Clearly this is a time for rethinking many long-established claims and convictions, and for new foreign policies As threatening as the external environment is, it could easily become much worse.

If there is a silver lining in this daunting narrative, it surely rests with the worlds citizenries. There may be no better time than the present to forge the international alliances necessary to check the political power of the worlds hard-line military ideologues.

Donna Brasset-Shearer of Petaluma is a cultural-anthropologist with a background in international relations.

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Close to Home: Threaten Iran? Here we go again - Santa Rosa Press Democrat

‘So-Called’ Judge Criticized by Trump Is Known as a Mainstream Republican – New York Times

'So-Called' Judge Criticized by Trump Is Known as a Mainstream Republican
New York Times
The federal judge who blocked President Trump's immigration order is described by former colleagues and acquaintances as a mainstream Republican who went from a career as a highly respected corporate lawyer in Seattle to an appointment by ...

and more »

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'So-Called' Judge Criticized by Trump Is Known as a Mainstream Republican - New York Times

Republicans face anger over Obamacare repeal during town halls – Politico

Rep. Tom McClintock has voiced concerns about Obamacare enrollees losing coverage. | AP Photo

Obamacare supporters showed up in huge numbers to voice concerns over repeal.

By Victoria Colliver

02/04/17 04:38 PM EST

Updated 02/04/17 07:28 PM EST

ROSEVILLE, Calif. Two Republican lawmakers representing reliably conservative districts on opposite ends of the country on Saturday faced down heated questions from Obamacare supporters who flooded town hall events demanding that Congress not dismantle a health care law that has provided insurance for millions of people.

Fervent backers of the health care law shouted down Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Calif.), blasting his views on the Obamacare repeal and President Donald Trumps immigration ban. Hundreds of demonstrators showed up some as early as 6:30 a.m. to a theater in downtown Roseville, just northeast of Sacramento.

Story Continued Below

After the meeting ended, McClintock was escorted by police as the crowd outside the theater shouted Resist! and "Shame!"

The hostile crowd in Roseville was just the latest sign of trouble for congressional Republicans as they face voters outside of Washington. In Pinellas County, Fla., Gus Bilirakis, who represents a district Trump won, was on the defensive as voters packed a town hall on Obamacare. For more than two hours, Bilirakis listened to stories from his constituents young, old, black and white who implored him to not repeal the federal health care law without having a replacement ready.

To take away the Affordable Care Act is taking away my freedom and justice, said Evan Thornton, a 21-year-old St. Petersburg College student who said he was diagnosed with Marfan Syndrome at 16 and has stayed on his mothers insurance because of Obamacare. Its taking away my life.

Hundreds of protesters, some holding signs favoring the Affordable Care Act and demanding a town meeting, gathered outside a GOP gathering Rep. Peter Roskam (R-Ill) attended in his district early Saturday, the Chicago NBC affiliate reported.

Liberal-leaning groups are trying to foment a real movement against Trump and in particular against repeal of Obamacare sharing spreadsheets of town halls for Republicans across the country in hopes of sparking a grassroots movement similar to the tea party movement of 2009. Videos of screaming constituents were splashed across TV that summer as Congress drafted Obamacare, slowing the laws momentum and crushing any chance that Republicans would help pass it.

So far, protests against the repeal effort are not nearly as heated as those rage-filled 2009 town halls, some of which ended in fistfights, arrests and hospitalizations. But they show growing angst over the GOPs uncertain plans to replace the health care law.

McClintock, whos voiced concerns about Obamacare enrollees losing coverage, was heard on leaked audio during last weeks GOP retreat fretting about the lack of a replacement plan. On Saturday, McClintock recounted conversations he's had with party leadership.

I said, no, with all due respect, we have bills, we have proposals, but we dont really have a plan until we pass a plan out of the House, he said.

McClintocks district covers a large swath of mostly rural Northern California, covering some small mountainous counties as well as portions of the farm-rich Central Valley. In solidly blue California, it can be easy to forget that 25 of the states 58 counties voted for Trump. Roseville is the largest city in Placer County, where Trump won 52 percent of the vote, compared to 41 percent for Hillary Clinton.

Amanda Barnes, a 28-year-old resident of Auburn, Calif., told McClintock she considered it an act of God that she was able to get on her mothers health insurance five months before she was hit by a car, leaving her paralyzed from the waist down. Barnes said at the time she was covered by the Obamacare provision allowing young adults to stay on their parents' health insurance..

If I had not had my mothers insurance to cover my health care costs, I would have been over half million in debt just in the first three days," she said, asking how McClintock would protect her health.

Republican leaders say theyre still trying to push through a repeal of Obamacare while approving major parts of a replacement plan by early March. But there are deep disagreements among GOP lawmakers about how much of Obamacare they should salvage, with Obamacares fiercest critics pushing to kill as much of the law as swiftly as possible through a fast-track budget process.

After the McClintock event, some attendees said they were frustrated his lack of detail about an Obamacare replacement plan. He just said, yes, we have something in place, said Andrea Seminer, a lawyer from Roseville. They have nothing in place.

Bilirakis was on the defensive at a Palm Harbor community center in northern Pinellas County, which was one of just four Florida counties that went for Trump after President Barack Obama won there twice.

Without providing details, Bilirakis said that he would work to ensure that the GOP replacement plan allows young adults to stay on their parents' plans and includes protections for pre-existing conditions. Bilirakis told reporters after the meeting that he was resolved to repeal Obamacare.

I think we need to repeal because we need to do it right and expand health care, he said. Its too expensive. The premiums are too high, the deductibles are too high.

McClintock told POLITICO he wanted to hold another listening session Saturday to accommodate the crowd outside the theater, but he said Roseville police advised him to leave when the town hall ended, because apparently the situation outside was getting dangerous.

As a diplomat would say, it was a frank exchange of views, McClintock said after the event, adding that he will continue to meet with constituents. Its not their job to listen to me at the town hall; its my job to listen to them.

Dennis Revell, chairman Placer County Republican Party, attributed the high turnout at the town hall to an organized effort within the Democratic and progressive movement in this country to attempt to become the liberal equivalent of the Tea Party.

Theyre entitled to do that, he said. Theres a very good member of Congress standing here in the middle of Coliseum as the liberal gladiators attempted to attack him. He stood his ground and had a meaningful discussion.

Nathan Williams, one of the main organizers of Town Hall Project 2018, a liberal volunteer group that circulated a nationwide list of lawmakers constituent events, said hes trying to promote respectful dialogue.

Were not encouraging people to be abusive or intimidating or peddle conspiracy theories, he said this week. Were empowering constituents; not trying to terrify members of Congress.

Despite the show of support for Obamacare at the town hall, McClintock said he believes the majority of Americans want a better health care plan.

If people loved [Obamacare]," he said, "Nancy Pelosi would still be speaker and Hillary Clinton would be president."

Christine Sexton contributed to this story.

Originally posted here:
Republicans face anger over Obamacare repeal during town halls - Politico

McClintock exits with police escort after raucous town hall meeting in Roseville – Sacramento Bee


KQED
McClintock exits with police escort after raucous town hall meeting in Roseville
Sacramento Bee
Facing a packed auditorium and raucous crowd, Republican Rep. Tom McClintock on Saturday defended his party's national agenda and voiced strong support for President Donald Trump's controversial executive actions to scale back Obamacare, ban ...
Republican lawmaker given police escort due to rowdy protestersWashington Examiner
Police have to escort California GOP congressman from rowdy town hall meetingThe Mercury News
'Resist': Protesters Descend on California Republican's Town HallKQED
WBAL Radio
all 29 news articles »

Originally posted here:
McClintock exits with police escort after raucous town hall meeting in Roseville - Sacramento Bee