Jeff Sessions is all for states' rights -- except when he isn't. Author and researcher Radley Balko lays it out in The Washington Post.
Republicans often talk up states' rights as a sacred principle, but in this decade they have amped up the squashing of states' rights when they caught the states actually doing something sensible for people.
In a mutation of failed "trickle down," just as the U.S. Congress has cast down decrees abridging laws upon states, many state legislatures -- including Tennessee -- have defecated down on cities and counties.
Examples in Tennessee include: 1-- State takeover and smashing of free public education and converting whatever "education" is left, especially in Democratic-voting Shelby and Davidson Counties, to for-profit schemes. 2--The state legislature overriding cities of Memphis and Nashville wanting to lessen marijuana possession as a crime. 3--Legislation against cities wishing to require minority hiring quotas for public contracts. 4--Pushing past cities' and counties' desires to keep firearms out of their public parks and other spaces.
In an almost-funny reverse reflex, Tennessee legislators a couple of years ago pledged to arrest any federal officers crossing the state border to enforce federal laws about firearms.
Balko gives us chapter and verse from the mouth of Sessions.
Citizens Media Resource educates the public on matters of policy and governance; media practices, and social, cultural and economic issues.
Thursday, July 20, 2017
Friday, June 30, 2017
Georgia Election is Case Study in "Don't-do-This" for Democrats
It's not hard to figure out that Republicans have been out-messaging Democrats. We have seen that facts don't matter and that strong messaging overcomes playing not to lose.
Having been a speechwriter, political strategist and PR operative for causes and candidates since Jimmy Carter was President, I was sufficiently horrified in this century to join others in forming Messaging Values Project -- a study of how to clearly message progressive values.
During this project we met political researcher and strategist Drew Westen.
Westen is to Democrats what Frank Luntz is to Republicans. Westen, who lives outside Atlanta, conducts focus groups to learn which messages and words resonate with potential voters and which ones fall flat. He understands how to "prime" a message by firing off mental "frames" in the mind of an audience.
Westen is every bit as good as Luntz -- better, I think, because he does not play on ignorance and hate -- but not as widely known. Westen does not have a track record of success (if you call convincing voters to screw up the country a success) like Luntz. For example, one Luntz gem was to advise Republicans to call Obamacare a "government takeover."
One subject for study, although it should not be a political issue, is abortion. I hate to even bring it up. It's a no-win subject. It's a personal matter that Republicans have wrangled and manipulated into hate and crazy and votes. There is no changing anyone's mind on this, but it is an issue that Westen tested in focus groups.
"A man and a woman have the right to plan a family. Voters respond favorably if you begin with that," Westen said in describing the results of focus groups on messaging women's reproductive rights.
Westen closely observed Democrat Jon Osoff's recent loss to Repubican Karen Handel in a highly watched and richly funded special congressional election in Georgia's sixth district.
In this CNN story, Westen lines out the Democrats' failures in this race, and he advises Democrats should use this as a what-not-to-do case study for 2018 congressional races.
Wednesday, June 28, 2017
Dialing for Democracy: Turning Back the Turn-Off of Medical Care
Remember when Republicans used to holler about "death panels" and putting a "bureaucrat" between you and your doctor? Almost seems like the good ol' days in 2010 when the Affordable Care Act was widely debated and a discussed before being voted into law (and letting insurance companies stay between you and your doctor).
Now they are putting U.S. senators and representatives between you and your doctor, your pharmacy, your physical therapy, etc.
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Do you want this man to decide if you go to the doctor? AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite |
Now they are putting U.S. senators and representatives between you and your doctor, your pharmacy, your physical therapy, etc.
Dialing for Democracy
Phone lines to members of
Congress often are busy – yeah, they know it’s you and just don’t want to
answer. (Crackerjack box: Little-known Lamar Alexander info below contacts)
Personal calls are
powerful because a breathing person has to engage you. But fax is an option. I had faxed Leemar about Jeff-Beau Sessions
and was surprised to get an email back, explaining how Sessions was his
friend. Surprise was that I got a reply,
not that Alexander had his head up…. At
least someone had to go to slight trouble.
Sen. Lamar Alexander
DC office 202-224-4994
FAX 202-228-3398
For phone calls, if you
get tired of busy signal in DC, call Nashville office, even if you live in
Memphis. They don't believe Memphis
qualifies as part of Tennessee. Ask them
to "log the call."
Nashville office
615-736-5129 fax 615-269-4803
Memphis office 901-544-4224 fax: 901-544-4227.
Bonus: David Cleary, Alexander chief of staff, email david_cleary@help.senate.gov
Bonus: David Cleary, Alexander chief of staff, email david_cleary@help.senate.gov
Sen. Bob Corker
DC office 202-224-3344
FAX 202-228-0566
Call to Chattanooga office
would be second choice after DC.
Chattanooga office 423-756-2757
Fax 423-756-5313
Nashville office 615-279-8125
Fax 615-279-9488
Memphis office 901-683-1910
Fax 901-575-3528
ALEXANDER THE NIXON AIDE
Alexander learned dirty
politics while he was a Nixon White House attorney under Haldeman and
Ehrlichman. Did you miss that one on his
resume? Yeah, he does not want people
talking about that.
PRAISE THE LORD AND PASS THE JIM BEAM
Mr. Wholesome from
Maryville, TN, in the 1970s Alexander used a church charter to get around local
laws and serve liquor at a Ruby Tuesday’s restaurant he owned in Gatlinburg.
CITY SLICKER GOES COUNTRY
All you need to know about
Alexander’s phony politician game is that he put on a red plaid shirt to act
like a working man when he ran for governor in 1978. When his crew got near a media or other
event, they would plop Alexander behind the wheel of a pickup truck so he could
“drive into town” in his pickup and plaid shirt.
AMERICAN GET-RICH SCHEME
Alexander gets rich using
his government positions for personal gain.
No surprise, right? But this 1996
Chicago Tribune story – while Alexander was a mere single-digit millionaire -- lays
out some of his spurious land deals from the 20th century and how he
has leveraged his positions in office to personal wealth:
Open Secrets compiled this
listing of assets, updated as of 2014:
http://www.opensecrets.org/pfds/assets.php?year=20100&cid=N00009888
Thursday, June 22, 2017
Myths and Realities of Globalization in 2017 and Beyond
Linguist and intellectual Noam Chomsky and Cambridge economics professor Ha-Joon Chang talk out the powerful, transnational forces that run our lives in this Truthout interview.
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Noam Chomsky Photo by jeanbaptisteparis |
In our story with Noam Chomsky from 2012, he described the U.S. as having become a "senate of the wealthy" and operating as something of a third-world nation. Nothing has happened to change that view.
Friday, June 2, 2017
Forrest Statue Is about Domination, not History
It was Memorial Day, and I decided to see if any history would rub off on me if I visited the Nathan Bedford Forrest monument in Memphis, Tennessee. After all, that's the rationale Mississippi legislators and others give for keeping the 22-foot tall bronze idol to the rebel general, slave trader and first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.
We posted this in Daily Kos, and here's the link.
We posted this in Daily Kos, and here's the link.
![]() |
Beneath the boot of the Confederate general |
Wednesday, May 24, 2017
Sessions of the Old South is Poster Boy for the New Slavery
Jefferson
Beauregard Sessions is a buggy whip in an age of self-driving cars.
While
Sessions’ mentality is circa 1843, he strangely exists in the 21st
century and is the poster boy for the New Slavery.
![]() |
Attorney General Jefferson Beauregard Sessions |
Like with slavery, Americans are stuck and cannot get out.
Monday, May 22, 2017
The Death of the Republic
Author and prize-winning former New York Times war correspondent Chris Hedges lays out why getting rid of Trump, as some want, will not fix the fact that democracy is dead. We are living in a shadow democracy, where we give lip service to constitutional rights from time to time -- even though courts have largely neutered them -- and we have what's left of the trappings of democracy, like periodic access to voting for some.
Just like when narcisistic Roman emperor Commodus was replaced in the year 192, things did not get better for regular citizens. The Pretorian Guard, counterpart to our over-militarized policing, soon took over Rome and sold the position of emperor to the highest bidder.
There are more of Us, regular citizens who are in the same boat, than Them, a Ruling Class that can operate with unimaginable power, wealth-gathering and impunity. Recommended reading:
'The Death of the Republic' published at Op-Ed News.
https://www.opednews.com/articles/The-Death-of-the-Republic-by-Chris-Hedges-Deep-State_Fascism-Cant-Happen-Here-170522-917.html
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Police Department Sniper in Ferguson, MO |
There are more of Us, regular citizens who are in the same boat, than Them, a Ruling Class that can operate with unimaginable power, wealth-gathering and impunity. Recommended reading:
'The Death of the Republic' published at Op-Ed News.
https://www.opednews.com/articles/The-Death-of-the-Republic-by-Chris-Hedges-Deep-State_Fascism-Cant-Happen-Here-170522-917.html
Monday, May 15, 2017
'Insulted' Police Oversight Board Fires Back at Police Chief, City Council Rep
Stung by rejection from the police chief and dismissed by their City Council liaison, members of Memphis’ citizen police oversight board dug in their heels and insisted their mission matters.
At the Civilian Law Enforcement Review Board’s monthly meeting today, the board voted to ask City Council Chairman Berlin Boyd to replace councilman Worth Morgan as the liaison from council to CLERB. They also voted to ask police director Michael Rallings to require police officers to appear and testify when the board hears citizen complaints of police abuses.
“I was insulted. All of us should have been,” CLERB Chairman Rev. Ralph White said of Rallings’ letters of rejection to four cases in which CLERB said citizens were mistreated and recommended that Rallings discipline officers.
COUNCILMAN MIA
Morgan last attended a CLERB meeting June 14, 2016, and at that time he was pushing a new ordinance which would have stripped CLERB of a path to subpoena evidence and testimony.
Morgan recently told the press that he saw no reason for CLERB to exist. He was appointed CLERB liaison last year by then-council chairman Kemp Conrad, with the apparent intention to cripple CLERB, somewhat like Donald Trump cabinet appointees.
CLERB can only make recommendations to the police director; the citizen board has no power or authority to require sanctions or even notations in an officer’s personnel file. Upon hearing how Rallings had rejected CLERB’s findings, some citizens asked if CLERB is meaningless, anyway, without authority. However, CLERB can at minimum and with media coverage shine light on how police treat citizens and how MPD brass view citizen complaints.
BACK TO THE DRAWING BOARD
Rather than slinking away in defeat, CLERB members were defiant after Rallings blew off the board’s months of work. The board also voted to resubmit the same cases to Rallings with more detailed information outlining how they had arrived at their decisions.
"We have to convince him. I think we need to tell the story as we hear it from the person who is talking to us," said CLERB member Casey Bryant, a lawyer.
Rather than slinking away in defeat, CLERB members were defiant after Rallings blew off the board’s months of work. The board also voted to resubmit the same cases to Rallings with more detailed information outlining how they had arrived at their decisions.
"We have to convince him. I think we need to tell the story as we hear it from the person who is talking to us," said CLERB member Casey Bryant, a lawyer.
Friday, April 21, 2017
CLERB awaits response from police director on four citizen complaints
The next chapter in the story of citizen oversight of police
in Memphis will be written by director of police services Michael Rallings.
![]() |
Paul Garner testifies at November 2017 CLERB hearing |
After hearing complaints from four citizens since November that police had
mistreated them in various ways, the Civilian Law Enforcement Review Board
wrote letters to Rallings on April 11 stating they determined officers had violated MPD policy
and procedures, and thus they disagreed with internal affairs that the
citizens’ complaints were invalid. CLERB also recommended certain actions from the police director, such as reprimands and training.
Rallings now must respond to CLERB and within 10 days per
the city ordinance under which CLERB operates.
Rallings must decide if he agrees or disagrees with the board’s findings
and if so, if he is willing to institute CLERB’s recommendations regarding the
officers. CLERB can only make
recommendations; the board has no power to discipline an officer or require any
actions by the police director.
Thursday, April 20, 2017
How this brown girl got woke in America
Self-described “Woke Brown Girl” Prisca Dorcas Mojica
Rodriguez seems an unlikely one to hold a masters degree from Vanderbilt University
divinity school.
“Many of my peers went on to be preachers. I went in a Christian and came out a
pagan. I came out like this to religion,”
said says, flicking her middle finger upward.
A storyteller and writer who created a platform called
Latina Rebels, Rodriguez last night articulated her struggle to
define herself on her own terms at a Rhodes College gathering organized by
Latinx Student Association.
Rodriguez warns the audience that she is abrasive and
disruptive and tells jokes -- and she says “fuck” a lot – all designed to bust
out of how parents, professors and white people want to corral who she is.
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Foundational fascism and the brake on democracy
Italian dictator Mussolini effected fascism in his country by the government taking over the corporations.
In the United States, the corporations took over the government.
Monday, April 17, 2017
Why Authoritarians Hate the Arts
It is no incidental decision that the Trump administration wants to cut funding for the arts, which will cripple or shutter programs in communities all over America.
From the arts spring creativity, unbridled thinking and -- anathema to authoritarian rulers -- dissent. Dissent and the press in the Trump era are under attack, and a blow to the arts, such as contained in the Trump budget, is a furthering of that attack.
This New York Times story lays it out.
From the arts spring creativity, unbridled thinking and -- anathema to authoritarian rulers -- dissent. Dissent and the press in the Trump era are under attack, and a blow to the arts, such as contained in the Trump budget, is a furthering of that attack.
This New York Times story lays it out.
Time to retire "black on black crime"
It's time to retire "black on black crime" as a catch phrase.
That sound bite creates a mental frame, which may mean different things to different people, that extends stereotypes and creates a handy pivot for police and elected officials who want to deflect criticism.
Former Memphis city council member Harold Collins opines in this Commercial Appeal story.
That sound bite creates a mental frame, which may mean different things to different people, that extends stereotypes and creates a handy pivot for police and elected officials who want to deflect criticism.
Former Memphis city council member Harold Collins opines in this Commercial Appeal story.
Friday, April 7, 2017
'Straight Outta Memphis'
Races, Religions, Issues Converge at MLK Murder Anniversary March
VIDEO BELOW
Memphis, Tennessee, was the center of a national day of action for labor and oppressed Americans on the 49th anniversary of the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. April 4, 2017.
Memphis, Tennessee, was the center of a national day of action for labor and oppressed Americans on the 49th anniversary of the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. April 4, 2017.
Fight for $15, Black Lives Matter and national religious and labor leaders came to continue the fight King died for. Memphis organizers led Fight for $15's national day of action, and there was a unified message, "straight outta Memphis," as Rev. William Barber said, that all peoples are connected in the struggle and must work together. Barber is president of the North Carolina NAACP and leader of Moral Mondays.
Mary Kay Henry, international president of the two-million-member Service Employees International Union (SEIU), joined Barber and others in firing up the crowd of more than a thousand before they marched from Memphis City Hall to the National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel.
Fight for $15 seeks to raise the minimum wage so that hourly employees, such as restaurant and home health care workers, can form a union and make a living from their jobs.
Mary Kay Henry, international president of the two-million-member Service Employees International Union (SEIU), joined Barber and others in firing up the crowd of more than a thousand before they marched from Memphis City Hall to the National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel.
Fight for $15 seeks to raise the minimum wage so that hourly employees, such as restaurant and home health care workers, can form a union and make a living from their jobs.
“America, here is your wake-up call, straight outta Memphis,” Barber said. “You crucified Dr. King, but we are the resurrection.”
As political rallies and marches go, this one was set apart by a marching band -- and what march is not better with a band? -- the Talladega College Great Tornado Band and its dancing Dega Diamonds, who earlier this year had appeared at Mardi Gras and the Presidential inauguration in Washington.
As political rallies and marches go, this one was set apart by a marching band -- and what march is not better with a band? -- the Talladega College Great Tornado Band and its dancing Dega Diamonds, who earlier this year had appeared at Mardi Gras and the Presidential inauguration in Washington.
#WatchTheWatchers
Sunday, April 2, 2017
Goodbye, Jerome Wright and a Free Press
I double-dog dare you -- Mark Russell at The
Commercial Appeal, David Plazas at The Tennessean -- or USA Today Network Tennessee -- and Gannett CEO Bob Dickey
in McLean, Virginia -- anybody, to run this opinion piece. I mean This, not a sentimental, boo-hoo letter to editor about axing editorial staff at newspapers. Or else, Gannett has zero credibility.
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Dania Helou: Who Will Watch the Watchers when there are no reporters left? Moore Media Images |
Jerome
Wright hanging up his green eye shade was the last straw for me, although Jerome says
he retired, unlike 15 or so editorial staffers at The Commercial Appeal in Memphis, Tennessee, and more at other Gannett properties in Tennessee. Green eye shade might be too 1930-ish for
Jerome's 1970s-forward generation of journalists. But, in what he is calling a farewell column, The Commercial Appeal’s opinion editor
recalls a vastly different era of newspapering. It
moved through a series of technology changes, such as from manual typewriters to computers, from hot metal type to offset printing, before the market for printed news withered in the face of the Internet.
Nowadays,
reporters and editors don't actually touch much more than a keyboard – let
alone melted metal to make a newspaper -- and newsrooms sound like an insurance
office or bank -- not like the raucous scenes in old movies. Yet, Jerome came up as that era was ending and
technology was taking over, before capitalism ultimately smashed the free
press.
THOSE
DAYS
In
those days, every city over 100,000 population had two daily papers. There were glue pots on every desk, and cut and paste really meant it. There was noise even when the
presses upstairs were not thundering in the old Ford glass plant at The Commercial Appeal morning newspaper in Memphis, and there
was lots of yelling, like editors hollering, "Copy!"
to summon a "copy boy" or "copy girl," usually a college journalism student, to fetch this or that piece of copy or something else.
In
those days, press releases were not emailed, texted, tweeted or even faxed,
they were mailed in – or even hand-carried, like when a World Football League
team on the edge of its existence would send over the beat writer’s favorite
cheerleader – wearing her uniform -- to
hand-deliver it while every guy in the newsroom gawked.
Jerome
and others endured the changing technology and business model – I don’t
know
how he stood it for 46 years -- but somebody had to do it, and I am glad he
did.
![]() |
Jerome Wright in 1974 Commercial Appeal photo |
THE
SUBURBAN ITCH
In
Jerome’s final work, he was grasping for memories. There is one Jerome Wright column that he
left out, but it and the acquittal of George Zimmerman for killing Trayvon Martin later led me to the idea for our comedy short film,
“The Suburban Itch,” a role reversal of a film which may be described as Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner meets Blackish in 10 minutes.
As
I recall from his story, Jerome was jogging at twilight, and a car load of
rednecks drove slowly behind him and razzed him. One threw a bottle at him. Jerome took it like, What is a black guy like
you doing running in a mostly white neighborhood?
In
“The Suburban Itch,” we turned that upside down, and a white young man is hassled
by police upon suspicion while running-while-white on Chelsea near
Hollywood in mostly black North Memphis.
USA
TODAY AND JOHN SEIGENTHALER
When
I tried to post Jerome’s farewell column to Facebook, the Gannett website did
not function, did not hook me up to Facebook – which is exactly how The Tennessean
website looks and works, or does not work, and it drove home one more time how we now
have homogeneous journalism in Tennessee.
To
hide behind euphemistic titles like “storytelling coach” and “consumer
experience director,” like The Tennessean
staff, just won’t cut it. That does not
fool anybody who knows centralized reporting takes the local edge off
news. There used to be veteran state
politics reporters at newspapers in the state’s largest cities, and
Memphis had Richard Locker, Knoxville had Tom Humphreys and Nashville had Larry Daughtery. Now the state legislature,
which is already corrupt and misguided enough, will get away with even more as
there will only be the Nashville newspaper covering the legislature and the
governor’s shenanigans.
John
Seigenthaler is rolling over in his grave.
I know it for a fact. When
Seigenthaler became the founding editor of Gannett’s USA Today, little did he
know it would lead to a free press and the public interest coming in last place
to stock price and bonuses in the C-suite.
By the way, in news of recent cuts to editorial staff, I missed seeing
where Gannett’s CEO and executives were going to do their part to make the numbers work by foregoing their stock options.
The
last time I saw Seigenthaler was 2012 when he was 84, two years before he died. This
is a man who as Bobby Kennedy’s aide was knocked unconscious by a Klansman in
Montgomery while he sought to quell violence against Freedom Riders. He was not talking to me about consolidation
of assets, or convergence of media, or earnings per share. He was worried that a woman was wrongly in
state prison, and he was working to shed light on her story and get her some
relief.
We
are going to miss that sort of thing in the press. But, we better not. We better do something. A robust and free press goes hand in hand
with democracy. As an unhinged President
bashes and punishes the press, and as dissent and the First and Fourth
Amendments are under attack everywhere, including in Memphis where we have police
and a mayor conducting surveillance of citizens, there is a choice: democracy and a free press, or a further
spiral into the abyss of a system that rewards those who least need help and
despises those who do.
With
the demise of local journalism, in Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville, everywhere,
there will be a hole in the story. Looming ever larger will be the question
posed by the title of our documentary: Who
Will Watch the Watchers?
Gary Moore operates the
non-profit Citizens Media Resource and Moore Media & Entertainment, which
makes films about social justice issues.
Moore formerly was a sportswriter at The Commercial Appeal.
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After the newspaper went from hot type to offset printing, editors would use this form to mark up printing instructions. Nothing like this exists today. |
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