Wednesday, May 29, 2013

R.I. Gov. Chafee to become Democrat, run for 2nd term

Chafee previously served as a Republican senator, then bolted the GOP to become governor. He's endorsed President Obama twice.

WASHINGTON — Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee, an independent who used to be a Republican, intends to run for a second term next year -- but as a Democrat.

A Democratic source with knowledge of Chafee's decision confirmed the news to USA TODAY. The source requested anonymity because the source was not authorized to speak ahead of Chafee.

Chafee, elected in 2010, had insisted he would seek a second term despite low job-approval ratings in public opinion polls and hinted he could join the party of President Obama, whom he has endorsed twice.

The governor is expected to announce his new party registration as early as Thursday.
White House spokesman Jay Carney said Wednesday that "the president welcomes Gov. Chafee to the party."

Chafee previously served as a U.S. senator from 1999 to 2007, but as a Republican who bucked the party on the Iraq War and declined to support President George W. Bush for a second term.
Rhode Island's economy has been hard hit and most of Chafee's time in office has been spent dealing with the state's red ink. The state unemployment rate, which was over 11% when Chafee took office, was at 8.8% in April.

A poll taken by Brown University in February showed Chafee had a 25.5% job-approval rating among Rhode Island voters, compared with 73% who said they disapproved of the way he was running the state.

Chafee is the son of John Chafee, a former U.S. senator and governor who died in 1999, who was synonymous with the Republican politics in Rhode Island. The younger Chafee was appointed to serve out his father's Senate term and won election in his own right in 2000.

Lincoln Chafee bolted the GOP in 2007, after losing re-election to the Senate to Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse. The following year, Chafee gave Barack Obama the first of his two endorsements.

Last year, Chafee was a featured speaker at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte. He touted touted Obama's support for same-sex marriage, the environment and abortion rights, and denounced his former Republican Party for its stance on Iraq and Afghanistan and for federal budgets.

"Lincoln Chafee always marched to the beat of his own drummer," said Jennifer Duffy, a political analyst with the Cook Political Report.

Chafee is likely to face a crowded Democratic primary. Rhode Island Treasurer Gina Raimondo and Providence Mayor Angel Taveras, both prominent Democrats, have already been looking at next year's governor's race.

Duffy said it's not clear whether Chafee's latest party switch will help him. The newly minted Democrat will have to convince activists in the state and nation to back his campaign, over those of Raimondo and Taveras.

"A Democratic primary with two opponents who will be well-funded is a tougher road," she said. "I've been talking to a lot of Democrats and I don't get the sense that there all in behind Chafee. It's not in their best interest to get involved in a primary like this."

Monday, May 20, 2013

Obama's Meeting With IRS Union Leader Not a Smoking Gun

May 20, 2013 RSS Feed Print
 
The conservative blogosphere is up in arms over what appears to be a smoking gun in the Internal Revenue Service scandal.

[POLL: Scandals Not Sticking to Obama]

The American Spectator is reporting that President Barack Obama met with the president of the IRS union a day before the tax agency began targeting tea party groups, citing a meeting between National Treasury Employees Union President Colleen Kelley and Obama on March 31, 2010 listed in the White House visitor log.

A team of specialists was formed to look at political cases of tax-exempt groups in April 2010, according to the Treasury Department's inspector general report on the IRS targeting of conservative groups.

The timing appears fishy, but a closer examination of Kelley's visit reveals she was visiting the White House to participate in the "Workplace Flexibility Forum," a March 2010 event that was about the state of flexible work arrangements. According to a April 2010 story in the federal trade worker publication FCW, Kelley spoke at the forum about the benefits of teleworking and other flexible work schedules. FCW reported that the event was hosted by Obama and first lady Michelle Obama.

The visitor log also notes that Kelley's visit took place in the "South Court Auditorium," a large room in the Old Executive Office Building across from the White House - not exactly a prime location for a private meeting.

Kelley's office didn't immediately respond to request for more information about her March 2010 appearance, but we will update when we hear back.

Friday, May 10, 2013

NC House passes bill allowing concealed weapons at college campuses, bars


by Michelle Saxton

Wednesday, May 8, 2013



Staff photo by Joshua Curry
The North Carolina General Assembly passed House Bill 937 on Tuesday, May 7 affecting firearms policies on college campuses, and inside bars and restaurants.



North Carolina lawmakers have passed a bill to increase penalties for certain crimes in which firearms are used and to also allow people with concealed handgun permits to bring firearms into restaurants and bars or to be kept in a locked vehicle on college or university campuses.
 
The bill, which passed its third reading 78-42 on Tuesday, May 7, has been supported by the North Carolina Sheriffs’ Association but opposed by some university chancellors.
 
“House Bill 937 is an effort to protect the rights of individuals who abide by our gun laws and to increase penalties on those who do not,” bill sponsor Rep. Jacqueline Schaffer, R-Mecklenberg, said in an online audio feed of a bill debate Monday, May 6. Schaffer, an attorney, added the bill would make it a crime to allow children access to firearms without supervision and parental consent.
 
But several lawmakers raised concerns about allowing concealed handguns in places where they currently are banned.
 
People do not need to go out to dinner fearing there might be an accidental discharge or bar room brawl or worrying about irate fans in stadiums, said Rep. Deborah Ross, D-Wake, who added colleges and universities have said “no thank you” to the bill.
 
“Why are you giving people something that they emphatically do not want and that will subject them to acts of violence in places where they already feel safe?” Ross, a consultant, said during the May 6 session. “This is not something that makes this state a better place. It’s something that puts us on Stephen Colbert.”
 
Cape Fear Community College President Ted Spring had not yet made a public statement on the bill, David Hardin, director of marketing and public relations, said May 7.
 
“It’s definitely something that we’re watching very carefully,” Hardin said. “If it becomes law it will affect our current policy on campus.”
 
University of North Carolina Wilmington Chancellor Gary Miller released a statement in late April, saying the potential increase in gun-related incidents on campus is not worth the minimal convenience the bill would offer concealed-carry permit holders.
 
“Allowing people to store weapons in their cars does not in any way benefit their personal safety while on campus; the idea of people having the time and capacity to retreat to their vehicles to arm themselves during a threat has very little chance of occurring,” Miller said. “The realities, however, are much more harsh. We will face the possibility of guns being stolen from vehicles by people who are already demonstrating a disregard for the law by breaking into cars — and now could be armed with stolen handguns.”
 
North Carolina is among 22 states that currently ban carrying concealed weapons on college campuses, while 23 other states allow individual colleges and universities to ban or allow concealed carry weapons and five states allow it, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
 
Many students must work while in school and may have to commute during late hours in the dark, and they should have the right to protect themselves, said bill sponsor Rep. John Faircloth, R-Guilford, a real estate broker.
 
“What we’re saying here is not that a person can walk on to the campus of one of our universities, strap on his six-shooter and make his way through campus as a big man,” Faircloth said during the May 6 session.
Rep. Larry Pittman, R-Cabarrus, a pastor, said the bill does not go far enough, including with concerns that guns could be stolen from cars.
 
“I would say the best way to deal with that is allow them to carry it in the classroom,” Pittman said.
“The last thing I want is someone to have a gun in my class,” Rep. Rick Glazier, D-Cumberland, an attorney who has taught at Fayetteville State University and Campbell University School of Law, said later in the debate. “I’m a tough grader.”
 
The bill would not allow guns in college classrooms.
 
Rep. Darren Jackson, D-Wake, spoke of the 2008 District of Columbia v. Heller Supreme Court ruling about the second amendment, which noted that right has limits.
 
Alcohol and firearms do not mix, said Jackson, an attorney and gun owner.
 
“When I go out to a restaurant with my family …I don’t want to have to worry about the guy next to me, if he’s had too much to drink,” Jackson said, later adding, “The more places we allow guns the more accidents we’re going to have happen.”
 
Of New Hanover County’s representatives, Reps. Rick Catlin and Ted Davis Jr., both Republicans, voted for the bill, and Rep. Susi Hamilton, a Democrat, voted against it.
 
Several amendments were tabled without discussion May 6 that would have required universal background checks for the private transfer of firearms, increased penalties for carrying a concealed handgun while consuming alcohol and limited the size of ammunition magazines.
 
Meanwhile, the House also passed a bill 110-8 on May 7 to allow judges and court clerks to carry concealed handguns if they have a permit. All three New Hanover County representatives voted for it.
Davis, among House Bill 405’s sponsors, has said not all judges want to carry weapons, but some would like to because they get threats on their lives.
 
“They felt like it was needed for their protection,” Davis, an attorney, said in a phone interview Friday, May 3.
Both bills were to be sent to the Senate.
 
Meanwhile, lawmakers were expected to be busy the next couple weeks making sure House bills get passed and ready for the Senate — and vice versa — by the May 16 crossover deadline.
 
“Any bills that anyone wants to have the possibility of becoming law … (have) to be passed by the respective chamber by the crossover date,” Davis said.
 

Wednesday, May 8, 2013


Air Force strips 17 officers of nuclear watch command

This file photo provided by the National Park Service shows the inside of the deactivated Delta Nine Launch Facility near Wall, South Dakota The inside of the deactivated Delta Nine nuclear missile launch facility near Wall, South Dakota

 

The US Air Force has stripped 17 officers of the authority to control nuclear intercontinental ballistic missiles, US media have reported.

The unprecedented action was taken in April, after the unit's deputy commander wrote in an email the programme was suffering "rot".

The story was first reported by the Associated Press.

The Air Force's top official told a Senate hearing that the revelation shows it has strengthened inspections.

Michael Donley, the Air Force secretary, said he was confident that the nuclear missile force was secure.
24-hour watch
In an email initially obtained by the AP, Lieutenant Colonel Jay Folds wrote that drastic action was needed because "we didn't wake up" after an underwhelming inspection the month before.

The 91st Operations Group at Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota, the unit responsible for 15 Minuteman III missile launch control centres, received an satisfactory review overall in March.

But the unit received the equivalent of a D grade on the test of its mastery of the missile launch operations.

Minuteman launch crews have long been marginalised and demoralised by the fact that the Air Force's culture and fast-track careers revolve around flying planes”
 
End Quote Bruce Blair Former ICBM officer

Lt Col Folds also complained of unwarranted questioning of orders by launch crews and the failure of more senior officers to report infractions.

"We're discovering such rot in the crew force," he wrote, that the unit was accepting violations of safety rules and code compromises "all in the name of not inconveniencing yourselves".

The 17 officers were removed from duty of 24-hour shifts watching over nuclear missiles that can strike targets across the globe. Inside each underground launch control capsule, two officers stand "alert" at all times, ready to launch an ICBM upon presidential order.

The Air Force said the lapses never put the security of the nuclear force at risk and that the officers pulled from the watch will receive more training. They are expected to return to normal duty within two months.

The service has removed officers from nuclear authority before, but never so many at one time.

The move comes after a 2008 Pentagon report excoriated the Air Force for a series of blunders, including a bomber's mistaken flight across the country armed with nuclear-tipped missiles.

The top civilian and military leaders of the Air Force resigned over the report.

It had taken numerous steps since then to improve the force's nuclear performance.
Deep malaise
At a Senate hearing on Wednesday, Mr Donley said the launch control officers were relatively junior in rank and needed to be reminded continually of the importance of "this awesome responsibility".

Michael Donley, Secretary of the Air Force, gestures as he testifies during the Senate Appropriations Defense Subcommittee hearing on the Air Force Fiscal Year 2014 Budget Request, 8 May 2013 Air Force Secretary Michael Donley said the nation's nuclear missile force is secure

The Air Force's chief of staff also endorsed the handling of the situation by Minot Air Force base officials and said it had been "more of an attitude problem than a proficiency problem".

But at least one senator was not calmed by official assurances. Illinois Democrat Richard Durbin, chairman of the Senate appropriations defence subcommittee, expressed outrage, saying the AP report revealed a problem that "could not be more troubling".

Bruce Blair, who served as an Air Force ICBM launch control officer in the 1970s and is a co-founder of nuclear weapons elimination group Global Zero, said the email points to a broader problem.

"The nuclear air force is suffering from a deep malaise caused by the declining relevance of their mission since the Cold War's end over 20 years ago," Mr Blair said.

"Minuteman launch crews have long been marginalised and demoralised by the fact that the Air Force's culture and fast-track careers revolve around flying planes, not sitting in underground bunkers baby-sitting nuclear-armed missiles."

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Workers Claim Race Bias as Farms Rely on Immigrants

  • Grant Blankenship for The New York Times
  • Grant Blankenship for The New York Times
  • Grant Blankenship for The New York Times
  • Grant Blankenship for The New York Times
  • Grant Blankenship for The New York Times
  • Grant Blankenship for The New York Times
  • Grant Blankenship for The New York Times
  • Grant Blankenship for The New York Times
NEXT
Working for hours on end under a punishing sun, the pickers are said to be crowded into squalid camps, driven without a break and even cheated of wages.

VIDALIA, Ga. — For years, labor unions and immigrant rights activists have accused large-scale farmers, like those harvesting sweet Vidalia onions here this month, of exploiting Mexican guest workers. Working for hours on end under a punishing sun, the pickers are said to be crowded into squalid camps, driven without a break and even cheated of wages.
 
But as Congress weighs immigration legislation expected to expand the guest worker program, another group is increasingly crying foul — Americans, mostly black, who live near the farms and say they want the field work but cannot get it because it is going to Mexicans. They contend that they are illegally discouraged from applying for work and treated shabbily by farmers who prefer the foreigners for their malleability.
      
“They like the Mexicans because they are scared and will do anything they tell them to,” said Sherry Tomason, who worked for seven years in the fields here, then quit. Last month she and other local residents filed a federal lawsuit against a large grower of onions, Stanley Farms, alleging that it mistreated them and paid them less than it paid the Mexicans.
      
The suit is one of a number of legal actions containing similar complaints against farms, including a large one in Moultrie, Ga., where Americans said they had been fired because of their race and national origin, given less desirable jobs and provided with fewer work opportunities than Mexican guest workers. Under a consent decree with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the farm, Southern Valley, agreed to make certain changes
.
With local unemployment about 10 percent and the bureaucracy for hiring foreigners onerous — guest workers have to be imported and housed and require extensive paperwork — it would seem natural for farmers to hire from their own communities, which they did a generation ago.
In fact, the farmers say, they would dearly like to.
      
“We have tried to fill our labor locally,” said Brian Stanley, an owner of Stanley Farms, which is being sued by Ms. Tomason and others. “But we couldn’t get enough workers, and that was hindering our growth. So we turned to the guest worker program.”
      
The vast majority of farm workers in the country are not in the guest worker program but are simply unauthorized immigrants. The plan to place those workers on a path to legal status would reduce the chances of their being exploited, the bill’s sponsors say, and thereby also improve the status of Americans who feel they cannot compete against vulnerable foreigners.
      
Mr. Stanley, like other farmers, argues that Americans who say they want the work end up quitting because it is hard, leaving the crops to rot in the fields. But the situation is filled with cultural and racial tensions.
      
Even many of the Americans who feel mistreated acknowledge that the Mexicans who arrive on buses for a limited period are incredibly efficient, often working into the night seven days a week to increase their pay.
      
“We are not going to run all the time,” said Henry Rhymes, who was fired — unfairly, he says — from Southern Valley after a week on the job. “We are not Mexicans.”
      
Jon Schwalls, director of operations at Southern Valley, made a similar point.
      
“When Jose gets on the bus to come here from Mexico he is committed to the work,” he said. “It’s like going into the military. He leaves his family at home. The work is hard, but he’s ready. A domestic wants to know: What’s the pay? What are the conditions? In these communities, I am sorry to say, there are no fathers at home, no role models for hard work. They want rewards without input.”
Such generalizations lead lawyers — and residents — to say there are racist undertones to the farms’ policies.
      
“I am not arguing that agricultural work is a good job,” said Dawson Morton, a lawyer who focuses on farm workers’ rights at the Georgia Legal Services Program, a nonprofit law firm. “I am arguing that it could be a better job. If you want experienced people, train them. Just because people are easier to supervise, agricultural employers shouldn’t be able to import them. It is not true that Americans don’t want the work. What the farmers are really saying is that blacks just don’t want to work.”
      
To which J. Larry Stine, an Atlanta lawyer for Stanley Farms and other big farms, replied: “The farmers are not racist or against Americans. They have crops to be picked, and they see that domestics just don’t have their hearts in it.”
      
Jim Knoepp of the Southern Poverty Law Center, a nonprofit group that has campaigned against the guest worker program, said that farm work, like other difficult labor, could be made attractive to Americans at reasonable cost, and that farmers should not be excused from doing so.
“There used to be lots of American pickers who moved around the country,” he said. “But wages have stagnated and conditions have deteriorated, and agriculture is unwilling to make these jobs attractive. Think of trash collection. That’s not very appealing, either. But if you offer a decent wage and conditions, people do it.”
      
Cindy Hahamovitch, an expert on guest worker programs at the College of William and Mary in Virginia, said that in the 1970s about two-thirds of farm workers were Americans and a third were foreign, and that a decade later the proportion was reversed. Today, she said, the vast majority of farm workers around the country are immigrants, although not in the guest worker program.
      
Republicans in Congress, mindful of the Democrats’ desire to bring legal status to the nation’s 11 million unauthorized immigrants, have made an expansion of the guest worker program a key element of any deal. Current proposals include increasing the number and category of temporary workers to the dairy and construction industries, and increasing their stays from a matter of months to three years so that employers have the workers they say they need.
      
The guest workers who are planting cucumbers for Southern Valley and harvesting onions for Stanley Farms are among 10,000 holders of H-2A visas in Georgia this year and 85,000 nationally. They are generally guaranteed a minimum wage of just over $9 an hour, but are paid per piece and can boost those wages by increasing their productivity. Other workers, known as H-2B and numbering around 65,000, labor in other businesses in which there is a demand for temporary or seasonal workers, including hotels.
      
Employers must show that they have tried to hire Americans through advertising and other means and that they could not attract enough of them before resorting to the H-2 system. In the litigation that resulted in the consent decree with Southern Valley, the federal government argued that the effort had not been made or had been intentionally not serious. Excuses were used not to hire locals or to fire them — training was minimal, and people were fired when they were less skilled than others who had been doing the work for years.
      
“You’ve got some people who don’t work as fast as Mexicans, but they don’t teach you, and it can be learned,” said Misty Johnson, who was fired and then rehired by Southern Valley as part of the consent decree.
      
For the past few months, Southern Valley has been required to provide daily bus transportation to the farm and demonstrate that it was training and retaining Americans. But a recent inspection of those efforts left federal officials unimpressed.
      
Southern Valley officials make no secret of their belief that the consent decree — the free bus, the orientation program they now run and the training — is a waste of their time and money. They assert that there is no discrimination and that they would prefer to hire locals if they could.
      
Lawyers for the local workers say the system is rigged to favor low-cost foreign labor because, given the conditions and the pay, no one else will do it.
      
“If you can’t find locals to do the work, why is the answer to bring in people who have little protection and not grant them legal status?” asked Mr. Knoepp of the Southern Poverty Law Center. “If we need them, why not bring them in and make them legal citizens with real protections? The answer is because then they wouldn’t keep working in the fields given the conditions of that work. They would do something else. It doesn’t have to be this way.”

Friday, May 3, 2013

Sources: U.S. believes Israel has conducted an airstrike into Syria

By Barbara Starr, CNN Pentagon Correspondent
updated 8:32 PM EDT, Fri May 3, 2013
Watch this video

U.S. officials: Israel airstrike on Syria

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Sources say a strike mostly likely occurred in the Thursday-Friday time frame
  • The U.S. does not believe Israeli warplanes entered Syrian airspace
(CNN) -- The United States believes Israel has conducted an airstrike into Syria, two U.S. officials tell CNN.

U.S. and Western intelligence agencies are reviewing classified data showing Israel most likely conducted a strike in the Thursday-Friday time frame, according to both officials. This is the same time frame that the U.S. collected additional data showing Israel was flying a high number of warplanes over Lebanon.

One official said the United States had limited information so far and could not yet confirm those are the specific warplanes that conducted a strike. Based on initial indications, the U.S. does not believe Israeli warplanes entered Syrian airspace to conduct the strikes.

Both officials said there is no reason to believe Israel struck at a chemical weapons storage facilities. The Israelis have long said they would strike at any targets that prove to be the transfer of any kinds of weapons to Hezbollah or other terrorist groups, as well as at any effort to smuggle Syrian weapons into Lebanon that could threaten Israel.

The Lebanese army website listed 16 flights by Israeli warplanes penetrating Lebanon's airspace from Thursday evening through Friday afternoon local time.

The Israeli military had no comment. But a source in the Israeli defense establishment told CNN's Sara Sidner, "We will do whatever is necessary to stop the transfer of weapons from Syria to terrorist organizations. We have done it in the past and we will do it if necessary the future."

Michael Savage Trashes ‘Fake Conservative’ Hannity: ‘One Of The Most Shallow Men In Media’


Unbeknownst to those Americans who do not listen to conservative talk radio, there exists a long-standing feud between some of the most well-known names in the business. The most widely-known battle has been between Mark Levin and The Savage Nation host Michael Savage — the two have had it out over a variety of issues, including claims of who has greater listenership.

It seems as though Savage also has beef with Levin’s good friend Sean Hannity, mostly on the grounds that the Fox News host is a “fake conservative.” On his Monday evening show, Savage took to bashing Hannity for what he believes is the cable news host’s desire to go to war with Syria.
“Some of the so-called conservatives are in favor of American men dying,” Savage began. “For example… Sean Hannity — who is known to be one of the, let us say, most shallow men in the America media, who gives conservatism its reputation of being shallow — back in 2012, called for war in Syria.”

Reacting to the old Fox clip in which Hannity decried the “prescription for disaster” seen in Syria now that the regime has the capabilities to use chemical weapons, Savage said: “You’re like a bad pharmacist. And if anyone takes your pill, they’re liable to get poisoned rather than cured. Because what you’re doing there is putting out so many ideas that are fraudulent that it gives true conservatives a bad name.”

Savage then went on to lambast “another fake conservative” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and mock him as a “gun for hire” and “super-lobbyist” for “American boys dying” in a potential conflict with Syria.