
Ann Richards has passed. Her feisty rhetoric and ornery turn of phrase was always fun to watch and to read (and her comic timing was spot on), but it was her spirit and her spunk which illuminated everything she did. Texas bloggers are understandably devastated — here’s a great post with links to some writing about Governor Richards and her role in Texas and beyond. And I found a great interview with Richards on the Vermont Woman website that makes for a fun read.
But, for my money, her speech to the 1988 Democratic National Convention, remains the quintessential Ann Richards moment — and it is just as relevent today as it was back then.
Twelve years ago Barbara Jordan, another Texas woman, Barbara made the keynote address to this convention, and two women in a hundred and sixty years is about par for the course.
But if you give us a chance, we can perform. After all, Ginger Rogers did everything that Fred Astaire did. She just did it backwards and in high heels….
I was born during the Depression in a little community just outside Waco, and I grew up listening to Franklin Roosevelt on the radio. Well, it was back then that I came to understand the small truths and the hardships that bind neighbors together. Those were real people with real problems and they had real dreams about getting out of the Depression. I can remember summer nights when we’d put down what we called the Baptist pallet, and we listened to the grown-ups talk. I can still hear the sound of the dominoes clicking on the marble slab my daddy had found for a tabletop. I can still hear the laughter of the men telling jokes you weren’t supposed to hear — talkin’ about how big that old buck deer was, laughin’ about mama puttin’ Clorox in the well when the frog fell in.
They talked about war and Washington and what this country needed. They talked straight talk. And it came from people who were living their lives as best they could. And that’s what we’re gonna do tonight. We’re gonna tell how the cow ate the cabbage….
Now, in contrast, the greatest nation of the free world has had a leader for eight straight years that has pretended that he can not hear our questions over the noise of the helicopters. And we know he doesn’t wanna answer. But we have a lot of questions. And when we get our questions asked, or there is a leak, or an investigation the only answer we get is, “I don’t know,” or “I forgot.”
But you wouldn’t accept that answer from your children. I wouldn’t. Don’t tell me “you don’t know” or “you forgot.” We’re not going to have the America that we want until we elect leaders who are gonna tell the truth; not most days but every day; leaders who don’t forget what they don’t want to remember. And for eight straight years George Bush hasn’t displayed the slightest interest in anything we care about. And now that he’s after a job that he can’t get appointed to, he’s like Columbus discovering America. He’s found child care. He’s found education. Poor George. He can’t help it. He was born with a silver foot in his mouth.
Well, no wonder. No wonder we can’t figure it out. Because the leadership of this nation is telling us one thing on TV and doing something entirely different….
Go back and read the whole thing and see if you don’t agree. America has lost a powerful voice, and we are the lesser for it.
Oh, and speaking of Barbara Jordan, op99 reminded me this morning of meta’s find of this gem of a Jordan moment during the Watergate hearings. Whatever they are putting in Texas water, it sure does grow some awesome women, doesn’t it?
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Made me cry this morning when I heard she’d passed. Why do we lose feisty women when we need more like her?
Vaya con dios, Ms. Richards.
We could use more like her…
Vaya con dios Ann.
RIP to one classy lady and a great example of Fearlessness!
I didn’t even see your comment Rayne, great (or twisted) minds think alike!
Ann Richards was the only reason I ever wanted to be a Texan.
What an awesome woman she was… R.I.P.
Her best:
“Poor George, he was born on third base, and thought he hit a triple…”
Jesus. They shoulda had her speak at the ‘04 convention.
Instead of “poor George,” it would have been “poor us.”
A remarkable woman. A great example. Godspeed.
Christy, I heard an echo in that Barbara Jordan speech.
Subtle, but you can hear how it shaped what she said.
Articulate women, both Jordan and Richards, the kind who took no crap from anyone.
Mothers.
EPU’ed
Breaking CNN…. Bomb blast in Baghdad. 2 U.S. soldiers killed and 29 others (U.S. soldiers) wounded….
Long live the memory of Ann Richards! Long live Helen Thomas, and Molly Ivins! And Arianna. And the many, many other women of courage, integrity and compassion. I will not ever forget Rosa Parks either. These women, and others help endear humanity to me.
1,263 DAYZ AND THE KILLIN’ GOEZ ON AND ON AND…
Sob…sigh…and a little prayer for two great women we could surely use right now.
Why couldn’t a group like Move On sponsor an ad run in strategic states against the Gestapo wiretap bill with just an introduction and Barbra Jordan’s little speech?
Rest in peace, both…may we be granted the strength to advance the meaning of their lives into ours.
KEEP THE FAITH AND DON’T BE AFRAID OF THE BASTARDS!!!
What to expect if the Dems win Congress:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14833983/
EPU’ed
I listened to a bit of the Diane Rehm Show panel this morning about the tribunals, and it was actually instructive. The pro-administration weasel they had on was less annoying than usual, but no less scary, and he provided a preview of the arguments we need to undercut politically before they’re made (logically their points are simple to shoot down, politically is trickier.)
The big one, of course, is the usual GOP law-n-order “these people are terrorists and war criminals, not soldiers or ordinary criminals, and they don’t deserve all these rights.” The logical answer is “if you’re going decide what they deserve the government’s declaration that they’re guilty, why bother to have a trial at all?,” but I’m not sure it’s effective politically.
A related bit of blather was “oh, no, the argument about courts martial and treatment of our soldiers doesn’t apply because we’re talking about war crimes, and that’s very different.” The obvious rejoinder is “you’re willing to trust that our soldiers will never be accused of war crimes by another country?” but that’s a response; I’m trying to come up with pre-emptions.
The best I have so far (based on a point from another panel member) is that we have a Uniform Code of Military Justice that has been refined and tested for decades and works. The administration keeps claiming that they want swift justice, and then making up proceedings as they go along, guaranteeing that there will be delays and screwups. But I don’t know how to turn it into a sound bite.
Some nice speeches in the Senate about Governor Richards. Right now, Senator Reid on cspan2 demanding that some of the redactions to Phase 2 be declassified for the American people.
Redshift, I’d argue that our system in based on 200 years of Constitutional rule of law and we aren’t going to change it, nor give up our ethics and morals of decency and fairness, for anyone, especially terrorists.
From other thread… just checking back in after a renewed sense of empowerment called the local Dem office going by to pick up some signs (to stick on my front lawn which is in terrible need of a mowing) for my local state rep who is running and will also add myself to the list to volunteer for whatver I can….. Thanks again everyone!!!
Also found out last night about Ann Richards. She is the first politician I remember seeing and feeling like she spoke to me. 1988 Democratic convention, the whole poor George speech. That was the dawn of my political awakening (I wasn’t quite old enough to vote yet, but she really made me want to) Unfortunately sometimes a passing is what brings recognition to a person and she is one person this country could use as a role model. The Think Progress page has a quote from her…”In 1995, she said, “I did not want my tombstone to read, ‘She kept a really clean house.’ I think I’d like them to remember me by saying, ‘She opened government to everyone.’”
now Rockefeller up.
Two classy, sharp-as-a-tack ladies!
BTW, Google’s now gone Republican. They’re funneling money into a struggling GOP candidate’s campaign.
Don’t let them use their soft-, er, *spy-* ware for domestic political espionage to the benefit of Republofascists…start deleting those toolbars and gmail accounts.
Dirty bastards!
We may have lost one, but you can’t swing a dead cat around here without hitting a “feisty dame”! And that’s a GOOD thing…
…except for the cat.
Long live the FDL feisty dames!
RIP Ann, off to a better place, one unlikely to be seen by Rove and Shrub who swiftboated her
I hope all women will learn from Ann and Barbara…take chances….be willing to be ridiculed….FIGHT!
They set quite an example for us…now we have to live up to that example.
It takes courage to stand for Peace, Justice, and Liberty.
RIP, Ann.
I think we have this generation’s Barbara Jordans and Ann Richardses right here. And if you don’t feel like you are already you will when you’ve been around the track a few more times. Who better to pick up that torch?
CSPAN2–The section that want redacted is about the alleged Atta mtg and they say the redaction “shields the White House”.
finally– real Senate bizness! watch it if you can.
ooh, Durbin calls out Cheney and his statement on MTP 9/10.
Whenever the sometimes pejorative “broad” was applied to Ann Richards, dammit, I wanted to be a “broad” too. What an example she has been.
Feisty women…sometimes it comes w a cost.
.
.
What if I can save more lives by running at full capacity, even if it involves bad health habits *cough*drinking*cough* that are destructive? Not to mention what I am able to contribute to firedoglake and other blogs about saving our country from totalitarian government…we are germany in 1931…need to ACT…
Where is the tradeoff?
Yes I’m on meds/in therapy/trying hard. But still.
What do I owe my grown children and my future grandchildren, versus what I can do to save the lives of ANOTHER 2,000 children. No pressure.
I need help. I am getting some psych help. I need support. Have asked for support at home. Not happening….. Thanks for listening to this egregious rant
You’re broadminded, op99!
Connecticut Bob @ 21
Bob, that’s why it’s not called FireCatLake.
How are things on the “flush the Lieberturd” front?
Ask.com’s coming up fast as an alternative to Google. They’re advertising like crazy down here.
I’m awfully used to Google, but if what kimmy at #20 is true – worth a shot.
Barry Diller bought it a couple years back and he’s a genius at seeing a new frame for the same old same old. Built Fox network when nobody thought there was room for more than the Big Three, made a fortune with QVC and Home Shopping and is now re-shaping the former askJeeves.
Ann Richards…the best of Texas. How far from her example the state has sunk, slunk back to its corrupt grotesque dumbass greed-driven, Bible-puking political machine.
egregious @ 28
Get this book. It’s been a big help to me.
You’re doing the right thing by recognizing you need help and seeking it. Don’t doubt yourself if your intentions are right. Understand that all emotions are self-preserving. Unlike anger or fear or despair, love and compassion are justifiable. Take refuge in them, and apply them as much to yourself as you do others.
Take heart.
egregious at 28 — if you are talking about household sorts of help, we recently started having some folks come in to clean twice a month. Even given the picking up after a 3 year old day in and day out, the twice monthly full-house cleaning makes a HUGE difference in how much we have to do daily. Which, for me, is a godsend. Now that the weather has gotten cooler, I’ve also pulled out the crockpot — which allows me to toss in the ingredients first thing in the morning and not have to worry about dinner because it cooks itself. Here and here are a couple fo websites with some good recipes. Those are two steps we’ve taken for a happier me — as Mr. ReddHedd says, “No one is happy if momma is not happy.” I’m awfully glad you are talking with someone psych-wise, and I hope it’s a good experience for you. (FWIW, I always found that it depended on the interaction between patient and doc — if it was a good match, a client did well and if not…well, we found another doctor that did work.)
slade @
23
Hell, I’d like to see the Dem Congresspersons of both sexes learn from Ann Richards’ example, overcome their timidity, and speak out against things like warrantless wiretapping and kangaroo courts. On our side, it’s not like the men have been unafraid to speak up.
Speaking of feisty Texas women, I’ll have to keep a close watch for Molly Ivins’ next column. I’m sure she’ll have some appropriate words to memorialize Ann Richards.
Suprise– Patsy opposing the Reid/Rockefeller/Levin amendment and bellyaching now.
Holy crap, Mary Landrieu, of all people, just got feisty!
Here’s to feisty women!!
In my life (so far), I’ve found that I regretted enormously the things I failed to say, things required having a spine and just spitting out the plain truth.
They were simple things, things which said might be found eloquent. But they were things for which I’d rather be memorialized than not.
Ann Richards said those simple things. They were often funny, but bitingly true. It’s what makes what she said so very memorable, that they were the simple truth. And it’s those things she had the spine and wherewithal to say that move us to take the time to remember her today.
Be memorable: Speak the plain truth.
I think I’d like to have that engraved on the exterior of my laptop.
R.I.P., Ms. Richards.
In her memory… Sic semper tyrannis
ops99
Guess Christy was saving the clip for something better indeed
^_-
Okay, first Mickey Mouse and ABC, now Google. They are dead to me now.
breaking: Patsy says he’s not Tony Snow (in a very rude response to Dick Durbin)
what a WH tool.
I live in Austin and on two occasions after Ann Richards left the governor’s office, I happened to see her at movie theatres. Of course, everyone in the theatre was noticing her and pointing, but I kept hearing “there’s Ann,” not “Governor Richards.” She was a terrific, articulate woman and leader, but she felt like our friend. She was one of us. I mourned when she lost and I’m even sadder now. Thank you for the excerpts from her speech.
kimmy — I need more details, SPECIFICS, about your claim. If I’m going to send a registered letter to Google Execs as a shareholder, I need facts. Please provide, thanks.
bbuster, glorindel — wait until you have all the facts. The BIGGEST partner we have in Net Neutrality is GOOGLE; the only thing I’ve seen so far is that they’ve made a misstep in trying to get access, something that can be remedied with some shareholder activism. I’d rather have Google on our side than against us, especially since they have made concerted investments and efforts in open source software.
darkblack @
39
DB Does It Again……………….
Good on ya D-man.
rat bastahd @ 14
A favorite bit (since Tom Davis is right next door):
You say that like it’s a bad thing! *g*
Seriously, I’d like to see this plastered all over. First off, the Republican chair of the Government Reform Committee is openly admitting that Congress isn’t doing enough oversight. And is there anyone in the country, other than hardcore wingnuts, who believes that it would be possible for this administration to have too much oversight?
Pat Roberts now spewing bile over the House floor. Send a mop.
egregious @ 28
Does this help?
*You are not alone trying to save the country. Hundreds of thousands of us are pitching in on that one, and you pow-wow with hundreds of us a day at FDL.
*Even if you were the picture of physical and mental health, and needed no sleep or meals, you could still only save a fraction of the babies. Just ask yourself, am I doing the best I can given my limitations? You can’t change the limits God gave you, but think about removing your self-imposed limits – i.e. those self destructive habits.
Honestly, though, I wish I could just come over and clean your house and cook supper. (Supper would taste like crap, though.)
errr…correction…Senate Floor. My bad.
Rayne @ 44
My bet is they’re spreading the cash around. That’s what most of them do ………….
Ann, you will be missed.
Not to worry, though, we shall carry on!
Wow, thanks for including that speech by Barbara Jordan. She’s one of my all-time favorite pols (or people, for that matter).
Both she and Ann were the best.
Glorfindel @ 41
How can we do our research thing without google? What other search engines work as well?
All you Pups ‘n’ Lambs whom I adore, thank you so much for making my day — my every day, year ’round, party or dirge.
God bless Ann Richards and Barbara Jordan and old Sojourner Truth and all of us following in their footsteps to our own honorable ends.
And, soon’s today’s chores are done, c’mon down and sit by me, honey, and let’s eat and drink up all these goodies in the soft light of darkblack’s gorgeous lotus — ’cause all this day long we earnin’ us a par-tay.
But I gotta tell ya: just for now — just until this software glitch gets fixed — I gots to minimize my flowahiness as much as I can stand to, to keep outta the mods’ hair. I’m gonna do my durnedest to pipe up only when I got something substantive to add (in my case, more often news than insight). I hope it won’t be long befo’ I can get back to my usual petally cuttin’ up too, but for the nonce I’m gonna
struggle toplay it straight.So here, straight from Raw Story, is some really tacky news:
op99 @ 53
Yahoo!
RT @ 35
The public acclaim of Ann Richards since the announcement of her passing last night illustrates what a strong person she was to everyone.
I love Ann’s “born on third base” line a lot. Drives my GOOP’er acquaintances nuts, as it aptly contrasts Bush’s actual rise to power (Lucky Sperm Club) with the self-made man image GOOP’ers bow to.
I’m sure Ann is putting St. Peter to the question, demanding an audience with God.
Rest in Peace, Lady.
On a related note, I love how the Internet is changing the status quo. With practically no barriers to entry, women are asserting themselves in the virtual world, impacting and changing reality. The Ladies of the Lake are but one (but one very fine) example.
One wonders, how many ‘Anonymous’ thru the ages was a woman?
No more. In a line tracing from Harriet Tubman to Susan Anthony to Ann Richards to Jane and Christy, women are claiming their birthright and pushing the Constitution to mean what it says.
You gladden an old cynic’s heart, ladies!
I had the opportunity to meet her once, in the lobby of a show I was producing that spoofed NEA arts funding. Of all the ‘famous’people who came to see that show SHE was the one I was most excited to have met.
My first impression was that she was very very very short….my next impression was that she was one of the most lovely and YES feisty people I had ever met. Her lasting impression on me was that she had more balls in her pocketbook then most men have in their pants.
I was downright saddened to hear of her passing. we may never see her like pass this way again but thank goodness SHE came our way ….
rest in peace Ann.
egregious @
28
EGREGIOUS-As a survivor myself I would like to answer your plea. I have a friend who started a ‘rights group’ many years ago. I think you should plug in if you haven’t already. Please email David at oaks@mindfreedom.org____w/love *ilbo
OT– Kit Bond losing it and says that the Senate needs to hit the “baloney button” cause the Dems are being partisan and probably want to impeach the preznit and/or score political points.
#33-YES!!
#28
When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times
by Pema Chodron
also Publishers Weekly
Pema Chodron, a student of Chogyam Trunpa Rinpoche and Abbot of Gampo Abbey, has written the Tibetan Buddhist equivalent of Harold Kushner’s famous book, When Bad Things Happen to Good People. As the author indicates in the postscript to her book: “We live in difficult times. One senses a possibility they may get worse.” Consequently, Chodron’s book is filled with useful advice about how Buddhism helps readers to cope with the grim realities of modern life, including fear, despair, rage and the feeling that we are not in control of our lives. Through reflections on the central Buddhist teaching of right mindfulness, Chodron orients readers and gives them language with which to shape their thinking about the ordinary and extraordinary traumas of modern life. But, most importantly, Chodron demonstrates how effective the Buddhist point of view can be in bringing order into disordered lives. (Jan.)
.
Library Journal
An American Buddhist nun and author (Start Where You Are, LJ 6/1/94), Chdrn here passes on the teachings of the Venerable Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche, advising a loving kindness toward oneself and awakening a compassionate attitude toward our pain and the pain of others. The readings allow us to reconnect with a truth already known or to find a new way of looking at everyday chaos. Throughout, we are shown basic Buddhist beliefs and given instructions in discovering one’s true nature through asking questions, facing one’s fears, and dealing with the present. The instructions can be taken as meditations, affirmations, or simple reminders of how to transform our minds and actions into nonaggression, which benefits ourselves and society. Popular reading recommended for all libraries; Chodron is donating the proceeds of this book to the Gampo Abbey in Nova Scotia, Canada.-Leo Kritz, West Des Moines P.L., Ia.
Tricycle Magazine
There are few Dharma voices as clear as Pema Chodron’s, and few people who know more about things falling apart than mothers.
Dali Lama/Pema Chrodron/yoga got me through husbands heart attack-subsequent alcholism-subsequent death in MVA-company closing-going back to school at 51 and so much of the last 8 years
Rayne 44, hit F5 and then check at 54!
egregious @
28
eg,
make sure you are being good to your self. make sure you are not trying to do more than you can do. nobody can do everything. that includes you. my guess is you’ve probably done more good for others than any random ten people you might run into outside of your job.
take care of yourself. that way you can do what you want to do better……
ot
murtha has one GREAT resolutiion;
The President must show the American people and the world that there is accountability for the mistakes that have made in the war in Iraq. We must restore our credibility with our allies and the world in order to effectively fight the global threat of terrorism.
Secretary Rumsfeld has failed in managing the military response to this threat and should be replaced with someone who is capable of not only recognizing the mistakes that have been made but addressing them head on for the good of our military and our great nation.
H. Con. Res. __________
Expressing the Sense of Congress that the President should immediately replace the Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
September 13, 2006
Mr. Murtha introduced the following resolution, which was referred to the committee on___________
Whereas —-
After 9/11, the United States government had unprecedented support from international allies as well as the American people for military action against al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan
The initial phase of the war in Afghanistan was successful in dismantling al Qaeda operations, removing the Taliban authority which was harboring al Qaeda, and allowing for the Afghani people to establish a representative government
The Secretary of Defense imposed a cap on the number of ground forces in Afghanistan prior to the war in Iraq
The Bush administration concluded in April 2002 that Osama bin Laden was in Tora Bora, Afghanistan during the battle for Tora Bora in December of 2001 and that the failure to commit the sufficient number of ground forces directly resulted in the failure to capture him
A resurgence of Taliban influence and violence is now occurring in Afghanistan
In the months prior to the war in Iraq, The Secretary of Defense repeatedly and forcefully asserted to Congress and the American people that there was no question that there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and that they were a threat to the United States, which is now known to be false
The Secretary of Defense rejected estimates from top military commanders regarding the troop strength that would be required to secure Iraq, failed to anticipate the level of violent opposition among Iraqis to US occupation, and publicly doubted the war in Iraq would take [longer than] six months
The Secretary of Defense expressly forbade his staff to develop a plan for post-war Iraq and threatened to fire anyone who raised the issue
The Secretary of Defense failed to ensure that US troops had adequate protective gear for their mission at the start of the Iraq war, including a shortage of 40,000 protective body armor units, radio frequency jammers to thwart remote detonation of improvised explosive devices, and up-armored high mobility multi-purpose wheeled vehicles (HMMWVs)
Failure of the Secretary of Defense to anticipate the troop strength needed to secure Iraq or to develop a post-war plan resulted in foreign fighters entering the country who have incited attacks against US soldiers and fomented sectarian violence, the latter of which has precipitated a civil war between Sunni and Shia Iraqis
The Secretary of Defense asserted at the start of the Iraq war that Iraqi oil production would pay for the war yet US expenditures in Iraq now exceed $8 billion per month and Iraqi oil production is still below prewar levels
The Secretary of Defense failed to provide the necessary training, supervision, personnel and guidelines for the management of prisoners and detainees which directly led to the abuses at Abu Ghraib prison, severely undermining US efforts to win hearts and minds of the Iraqi people critical to securing Iraq
The Secretary of Defense has failed to address the flagging readiness of US ground forces, in particular the US Army, whose preparedness for war has eroded to levels not witnessed by our country in decades, thus hindering the ability of the US to respond to other potential threats to national security
US armed forces cannot sustain the current operational tempo in Iraq and a large percentage of US troops have done over three tours in Iraq
With 130,000 troops, key measures of success in Iraq have not been met and in some cases are worsening, including: the level of employment; the level of oil production; the level of electricity production; the training of Iraqi security forces; and the number of violent incidents, which have increased from an average of 400 per week before the establishment of an interim Iraqi government in the spring of 2004 to almost 800 per week this year
The Secretary of Defense has failed to ensure adequate accounting of billions of dollars of expenditures of the Coalition Provisional Authority
At the time of the introduction of this resolution, 2,672 US service members have died in Iraq and 337 have died in Afghanistan, exceeding the number of people who died on 9/11; in addition, over 20,000 US service members have been wounded
Terrorism incidents around the world have increased since the US entered Iraq
A survey of 116 top national security experts indicates that eighty-seven percent of them believe the Iraq war has had a negative impact on the war on terrorism while ninety three percent of them believe that the war in Afghanistan has had a positive impact on the war on terrorism
Democrats and Republicans are united against terrorism; Democrats and Republicans are united for a strong military; Democrats and Republicans are united for a strong America
Therefore, be it resolved that ——–
It is the sense of the Congress that, for the good of the country, the United States of America must restore credibility both at home and abroad and that the first step toward restoring that credibility must be to demonstrate accountability for the mistakes that have been made in prosecuting the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq by immediately effecting the resignation of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and replacing him with someone capable of leading the nation’s military in a strategy to resolve our deployment in Iraq, prevent regression in Afghanistan, reconstitute our military readiness, and refocus on the threats to national security posed by diffuse and proliferating terrorist cells as well as belligerent states.
__________________________________
JOHN P. MURTHA
Member of Congress
I remember crying when I heard that Ann Richards had lost the govenors race to Bush. To me it meant that I would have less opportunity to hear her speak (since I didn’t live in Texas). I could hang on her every word. What an inspiring woman. Peace be with you Ann.
angie @ 60
quick, somebody give that baby a pacifier and a rubber ducky to squeeze! Jeebus!
The thugs are being sooo sanctimonious about protecting sources and methods… faked moral outrage is just the thing for a rainy, dark NE afternoon.
Hey, what about Valerie Wilson you traitors?
(It’s good reality teevee though!)
FEMA OVERHAUL DEBATE STALLS FUNDS FOR INTEROPERABLE RADIOS
Washington Post AUTHOR: Spencer S. Hsu]
House Republicans are blocking an attempt to spend $3.1 billion to help the nation’s police and fire agencies communicate in emergencies as Congress debates a proposed overhaul of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
And the Repugs want us to believe THEY’LL make us safer?
egregious@28. I’m delurking to pass on a word. You are doing the things you need to do not just for yourself but for your family and this country. It is brutally hard I know too well. But we are not engaged in a sprint, where any of us can collapse at the end of the 100 yard dash knowing that the race is done. Cleaning up the mess that is this country is a marathon and it needs us all for as long as we can keep going, fortunately we can all keep going longer and getting more done by reaching out to each other–both when we can help and when we need to know someone gives a damn. I have been touched by you and countless others here–please do what it takes to keep yourself going. it matters.
OT – 29 Retired Admirals and Generals, Military Leaders and Former DOD Officials Urge Congress to Preserve the Geneva Conventions
Barbara Jordan would be very proud of FDL — especially of its bright, caring, courageous women.
I was living in Dallas when Ann Richards ran for governor in 1990, and Barbara Jordan helped her campaign. I went to see them at a community center in South Dallas. And I’ll never forget Ms. Jordan, sitting in her wheel chair, introducing Ann to the crowd. In that magnificent voice of hers, she talked about American being by the people, of the people and for the people. And now, she said, THE PEOPLE ARE BACK!
Given the dangers of the present government to our Constitution and our democracy, none of us can afford to be armchair patriots.
Thanks to Jane and Christy and all of you at FDL, the people ARE back.
Dick Durbin on fire about having misled the American people, the uranium in the SOTU, etc.
angie: is that on c-span II?
Dr. Bong @ 73
Yep– it’s gooood.
Is Bush manipulating gas prices? Could someone *cough* Congress investigate this?
Gas Watch
——————————————————————————–
Does Bush have some insider information about gas prices, which appear to be conveniently dropping just in time for the mid-term election?
Barnes writes in the Weekly Standard: “Bush said the price of gasoline, which has been falling rapidly, is one of the ‘interesting indicators’ that the press should watch carefully. ‘Just giving you a heads up,’ he added.”
twolf1 @
70
OT ? NOT!
How many flag officers, including TWO former Chiefs of Staff have to stand up about the Geneva Conventions before this pack of rat-brained Republicans and Joe Lieberworst get the message? 100? 1000? Unbelieveable!
I lived in Austin during Ann Richards time as Governor. She was great, and was loved by many people. The worst ads against her, and the flyers Rove had placed on car windshields at churches happened in east Texas. I had no idea she could lose to the little twit in 1994.
A relative of mine was in local Dem politics then, and took me to the state capitol, on the lawn, with thousands of others as Richards was sworn in. It wa a great moment.
I’m going to hunt through my closet and see if I still have the “The People are Back” t-shirt.
Made the mistake of reading some of The Architect last night before bed. I dozed off with the tv still on, and when I woke up, Larry King was showing a rerun of an hour with Ann Richards from 2004. She was so smart, and funny, and had common sense. And it’s all Rove’s fault her career in public serve ended too soon.
Has Kit Bond been hittin’ the sauce?
Even Mary Landrieau is speaking up?
I don’t think Ann Richards has any intention fo resting in peace – I think she’s exercising her perogative to possess a few timid souls first.
redshift – go take a look at this WaPo thread (the question they pose is horribly put together – which makes it easier to understand their journalistic difficulties – but lots of the responses may be helpful to you)
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postglobal/
My first response to “rights for terrorists” is to say, “says who?” How does anyone know who we have at GITMO? Rumsfeld has lied over and over and we know for a fact that we have held – for YEARS – people who were not terrorists, who were not involved in any military action and who did not do anything wrong at all. How did that happen?
Because George Bush orders and allows and encourages people to break the law instead of enforce it.
If “we” as a people say it is ok to take terrorists and torture them; then what is it ok for other countries to do to our personnel when we get it wrong?
I’m not saying what happens when al-Qaeda captures troops. I’m asking what happens when Karzai is faced with Americans who have beaten to death a cab driver – Blair is faced with Americans who have kidnapped, beaten etc. British travelers? What happens when we kidnap and torture German citizens, because their name looked like someone else’s name?
Of course al-Qaeda isnt going to follow Geneva Conventions (although Jill Carroll was relased in Iraq – while KSM’s kidnapped children had not been last I hear) but what happens when we make criminals of our own people and in the end, because we have abandoned any standards of evidence, we end up committing criminal acts on innocents?
Are we the ticking time bomb?
I LOVED ANN…what Rover did to her… he will burn for…. that is for sure. What a powerful voice and a GREAT sense of humor. I will miss her dearly. She inspired me everytime I heard her speek, whether she was shooting the breeze on Larry King or knockin down the ReTHUGlicans with her powerful words…….Ann you are a National Treasure.
NOt only Powell and the other military leaders, but Military JAG – UNANIMOUSLY – want to follow UCMJ rules.
Think about that. What wing has the absolute best idea – having heard from “both sides” in detail and having to address “both sides” – as to what is needed?
Ann Richards’ speech at the 1988 convention was a masterpiece. I’ll miss her voice.
TheOtherWA @ 77
makes me think naughty thoughts…..something to do with Lee Atwater…….mmmmmmmmh
Mary (#79):
I agree totally. She’s out there and we’re feeling the evidence of it.
anon @
75
Anon, where’d you get that quote?
It is all just a sick fucking game to Bush and his cultists.
Sick fucking game.
-GSD
Swift Boat Redux: Wealthy GOP Donor Drops $5 Mil for New Group
Everybody, please hit F5 and check out 54 ^ (especially Rayne).
According to Dahlia Lithwick at SLATE, Bush wants to rewrite Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, which bars ‘outrages upon personal dignity, in particular, humiliating and degrading treatment.”
Lithwick writes that Bush thinks “humilating and degrading” is too vague a standard and wants to replace it with “shocks the conscience”, which he says would give interrogators more legal clarity.
What the hell is treatment that shocks the
Mary Landrieu – who’da thunk it. Katrina musta really rocked her world, eh?
GSD @ 85
I hope that’s the only October suprise we get. I believe he has been manipulating the whole thing.
Breaking CNN: Armed Services cmte passes its own terrorism tribunal bill, in Bush’s face acc to commentator.
whoops! too fast on the refresh button.
But you get the point.
Just in “BUSH LOST” HAHAHAHAH by a vote OF 15 TO 9 hahahahahahahahaha
I remember a clip from that PBS show, The 90’s– coming out of a green room somewhere on election eve 92, she referred to Bush 1 with a smile– “Stick a fork in ‘im, he’s done.”
Yes, Bush and Rove are in the endgame of their psycholgical war on the nation. They want to have their way and in order to do that they want to demoralize and defang any opposition to them.
This is the end game for them.
Powell is doing the right thing. God knows he’s done lots of ratty and shitty things. This move changes the debate–Powell lost credibility with many on the left for his pre war shilling, but he still has cred in the center and the non-Kool-Aid right.
This gives more people reason for pause and will look at Bush more critically.
Now Bush and Rove are going to have to play defense on this one.
-GSD
Pam in SC @ 89
Could you expound upon this please?
From “shock and awe” to “shocks the conscience”.
The downward spiral of American dignity.
Thanks alot assholes.
-GSD
Hey Christy, any predictions on the ‘Neers game tonight?
new thread
op99 @ 87
I was watching the senate at the time, DeMint and Ensign were demonizing Democrats and “Islamofascists” and Islam. They were crazed, she was gonna talk about something else but was clearly pissed and gave her feisty rant. It was good to see. Reminded me of her anger during Katrina when she whupped the preznit while choppering around in near tears.
Apparently Bush wasn’t shocked over kidnapping children under 10 and he hasn’t been shocked by kidnapping and torturing a German citizen based on a name mistake. He’s not been shocked over beating a cab driver, over days, until his muscles and bones are pulverizde and won’t support his weight in his “stress position,” resulting in his death. He’s not shocked over kidnapping and holding Chinese refugees for years.
So, based on the things that don’t shock his conscience when done to the innocent, I have no idea what would do it for the guilty.
It’s a stupid argument – all words have to be interpreted and degrading/humiliating get interpreted all the time.
alittlemusicalityplease…
My take on that is that is if the standard is imposed on the torturer, then the torturer can deny that the action “shocked his or her conscience” (see also Stanford Prison Experiment), whereas with the “humiliation and degradation” standard, which is clearer and more objective, and tied to its impact on the torturee, the torturer loses the deniability.
Good old Republican “It’s all about Me Me Me” politics as usual.
Twisted at 95 — Are you kidding me? ‘Eers, baby, alla way. :) I’m going to go with WVU 31 — Maryland 14. (But when we play Maryland, it’s never a good idea to place abet, because it’s always a good game. It’s a good rivalry, but this year, I think we’ve got the better team. Guess we’ll see…)
raw story- Senate Armed Services Committee defies Bush;
Passes its own terrorism tribunal bill: Developing…
Senate cmte approves terror bill opposed by Bush and if it goes thru Bush will veto acc. to Fox (only source I can find ;( ) Bustednuckles.
angie @ 102
Thanks.
Bustednuckles, Bush will not get to change the rules on how we treat prisoners. Go to RAW STORY
egregious @ 28
Don’t minimize who you are and what you can do – my most-senior-aunt (now 92) retired from teaching at the college level two years ago. She’s bipolar, diagnosed many years ago, and I understand her doctor thought that that generation would be worth doing a paper on (5 of 7, at least, are bipolar or unipolar).
[Mental illness, no. Chronic condition, yes, like arthritis or high cholesterol or high blood pressure. Take meds to help deal with it, and live the way you feel you should.]
Defying Bush, Senate panel clears terrorism tribunals bill
egregious at 28 – If warm and healing thoughts can calm your spirit and assure your soul, be assured that many of them are sending them your way. I echo the confusion and frustration that results from so many directions that are calling, legitimately calling us and sometimes I just don’t have the resources to respond.
One reason I like this blog is because of Fiona (the Peanut). With her earaches and her fevers and her need to be held and played with, we all relive the moments of the immediate present and remember the reasons for what we are doing. I admire Christy for blending motherhood and activism as well as she does. I can’t always do that.
Ruffian mentioned Pema Chodron. I’m nowhere near understanding or practicing Buddhism, but when one of my children was self-destructing and I was afraid she would not literally live through it, I gleaned what I could from Chodron’s book, Living with Uncertainty. It was my thread to sanity and reality. A “for what it is worth” recommendation.
Egregious – I always look for your comments….I value them immensely.
I posted this in Late Night, but thought others would enjoy it as much as I do:
njprogressive @ 83
I posted this in Late Night, but thought others would enjoy it as much as I do:
njprogressive @ 83
Ann Richards, RIP
The best stories told about Ann Richards [besides those she told herself] were told by Molly Ivins.
Here’s my favorite, from Molly Ivins Can’t Say That, Can She?
“Several years ago there was a big political do at Scholz Beer Garten in Austin and everybody who was anybody in political Texas was there, meetin’ and greetin’ at a furious pace. About halfway through the evening, a little group of us got the tired feet and went to lean our butts against a table by the back wall of the Garten. Like birds in a row were perched Bob Bullock, the state comptroller; me; Charlie Miles, a black man who was then head of Bullock’s personnel department (and the reason Bullock had such a good record in minority hiring); and Ms. Ann Richards. Bullock, having been in Texas politics for thirty some-odd years, consequently knows every sorry, no-account sumbitch who ever held office. A dreadful old racist judge from East Texas came up to him, ‘Bob, my boy, how are yew?’ The two of them commenced to clap one another on the back and have big greetin’.
“‘Judge,’ said Bullock. ‘I want you to meet my friends. This is Molly Ivins with the Texas Observer.’
“The judge peered up at me and said, ‘How yew, little lady?’
“‘This is Charles Miles, who heads my personnel department.’ Charlie stuck out his hand and the judge got an expression on his face as though he had just stepped into a fresh cowpie. It took him a long minute before he reached out, barely touched Charlie’s hand and said, ‘How yew, boy?’ Then he turned with great relief to pretty, blue-eyed Ann Richards and said, ‘And who is this lovely lady?’
“Ann beamed and said, ‘I am Mrs. Miles.’”
originally published in Ms., October 1988
Christy Hardin Smith >”…Whatever they are putting in Texas water, it sure does grow some awesome women, doesn’t it?”
I was raised by a woman from Texas (she left first chance she got & never went back) & I thank her all the time for who she helped me become
I had so wanted Barbara to be president but *sigh* twas not to be
“Terrorists do not need pretexts for their barbarism.” – Judge Alvin Hellerstein
Rayne @
44
There are a bunch of background links in the story I submitted to slashdot this morning. Note that while these people have strong ties to Ralph Reed and the Bush-DeLay brand of Republicans, they are also just plain slime. I wouldn’t trust them if they came recommended by God (which, as it turns out, they sort of imply is the case).
And the key here is that Google hasn’t done anything wrong, per se, just made a poor choice, which they need to be educated about (they should have googled ‘em first!)
–MarkusQ
What is Sen. Toobz blabbering?
op99 @
53
I’ve used ‘metacrawler’ for the past two years.
GSD – Sorry that quote is from an article by Fred Barnes as quoted by Dan Froomkin in today’s column.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/…..00879.html
@nj progressive and all…
On my way home last night after some meetings, I noticed that flags all over Austin were at half-mast, and I had no idea why. When I got home, I found out. The reponse to her death here was that quick. Today, I have yet to see a flag not at half-mast, and I work downtown. Not only was Ann respected (at least here in the Texas Thought Oasis of Austin), she was loved and admired.
Quick anectdote: While I was in school at UT in the late 80s/early 90s, I spent an inordinate amount of time at Scholz (and about every other watering hole around campus). It wasn’t unusual to find pols at Scholz while Texas was in session, and, as I minored in government, I got to know a couple. I didn’t get to know Mrs. Richards well, but I can tell you that she never shied away from a single handshake or conversation. I admired her greatly for that.
Ann was officially Bush’s/Rove’s first smear job. I wish we would have learned more from that experience.
BFD
*ilbo @ 113
I sent the TPM clip, in its entirety, to Investor Relations at Google, wanting to know why they want to associate themselves with an astroturfing company. I believe their e-mail is investors@google.com – you can find it, but you need to go through their Site Map; getting there is half the fun.
op99 @ 48
Eg,
You are such an inspiration. Running flat out once in a while, is OK to get you over a hump. Doing it all the time, will get you an early grave an short change all of the babies you COULD have saved had you lived longer.
Taking care of you, helps you take care of others. I realize I am a huge hypocrit here and might want to follow my own advice. Sigh.
But it doesn’t mean it’s not good advice. You sound like you have a bad case of burnout. Take a long weekend off and don’t do anything at all that you are supposed to do. Goof off.
You will find you are much more productive when you get back.
The most productive woman I have ever met, ALWAYS takes time to pamper herself. In fact, when she knows she will hove a big chunk of work or something stress full come up, she schedules some vacation time for before and after.
In my dreams, I coud never be as prolific at work as she is. Exhaustion saps your productivity. it’s not how many hours you work that counts, it’s how much work you get done and how good (quality) that work is.
Be gentle with yourself
EPU territory:
Let Bush veto it. Two things, 1. we can then turn the blame on him for not trying these suspects, and 2. a veto still doesn’t give him the powers he wants.
Amy Goodman has an 8 minute excerpt from a 2004 speech Ann Richards gave here in Texas honoring Molly Ivins, here the linky:
http://www.democracynow.org/ar…..14/1351255
I had the great fortune to vote for Ann Richards for Governor (which was the last time I was really proud of my vote for a candidate for that office) and the even greater fortune to have a grad school class taught by Barbara Jordan. That class was one of the most amazing experiences of my life. It was also the only class I ever had in which I did ever bit of required reading before the class. Imagine, if you can, sitting in a classroom with 15 other students and Barbara Jordan. She started off every class by picking one person (at random?) and, using the exact same voice and presence you see in that clip, drilling that person about the reading assignment. She expected every single person in the class to have done the reading, come to a conclusion about it, and be able to defend it against her withering style of cross-examination. I think I know how Job felt when God showed up to debate him. There is nothing in my academic career that comes close to the feeling I got when she gave me an “A” on paper when I knew she disagreed with my premise.
Folks like Ann and Barbara create waves that affect the course of history. Those waves are still rippling out even today. Take a moment to think about the challenges they faced and, to use a phrase I heard both of them say, “gird up your loins”. For folks from other cultural traditions, that means tighten your belt and get ready for a fight.
Well done, good and faithful sister. Extraordinarily well done.
The Barbara Jordan video made me f**king cry. How I long for national leaders like Gov. Ricahrds and Rep. Jordan again. God, what the world has lost.
yes, now bush is out saying how sad he is about ann richards dying.
and later in the day, karl rove even admitted, “yes, it is sad,” but then went on to say, “but would it be sad if she were a lesbian?”
which is exactly what i was thinking when ronald reagan died.
Yeah, I’ll grant you that Ann Richards was certainly a one-of-a-kind politician. She was eloquent, brilliant, witty and smart as a whip, blah blah blah blah.
She also facilitated the Texecution machine by allowing the execution of Ruben Cantu, a man executed for a crime he apparently did not commit, and to make matters worse he was 17 at the time of the alleged offense. He died at 26 at the hand of Ms. Richards.
I hope, that if there is that mythical Xtian afterlife she can explain her rationale to Mr. Cantu, and that it’s better than “I needed to be tough on crime, sorry”.
jo fish,
appparently, you’ve never lived in texas. i’m not sayin’ it’s right, i’m just sayin’…texas justice.
save that discussion for later. this is a place where people are paying their respects.
p-rex, actually I lived in Texas twice, once for about 16 months in Corpus Creepus going to flight school and then at NAS Dallas for two-plus years.
so, yeah, I have some texas creds, I think.
RIP Ann.
Impeachment Happens @
6
Amen
I drove out today and saw the Flag at half staff.
That was a sad thing to see.
I was proud to have worked (a little) on her campaign for Gov.
I was proud to be even a little like her.
I’ll miss her voice.
She was a hero to this little Texas gal.
If you can find it, Barbara Jorden’s reading of Sojourner Truth’s Address rocks. I saw it on television many years ago and remember it still. I think it’s what Ann Richards is referring to above.
Jo Fish @ 127
well, it’s not about ‘texas creds’ — i wasn’t trying to out-texan you, by any means! i happen to be one that thinks living in texas doesn’t make you any better than any other american.
america has seen enough ‘texas swagger’ in the last 6 years to last us a century. i last lived there during the bush-governed years, unfortunately, and i would ask people, “so, you voted for an ivy league cheerleader from connecticut… what in the hell happened to texas?”
no one could give me an answer. and it wasn’t like i met anyone that didn’t like ann richards, that i can recall. they just went for that chest-puffing fake rancher crap.
what a world we’d be in now if gov. ann had won that second term.
RIP Ann!
That’s because the imposter in the White House is not and never will be a texan.
He’s all hat and no cattle…..
Goodbye Ms. Richards you will be missed here in Texas and all the rest.
truce. I guess that the whole Texecution thing (and every other Death Penalty program) bothers me sufficiently that when someone of Ann Richards stature and obvious intellect bought into that murderous solution to nothing, it degrades them and all of us.
I liked Ann Richards, she was a hell of a leader and someone who earned the respect of everyone around her. I agree, Texas would have been better off had she gotten another term. But that single cloud remains over her memory for me.
George Ryan will probably die in prison, but he’ll always be remembered for having the courage to stop the machinery of death in Illinois. In the midst of his trials (literally) he held onto that moral certainty that there was something wrong with the machine, and acted on it. Why couldn’t Governor Richards have done the same thing?
As a whole, we are the worse for her not being among us anymore. We will miss her, and I hope she inspires 100 or more others to follow in her footsteps in public service. That would be her best legacy.
peace…
JF
It is heartbreaking to contemplate how the world would be different — how many thousands of souls would still be alive — if, in 1994, fewer Texas voters had been duped by the jerk, his brain, their neo-con propaganda storm troopers and their election riggers. Texas would be so much better off had Ann Richards won a second term. And our country and the world — words fail me.
Here in Austin we have wonderful tributes going on that remind us of the hope of her time and the sanity of her words. I taught my children a lot about politics by raving about her keynote speech and by taking them on the walk with her up Congress Avenue to the Capitol Building when she was inaugurated. Most tributes quote the Silver Foot and Ginger Rogers parts of her speech. This was my favorite part:
yep, truce. i totally understand and agree with what you’re saying. all i was saying is that it’s a symptom of texas, and not necessarily ann richards.
politics, unfortunately, makes such distinctions necessary.
I love Ann, but have lived to regret having voted for her.
In the Texas governors Democratic primary years ago, I voted for Richards over Tx Attorney General Jim Maddox. Maddox was a true pit bull of a Democrat, who at the time, greatly offended my delicate sensabilities with his vicious campaign. Ann became a great governor, bringing a progressive positive image of Texas to the country during her term and in the years that followed. I voted for her again over you-know-who. A vote I do NOT regret.
But every day since the year 2000, I remember…and truly believe that In that Texas primary long ago, I voted against the only Democrat in America (Maddox), who posessed the temperment and balls it would have taken to strangle Karl Rove and George W Bush in their plush little guilded cribs.
Ann was a national treasure. Rest in peace Lil’ Hon.
RE: Ann’s rep as a “tough broad”–found this linky on San Antonio Express-News website—hang on through to the end for the payoff.
We loved Ann. I’m thrilled to see how many non-Texans remember her so fondly.
If Clayton Williams, the GOP candidate for governor, hadn’t blown the election with his over the top BS we might not have ever heard of Ann Richards. She was an exceptional governor but the days of statewide office for Democrats really came to an end with Richards and Lloyd Bentsen — the last of the Texas Democrat Party giants.
There was a real arrogance with Democrat State Chair, Bob Slagle. It represented an attitude that opened the door for Texas Republicans. The GOP just needed a name and a figurehead to
package.
{Thanks for the link, btw}
You noted:
Whatever they are putting in Texas water, it sure does grow some awesome women, doesn’t it?
I reply: That’s a “state secret!”