Category Archives: Politics

Women’s Lives Matter

“We shall not be safe until the principle of equal rights is written into the framework of our government.”              Alice Paul     1923

Alice Paul

In the 100 years since women got the right to vote in the 19th Amendment, and the 150 years since ‘the equal protection of the laws’ was guaranteed in the 14th Amendment, women have had their legal status in the United States challenged by the fact that the original Constitution did not take them into account. That omission in the basic plan of government bedevils women to this day and allows for legislative mischief, such as states creating impediments to their reproductive rights, and employer slights, such as unequal pay and the denial of specific benefits unique to their gender, such as leave and help for their children. The concept of One Nation requires that all be equal before the law. The failure of the national government to protect the interests of woman throughout the land is much like that of the lack of federal oversight in national elections; they are problems in need of legislative solutions.

Shirley Chisholm

I advocate executive action to issue the Preliminary Equal Rights Proclamation, after the manner of Lincoln’s 1863 Preliminary  Emancipation Proclamation, with the injunction for the 117th Congress to expedite as quickly as possible the ratification of ERA as the 28th Amendment to the Constitution. Alice Paul’s advice is as right today as it was 100 years ago.

Field of Play – The End of Q2

As those competing in the Presidential election size up the field of play for the November 3rd contest they view an arena of competition unlike any in history. Comparisons to 1860 and 1932 are appropriate because the emergencies the country is facing are similar to those of disunion that would challenge Lincoln and complete economic meltdown that would confront Roosevelt. In addition, the Congress and the White House will have to agree substantively on any number of issues in order to correct the overly aggressive and reactionary actions of the executive and judicial branches. Those facts are the basis for my contention that there needs to be clear discussion of all options and actual votes in Congress to determine what policies and actions are supported by majorities, and those that do have majority support should be instituted into law and action. Health care for all and women’s rights are at the top of my list. The entire package of economic and legal apparatus that insure entrenched racism and income inequality require federal attention in order to rebuild society along just and sustainable models.

This requires increasing taxes on both the very wealthy and corporations, reducing militarism, and articulating a clear and coherent social contract.

 To leave that matter unsaid and not debated in the four months until we all vote would be a grave mistake. That’s grave, as in dead and buried, which is where the country is headed unless we get our house in order.

Unforgivable

If in the wake of the current pandemic and pervasive unrest the country cannot see a way to obtain universal single payer health care and protect the American people from the depredations of corporations and a failed philosophy and budget for the police and military, then we may find the nation in the twilight of the period that guided us since the Constitution was drafted and ratified. How can something like Medicare for All not be at the forefront as millions are left unemployed and thrown out of private insurance coverage? Those who wish to remain with private carriers should be granted waivers to do that, but the country needs a way to protect public health and to guarantee to everyone that necessary care is given. This issue, like the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) for full equality under law for the half of our citizenry who still remain outside the umbrella of protection, is not only ripe, it would be a disaster and a sin if we did not make this a central issue in the 2020 election. Emblazon it on our ensign and go forward boldly into battle. Now is our moment, and, might I add in the best words of The Movement, We Shall Overcome!

Not ‘someday’, but right now ; we are the ones that need to do this.

Unimaginable

To many Americans the idea of more of Donald J. Trump as President is beyond reckoning. His policies, his actions, his world view, his lies and the distinct odor of core corruption make it hard for the opponents of Trumpismo to believe that he could prevail in November. As stated earlier, he does not need to win a majority of the votes and his Department of Justice (DOJ), and followers in Congress and in appointed offices will do what they can to keep him in power in the event of an election that is close enough to be called ‘disputed’, so it behooves the opposition to bring game by having lawyered up, exercised all due diligence, and being ready to ‘go the mattresses’ if the inevitable challenge arises. The weaknesses of US political institutions coupled with the lack of courage and imagination of elites, has left unchecked the support that the caudillo enjoys from his billionaire cohort and core cult members. The fact that the Democratic Party has not been able to articulate and advance a national program for wages, health care, housing, education and job training and viable and cohesive tax and budgeting principles and procedures goes a good distance past the failings of the last 40 years of Reaganism triumphant and reflects the wider difficulty of power sold to the highest bidder and a value system and ethic that rewards unregulated campaign financing and permanent incumbency for those who so choose.

Will they come forward with a platform and then be able to get their votes counted? JKF already has put forward his program and next to Medicare for All and Equal Rights for Women, control of the budget and raising taxes on the wealthy while reigning in military and police appropriations are primary objectives of this campaign.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Canceling the Next Season

“Because of flagging interest and a measurable drop-off in ratings, the next season of Donny Johnny Drains the Swamp is likely going to be cancelled.”

I somehow believe that news of that nature would be greeted favorably by about 60% of the country if for no other reason than to garner some relief from the tremendous fatigue and anxiety caused by his daily bluster and shenanigans. Those who find the Donald J. Trump show troubling to the point of exhaustion would be happy to put it behind them.

The larger question as to whether the displeasure of more than half the nation can have any bearing at all on a Presidential election will require some examination.

Of the many factors to consider concerning the specifics as to how the November elections will be run, the most worrisome and problematic are related to voter suppression under the rational that extreme restrictions will be required in order to protect the process from fraud. While there are repeated accusations that fraud is rife in all voting, the facts indicate that an examination of many millions of votes could find fewer than 100 suspect instances of possible fraud versus the documented reality of only half of the eligible voters bothering to show up to vote in elections for which there are no candidates for the highest office, the Presidency.

As the incumbent President, Donald John Trump rails against possible fraud in this election, would-be voters should remember this and recall that non-voting is a greater threat than fraud. Since the requirement of registering to vote already creates barriers for some voters, the need to vote by means other than showing up at the polls between a limited number of hours should be effortless and secure. The already added demand that the ballot be signed and delivered on time should be sufficient. Mr. Trump would not have won without voter suppression in battle ground states like Wisconsin in 2016, and he probably cannot win in 2020 unless the Trumpublican Party can expand their ability to restrict voters. Being able to vote is the sine quo non for representative democracy to function. With secure, verifiable mailed ballots, the Trump TV show could be toast well before November 3rd .

 

George Floyd

In the midst of the Corona Pandemic the murder of George Floyd, a man of color from Minneapolis, Minnesota, by  uniformed police officers,  for no apparent reason and in plain view and recorded for the world to see, came as an incendiary reminder of the distinct possibility that things are out of control in the United States of America. Beyond any of the particulars concerning this heinous crime, consideration of the fact that the institutional framework of American society is shattered has to be a possibility that thinking people of conscience must weigh. The delay in arresting the perpetrators and the failure of authorities to acknowledge immediately the gravity of the crimes showed that race remains central to the way in which justice is ignored or delayed rather than administered with impartiality.  As has been heard in response to other such incidents, too many to list in this short statement, “I’m tired of being tired about this kind of treatment”. For those not tired, the bomb and the bullet can be the remedy sought. Ballots seem deaf and inert to the needs of the oppressed and persecuted, and “Burn Down The House”, becomes an appeal to tortured reason and aggravated frustration.

Historic November Election – Will it Happen ??

No matter the level of distraction from business-as-usual politics and the needs of responding to the current coronavirus pandemic, the case for voting for John Karl Fredrich as a write-in candidate in the November 3, 2020, Presidential election remains strong.

The drive for equal rights for women, and civil rights and voting rights for all, is paramount.  Legal elections require hand-marked  paper ballots and the availability of risk-limiting audits; it’s been proven that putting a computer between a voter and their ballot disallows audits as tampering can change outcomes and remove any traces of the mischief. The Electoral College is a specious anachronism that negates one person/one vote and accentuates the inequality between large and small states that is already institutionalized in the Senate. The United States has lost even the pretense that the results of any election are correct because verification is impossible when evidence of changes can be whipped clean without detection. Why this flaw is not corrected is the advantage it gives to political parties and permanent incumbents so the incentives for fixing it are few, and the cynicism it fosters further discourages larger turnout. That is a persistent pattern in our heavily manipulated elections.

For The Ship of State to right itself in the water the President and Congress will need to work together to get control of the budget. If the legislature budgets by continuing resolution rather than line item mark-ups in committees, and the executive seeks to divert and impound appropriations, there is no discipline and the road to financial ruin is well paved. Better to pave actual roads and build schools and housing and bridges by Congress funding public works and human capital resources and direct money from the military to infrastructure and social services, with proven successful programs like Social Security and Medicare and Veterans Affairs as top priorities. Straightening out the national accounts will require new revenues, the elimination of sweetheart deals for the privileged few, and progressive tax policies that reverse the ‘unholy alliance between business and government’ that has plagued our federal system since the first billion-dollar budget of over a century ago.

I also recognize and embrace the partnership that will be needed between Congress and the President for progress in these areas and in order to advance the necessary reset in American foreign policy from Cold War mind-sets and other fearful and counter-productive attitudes bred from recent mistakes. I advocate unilateral, incremental nuclear disarmament and the deployment of forces only where approved by Congress except for immediate and imminent actual national security threats pursuant to the War Powers Act.

Finally, as the Chief Presiding Officer of our country, I pledge while working to accomplish the above-stated goals to push for preserving the maximum amount of our national environmental assets, including National Monuments, Wildlife Refuges, and water and timber resources. National policies must include carbon and nitrogen dioxide management, regulation of harmful chemicals, and intelligent restrictions on addictive drugs. To further our debate on all of these topics I would require that the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) reinstate the Fairness Doctrine and the Equal Time Doctrine to facilitate our national discussion on these subjects and others. If we do not do try to do all of this, and Congress does not hold an up or down vote on all of these matters, in what sense can we say that we are represented in Washington, DC?