Thursday, October 4, 2012

In Honor Of National Public Lands Day: The Top Five Purposes Of Public Lands

In Honor Of National Public Lands Day: The Top Five Purposes Of Public Lands: pBy Jessica Goad Tomorrow is the 19th annual National Public Lands Day, the “nation’s largest, single-day volunteer event for public lands.”  More than 170,000 Americans will volunteer their time helping to restore and conserve their favorite places. It’s a good time to reflect on why we have set aside more than 700 million acres of [...]/p

Poll: 72 Percent Of Swing Voters Say The Federal Government Should Do More To Promote Solar

Poll: 72 Percent Of Swing Voters Say The Federal Government Should Do More To Promote Solar: pAmericans like solar. They like it a lot. A new poll shows that 92 percent of registered voters feel it is either “very important” or “somewhat important” for the U.S. to develop more solar. Even more striking, the poll shows that 70 percent of voters believe the government should be doing more to help promote [...]/p

Epic ‘Dust Bowl Of 2012′ Expands Again

Epic ‘Dust Bowl Of 2012′ Expands Again: pThe latest weekly Drought Monitor update set another grim record. The brutal U.S. drought expanded to 65.45% of the contiguous U.S. — the highest ever in the Monitor’s 12-year history. The previous record was 64.8% — set just last week. In the third quarter alone, crop production dropped $12 billion “due to this summer’s severe heat and drought.” [...]/p

One Millionth Home Weatherized: Federal Efficiency Program A Winner On All Counts

One Millionth Home Weatherized: Federal Efficiency Program A Winner On All Counts: pby Richard W. Caperton, Adam James, and Matt Kasper Energy efficiency is a win-win-win for the United States. It saves homeowners money, it puts Americans back to work, and it helps avoid the most catastrophic consequences of climate change. But energy efficiency investments are tough for some people to make because they typically involve relatively [...]/p

Avoiding Obama’s Mistake, Senate Candidates Slam GOP Opponents Over Climate Denial

Avoiding Obama’s Mistake, Senate Candidates Slam GOP Opponents Over Climate Denial: pThe less said about Obama’s inexcusably lame debate performance, the better. Kudos to team Romney for figuring out that in a nationally televised debate with only one, passive moderator, the winning strategy is the Gish Gallup: ”the debating technique of drowning the opponent in such a torrent of half-truths, lies, and straw-man arguments” that there is no time [...]/p

Avoiding Obama’s Mistake, Senate Candidates Slam GOP Opponents Over Climate Denial

Avoiding Obama’s Mistake, Senate Candidates Slam GOP Opponents Over Climate Denial: pThe less said about Obama’s inexcusably lame debate performance, the better. Kudos to team Romney for figuring out that in a nationally televised debate with only one, passive moderator, the winning strategy is the Gish Gallup: ”the debating technique of drowning the opponent in such a torrent of half-truths, lies, and straw-man arguments” that there is no time [...]/p

Bush-Appointed Judge Upholds Obama Administration’s Birth Control Coverage Rules

Bush-Appointed Judge Upholds Obama Administration’s Birth Control Coverage Rules: pOn Friday, Judge Carol Jackson, a George H.W. Bush appointee to a federal court in Missouri, rejected a Catholic business owner’s challenge to the Obama Administration’s rules requiring employer health plans to cover birth control. Like the many copycat lawsuits asserting similar legal claims, the plaintiffs in this suit argued that the birth control rules [...]/p

Income Support for Children with Disabilities: Moving Towards Reforms That Work

Income Support for Children with Disabilities: Moving Towards Reforms That Work:
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This year the nation celebrates the 40th Anniversary of Supplemental Security Income program, which provides income support to people with disabilities, including 1.3 million children. For families, the program is a lifesaver that allows for greater economic security as they provide family-centered care for their children. Despite its tremendous value, conservatives are targeting the program for reforms, some of which mirror what was done to programs like TANF. It is clear that this isn’t the way to go. The Children’s SSI program would benefit from some reforms, but ones that improve outreach to qualifying families, target resources to those most in need, and facilitate successful work outcomes.
This panel will discuss the challenges experienced by the families of children with disabilities, attacks on the SSI program, a blueprint for reform, and connections between SSI policy debates and those of other safety net programs.
Copies of The Family Consequences of Children’s Disability will be available for purchase at the event.

The BRAD BLOG : CRIMINAL PROBE OPENED IN FLORIDA INTO ROMNEY-TIED FIRM AT CENTER OF GOP VOTER REGISTRATION FRAUD SCANDAL

The BRAD BLOG : CRIMINAL PROBE OPENED IN FLORIDA INTO ROMNEY-TIED FIRM AT CENTER OF GOP VOTER REGISTRATION FRAUD SCANDAL:
An official criminal probe has been launched into the GOP Voter Registration Fraud Scandal we first reported just over one week ago. The investigation, confirmed by Reuters tonight, comes on the heels of an election fraud complaint filed on Friday by the Republican Party of Florida (RPOF) after an initial batch of more than 100 apparently fraudulent voter registration applications were discovered in Palm Beach County. The forms had been submitted to the county by the RPOF after being collected by employees of Strategic Allied Consulting, a group hired by the party and headed by Mitt Romney's paid political consultant and controversial longtime GOP operative Nathan Sproul.

via www.bradblog.com

Stealth Inequities of School Funding

Stealth Inequities of School Funding:
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Too many children—often low-income children and children of color—are denied access to high-quality education because they attend schools that are underfunded and under resourced. All 50 states have adopted school-funding formulas—systems for distributing state aid—that are often aimed at addressing and reducing funding inequities. But many of these systems fail to achieve this goal and differences in per-pupil spending between low-income and high-income communities persist.
A new report from the Center of American Progress, “The Stealth Inequities of School Funding,” identifies often-overlooked features of school-funding systems that tend to exacerbate inequities in per-pupil spending rather than reduce them. They do so in ways that favor communities with the least need.
Please join the Center for American Progress for an event to examine these issues and their possible solutions. Opening remarks will be provided by Gov. Ed Rendell, who tackled these issues when he was governor of Pennsylvania. Professors Bruce Baker and Sean Corcoran will discuss the findings of CAP’s new report, and our esteemed panelists will discuss the importance of addressing funding inequity and the challenges facing reform efforts.

The Path to 270 Revisited: The Role of Demographics, Economics and Ideology in the 2012 Election

The Path to 270 Revisited: The Role of Demographics, Economics and Ideology in the 2012 Election:
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In November 2011 the Center for American Progress released Ruy Teixeira and John Halpin’s influential report, “The Path to 270.” That report argued that two large forces will ultimately determine the outcome of the 2012 election: the shifting demographic balance of the American electorate and the objective reality and voter perception of the economy in key battleground states. With the campaign debate heating up and increasingly cast in ideological terms, it is time to revisit the basic questions posed by the original report: Will the rising electorate of communities of color, the Millennial generation, professionals, single women, and secular voters that pushed President Barack Obama to victory in 2008 be sufficient and mobilized enough to ensure his reelection in 2012? Or will the Republican Party and its nominee, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, capitalize on a struggling economy and greater mobilization from a conservative base that holds the president in deep disdain?

This panel will explore these and other issues surrounding the 2012 election as presented in a new paper, “The Path to 270 Revisited,” from Ruy Teixeira and John Halpin of the Center for American Progress.

Download the event’s PowerPoint presentation (.ppt)

Abortion Worldwide

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Minnesota Point from the hill above Duluth in 1875
Minnesota Point from the hill above Duluth in 1875 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Memorial
Memorial (Photo credit: holisticgeek)
English: Panorama of Duluth, Minnesota, c1898
English: Panorama of Duluth, Minnesota, c1898 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
African American and Hispanic American workers...
African American and Hispanic American workers on strike against Kellwood, wearing placards that encourage support for better wages (Photo credit: Kheel Center, Cornell University)
English: Photo of public lynching of Henry Smi...
English: Photo of public lynching of Henry Smith in Paris, Texas in 1893. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
A postcard of a Duluth lynchings, June 15, 1920
A postcard of a Duluth lynchings, June 15, 1920 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
A man lynched from a tree. Face partially conc...
A man lynched from a tree. Face partially concealed by angle and headgear. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
A memorial in Duluth honors three workers who ...
A memorial in Duluth honors three workers who were lynched there in 1920. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

During this week in history: Rare Triple Lynching in Duluth, Minnesota


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As a society, we rarely take time to study the past and worse we frequently forget about important and tragic events.


Today we can reflect on an important and generally forgotten event:
the lynching of three black men, Elias Clayton, Elmer Jackson, and Isaac
McGhie
, in Minnesota, this week in 1920. In Minnesota, these men were
the only blacks ever lynched.


The article below is based on and taken from an article I wrote which will appear in an upcoming book, the Encyclopedia of Disasters and Tragic Events and How They Changed American History.












After the Civil War ended racialized enslavement, African-Americans
still had it rough in the United States, very rough. Most historians
even say it was “worse” because whites now actively had motivations to
murder and hurt blacks in new and far worse ways and more often than
ever before.


One of the new forms of discrimination directed toward blacks after
the Civil War was lynching. From 1882 to 1930, there were 4,587 lynching
victims, 3,306 of these African-American—the vast majority of these
were in the South and only involved one victim.


I put this graph together to give you an idea of the number of
lynchings per year. I know it is hard to see, sorry. The blue line
represents white lynching victims, the red line black lynching victims.
(BTW, I am well aware of the very problematic nature of the labels
"white" and "black" - that's for another diary.) The graph starts with
1882 and goes to 1968. The vasty majority were from 1882 to 1930.






Although somewhat a debate over words, perhaps, a “lynching” was very
different than a “hanging.” A lynching would include extralegal mods
and mutilation of the body before and after the death, for example.








On June 15, 1920, in Duluth, Minnesota, a mob of somewhere around six
to ten thousand men, women, and even children, gathered together to
murder three black men accused of rape. The total population was just
under 100,000 (with 495 blacks and 29,675 immigrants).


It all started twenty-six hours earlier when Irene Tusken, 19, and
her boyfriend, James Sullivan went to a traveling circus on June 14.
When Sullivan went to work that evening, he told his dad that Tusken had
been raped by a group of black men and that they had both been
attacked. His dad called the Duluth chief of police, John Murphy.


As miscegenation was a deadly “sin” and a most feared “crime,” Murphy
immediately responded. The traveling circus already sixty miles away
was ordered to stop. The chief of police and fifteen officers
subjectively selected forty of the 150 black circus workers as suspects.
After pressuring Tusken and Sullivan to pick the “guilty” men, after
they both said they didn’t know, six of these men were again
subjectively arrested and taken to the jail.


Paranoia, by word of mouth and newspapers, spread quickly through
Duluth. Details didn’t matter. Truth didn’t matter. An accusation of
rape had been made; therefore, someone had to be punished in their
minds. Even Dr. David Graham’s examination of Tusken and conclusion that
she had NOT been raped did not squelch the paranoia. People began
suggesting that the blacks who raped Tusken be lynched. Crowds formed
off and on throughout the day. Tension increased further after rumors
spread that Tusken had died from shock. The largest and most enduring
mob began assembling when a group of young men used their truck to drag a
long piece of rope with a noose on the ground while they drove around
town.


In virtually every similar situation, local, state, and national
officials, including religious leaders, overlooked lynch mobs and their
crimes and even encouraged them. In Duluth, the police provided a
surprising amount of protection for the accused blacks. Although
understaffed, underequipped, disorganized, and ordered not to use
firearms, police in Duluth actively tried to disband the mob by
reassuring them that justice would be served. As tensions escalated,
people broke into the police station and began tearing the building down
with bricks, chisels, and anything else they could retrieve. Police
used firehoses on the crowd. Undaunted, the crowd shouted and turned a
firehose on the police. Even local ministers were unsuccessful in
persuading the mob to disperse. Finally a few hours later, the crowd
seized complete control of the jail.




Following mock trials of no more than seconds, the extralegal mobs beat,
partially stripped, and hung Elias Clayton, Elmer Jackson, and Isaac
McGhie on the light pole outside the police station at 11:30 p.m. and
left them overnight. Photographers took pictures of the dead bodies
alongside cheering crowds and made enduring postcards. The following
morning, people returned to collect any kind of souvenir possible from
the lynchings.


While all lynchings were tragic and generated responses, reactions
after the Duluth Lynchings were different and more extended. Previously
having thought that such extreme racism only existed in the South, the
nation reacted in horror upon seeing pictures and hearing about this
incident through media outlets. On June 16, the Minnesota National Guard
came to restore order. On June 17, the grand jury brought various
charges against some of the mob members: twenty-five for rioting and
twelve for first-degree murder. While only three were ultimately found
guilty, significantly for the time, three white men were found guilty,
though they were only convicted of rioting, with sentences of only about
a year.


Black males from the circus faced scrutiny again. Evidence still said
that Tusken had NOT actually been raped at all, but since such a charge
had been made, citizens of Duluth continued to believe it and had to
punish someone. The grand jury approved prosecution against seven
blacks. The NAACP provided three lawyers. In the end, a jury convicted
only Max Mason of rape and sentenced him to seven to thirty years in
prison. After serving less just less than five years, the court released
him and ordered him to never enter Minnesota again. For a time, rumors
spread in Duluth insinuating that all blacks would be lynched. Local
blacks responded by launching a chapter of the NAACP. Individuals
throughout the state pushed for antilynching legislation, which passed
on April 21, 1921. Although unsuccessful, attempts were also made to
codify a national antilynching bill. Nonetheless, approximately 20
percent of Duluth’s blacks moved elsewhere.


Over the decades, people suppressed the Duluth Lynchings from memory
and forbade discussion of them in schools. (I even know of one person
who grew up near Duluth a few years later who never heard about them.)




In a turn of events, on October 10, 2003, with thousands in attendance, the city dedicated the seven-foot-tall stone and bronze Clayton Jackson McGhie Memorial, located across the street from where these men were murdered over eighty years prior.












Although not as significant, a native of Duluth himself, Bob Dylan’s
“Desolation Row” (1965) serves as a partial reminder of this horrible
triple murder.




References/Further Reading:

Apel, Dora. “Memorialization and its Discontents: American’s First Lynching Memorial.” Mississippi Quarterly 61 (1/2): 217-35.


Fedo, Michael. The Lynchings in Duluth. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2000.


Green, William D. “‘To Remove the Stain’: The Trial of the Duluth Lynchers.” Minnesota History 59 (1): 22-35.


Gustafson, Kristin L. “Constructions of Responsibility for Three 1920 Lynchings in Minnesota Newspapers.” Journalism History 34 (1): 42-53


Minnesota Historical Society. “Duluth Lynching Online Resources.”













And we must pay tribute to Billie Holiday




Originally posted to Culture, History, Politics, and More on Wed Jun 13, 2012 at 10:58 AM PDT.

Also republished by

History for Kossacks.


















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