Sunday, November 4, 2012


Fredericksburg, VA 22405-8730
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Republicans party has become the “Almond Joy Party”. Sometime they act like a nut and sometime they don’t.
Editorial Comments by Clarence Piner Jr 11.15.2012
State Rep (R) John Hubbard comments on Slavery a blessing in disguise is this guy for real? Are we sure he has enough brain power to be in elected office at the state level for a second time.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sunday, October 07, 2012
Arkansas Republicans tried to distance themselves Saturday from a Republican state representative’s assertion that slavery was a “blessing in disguise” and a Republican state House candidate who advocates deporting all Muslims.

The claims were made in books written, respectively, by Rep. Jon Hubbard of Jonesboro and House candidate Charlie Fuqua of Batesville. Those books received attention on Internet news sites Friday.
On Saturday, state GOP Chairman Doyle Webb called the books “highly offensive.” And U.S. Rep. Rick Crawford, a Republican who represents northeast Arkansas, called the writings “divisive and racially inflammatory.”

Hubbard wrote in his 2009 self-published book, “Letters To The Editor: Confessions Of A Frustrated Conservative,” that “the institution of slavery that the black race has long believed to be an abomination upon its people may actually have been a blessing in disguise.” He also wrote that African-Americans were better off than they would have been had they not been captured and shipped to the United States.

Fuqua, who served in the Arkansas House from 1996 to 1998, wrote there is “no solution to the Muslim problem short of expelling all followers of the religion from the United States,” in his 2012 book, titled “God’s Law.” Fuqua said Saturday that he hadn’t realized he’d become a target within his own party, which he said surprised him.

“I think my views are fairly well-accepted by most people,” Fuqua said before hanging up, saying he was busy knocking on voters’ doors. The attorney is running against incumbent Democratic Rep. James McLean in House District 63.

Hubbard, a marketing representative, didn’t return voicemail messages seeking comment Saturday. He is running against Democrat Harold Copenhaver in House District 58.

The November elections could be a crucial turning point in Arkansas politics. Democrats hold narrow majorities in both chambers, but the GOP has been working hard to swing the Legislature its way for the first time since the end of the Civil War, buoyed by picking up three congressional seats in 2010. Their efforts have also been backed by an influx of money from national conservative groups. Rep. Crawford said Saturday he was “disappointed and disturbed.”

“The statements that have been reported portray attitudes and beliefs that would return our state and country to a harmful and regrettable past,” Crawford said.”

In my mind Rep John Hubbard comments demonstrate the mind set of far too many white males in this country. My family came here on one of those slave ships and as best as I can determined they were happy until they were sold into slavery. Picture this if you will, being lock in chains below deck with little or no food, no bathrooms, not knowing where you are headed, family being busted up and you given no choice in any of this. According to Rep Hubbard African American should be happy about all of this. We should be glad that under the goodness of the “Man” and our family members having good genes so they could survive all of this. In my family case I have been told that the “Man” decided as slaves were disembarked at the port of Charleston, SC he saw my great, great, great, great grandfather and Grandmother and put them together and that was the beginning of my family tree in America. I am sure my grandparents in the late 1700’s had no power or say so in where they were going or what kind of work they were going to do. Put yourself in this situation, what would you have done? Some worked, some adjusted and others died because they were not strong enough to recover from the diseases transferred from the white men.

I am talking about all of this because not only is it important to me but it should add some perspective to comments like those of Rep Hubbard. He didn’t say this but I am sure deep down he would like to see those days returned. The old south isn’t dead some are still thinking about the return of slavery, working in the cotton fields slaving all day making “King Cotton” Multi Millionaires for lots of those farmers.

If someone ever tells me that I am not American, my question to them will be, when did your family arrive in America? My family came to America in the 1700’s aboard slave ships.

While I am here there is another subject that should be addressed and that is some have been saying that African Americans are lazy and have no vision for their future. Nothing can be further from the truth.  First example I am going to talk about is when slaves were set free from their toils they were given land by their frees. Most of the slaves were not able to keep their land. Their land was taken by again “white men” in Tax schemes; these people had no recourse because everything was control by white men. One good old boy scratches the backs of others. When they want land they went to their buddies and over a beer they put in motion how they were going to take the land. The county tax collector would put a lien on the property, give the slave owners let’s say six months to pay off this bogus tax lien of course, they couldn’t pay the liens so they lost their land. All of this happens shortly after the northern Armies left the south. Their departures pave the way for slave owners to return to their old ways. I know this to be true because my family still have the papers where their land was stolen from them by a tax scam created just to steal land from slave owners. So, please don’t tell me that we are lazy and don’t want to work; it just not true. I will agree there are some who are lazy like there are in every racial group but most people in this group is ready to work. If you don’t believe me just check out any Africa American neighborhoods in any city around the country. People are up early, catching commuter buses, commuter trains trying to make their way to work. 

Here is another big lie that Governor Romney and Republicans like to say which is welfare is mostly the domain of African Americans. How can this be? If this is true, we need to look at the unemployment numbers and underemployed to really see what is happing. In some African Americans neighborhoods the unemployed rate is as high as 25-30% and the underemployed will raise the rate to close to around 40%. To be the best and richest nation in the world we should be able to do better. Let’s look at this through another set of lens, when hard time hit people who got laid off from higher paying jobs pushed people out of less paying jobs by calling on their friends who are the bosses to hire them. There is a domino effect and the “last hired is the first fired” and being the wrong color is even worse. I have been looking at school bus drivers before the 2009 depression most of these driving jobs were held by minorities’ women. Recently, I have seen more white women driving school buses pushing the other racial group out. Being a woman in both racial groups they need jobs most have children without men helping with the children. This is another case for birth control and guess what Republicans do not want women to have birth control pills. Again Republicans ideas make no sense. I guess their idea is to outlaw sex that way; they solve three problems Abortion, birth control and welfare.

Every time African Americans had started to make real economy strides the white man has come along   killed the people, and destroyed the progress they have been making.  Here are more examples:

College Tuition on more Campus are being Frozen or cutting tuition to be prepared for the backlash. We have a problem in this area and we must get our heads around the high cost of education. Iowa, Minnesota, Texas, Montana, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maryland and Oklahoma are just a few states who want to get off this merry-go-round. They are tired of being held hostage by educational institutions all over the country. Some of these fine Universities have increase their tuition as much as 60% since 2000. It seems to me that colleges and Universities administration have gone brain dead. Most of these fine schools have been reducing their cost by having more and more of their students telecommuting. Schools like the University of Phoenix have been on the cutting edge of attracting students from all over the country. Without the cost of class rooms and equipment associated with having students in classrooms. Some students need to see others suffering just like them. Keep in mind the schools we have been talking about are ranked as mid level schools. All of the schools are very fine institutions I attended universities in this category. What you put in your education is what you get out of it. You don’t need money but it helps most of us will never be in the top 2%.

One more point that needs to be made here and that is funds save on classrooms space is spent on technology system. There is a very high financial requirement to startup and run online classrooms; to support the needs of those students who chose telecommuting using this new technology. Over time, universities should see big saving after recouping their initial investment. Of course, these schools should be prepared for obsolescing, their equipments will need to be replace or upgraded at some point to keep up with all of the changes that’s occurring in this industry. I would recommend leasing equipments to stay on the cutting edge.  

I think I got a very fine education at the schools I attended without the outrageous cost associated with the top tier school like Harvard, Yale, Cornell, Stanford, Washington University (St Louis) just to name a few. These universities have one thing in common that is the high cost to attend. These schools educate the rich around the world and there is always a long line to get in. The main reason students want to attend is connecting not education. I am not saying people who attend these schools don’t get a good education they do but, the real reason is by attending these schools is your classmates, they all come from family who are the “mover and shaker”. People attending these schools are leading nations, leading major corporations, royal family and government departments. If you are fortune enough with connection to attend one of the top twenty five universities of higher learning the people who you may meet are enormous that why parents want their sons or daughters attending one of these top schools. It’s not the education; it the people who are sitting next to you in the classrooms. It is my beliefs that these fine schools will never give up this advantage they clearly understand their edge. Rich folks can pay the high cost to attend these fine universities unfortunately I cannot, nor will any of my off springs unless I have some major economy changes in my life.

VP Candidate (R) Paul Ryan has a record of getting at the head of the earmarks line for federal funds for his district. I am not blaming the congressman for looking out for his district what I blame him for is all of this false talk about the people in Washington. He is always pointing his fingers at others forgetting that four of them are pointing back at him. He has been in Washington, DC for his entire adult working life either working for member of congress and the last fifteen years or so he has representing his district in Wisconsin. He can stop all of this talk about Washington he is Washington. He is also part of the party that blocked everything President Obama submitted to congress to help us get out of the mess Republicans administrations got us into. Rep Paul Ryan has no daylight between him and right wing buddies. He has helps orchestrate bans on abortion more times than he care to remember. The thing that gets my goat about this guy is he is against abortions and against birth control you can’t have it both ways. Yes, but he really want is a personhood amendments where they ban everything and have total control over women bodies. One day the daughters of these guys will be asking their mothers did you speak up when all of this was going on.

I think most mothers will respond to their daughters I was duped and believe your father who led the charge or agreed with banning any sex unless you are a married women married to a man.  Do you remember Sandra Fluke how she was demonized by the biggest loud mouth in America? Birth control pills are use for more than controlling pregnancies? Republicans in congress didn’t want to her what she had to say they were only interested in all of these old mostly white men who have never been a woman therefore they could never understand how women feels and their health issues. It’s good I am not a woman I would really be giving these guys down the river. Ladies if you don’t fight like hell you are going to slowly lose all of your rights.  
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By Michael Cook 10.5.2012
Some of Arkansas’ Republican legislators are radical extremists whose views are far outside the mainstream of Arkansas.

I’ve written previously about State Rep. Loy Mauch’s radical beliefs, now it’s time to examine the extremism of another Republican state legislator – Jon Hubbard.

Republican State Rep. Jon Hubbard published a book entitled, “Letters to the Editor: Confessions of a Frustrated Conservative,” and using highly sophisticated oppo research skills that Republicans complain about, I read some of what he wrote.  What Jon Hubbard writes and believes will blow your hair back.
From reading Hubbard’s writings, it is clear he believes that African-Americans are lazy, ignorant, lack discipline and that they should be thankful they were once enslaved.  My previous sentence is inflammatory, but that is what Hubbard has basically written in his book. And by the end of this post you’ll believe I even held back a little.

Let’s start looking at the extreme words Hubbard put to paper.
First, Hubbard believes that slavery was, in the end, a good thing for African-Americans:
“… the institution of slavery that the black race has long believed to be an abomination upon its people may actually have been a blessing in disguise. The blacks who could endure those conditions and circumstances would someday be rewarded with citizenship in the greatest nation ever established upon the face of the Earth.” (Pages 183-89)

Here is what Hubbard is really saying: Hey black folks, yeah, I know, we kept you in chains for hundreds of years, beat you, raped your women, lynched innocent teenagers, destroyed your families, but isn’t that really a good thing?

Hubbard believes integrating schools is harmful to white students because, in his opinion, blacks are lazy, have no discipline and are causing a decline in education:

“… one of the stated purposes of school integration was to bring black students up to a level close to that of white students. But, to the great disappointment of everyone, the results of this theory worked exactly in reverse of its intended purpose, and instead of black students rising to the educational levels previously attained by white students, the white students dropped to the level of black students. To make matters worse the lack of discipline and ambition of black students soon became shared by their white classmates, and our educational system has been in a steady decline ever since.”  (Page 27)

Hubbard believes blacks are too ignorant to know the value of a good education:
“Wouldn’t life for blacks in America today be more enjoyable and successful if they would only learn to appreciate the value of a good education?”  (Page 184)

Hubbard believes black folks were lucky they were once enslaved because living in Africa is bad:
African Americans must “understand that even while in the throes of slavery, their lives as Americans are likely much better than they ever would have enjoyed living in sub-Saharan Africa.”  
“Knowing what we know today about life on the African continent, would an existence spent in slavery have been any crueler than a life spent in sub-Saharan Africa?” (Pages 93 and 189)

Here is where Hubbard basically says black folks are lazy and don’t do anything worthwhile:
“… will it ever become possible for black people in the United States of America to firmly establish themselves as inclusive and contributing members of society within this country?”  (Page 187)

It blows my mind that this man is an elected state representative. Are the above views shared by others in the Republican legislative caucus?  Have any Republican legislators ever denounced Hubbard from writing straight-out racist statements?  Is this representative of the Republican Party of Arkansas reflective of the party’s attitude toward African-American Arkansans?  Will they condemn this intolerance and ignorant attitude?  Silence will speak volumes.

I doubt folks in Craighead County had any idea about Hubbard’s core beliefs in 2010 when they first elected him. Harold Copenhaver is running against this condescending, clueless and yes, I’ll say it, racist incumbent and hopefully the Democratic challenger is getting the word out about the extremist Jon Hubbard.
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College Tuition: More Campuses Freeze Or Cut Tuition As Backlash Continues
http://i.huffpost.com/gen/461301/THE-HECHINGER-REPORT.jpg  |  By Jon Marcus Posted: 10/05/2012 11:21 am EDT Updated: 10/06/2012 11:52 am EDT
This piece comes to us courtesy of The Hechinger Report's HechingerEd blog.
As public anger over college costs continue, and legislators in some states get to work on their budgets, more colleges and universities are promising to freeze or cut tuition--in many cases, on the condition that they receive more taxpayer funding.

The latest schools and systems to dangle promises of lower charges follow a wave of campuses that have already announced them, including Arizona's public universities.

Concordia University, a private institution in St. Paul, Minnesota, said it would reduce its undergraduate tuition by one third beginning next fall, to $19,700, though financial aid will also be cut and the deal will not be extended to graduate students.

Texas Governor Rick Perry this week formally proposed a four-year tuition freeze for public-university students in that state as a way to increase the proportion of the population with degrees. The cost of attending public universities in Texas has increased 55 percent in the last 10 years, a Dallas Morning News analysis found.

Other governors and boards of trustees are also pushing for tuition freezes.
The Iowa Board of Regents has asked the presidents of the University of Iowa, Iowa State University, and the University of Northern Iowa to freeze tuition for next year. The universities' charges have nearly tripled since 2001, to just over $4,000.

In Montana, outgoing Governor Brian Schweitzer has announced that he will propose a tuition freeze in his final two-year budget. As in many other states, however, it would be contingent on the legislature increasing higher-education funding--in Montana's case, by $34 million, which would come from a $450 million budget surplus.

The University of Minnesota has also promised to freeze undergraduate tuition if the state increases funding by $91.6 million over the next two years. And the University System of New Hampshire Board of Trustees will freeze tuition next year if the legislature in that state restores $50 million in state aid it has proposed to cut.

These proposals follow earlier announcements by the University of California system to freeze undergraduate tuition on the condition that voters approve a tax increase next month to raise $8.5 billion for public education and other services.

Other institutions that have promised to keep costs where they are, or lower them, include the University of Massachusetts, University of New Hampshire, and University of Maryland schools of law; the University of the South and University of Charleston; Temple, William Peace, Duquesne, Urbana, Franklin Pierce, and Oklahoma City universities; and Cabrini, Lincoln, Burlington, Ancilla, Tabor, Daytona State, Mount Holyoke, and Pacific Union colleges.
Chief financial writer, The Huffington Post
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Romney's Dodd-Frank Comments Shock Bewildered Bankers
Posted: 10/04/2012 11:34 am

Jeez, Wall Street and Dodd-Frank, get a room already!
It turns out that all of the Dodd-Frank bashing that Jamie Dimon and the other heads of big New York banks constantly do is just their version of how married couples might use a little light S&M to keep things spicy in the bedroom.

But don't worry, Mitt Romney is on to their perverted games. At last night's debate, he declared that a key component of the financial-reform law was "the biggest kiss that's been given to New York banks I've ever seen."

This came as a shock to Wall Street, notes Politico's Ben White, who writes that it 
"blew up [his] inbox like no other" line of the night. One such email, from a "New York" bank executive, said: "Doubt that most folks on Wall Street would have predicted that Romney would have taken the most direct shots at 'N.Y. banks' at this point. ... If he'd named names, it would have been his top five contributors."

The part of Dodd-Frank Romney was referring to was the part that designates several banks and other institutions -- not just New York banks, but also insurance companies and banks based outside of New York -- as "systemically important financial institutions." Firms that get the SIFI label have to provide a "living will" that lays out a plan for their orderly euthanasia in the event of a financial crisis. As Ben Protess of the New York Times writes, this is "hardly a wet kiss." The SIFI set has to hold more money against potential losses and is subject to tighter regulation.

This canard, that Dodd-Frank essentially sets "too big to fail" in stone forever, is one of Republicans' favorite arguments against Dodd-Frank. It sounds good and puts them on record as being against banks being "too big to fail," along with pretty much everybody (aside from the Jamie Dimons) in the world.
But it is a misleading argument, and repealing Dodd-Frank ultimately favors the banks. If they really enjoyed Dodd-Frank's wet sloppy kisses, why would they be spending so much money to furiously do away with it? (That approach is working pretty well, by the way, as demonstrated last week, when Wall Street won another round in court against Dodd-Frank, when a judge blocked new rules setting limits on speculation in commodities.)

As my former colleague David Weidner at the Wall Street Journal points out, this is of course Romney's ultimate goal -- to help the banks by doing away with Dodd-Frank. Sadly, though, President Obama's approach, aside from causing a few hurt feelings among hyper-sensitive bankers, has hardly been much more painful for banks.

Update: Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), for whom the Dodd-Frank act was partly named, told the Huffington Post's Bonnie Kavoussi last night that Romney's charge was off-base, among other inaccuracies.

Update 2: Dennis Kelleher, founder of Better Markets, the non-profit group lobbying for financial reform, just emailed a statement about Romney's claim, calling it "false and misleading" and adding: "Romney wants to repeal [Dodd-Frank], which would be the biggest, sloppiest kiss possible to Wall Street banks and a kick in the pants to the American taxpayers who are going to get stuck with the bill -- again -- for their recklessness if financial reform is repealed by Mr. Romney."
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Posted at 11:11 AM ET, 08/13/2012
On social issues, there's no daylight between Ryan and the far right
By Jamelle Bouie
For the right wing, Paul Ryan is the perfect representation of their budgetary priorities — low spending on social services, high spending on defense and the slow unraveling of entitlements for younger Americans. What goes under the radar, however, is his commitment to right-wing cultural values, which is just as strong as his disdain for the welfare state.

On abortion, Ryan is in the far-right of his party. As Michelle Goldberg explains for the Daily Beast, he doesn’t believe that women have any right to terminate a pregnancy, even if the circumstances are dire. To wit, he co-sponsored the Sanctity of Life Act, which declares that a fertilized egg “shall have all the legal and constitutional attributes and privileges of personhood.” It would criminalize all abortion, as well as in vitro fertilization and some forms of birth control. Indeed, it stands as one of the most extreme anti-abortion measures currently floating in Congress.

On gay rights, he’s just as reactionary. He supports amending the Constitution to ban same-sex marriage, and voted for the Federal Marriage Amendment in 2004 and 2006. He supports the Defense of Marriage Act and in 2003, approved of a bill that would prevent federal courts from considering DOMA and possibly overturning it. He voted in 1999 to keep same-sex couples from adopting in the District of Columbia, he opposed last year’s effort to repeal Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell and when the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act came up for a vote in 2009, Ryan placed his name in opposition. At most, he supported the 2007 version of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, which would have prohibited discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.

The Human Rights Campaign, an LGBT rights organization, gave Ryan a 0 percent rating on its score card in 2006. Likewise, the ACLU gave him a 13 percent rating on civil rights when they evaluated his record in 2002.

Ryan receives credit, from all sides, for being a “principled” opponent of government. That’s only partially true. When we need to deal with market failures and provide security for the least well-off, Paul Ryan is a dedicated libertarian. But when it comes to women’s bodily autonomy or the rights of same-sex couples, Ryan is happy to enforce his views with the power of the state.

Jamelle Bouie is a staff writer at The American Prospect. You can find his blog here.

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