Sunday, November 07, 2010

Would you still love me? By Geniusofdespair

When my niece was about 7 she asked me: "Would you still love me if I were a Republican?" And, I did stop to think...finally I said "Of, course I would." Now that niece is 21 years old. I found out yesterday she didn't vote. She knows how important voting is to me...and in case she didn't my text messages and emails should have reminded her. If that didn't tell her, she could have read hundreds of blog posts I have written about politics and my disappointment/despair over election outcomes. Now I have a question for her: "If you love me, why didn't you vote?"

She could have voted to help keep Allen West from winning. I guess I don't understand because it is her generation that will suffer most from the policies set by Rick Scott, Pam Bondi and Marco Rubio.

I have a Democratic niece, she didn't vote in this midterm election, and that really sucks.

It wasn't Barack's fault: Sink lost Florida all by herself ... by gimleteye

Obama made big mistakes in his first two years in the White House, but losing the tightest governor's race in Florida history is not one of them. That, Democrat Alex Sink did all by herself.

The blame game boiled up on Friday; "... Sink pointed an accusatory finger Friday at what she called a "tone-deaf" Obama White House to explain why she narrowly lost her campaign," in Politico. As readers of EOM know, I disagree. And I was a Sink supporter.

I listened carefully to Alex Sink's stump speech at a Jefferson Jackson dinner in Miami a few years ago, when she officially announced her campaign. I didn't like it then. It was a saccharine appeal to the earthy values of North Florida and of sober business judgment. It neglected, completely, to tag Republicans-- and in particular Republican land speculators-- for the biggest economic conflagration in modern Florida history. And I didn't like the speech when she used the same one throughout the campaign, or at the end, in closing the final television debate against Rick Scott, now the governor-elect of Florida.

In Sink's campaign, there was no substance for the new Florida and no inspiration beyond conservative values that are all well and good, but also doomed the earlier campaigns of Florida Democrats from Buddy McKay, to Betty Castor, Jim Davis and her husband, Bill McBride, who ran a similarly lackluster campaign in 2002. Try as I did, and others: Sink's bland prescriptions stuck like tarballs on the sole of a shoe.

Nothing to rally or inspire urban voters. Nothing to inspire Hispanics, African Americans or the young voters who flocked to Obama in 2008. Sink complains, "I faced headwinds from Washington that I liken to a tsunami and was going up against a guy who had unlimited resources... I could have overcome either one but not both." That is just plain wrong.

Alex Sink vacuumed up enough Democratic money to run a credible state-wide campaign. Sink's idea of credible messages may have focus-grouped and poll-tested, but they added up to not enough. Sink couldn't defeat a health insurance company centi-millionaire who should have been held accountable for the largest civil fine in US history, $1.7 billion. Sink, the state's CFO, should have hammered Jeb Bush to the billions in losses in the state administration funds; investments in exactly the risky derivatives that connect up to the housing crash.

Sink tells Politico, "(People) preferred to vote for somebody with questionable ethics than for somebody who was associated with the Washington Democratic agenda." The truth is that she failed to energize voters and relied, instead, on the same worn-out brand of Democratic campaigning that Obama successfully avoided, in Florida, in the run up to the 2008 presidential. That's right: Barack Obama side-stepped Florida's Democratic establishment in winning the state for a reason. But instead of learning the why's and how's of Obama's dodging the Democratic establishment, Sink relied on out-dated thinking of the Tallahassee minority and marginalized; including Alex Penelas' chief strategist--the Democrat who cost Al Gore the 2000 presidency-- who made the mistake of violating television debate rules that he himself conceived with respect to communicating with candidates on stage. Think that cost a hundred thousand votes?

Today Barack Obama is shouldering the weight of the mid-term elections, but he is not the one who is "tone deaf" in Florida. It is Alex Sink and old-line Florida Democrats who cost Florida a critically important election.

Dueling Divas: Billie Holiday & Nina Simone. By Geniusofdespair

Link.
At the 2 minute mark, that is were it begins for me.

Link.

I love music, feeds my soul. This is dedicated to Rick from Atlanta who introduced me to this song.

Saturday, November 06, 2010

Rick Scott's allies: a story told from the golf cart! ... by gimleteye


Here is a story and photo from The Villages near Orlando, Florida. The Morse brothers, its developers, spent $310,000 for Bill McCollum then shifted to Rick Scott, then stumbled in an unsought piece of publicity.

Mitt Romney, Rick Scott to visit The Villages Oct. 1
Romney, 2008 presidential candidate, will join Scott, Republican candidate for Florida governor, at Villages campaign event
September 25, 2010
THE VILLAGES — Former GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney will join Rick Scott, Republican nominee for governor, at a campaign event Friday at the megaretirement community. A rally will be hold at 4 p.m. with attendees allowed to begin gathering at 2 p.m. at Lake Sumter Landing Market Square, according to a Scott campaign spokeswoman. Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, visited the retiree haven in March as part of his nationwide tour to tout his book "No Apology: The Case for American Greatness."


The Villages president charged with poaching in Montana

The Associated Press
November 4, 2010 at 2:55 p.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, November 4, 2010 at 8:24 p.m.

HELENA, Mont. - The president of The Villages retirement community and seven others have been charged with poaching in Montana. Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks spokesman Bob Gibson said Mark Morse faces felony charges that carry penalties of more than 20 years in prison and $203,000 in fines.

Morse, his wife and his daughter are among eight people who have been issued summonses on felony and misdemeanor wildlife violations dating back to 2006. Morse is president and chief operating officer of The Villages just south of Ocala. He owns a ranch in Montana's Yellowstone and Big Horn counties, and co-owns another ranch with James “Ike” Rainey. Rainey owns Rainey Construction Co., which does work in The Villages. He also has been charged.

CampaignMoney.com

Mark Morse
Political Campaign Contributions
2008 Election Cycle

Contribution Totals

Download all contribution records for this person
from 1999 to present
To a Spreadsheet or Other File Type
2010 Transaction Count/Amount 6/$14,895
2008 Transaction Count/Amount 9/$61,445
2006 Transaction Count/Amount 14/$54,795
2004 Transaction Count/Amount 13/$64,975
2002 Transaction Count/Amount 5/$31,250
2000 Transaction Count/Amount 6/$26,700

Download all contribution records for this person
from 1999 to present
To a Spreadsheet or Other File Type

Mark Morse Contribution List in 2008

Name & Location Employer/Occupation Dollar
Amount Date Primary/
General Contibuted To
MORSE, MARK MR.
THE VILLAGES, FL
32162 THE VILLAGES/DEVELOPER $2,300 09/25/2008 P MCCAIN-PALIN VICTORY 2008 - Republican
MORSE, MARK MR.
THE VILLAGES, FL
32162 $-2,300 09/05/2008 P MCCAIN VICTORY COMMITTEE - Republican
MORSE, MARK MR.
THE VILLAGES, FL
32162 THE VILLAGES/DEVELOPER $4,600 05/21/2008 P MCCAIN VICTORY COMMITTEE - Republican
Morse, Mark Mr.
THE VILLAGES, FL
32159 The Villages/Developer $28,500 03/25/2008 P REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE - Republican
Morse, Mark
PROVIDENCE, RI
02906 Self-employed/Attorney $295 11/15/2007 P LANGEVIN FOR CONGRESS - Democrat
Morse, Mark Mr.
THE VILLAGES, FL
32162 The Villages of Lake-Sumter, Inc./C $500 07/10/2007 P FLORIDA BANKERS ASSOCIATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE - None
MORSE, MARK G MR.
THE VILLAGES, FL
32162 THE VILLAGES OF LAKE-SUMTER/DEVELOP $2,300 03/31/2007 P ROMNEY FOR PRESIDENT INC. - Republican
Morse, Mark Mr.
THE VILLAGES, FL
32159 The Villages/Developer $25,000 02/27/2007 P REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE - Republican
Search


Jennifer Parr
vice president
the villages of lake sumter
Q2-2010 NEW
1000 LAKE SUMTER LNDG.
The Villages, FL
$2,400 donation to friends of john boehner
Harper Boone
sales
the villages of lake sumter
Q2-2010 NEW
2710 PADDOCK PL.
The Villages, FL
$2,400 donation to friends of john boehner
H. Gary Morse
ceo
the villages of lake sumter
Q2-2010 NEW
1020 LAKE SUMTER LNDG.
The Villages, FL
$2,400 donation to friends of john boehner
Mark Morse
president
the villages of lake sumter
Q2-2010 NEW
1020 LAKE SUMTER LNDG.
The Villages, FL
$2,400 donation to friends of john boehner

The worst win in this election: Rick Scott. By Geniusofdespair

I was invested in many issues this election but by far the worst win was Rick Scott (aka Mr. Crazy Eyes) as Governor. I fault Republicans for lack of brains.

I don't like Marco Rubio and I didn't like Bill McCollum but at the very least they were credible candidates.

Rick Scott is/was not a credible candidate. They say money can't buy you love but it can surely buy you a Republican election. Democrats had a rich guy short on ethics like Scott, Jeff Greene, but Democrats sent him packing in the primary. Republicans should have done the same to Scott - I fault them for not doing this. McCollum for all his faults, would have made a better Governor.

Florida is F--ked because of this election. The legislature is overwhelming Republican and now we have a man to-the-right-of-right who is also woefully short on principles or integrity as our Governor. He slashed and burned at his hospitals and he will do the same to the State. My sister, who worked at one of Scott's hospitals, said last night all the nurses she works with are Republicans but they all didn't support Scott. She said they all knew what he did in the medical arena. The strangest part, people don't even like him. Scott, in recent polls was receiving a 54 percent negative approval rating, while only 34 percent have a favorable opinion of him. Republicans didn't like him but they voted for him anyway. They chose to cast a blind eye at the 1.7 billion dollar fine his hospital empire had to pay.

What has happened that we throw basic contract law out the window (in foreclosure litigation) for expedience and then we elect a charlatan governor. What have we become?

Friday, November 05, 2010

Vile Natacha Seijas' Recall: Miami Voice has enough signatures to put it on the Ballot! By Geniusofdespair



Miami Voice PAC has collected a sufficient number of signatures to get a recall on the ballot for Miami-Dade County Commissioner Natacha Seijas. Miami Voice is requesting that a special election date be set placing Mayor Carlos Alvarez and Commissioner Seijas on the same ballot once petition signatures are verified by the Clerk of the Courts.

Miami Lakes Mayor Michael Pizzi signed the recall petition at today’s 4pm press conference (see photo above).

Vanessa Brito and Mimi Planas, officers of the Miami Voice PAC that is leading the charge for the recall of five commissioners.


The Media were there in abundance.

Natacha's Lawyer, Stephen Cody was late. He snapped a bunch of photos. Looks like he has been packing on the pounds since he tried to disqualify Eugene Flinn for what he said was a violation of the resign to run rule. The judge didn't see it that way - he threw out the case.

How Old is Too Old? By Geniuofdespair

My mother-in-law is going to be 103 in a few days, except she is more like a cranky 7 year old. The only difference is the adult guilt-giving is still intact. Joy is absent from her being. It left her about 5 years ago. She is not senile, she still reads the Miami Herald and she remembers very well what we were supposed to do for her and what her aides haven't done for her. She is so self-focused she barely has any other interest which makes it difficult to be around her. The birthday party is a dutiful affair.

One correlation I saw, the more focused she got on herself and her daily needs, the less her life had meaning and the more miserable she became.

My advice, if you are annoying, don't live past 100...make that 95. Better yet, learn now to be more tolerant because you will only get worse as you age and people will start writing blog posts about you to vent their frustration.

An anxious America turns to the party that built its viewing platform ... by gimleteye

In The New York Times, Tom Friedman reports from India, "After asking for an explanation of the Tea Party’s politics, Gupta remarked: “Where is the American dream? Where is the optimism?” To help answer those questions, watch the CBS 60 Minutes Segment, here (Can't do anything about the Viagra ads.) on the people of Newton, Iowa. The landscape of Newton reflects a nation that went from mom-and-pop stores and businesses serving industry, to franchises of corporations serving other corporations, using economies of scale to obliterate cultural differences. Newton, Iowa is not so different from anywhere else, after all is said and done: scared, in debt, and shell-shocked how fast 40 years of prosperity came to an end.

The GOP demolition crew that brought America the politics of the "Ownership Society" is back in power. That would be Karl Rove and other Republican leaders who flattered Alan Greenspan into lowering interest rates while they fired up boiler room operations selling mortgages to anyone who could fog a mirror. They were rewarded for speed in execution of those mortgage pools and titles and deeds; fees for engineers, lobbyists, and campaign contributions rolled into toxic goop.

So here is the problem, India, that you might envision through the Bhopol disaster. The goop that materialized so quickly, doesn't go away for a long, long time.

The TARP program that the Tea Party detests, was a Hail Mary pass by the Bush administration. The hair-on-fire crowd doesn't remember that. When the banks tried to unload their toxic mess, they found that it wasn't nearly as easy to do as it was to sign and transfer title to millions of Americans made gullible by the chain of corporate fraud. Consumers and taxpayers and voters, who were willing accomplices then, don't want to be held accountable now. Today contract law is acting like sand in the engine to resolve the foreclosure mess. The only good news, comparing Newton, Iowa to the people of Bhopal, is that the poison isn't in their bodies.

To frame this subject matter comes an excellent report, in the excellent series, Fresh Air. Terry Gross interviews NY Times Gretchen Morgenson on the foreclosure mess. These two women are heroes for Clarity. I urge all EOM readers to spread the word: listen by clicking here.

In Florida, we could see the economic disaster rolling up like a thunderous hurricane. Citizens and activists, watching the way the Growth Machine tore up the Florida landscape with insta-gro suburbs and degraded wetlands and dying Everglades, knew that it was all unsustainable. They were powerless to stop it.

As a post-script: on Tuesday Florida Hometown Democracy, a proposed constitutional amendment to give voters the final say on whether or not to continue allowing speculators to tear up the landscape, was crushed by builders, realtors, the Chamber of Commerce and Associated Industry. The measure needed 60 percent to pass. Its opponents inflicted this supermajority requirement in 2006, dooming any future grass roots initiative unless it comes with $!0 million in the bank to wage a war on television. Its organizers, exhausted by seven years of battle to make the state-wide ballot, ran out of gas. FHD only garnered 33 percent of the statewide vote, but here is an interesting fact. The measure passed in Monroe County and the Florida Keys-- where growth management is the perennial issue-- by more than 50 percent.

There was no special campaign by Florida Hometown Democracy in the Keys. But if you know the Keys, then you know that growth management controversies pitting citizen activists like those that started Florida Hometown Democracy against irresponsible development are more ubiquitous than mile markers. Voters in the Keys knew the power of Florida Hometown Democracy. Too bad, the general electorate was dazed and confused. Exactly the point of the torrent of corporate money in the mid-term elections that delivered an anxious America to the party that built its viewing platform.

Thursday, November 04, 2010

What is This? The District 8 Election Results Have Changed. By Geniusofdespair

There is now 355 votes between Lynda Bell and Eugene Flinn. she has 21,769 and he has 21,414. How did the numbers change since all the precincts were in? I think this race might need a closer look. It is 8pm and the numbers are again different. There is 362 between them. Bell has 21,787 and Flinn has 21,425.

The Mayor Gets Marlins Money to Help Thwart Petition Attack. By Geniusofdespair

The Miami Herald reports that Mayor Alvarez's PAC has $50,000 of Marlin's money. Alvarez formed the PAC to help in his defense against the recall petition drive led by Norman Braman. The PAC has raised $207,650.00.

Also, in a very smart move, the Mayor's PAC has hired Consultant Ivy Korman to help. Who is she? Ivy Korman was a top echelon staff member at Miami Dade Elections Department. The petitions are certified by elections. If anyone knows anything about election department problems/shortcomings/skeletons it is Ivy. She could probably write a book about what she knows. It would be on the top of my reading list.

Speaking of Norman Braman, I was looking at his family's campaign donor list. Besides donations to DeMint, Rubio and Club for Growth, take a look at this donation. How the hell did Lobbyist Ron Book get in there under 'occupation'? I assume this telling error was connected to how the money was raised for David Rivera, namely by Ron Book.

Florida Democrats need to hit the "re-set" button ... by gimleteye

In 2008, President Obama won Florida by appealing to an increasingly large and diverse group of voters. Hispanic voters were strongly energized by hope and change. He also won, by-passing the state Democratic apparatus-- especially old-guard affiliations. That was by design. This overlooked fact, now that the 2010 election results are in, points the way forward for Florida Democrats.

Part of Obama's calculation was that he didn't need to cultivate, like the Clintons, alliances within the African American vote. But there is every indication, from this-- Florida's most populous county-- that deal-making by African Americans for their slice of the political pie has only served as a form of permanent political enslavement. African Americans are far from the only group hostage to the political past.

South Florida's senior and more liberal Democratic voters have been captive, too, to cracker politics that dominate the old line, north Florida. North Florida Democrats produced conservative, 7 term Congressman Allen Boyd not to mention a sad list of failed campaigns for state office; including Buddy McKay, Bill McBride, Betty Castor, Jim Davis, and now Alex Sink and Rod Smith.

Boyd, from Florida Congressional District 2, was proud of being a conservative Democrat and part of the Blue Dog Coaltion that vexed the Obama White House that ultimately felt compelled, as a result, to sharply curtail its legislative priorities. Priorities, like the environment. As noted by the Florida Independent, Boyd has been, recently, a key figure in the effort to eliminate funding for the EPA, to kill the most important initiative to protect Florida's environment in decades-- restrain the pollution of Florida streams, rivers, and bays.

Ultimately, Boyd could not save his seat from the torrent of cash seeking an even more conservative, radical Republican home. But the take-away lesson is not that Democrats somehow failed to reflect the Florida electorate. This state has proven, as recently as 2008, that its voters are receptive to change. The problem is that Democrats can't find the words to communicate why Florida's economy is in such desperate shape.

The shocking loss of Alex Sink proves not just that she ran a terrible campaign-- and she did-- but that Florida's respected Democratic status quo have been staring for years at a computer screen displaying a fault message while claiming that they really can see the program we should all be following. It has been more than four decades since The Who sang, "We won't be fooled again" and nearly that long Florida Democrats nominate, cycle after cycle, candidates who can't win because they don't reflect the new Florida. Not the Florida of a small town past, but the inchoate mess of Florida's suburbs and cities groaning under poor schools, inadequate infrastructure and a degraded environment.

The popular truism is that no one ever got elected by saying how bad things are. But there is a political fact that is also true: really bad times can sweep you out of office if you can't explain 1) how we got here, 2) what we are going to do, to get out of an economic mess, and 3) where we are going.

Alex Sink did not explain how Florida became a state with a 12.4 percent unemployment rate and a foreclosure rate that is nearly the highest in the nation. She did not identify the bandits. She certainly did not explain what we are going to do-- nor did any other Democratic candidate for state-wide office beyond the standard platitudes-- nor did she paint for voters a clear picture of where we are going.

Here is the bottom line: Florida taxpayers are paying the price for a snatch-and-grab economy that worked while the rest of the nation was eager to buy into the winter sunshine on borrowed money, but not after the housing bubble and mortgage fraud disaster popped. The churning destruction of the American dream is resonant across the spectrum of Florida voters. Seniors, unable to make ends meet on threatened pensions. And for Hispanics-- especially the more recent generations-- the notion of promises hijacked to serve the purposes of an insulated economic elite is especially resonant, but not a theme that Florida Democrats have been able to articulate.

Alex Sink wouldn't even take the occasion of her campaign to tag the culprit for putting Florida's pension funds at risk of multi-billion dollars losses: that would be Jeb Bush and political insiders who ran the State Administration Fund out of the back pocket of Lehman Brothers. I'm sorry: the fact that Rick Scott in the final weeks of the campaign was able to pin Alex Sink with that responsibility is just... well... unprintable.

Florida Democrats are shell-shocked by the 2010 results. How could the GOP that created the weaknesses in the Florida economy through policies advocated by continuous majorities in the legislature and a hold on the executive branch, have taken such clear advantage from the misery they created? Stockholm Syndrome is at work, partly. The same old line political consultants in Tallahassee advise Democratic candidates who take the same route, cut and pasted from past campaigns, to defeat. Some might even claim there is no way for a Democrat to raise enough money for a state-wide campaign without being defeated.

But that is not a way forward. With 2012 and the passage by more than 60 percent of Florida voters for Fair Districts, re-districting of both state and Congressional lines will create a blank slate. That is the most significant change for the Florida political landscape in decades. What is needed is a vigorous effort to recruit and train a new generation of candidates for office who are Democrats, and the place to begin is to help Florida voters understand the costs of this snatch-and-grab economy, who is responsible and the way forward. Anything less than re-setting the Democratic agenda in Florida is just pushing against a string.

Want to Sign a Recall Petition for a County Commissioner? By Geniusofdespair


You can only recall one County Commissioner, the one from your district. Don't know who your County Commissioner is? Go to Miami Voice to see maps of districts.

Here are the locations that Miami Voice has set up for collecting signatures for the recall of 5 Miami-Dade County Commissioners:


District 1 & 3 - Recall of BARBARA JORDAN AND AUDREY EDMONSON

Girosol Group- 16666 NE 19th Avenue, North Miami Beach, FL
Mon-Fri:9:30am-7:00pm
Saturday: 9:30am-5:00pm
Sunday: 10:30am-4:00pm

District 5 - Recall of BRUNO BARREIRO

1031 SW 13 Avenue (look for sign on back porch)
Mon-Fri: 9:00am-5:00pm
Saturday: 10:00am-2:00pm
Sunday: 10:00am-3:00pm

District 9 - Recall of DENNIS MOSS

27455 S. Dixie Hwy.
Sunday/Monday/Tuesday: 10:00am-6:00pm
Wednesday/Thursday/Friday/Saturday: 10:00am-9:00pm

10406 SW 186th Terrace

District 13 - Recall of NATACHA SEIJAS

Miami Lakes Library – 6699 Windmill Gate Rd., Miami Lakes

Crown Medical – 8028 NW 154th Street
Monday (every other week) 8:30 am – 1:00 pm
Tuesday 8:30 am – 6:00 pm
Wednesday 8:30 am – 1:00 pm
Thursday 8:30 am – 6:00 pm
Friday (every other week) 8:30 am – 1:00 pm
Saturday 8:30 am – 12:00 pm
We recomend you call prior (305) 820-5001.

Hialeah Auto Center – 480 East 25th Street
Monday-Saturday: 11:00am-6:00pm
Sunday: Closed

Wednesday, November 03, 2010

Sleeping all Day: Total Eclipse of the Head. By Geniusofdespair

When in doubt about what to do, I sleep, and eat a lot of junk food. After eating some candy bars crushed in ice cream, I was in a twilight dream state watching the movie "The Coneheads," a movie about alien outcasts stranded here from another planet trying to fit in. I was right at home with the film... it is how I am feeling today especially while contemplating what your governor Rick Scott is going to do in Florida. The fish out of water theme is suiting me fine. It is 4 pm, time to finally get up and face a night of pizza and wine. Despair is rocking my life today.

Yes, we can panic! by gimleteye

There is a lot to write about, but this morning I'll be brief. Depression. I'm not talking about how I feel. So relieved this election cycle is over. If the election results show anything, it is that the economy is worse than the mainstream media has been selling; worse by far. A point frequently made on this blog where we don't worry about offending advertisers. People will act when they feel threatened, and if 12.4 percent reflects the official rate of unemployment in Florida, the unofficial number of Floridians who feel cornered by the Great Recession is closer to 60 percent.

The best indication is the race for Attorney General. Dan Gelber, the Democrat, wasn't defeated by Pam Bondi. (Gelber only won 41 percent of the vote). He was defeated by a tidal wave of anxiety. More, later. Congratulations to Republicans. The GOP didn't do so well governing when it held majorities in Congress (think "Ownership Society"). Now the GOP has no excuse: get us out of this mess. Enough of the good news.

The most important election win in Florida in 2010 was Amendments 5 and 6: Fair Districts, passed by 62 and 63 percent respectively if the numbers hold. GOP funders and top strategists like Jeb Bush really, really disliked Fair Districts, but what they hated was Amendment 4, Florida Hometown Democracy.

Florida Hometown Democracy. That was the real terror. If the amendment had passed, the unbreakable bond would have been busted: local public officials, zoning changes they rubber-stamp, and big campaign contributors whose main business is land speculation. This tag team wrecked the Florida economy by attacking and eviscerating regulations protecting taxpayers from fraud. Fraud on mortgages, fraud on the environment, fraud on our quality of life. Last night they won again.

The opponents of Florida Hometown Democracy control state politics. Out of fear of Florida Hometown Democracy, they promoted and won the 60 percent threshold for citizen referenda to change the Florida Constitution. They didn't need 50 percent to win, last night.

Safe to say that Amendment 4 opponents, including the Florida realtors, the Chamber of Commerce, builders and Associated Industries and Big Ag, spent more than $15 million to defeat Florida Hometown Democracy. That meant they had a lot less to spend against Amendments 5 and 6.

Focus groups showed Florida Hometown Democracy would have passed, if voters understood the measure. It took a ton of money to lie and confuse voters; approximately four times as much as the anti-forces invested against Fair Districts. In the case of your hometown, the money for campaign organization and communication and TV ads was all on the other side, and shame on the mainstream media for not saying so. In the end, the grass roots activists who dedicated seven years of their lives-- seven!-- to moving FHD over huge obstacles and barriers ran out of ching. Lesley Blackner and Ross Burnaman, co-founders of the citizens' movement, are Florida heroes for bringing this issue for the last, final time to voters. It's all sprawl now.

Fair Districts and its team, especially Miami attorney Ellen Freiden, ran a brilliant, focused $9.5 million campaign. That is what it takes. In an election marked by anxiety, Floridians, from both sides of the great divide, sifted through the evidence and will now have Fair Districts barring spurious lawsuits. So by all means cogitate on the tea leaves from yesterday's results, but don't forget a tip of the hat to Florida Hometown Democracy and its gritty, determined volunteers who were relentless and never gave up.

You Know How I Feel...Geniusofdespair

Is your glass half full today...

LINK

Or is it half empty...

LINK

Tuesday, November 02, 2010

The only bright spot in the election: Dorrin Rolle is gone. By Geniusofdespair

It is late the results are not final but it looks like Jean Monestime beat out Dorrin Rolle. Looks like Lynda Bell has won in District 8. She ran as a Republican in a non-partisan race and it worked. She even did Republican robocalls. The Democratic backlash took down so many good candidates like Flinn, Gelber and Sink. Help me think of a nickname for Lynda Bell, I need to be amused.

It is after midnight and all the precincts are still not in but Bell is up by 400. Maybe she could still lose -- one can only hope.

Seijas Recall: Back from the Polls. By Geniusofdespair

I was in Miami Lakes getting signatures for the Natacha Seijas recall. It gave me something positive to do. I have to say she is not a very popular woman in her district. Anyway, it was a pleasant afternoon. I set up on an ant nest, one actually got in my pants and bit me on the ass. Aside from that, all went well, people were friendly and in a festive petition signing mood. I even got a couple of people to change their vote on the amendments. Life is good. Voting was brisk, there was a line when I got there about 11 and people were complaining. I was surprised at the turnout at the small precinct I was covering. There was not one sign there or anyone holding signs. I was by myself but busy for the 4 hours I was there.

The Miami Voice Group has the recall petitions for the vile one just about sewed-up. I would suppose they will go for a comfortable cushion. If you live in Miami Dade District 13 and want to sign you can go to:

Crown Medical - 8028 NW 154th Street
Weekdays: 8:00am-7:00pm or Saturday: 9:00am-12 noon

Hialeah Auto Center - 480 East 25th Street
Monday-Saturday: 11:00am-6:00pm

What time will you vote today? by gimleteye

Plenty of time for commentary, tomorrow. I've never seen so much weight given to predicting election outcomes as this election, in direct proportion to the lack of clarity from candidates on their plans to revive the economy. Strange, isn't it.

The queens of small-change campaign contributions. By Geniusofdespair

Never have I seen so many $10, $12 and $15 donations to campaigns as I saw in School District 2 campaign reports. Actually it was nice to see.

Dorothy Bendross-Mindingall has 459 donations. I counted 31 $25 donations, 17 $12 donations, 19 $10 donations and one $5 donation. Ronda Vangates has 761 donations of which 59 were $25 donations, 14 were $10 and 15 were $5.

Can you imagine, some actual people giving campaigns what they can afford, instead of lobbyists and corporations taking over the system.

They are facing a run-off tomorrow. In contrast, the school board run-off in District 7, Carlos Curbelo with 666 donations, had 1 $10 donation, no $5 or $12 donations and 11 $25 donations. Hey Carlos Curbelo, why is AMERICAN SMOKELESS TOBACCO CO., LLC giving $500 to your school board campaign?

What I will be doing today and tomorrow...By Geniusofdespair


Besides voting again, I am going to collect signatures to recall certain County Commissioners and then I am going to a victory party or two today. But in all honesty, I will spend a good part of Tuesday and Wednesday in utter despair and/or in a state of crankiness.

One last appeal for Alex Sink: Your vote will not be meaningless for Governor. The Governor appoints on all boards — such as the South Florida Water Management District. That board is important to growth management if Amendment 4 does not pass. The SFWMD has stopped many bad developments with Crist's smart appointees. I shudder to think of what Scott will do with those appointments since he is intent on dismantling the growth management agency —DCA. This is why I like Crist so much -- pretty good appointments and he put Tom Pelham as head of Department of Community Affairs.

Monday, November 01, 2010

Alex Sink is Neck and Neck with Mr. Crazy Eyes. By Geniusofdespair

The latest Quinnipiac University survey shows the Governor's race in a virtual tie: Sink getting 44%, Scott getting 43%. According to the Miami Herald:

"The poll found Scott has gained over the last three weeks among conservative-leaning voters who don't like him but have decided they don't dislike him enough to let a Democrat win."

YOU MUST VOTE...GET YOUR FRIENDS TO VOTE...AND ANYONE ELSE YOU CAN DUST OFF AND BRING TO THE POLLS. CALL YOUR KIDS AT FLORIDA COLLEGES: THREATEN THEM. Scott would be a disaster. Don't let him win!

What time will you vote tomorrow? by gimleteye


Tomorrow we get to see if American democracy is fit to money spent on endless television commercials, or whether at the last moment, voters will think for themselves: what candidates are best for this state?

What time are you planning to vote? It is a simple question, but you need to answer it today and so do your friends and family. Put it out there for them: what time are you planning to vote?

From the Financial Times: "Taking America Back" ... by gimleteye

TERRIFIC report from the venerable Financial Times, focusing on a Florida couple, new arrivals to our state, who have embraced the Tea Party, "Taking America Back". Click 'read more', for the article and my commentary

My comments are embedded in the text, IN CAPS.

FT MAGAZINE

Taking America back
By Edward Luce
Published: October 30 2010 00:12 | Last updated: October 30 2010 00:12


Tea Party activists Ron and Mary Rakovich. Mary’s protest against President Obama’s fiscal stimulus was televised by Fox News and she has been a party celebrity ever since Mary Rakovich cannot pinpoint the moment she realised she was losing her country. But she started to get that feeling in early 2008 during a very heated phase of the Democratic primary contest between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. The TV networks had picked up tapes of the Reverend Jeremiah Wright’s sermons and were replaying the most incendiary clips over and over: “God damn America”, “God damn America,” “God damn America.”

The internet was awash with rumours that the clips of Obama’s Chicago pastor would be followed by another even more troubling release. One persistent rumour had it that Michelle Obama was on tape condemning “whiteys”. Conservative websites focused on the fact that Obama, unlike other presidential candidates, tended not to wear the American flag pin on his lapel. Already there were rumours that he had not been born in America and was a closet Muslim.

For 53-year-old Mary, an automotive engineer who had recently lost her job at General Motors in Detroit and moved with her husband to Florida, it was a moment of awakening. For the first time in her life she began to surf the internet. “I never realised how much you could learn,” she said over a seafood meal near her new home in Cedar Key, central Florida. “It opened up a new world to me.”

(THEY LOST THEIR JOB AND MOVED TO FLORIDA. JUST GREAT. FLORIDA IS LOSING POPULATION, AND WE ARE GAINING THE DISAFFECTED? INTO THE WOODS OF CEDAR KEY, NO LESS, WHERE THE NEAREST INDUSTRY ARE MASSIVE ROCK AND PHOSPHATE MINES DESTROYING AQUIFERS AND SPRINGS AND QUALITY OF LIFE. THESE INDUSTRIES CONTRIBUTE HEAVILY TO GOP AND "TEA PARTY" CAUSES. DO YOU THINK THE RAKOVICH'S HAVE ANY CLUE WHAT INTERESTS THE ANTI-GOVERNMENT PROGRAM OF THE TEA PARTY, SERVES IN FLORIDA?)

Mary looked up the website of the Revd Wright’s Trinity United Church of Christ. “I came across black liberation theology, which I’d never heard of before,” she said. “It really freaked me out. I mean, if you went on to John McCain’s website and found all this stuff about white liberation theology wouldn’t you be freaked?” I nodded in agreement.

Socrates said that to understand a thing you must first name it. It was not until February 2009 that the Tea Party movement got its name (after the 1773 Boston protest against punitive British taxes). That was when Rick Santelli, the CNBC anchor, erupted into his now famous live “rant” in which he stuck the moniker on the growing but inchoate conservative backlash against Barack Obama. President Obama had yet to complete a month in office.

It could just as easily have happened during the election. At their rallies, John McCain and Sarah Palin would often be drowned out by beer hall chants of “USA”, “USA”. (Palin surfed it, McCain just looked awkward.) It could have happened on October 3 2008, when Congress passed the $700bn Wall Street bailout unleashing a flood of hate mail to lawmakers who had voted in favour.

It might have happened six weeks earlier when Obama addressed the Hollywoodesque Democratic convention at the Mile High stadium in Denver – an event that sent liberal spirits soaring but which only deepened the foreboding of conservatives. “We kept thinking, who is this guy? Do we know anything about him?” says Ron Rakovich, Mary’s husband, 52, who, like his wife, had recently been evicted from his job at GM.

(SO BOTH RAKOVITCH'S ARE OUT OF JOBS IN AN INDUSTRY THAT THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION SAVED FROM BANKRUPTCY. PRESUMABLY THEY ARE LIVING ON PENSIONS OR FEDERAL BENEFITS. DO THEY ALSO DESPISE THOSE, TOO?)

But it was Santelli on February 19 2009 who put a name to the feelings of the Rakoviches and millions like them. His angry soliloquy was sparked by Obama’s announcement of an otherwise unexceptionable – and ineffectual – plan to stem the ... floodtide of home foreclosures. For Santelli it was another wasteful bailout for the undeserving – although in this case the undeserving were poor.

Tea Partyer Eric Wilson is the founder of the northern Kentucky 9/12 chapter. ‘Even before Obama came to power,’ he says, ‘I felt in the pit of my stomach things were going wrong.’ “This is America!” Santelli began. “How many people want to pay for your neighbour’s mortgages that has an extra bathroom and can’t pay their bills? Raise their hand! President Obama, are you listening? … It’s time for another tea party! What we are doing in this country will make Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin roll over in their graves.”

It is a phrase that crops up again and again. Tea Partiers are constantly invoking the outrage of long-dead Founding Fathers. There are many kinds of Tea Partier. Richard Armey, the former Republican leader, who heads Freedom Works, one of the most prominent Tea Party Groups, refers to the movement’s decentralised character as “beautiful chaos”. “The fact that we don’t have a leader is a strength not a weakness,” he says.

Whether they belong to Freedom Works, like the Rakoviches, the 9/12 group, which was set up by Glenn Beck, the talk radio host (“the day after 9/11 we were all Americans”), the Tea Party Patriots, or one of the dozens of allied outfits, they share a burning sense that the US Constitution is in mortal danger. More than anyone before or since, it is America’s 44th president who personifies that danger. “Obama is the most un-American president we have had,” says Mary.

Having been through the ordeal of being told to clear their desks within minutes of being fired (at separate times), Mary and Ron subsequently also forfeited their suburban home to the bank. They moved south to look after Ron’s ailing father in Florida (he died a few months later) and finally settled on the secluded tranquillity of Cedar Key. Once a railroad hub, it is now a sleepy town on the Gulf coast side of the state.

The Rakoviches live a few miles inland, past the bayous and mudflats in a prefabricated home surrounded by trees and water. At the end of their unkempt, potholed drive stands a warning sign: “Second Amendment Security” – after the amendment that specifies the right to bear arms. Tea Partiers revere the constitution. But some amendments are more equal than others.

Mary’s Chevrolet Trailblazer is covered with bumper stickers: “Legalise the Constitution”, “Embryo on Board”, “America was Founded by Right-Wing Extremists!” Their home is overrun with cats. Sometimes alligators wander out of the swampy pond beside their house. “I can never get used to the ’gators,” says Mary. “Ron’s fine with them.”

. . .

Like many Tea Partiers, the Rakoviches are open, talkative, and keen to tell their story. Their deep disdain for the “mainstream media” (MSM) in general seems to be suspended at the personal level. Like their peers, they very rarely in fact ever read the MSM, view it or consume it.

Instead they watch Glenn Beck’s show on Fox News, listen to Rush Limbaugh, the king of talk radio conservatives, and click on the links – usually to conservative sites, such as NewsMax, or Breitbart – that are posted on the Tea Party’s sprawling ecosystem of Facebook pages. “Now the internet was something that Obama taught us,” says Mary, who has picked up the habit of Tweeting.

Mary’s coming of age as a grassroots activist came just a few days before Santelli’s missive when she protested against Obama, who was speaking in a stadium in Fort Myers, Florida. The president was there to publicise the benefits of the fiscal stimulus Congress had just passed. If the bailout had raised the temperature, Obama’s $787bn fiscal injection took it close to boiling point.

Mary, who had turned up with only two other protesters, kept getting shifted further from the stadium by the Secret Service. They were heavily outnumbered by the hundreds of well-wishers. But they stood their ground. Their sign “Jobs, Not Pork” reflected outrage at some of the fiscal package’s content. Mary cited a $650m item to boost DirecTV and a $60m grant to fund a museum about the mob in Las Vegas.

Fox News heard about Mary’s lonely protest and set up a live feed to interview her. She said Obama was bankrupting America. “I’ve no idea if I made any sense at all,” she said, laughing. “But I just talked away.” Whatever it was, it obviously worked. Mary has been a Tea Party celebrity ever since.

Ron, who, like Mary, is unemployed and living on disability cheques (Mary recently had a hip replacement operation and Ron has a chronically bad back), keeps a file of cuttings about Mary.

Neither sees a contradiction between their dependence on government dollars and their anti-government activism. “Both of us have worked and paid taxes and followed the law all our lives,” says Ron.

(OK. SO HERE YOU HAVE WELL-MEANING PEOPLE WHO JUST MOVED TO FLORIDA, WHO KNOW NOTHING ABOUT FLORIDA EXCEPT THAT IT IS HARD TO LIVE WITH ALLIGATORS, AND THEY ARE POURING THEIR ANGER AND RESENTMENT TO GOVERNMENT, WHILE APPARENTLY IGNORANT THAT THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION, WHO THEY DESPISE, PROTECTED THEIR PENSION AND SUPPORTS AFFORDABLE HEALTH CARE WITH TAXPAYER SUBSIDIES. AND THEY ARE SHILLING FOR POLITICIANS WHOSE MAIN LOYALTY IS TO CORPORATE POLLUTERS, USING THE TEA PARTY AS A FOIL FOR THE DESTRUCTION OF THE REGULATORY CAPACITIES OF GOVERNMENT. JUST DUCKY.)

A few days after the Fort Myers episode, the Rakoviches had a beach party to celebrate Santelli’s rant. Three hundred people showed up. A few weeks later, they, and tens of thousands around America, held a Tea Party protest on April 15 – Tax Day, a date people dread since that is when they must file their annual tax returns. “I don’t want to sound corny or anything, but we feel like we are part of something bigger than ourselves – a movement to take back our country,” says Mary.

Some observers dismiss Tea Partiers as subliminal racists. Others believe the Tea Party is an avatar of the Christian moral majority movement, which lost steam somewhat with the deaths of televangelists, such as Jerry Falwell. And some, noting their disgust with America’s rising national debt, choose to take the Tea Party at face value – as a fiscally conservative movement that aims to shrink the federal government.

(THE TEA PARTY ISN'T ABOUT SHRINKING, ANYTHING. THE GOP, WHO REPRESENT THE TEA PARTY, CAN'T FIND EVEN A FRACTION OF FEDERAL SPENDING TO CUT, TO DENT THE FEDERAL DEFICIT. CLUELESS. JUST CLUELESS.)

All these traits are present. But insinuations of racism touch a raw nerve. Tea Party rallies are almost wholly white. Mary monitors her rallies and weeds out banners that could be construed as racist (Obama with a Hitler moustache apparently does not count). “My son-in-law is black, and I have mixed-race grandchildren,” says Ron, who, like Mary, is on his third marriage. “If anyone says we’re prejudiced they don’t know what they’re talking about.”

What all Tea Partiers share is an obsession with defending what they see as the endangered US constitution. Although little known outside Tea Party circles, W Cleon Skousen’s, The 5,000 year leap, A Miracle That Changed the World, is something of a bible. It depicts the Founding Fathers as divinely inspired individuals whose 1776 Declaration of Independence and 1787 Constitution marked a five-millennia leapfrog for humankind. The US constitution was God’s gift to the world.

It follows that any attempt to tamper with it is un-American and Godless – the two are often synonymous. It explains why Christine O’Donnell, the colourful Tea Party-backed Republican Senate candidate for Delaware, this month asserted that the US constitution did not separate Church and State. No accredited scholar, or judge, could possibly agree with her interpretation of the constitution. But for O’Donnell, as for the Rakoviches, God is its ultimate author. Any talk of it as a secular document is for them nonsensical. Unlike many other Tea Party candidates in next week’s midterm congressional election, O’Donnell is expected to lose.

“I wouldn’t take the Tea Party arguments seriously,” says Ronald Dworkin, a leading constitutional scholar at New York University. “There is no scholarship behind them. The Constitution was a product of the Enlightenment, which took society away from religion, not towards it.”

To scholars like Dworkin – who talks, somewhat resignedly, like he has seen it all before – the Founding Fathers were flesh and blood. Three of them, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, owned slaves. Brilliant though they were, the notion that they could have disgorged a timeless blueprint strikes him as absurd. Mary, of course, ... sees things differently. “Where in the constitution does it say everyone has to have healthcare insurance?” she asked more than once.

Dworkin also finds it hard to conceal his exasperation at the notion that the “Founding Fathers” were of one mind, and that modern America should limit itself to working out what they intended. In fact, they often disagreed. “The constitution was a document that reflected the political realities of the late 18th century,” says Dworkin. “It struck a hard-fought compromise between the slave states of the south and the non-slave states of the north. That is the factual reality.”

. . .


Outside their home in Florida’s Cedar Key, Ron and Mary Rakovich’s SUV is covered with bumper stickers that speak out for the Tea Party’s old-fashioned religious morality – for God and guns and strongly against abortion. If the stimulus brought matters close to boiling point, Obama’s healthcare bill set the kitchen alight. “Is this what our Founders had in mind?” asks Beka Romm, a touring lecturer for the American Majority, a group that gives history lessons to Tea Partiers around the country. “I don’t think so.”

A young lady in her late 20s, Romm is lecturing a group of 30 or so Tea Partiers in Williamstown, Kentucky. No one in the audience is under 60. The town has turned into a backwater since the interstate highway was completed 45 years ago. But it is a hive of Tea Party activity. Within Kentucky’s whisky and tobacco belt, places like Williamstown are the ground zero of the Tea Party movement. They have the key ingredients: disaffected blue-collar and less well-paid white-collar Americans who share the sense the world is passing them by. “It is not the past that is a foreign country,” writes the historian Jill Lepore of the Tea Partiers. “It’s the present.” One local group is called Citizens for a Christian Constitutional Commonwealth. The “9/12-ers” are also here in force.

Speaking in the breezy tones of a business motivator, Romm downloads a potted Tea Party history of America. Things started to go wrong in about 1900. “For our first 120 or so years America was governed as the Founding Fathers wanted,” says Romm. “The economy was controlled by the private sector. But then the progressive era began. Are you following … ? OK!” The upshot – and one many Tea Partiers, and Glenn Beck fans, can recite virtually word-for-word – is that the progressives, led by presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson (“the most evil man we’ve had in office,” says Beck) set about undermining the American project. They regulated the economy. Wilson created the US Federal Reserve and passed an amendment to enable federal income taxes. Roosevelt even dabbled in healthcare.

The other three who qualify for the pantheon of evil are Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr, a Supreme Court Justice, Robert Lafollette, a progressive from Wisconsin, and Herbert Croly, founder of the liberal New Republic magazine. “They were the ‘utopian statists’ who moved America away from its ideals,” says Romm. “Obama is also a utopian statist. Do you think this is what the Founding Fathers wanted for us?” she asks. “No? ... I didn’t think so.”

When Romm mentions the “horrific healthcare bill” there are murmurs of agreement. My host, Eric Wilson, a 9/12 stalwart, who has generously offered to take me to as many Tea Party meetings as I want, is a devoted follower of Glenn Beck. When Eric appeared on the Glenn Beck show in New York, somebody asked him on the return flight whether he had been there on business or pleasure. “I thought about it long and hard. But I just couldn’t answer the question,” he said.

Beck often refers to Obama’s healthcare bill as “reparations” in an unsubtle dog-whistle intended to conjure up thoughts of slavery’s angry descendants. It is also meant to invoke the belief that most of the beneficiaries of the bill are non-white (untrue, although the percentage of uninsured blacks and Hispanics is higher than their respective share of the population).

It occurred to me that the Tea Party’s abhorrence of mounting federal spending might be less to do with the spending than with its beneficiaries – greedy bankers included. American populism has always tended to demonise both the undeserving rich and the undeserving poor. It is always the honest-to-God middle Americans who get swindled.

That was the sentiment that sustained Father Coughlin – the angry radio priest, whose railings against Roosevelt’s New Deal often spilled over into anti-Semitism – in the 1930s. It was also the animating spirit of Joe McCarthy’s “Red scare” witch-hunt in the 1950s. Xenophobia is never far from the surface. But it is not precisely the same as racism.

“Race is usually a factor, but rarely in a simple way,” says Michael Kazin, one of America’s leading scholars of populism. “To describe the Tea Party movement as racist would be simplistic and probably wrong. But if you walk around Tea Party rallies and you look at their faces, you realise that it is Obama who looks like today’s America, not the Tea Partiers. Maybe that enrages some of them.”

. . .

A father of two, who moved to Kentucky in order to be near his favourite place of worship, a Sovereign Grace Baptist church, Eric Wilson is far from being a racist. His wife, Lydia, also 40, is a Mexican-American. Although very mild-mannered, Eric was clearly affronted when I mentioned the allegation. A day after we met, he e-mailed me a picture he took of an African-American girl waving a stars and stripes at Glenn Beck’s large “Restoring Honor” rally last August at the Washington Mall.

Awakened by Glenn Beck’s famous March 2009 broadcast in which he said “You are not alone”, Eric founded the northern Kentucky 9/12 chapter, which now has 2,300 members. In his broadcast, Beck trotted out nine principles and 12 values (9/12). The first principle states: “America is good.” What most struck Eric was the seventh: “I work hard for what I have and I will share it with who I want to. Government cannot force me to be charitable.” And the second: “I believe in God and he is the centre of my life.”

When we sit down for lunch at a very New Age, cranberry and tofu-style café near his home, I ask Eric whether he believes the Tea Party is just about limiting the size of government, or something larger. At an inaugural session I attended of a neighbourhood group in a farmhouse near Cincinnati, the organisers were candid in spelling out that the Tea Party had for tactical reasons chosen only to emphasise its fiscal conservatism. When asked, everyone there said they were “strongly pro-life”. “How can we rescue America from fiscal bankruptcy if we don’t tackle its moral bankruptcy?” asked one of the attendees. The organiser replied that the two were one and the same. “Look at what we will defund. We will close the Department of Education, the National Endowment of the Arts, cut welfare, etcetera – is that moral or fiscal?”

Eric was candid too. A statistical forecaster who works for a Lexington-based mattress maker, and earns around $65,000 a year, he admitted that before he got involved with 9/12, he had almost no friends. “Now I have so many,” he said. Back at their single-storey “ranch” (bungalow) on the outskirts of Georgetown, Kentucky, Eric and Lydia offered their definition of the Tea Party while their almost laughably cute 18-month-old daughter kept trying to grab my pen.

The US Constitution, said Eric, was an act of divine providence at the end of the first Great Awakening – the Protestant revivalist fervour of the mid-to-late 18th century. America had a second Great Awakening in the mid-19th century. Now it was embarking on a third. “Even before Obama came to power, I felt in the pit of my stomach that things were going wrong,” he said. “This is not the way it is supposed to be.”

Like Mary and Ron, Eric and Lydia are fixed on a past scholars see as mythical, but which to them is as real as the ground beneath their feet. It is an age-old dialogue of the deaf between faith and reason, which flares up at times of distress – particularly economic distress. Then it dies down. Meanwhile, the future keeps on coming. America used to be a slave-owning country. Now it has a black president.

I ask what it is that prompts Eric and Lydia to devote their precious spare time to the cause. “For our daughter,” they answered in unison. “We want her to grow up in the America our parents grew up in, where people worked hard and had values,” added Eric. “Right now America’s future looks pretty bad. We have forgotten who we are.”

(THERE IS NO QUESTION THAT AMERICA'S FUTURE LOOKS PRETTY BAD. BUT THERE IS ALSO NO HELP FROM THE TEA PARTY, WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT. THE CANDIDATES WHO BASK IN THE TEA PARTY LIGHT ARE SIMPLY USING THE FURY TO GET ALOFT, THE WAY PELICANS OFF CEDAR KEY USE THE TEMPERATURE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE AIR AND WATER TO GLIDE. JUST WAIT A COUPLE OF YEARS, WHILE THE POT SETS TO BOIL.)

Edward Luce is the FT’s Washington bureau chief

..................................................

Party people

The Tea Party will have its day in the sun on Tuesday when Americans elect the country’s 112th Congress. Among the iconic Tea Party-backed Republicans standing are Christine O’Donnell, the eccentric Senate candidate for Delaware, Rand Paul, the libertarian from Kentucky, Joe Miller, a hardcore Tea Partier in Alaska (who has the blessing of Sarah Palin, that state’s former governor) and Marco Rubio, a potential presidential prospect, in Florida.

Having outraged a sufficient number of apathetic voters to go to the polls on Tuesday, some of these big names, such as O’Donnell and Miller, may well stumble at the block. But a generation of others, including Rubio in Florida, and dozens of Tea Party-backed candidates in the elections for the House of Representatives, are likely to make it to Capitol Hill.

As opponents of taxation in any form, they could wreak havoc on the relationship between the White House and the Hill over the next two years – and send America’s national debt soaring into the stratosphere. They could also prove decisive in selecting the next Republican presidential nominee, who will face off Barack Obama in 2012. That contest effectively starts on Wednesday …

Election in Miami-Dade District 8: Tweets for Eugene Flinn. By Geniusofdespair

I'm supporting Gene because he has already proven his support of sustainability initiatives, he has worked with the other mayors to fight FPL transmission lines on US 1, and he understands how the county has to work with local municipalities. - Mayor Philip K. Stoddard, South Miami

Eugene Flinn has demonstrated the ability to both lead and represent our community, to listen to his constituents and will promote responsible and limited government.That's why I am supporting him.
- Mayor Cindy Lerner, Palmetto Bay.

I'm for Gene because he's green, likes budgets lean but never mean. Flinn's voice can be heard above the din. Let's help him win! - County Commissioner Katy Sorenson

To the point: Flynn is the candidate I want in District 8.
- Geniusofdespair of Eye on Miami

Add your own in comments: More important, get out and vote tomorrow!

BTW - Here is the best thing I like about Palmetto Bay, they care about their kids, most cities leave teenagers with nothing to do: