Thursday, March 4, 2010

O'Barry righting some old wrongs

In the 1960s, this man was the trainer of the dolphin in the television show, Flipper. Ric O'Barry has not rested since leaving that job as a young man. He has felt extreme guilt for his role in the show. He's seen how that TV program opened up the abuse of dolphins around the world, even though that was obviously not the intention of the show.

Like many men who grow more enlightened with age, stunned that they did the things they did as young men, O'Barry has lived with a lot of pain and regret. But he's also taken action and dedicated the rest of his career to protecting dolphins, freeing them from captivity and raising public awareness about why human beings should not pay admission to any attraction that confines dolphins. He knows a lot about these animals and is worth listening to. Nightline did a piece about him this week. I can't link to it directly, but you can go to the Nightline site and look for a video titled "Under the Sea."


This Sunday, there is only one film that I will be rooting for during the Academy Awards. It's a documentary called The Cove. The story behind this movie centers on one of the most horrible abuses man has ever inflicted on the natural world. One particular mass killing of dolphins in Japan is horrific beyond any words I could use to describe it. While I have not seen The Cove, I have seen the actual video clips of what Japan is doing to dolphins in an otherwise serene cove used to trap them as they are then butchered alive in the water. O'Barry was involved in exposing these murders that the government of Japan refused to do anything about until it was caught on film. Now The Cove is bringing more exposure to the killings, so I am hoping Hollywood does right by the film on Sunday night. The fear is that once the publicity moves away, however, the killings will resume. It's baffling to me how human beings can be this cruel and how a country that prides itself on being a world player can be this backwards and barbaric.

Read a short Q&A with O'Barry.

Buchanan, Bunning have other motives?

Pat Buchanan was on a conservative radio talk show this morning defending Sen. Jim Bunning's now-abandoned campaign to stop payments to unemployed folks. No surprise there. Buchanan isn't known for his compassion. But he, like other extremists, are creating a false argument in the defense of Bunning.

No one, including myself, denies that the government is over spending and that the deficit needs to be addressed. But why did Mr. Bunning, a Republican, decide to make his stand on the backs of average American citizens who happen to be down on their luck because of layoffs and the recession? The money required to extend benefits in this time of continuing high unemployment rates is a drop in the bucket compared to the money that went to the banks and various corporate bailouts. The money appropriated for extending unemployment is nothing compared to what we spend on two senseless wars every month. And as emergency funding, it's exempt from the pay-as-you-go guidelines.

Buchanan, Bunning and other ultra conservatives with the inability to empathize with the less fortunate in society are simply choosing the wrong issue to use to make their point. Once again it's making all Republicans look like heartless monsters.

I support fiscal conservatism but I suspect this Bunning-Buchanan stance against the unemployed is motivated by something else. Something far uglier than is being openly portrayed by these men and those who support them. They are stereotyping unemployed people. They don't seem aware of the underemployment problem that exists for everyone from PhD's to experienced professionals. And I wouldn't even doubt if there is some racism involved in their positions.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Bunning relents but damage likely done

Republican Sen. Jim Bunning of Kentucky finally came to his senses tonight. Read the latest. It may be too little too late for some unemployed folks because the deadline for a seamless continuation of funding was missed due to Bunning's one-man blockade. Combined with the timing of when certain people were scheduled to move into a new tier and the state in which they reside, further payments might be delayed for days, weeks or months. A percentage of jobless people who would have otherwise qualified for continuation of payments if last Friday's deadline was met, may have some problems restarting the process. Because I am one of those people, I will report back on this saga next week.

At the very least, Mr. Bunning has created a lot of anxiety for thousands of Virginians who might have received a similar "bye" notice to the one I got in the mail today from the Virginia Employment Commission -- an agency that still has not returned my calls or answered my e-mails. If payments do not resume for a percentage of us, Bunning will have done more damage than the mainstream media will probably report.

It's been clear to me that most news folks are missing the important nuances and magnitude of this sometimes surreal story. There has been a
fair amount of editorial commentary about Bunning's cruel stunt but little analysis about what it really means for average folks caught in the most complex part of this political web. In fact, the media hasn't done a good job in general of covering the unemployment problem in this country. They report the data released by the government, but I don't see much challenging of those statistics that fail to portray the whole picture. I don't see much interpretation of what unemployment means to society, let alone the diversity of individuals facing financial extinction. In a year in which many politicians, including President Obama, all but ignored growing unemployment issues, where was the media?

An interestin
g side note to this mess... Diane Sawyer led with the Bunning story on the ABC network news Tuesday night. Meanwhile, Brian Williams of NBC barely made mention of it late in his newscast. Think I will be watching Diane Sawyer from now on. What kind of news judgment does Williams have? Pushing a story that impacts millions of Americans to a 20-second blurb? Is he kidding? No wonder Sawyer's ratings have risen since she has taken over at ABC. Kudos to ABC for chasing down Bunning and airing his classless outbursts and thoughtless actions.

VEC unresponsive; Bunning not taking calls

To add insult to injury about the Sen. Jim Bunning situation that I've written several posts about, the Virginia Employment Commission is not returning calls. This is a commission that I have tried to contact numerous times. I've left phone messages and used its web site to send inquiries. Yet, in the dozens of times I have reached out in recent weeks, the VEC has not returned a single call or sent an electronic reply to me once. The lines are jammed today in Richmond. The automated answering machine does not even allow you to hold if you want. The VEC satellite offices don't have anyone available to answer a simple question. Receptionists take phone numbers, but it seems to be standard practice for workers at this agency to not return calls. What a mess and what an indication of how bad the unemployment problem really is in this state and country. These agencies can no longer handle the workload.

Related to this, if anyone is interested in voicing an objection to Sen. Bunning's outrageous behavior that will leave millions of Americans with no income starting next week, here is the Senate Office number in D.C.: 202-224-4343
. You'll probably get a busy signal as it seems the rogue Republican senator from Kentucky isn't staffed to handle calls. What a piece of work this guy is.

Bunning's cruelty hits home

I officially begin falling off the cliff next week. Yes, it appears that I am one of the millions who will be impacted by Sen. Jim Bunning's blockage of federal funding for extended unemployment benefits. I received a notice today from the Commonwealth of Virginia of my "bye date." Nice term, huh? As of March 6, I will not receive payments. The weekly sum that I was getting was less than a third of what I was earning before I got laid off. So it's not like I've been living high on the hog. But it was enough to keep me and millions of others afloat.

There will be a place for the soon-to-be-retired senator from Kentucky, and it isn't on a shuffleboard court in Florida or a horse farm in his home state. Justice will come to Mr. Bunning, but not before millions of more Americans are thrown into utter turmoil.

Not many things surprise me anymore, but how this can happen in this country due to one man is beyond belief. This doesn't only impact the unemployed. Everyone will pay a price for Mr. Bunning's actions. Read the latest.

A quake that moved the entire planet

We tend to go about our days without thinking much about the planet we inhabit. Even when natural disasters such as earthquakes occur, we think of those as regional events.

The recent 8.8-magnitude earthquake in Chile sent tsunami warnings to countries thousands of miles away. Still, it didn't seem as if the earthquake had a global reach or should concern us for any reasons beyond the obvious humanitarian ones.

Then came this news on the NASA web site.

Experts say the Chilean earthquake caused a shortening of days by knocking the planet off of its axis. How scientists figure this stuff out is astonishing. What's even more amazing is how an apparent localized natural event can literally impact the entire globe. Earth and life itself appear far more fragile than we often realize. In a year of record-breaking odd weather, earthquakes and other occurrences, it makes one wonder whether these events are somehow connected or if the planet is in some kind of transitional period.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Sen. Bunning showing his bitterness

Sen. Jim Bunning, a Republican from Kentucky, continues to make news after a confrontation with television news reporters wanting to question him about his one-man crusade to stop federal funding for folks who have lost their jobs in the recession. See video.

A week ago, I had never heard of this man. Now he's the face of everything that is wrong with politics in this country. He's stopping transit projects and hurting unemployed people. He's more concerned about basketball games than answering questions.

If you're still not convinced this dude is off his rocker, here are a few paragraphs from a recent huffingtonpost.com story about this ongoing fiasco:

... when Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) begged him to drop his objection, Bunning replied (according to Politico): "Tough shit."

Bunning says he doesn't oppose extending benefits -- he just doesn't want the money that's required added to the deficit. He proposes paying for the 30-day extension with stimulus funds. The Senate's GOP leadership did not support him in his objections.

And at one point during the debate, which dragged on till nearly midnight, Bunning complained of missing a basketball game.

"I have missed the Kentucky-South Carolina game that started at 9:00," he said,
"and it's the only redeeming chance we had to beat South Carolina since they're the only team that has beat Kentucky this year.

So far, neither party has been able to talk sense into Bunning. He is eroding whatever momentum the Republicans recently gained and infuriating Democrats. He is showing a level of coldness that has some questioning his mental health. This is not the time or issue to try to score political points on. Plus, who is he scoring points with? It appears most Republicans aren't backing him. I emphasize the word appears. More about that later.

Where was Mr. Bunning's principled objections during the previous administration's spending sprees? This isn't about the deficit reduction or fiscal conservatism. This is just a mean, old politician who has announced his intentions to retire, and is going out in the ugliest way possible -- his chance to earn 15 minutes of fame and a pat on the back from some country club buddies back in the bluegrass state who think all unemployed people are scum.

Some, however, believe the GOP is using Bunning, knowing he's leaving office soon, to create greater conflict with the Democrats without appearing like they are against ordinary middle class folks who are down on their luck. If this conspiracy theory is true, the Republicans will have shown a level of stupidity that you have to go back to Watergate to rival. If I were advising Republicans, I would tell them to speak out against Mr. Bunning loudly and often. Distance themselves from this lunatic. I don't buy the conspiracy theory yet, but if there is even a hint of it that is true, it needs to be extinguished now.

As this insane game of political grandstanding continues, millions of Americans are about to take another hit that they weren't prepared for because of the ugly behavior from one mad senator. Unemployment payments could dry up prematurely, adding insult to injury, causing thousands more foreclosures, which bring down the value of other homes. Also note that some of the money Bunning is holding up was targeted for small businesses and much-needed projects.

I have read some of the blogs about this. Most of the commentators are as appalled by Bunning as I am. But every now and then, a hater makes a hit-and-run remark about unemployed people not trying hard enough to find work. For anyone in that camp, I hope you never lose your job. And if you do, I hope it's in a field that hasn't been decimated by the recession. If you think 26 weeks (the normal unemployment payment period) is enough time for most people to find work in this economy, you simply aren't paying attention or are as heartless as Sen. Bunning. If you think 26 weeks is enough time for folks in their 50s or 60s to reinvent themselves after certain professions have gone extinct, think again. I am all for deficit reduction, but not on the backs of people who worked hard all their lives and have fallen victim to a force that was beyond their control.

Americans bailed out the banks. We can certainly help individual citizens weather this storm. It will do society no good to let millions of people lose their homes, live in shelters, eat at soup kitchens, take their kids out of schools, etc. Unemployment payments are usually a fraction of what people earned in their jobs, but they are often what keeps folks from falling off the cliff when those jobs are lost. If Mr. Bunning can't see that, then I question his patriotism as well as his intelligence. This is one senator who can't retire fast enough.

Read more at washingtonpost.com

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Long may you run

Neil Young performed at the closing ceremony of the Olympics tonight. Is it possible the Olympic committee read this earlier post in Calvacca Blog? Way to go, Canada.