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Archive for July, 2009

Stimulus Hypocrisy: Louisiana Style

Only a few months after our Governor publicly opposed the federal stimulus, even going so far as to say he would reject some of the stimulus money for Louisiana, he’s now appearing throughout the State, distributing jumbo-sized checks and channeling the spirit of the late Ed McMahon, which definitely makes for some great photo opportunities.

jindalchecksfinal(Photo credit: Think Progress)

However, it’s hard not to appreciate the irony: Much of the money Jindal has been doling out is, in fact, stimulus money, a fact that, to his credit, Jindal acknowledges. Just last week in Politico, Jindal criticized the stimulus as “a stimulus that has not stimulated.” Prior to that, as you may recall, Jindal appeared on national television to deliver the Republican response to President Obama’s first address to a joint session of Congress, during which Jindal lambasted monies set aside for high-speed rail infrastructure and, most notably, “volcano monitoring,” a curious criticism from a Governor who leads a State that should be well-aware of the value of preventative planning and research for natural disasters and a claim that infuriated many in the scientific community and in the State of Alaska. From CNN (bold mine):

Jindal has been a vocal critic of the stimulus package, highlighting what he considers waste at a White House meeting with governors on Monday and in his speech Tuesday. He noted $300 million to buy new government cars, $8 billion for high-speed rail projects and $140 million “for something called ‘volcano monitoring.’ “

“Instead of monitoring volcanoes, what Congress should be monitoring is the eruption of spending in Washington,” Jindal said.

Jindal, seen as a possible contender for the 2012 GOP presidential nomination, has announced plans to reject $100 million of stimulus funding for his state, saying it would require Louisiana to change its unemployment laws. Several other governors have expressed similar concerns.

To be fair, Jindal was not the most extreme in his stance against the stimulus. Unlike Governor Sanford, who flirted with rejecting the entire stimulus outright, Jindal likely saw the writing on the wall and realized that, despite his best efforts, the stimulus would pass, providing the State of Louisiana with billions in additional federal dollars that he couldn’t afford to reject.

Supporters of Jindal may claim that his opposition to the stimulus had less to do with its overall need and more to do with opposition to individual programs funded by the stimulus and the lack of a true bipartisan consensus, a compelling argument to be sure. The problem with this argument, however, is that throughout the month of February, Governor Jindal made it abundantly clear that he was “fundamentally opposed” to the entire package. This is what Jindal told David Gregory on Meet the Press on February 22, 2009 (bold mine):

I think we just have a fundamental disagreement here. I don’t think the best way to do that is for the government to tax and borrow more money.  I think the best thing they could’ve done, for example, was to cut taxes on things like capital gains, the lower tax brackets, to get the private sector spending again.  I think they had a provision the net operating losses to help small businesses.  Unfortunately, they slimmed that down.  They could’ve done some things on a real energy policy.  If all they do is borrow federal money and give it to the states, all we’re really doing is delaying the inevitable.  We’re eventually going to have to make these hard choices anyway.

Fair enough. Jindal believes tax cuts would be more effective at stimulating than targeted, large-scale spending. But it is important to remember that included in the $787 billion stimulus package was $287 billion (36%) in tax cuts. Jindal may believe the “stimulus has not stimulated,” but he has to concede that this stimulus included one of the largest tax cuts in American history.  Incidentally, some Democrats are now blaming these tax cuts for derailing much-needed transportation infrastructure funding. From The Hill:

Congress cut taxes by too much and did not include enough money for transportation projects when it passed a $787 billion stimulus bill this year, the Democratic chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee said Monday.

Rep. Jim Oberstar (Minn.) stopped short of saying Congress should move a second stimulus, as some Democrats have recently suggested. But he told The Hill on Monday that lawmakers could create jobs by passing his own big-ticket public-works legislation: a $500 billion surface transportation reauthorization bill.

Oberstar said a better option than a second stimulus would be to pass his bill authorizing highway, rail and mass transit projects over the next six years. He also said Democrats need to be more patient with the first stimulus.

“Let’s make sure this portion is working well before you talk about the next one,” Oberstar said of the first stimulus. He expects by Labor Day to see 250,000 new construction jobs, another 30,000 jobs in bus and train manufacturing and 25,000 new jobs for work on water projects.

“All of that is moving and the pipeline is in full swing. Then, I think by March of next year, you could reassess and move ahead with a second injection,” he said.

One thing he’s sure of is that Democrats focused too much on tax cuts in the stimulus bill
.

Although it may be politically convenient to blame the (predominately middle class) tax cuts included in the stimulus for preventing the type of large-scale infrastructure work needed in this country, there is no doubt, despite what Michael Steele may have us believe, that investing in infrastructure directly creates jobs, stimulates the private sector, and improves our overall quality of life. Republicans may blame Democrats for not focusing on shovel-ready infrastructure, and Democrats may blame Republicans for failing to contribute anything of value. Despite the the inclusion of many Republican-endorsed amendments, the bill failed to get a single Republican vote in the House and only three in the Senate.  Regardless, after nearly three decades of deregulation and tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, it is difficult to understand how the formula that spurred a great recession could be the same formula that solves this recession.

Which brings me back to our good Governor:

Despite his performance during the Republican response to President Obama, Bobby Jindal is still a rising star in the Republican Party, and as a potential Presidential candidate, it’s probably important for him to continually oppose President Obama’s big ticket agenda items. As a politician, that is his prerogative, but as Governor of the Great State of Louisiana, he should be the first to recognize the ways in which a large-scale infusion of federal dollars, particularly in economically depressed areas, can help stabilize and stimulate. The New York Times picked up on this back in April, observing that Louisiana may serve as a model for the federal stimulus:

Years before Washington spent $787 billion on a national stimulus bill, it staged an unintended trial run in Louisiana, a huge injection of some $51 billion for which historians find few, if any, precedents in a single state.

….

State economists specifically mention what one called “the ongoing building boom” from federal dollars as a main reason for the numbers. Largely a result of the damage caused by Hurricane Katrina, construction projects have not dried up as they have elsewhere, and a few can even be seen in downtown New Orleans.

Construction has “really hung in there and done very well,” said Loren Scott, an emeritus professor of economics at Louisiana State University. “In most states construction is way down, but in ours it has been up.” The relatively low unemployment rate in Louisiana “tells you that the stimulus can have an effect,” Mr. Scott said.

….

But even as Mr. Jindal has criticized the stimulus bill, his own subordinates have continued to request money from Washington, notably in replacing Charity Hospital, which for generations served the poor in downtown New Orleans.

….

In Louisiana, however, the consequences have hardly been dire — just the opposite, in fact. One of the governor’s leading aides, the state’s recovery director, Paul Rainwater, praised the federal relief effort in Louisiana in recent remarks to Congress, the day after his boss scorned federal help on national television in the Republican Party’s response to President Obama’s first address to Congress.

“No other state in the nation has been blessed with such generosity from Congress and the American people,” Mr. Rainwater said.

The Times makes an interesting point and one worthy of further thought and consideration. When our elected officials speak about the strength and (relative) health of the Louisiana economy despite the national economic recession, it is important to acknowledge two things: Our baselines in Louisiana were already abysmally low, and our economy has definitely been bolstered by billions in federal recovery dollars.

Jindal, it seems, would like to have it both ways: He appears on national television and writes opinion pieces in national publications decrying and blasting the effectiveness of the stimulus while touring around the State distributing stimulus money for worthy projects. He speaks about the health and resilience of the Louisiana economy without also acknowledging the ways in which the expenditure of billions of federal recovery dollars have directly contributed to the State’s economy.

Governor Jindal is not the only Republican official in Louisiana who seems to be having a difficult time balancing his beliefs on the stimulus. Today, the Louisiana Democratic Party blasted Senator David Vitter for essentially flip-flopping on the stimulus. Quoting:

Months after railing against the economic stimulus plan that became law earlier this year as wasteful and ineffective, U.S. Senator David Vitter yesterday proposed the allocation of $7 billion in stimulus funds for infrastructure projects he claims will boost the economy.

In February, Vitter said the economic stimulus plan before Congress amounted to “little more than a laundry list of government spending projects.” Vitter referred to the stimulus bill as “more pork-barrel spending” which would not “promote real economic growth and help create jobs.” [Release 2/10/09]

Yesterday, however, Vitter made a full about-face, asking the Senate for unanimous consent to spend $7 billion of the stimulus funds on what he called “shovel-ready’ infrastructure projects… that are vital to our economy and communities.” [Release 7/29/09]

“Once again, David Vitter has proven himself to be among Washington DC’s leading advocates of hypocrisy and empty political rhetoric,” said Louisiana Democratic Spokesman Kevin Franck. “David Vitter can preach conservative values and fiscal discipline all he wants, but in practice he’s a philanderer who always seems to bring home his share of pork.”

Franck said the Louisiana Democratic Party does not oppose fully funding the National Highway Trust Fund or the use of stimulus funds to create jobs in the state.

“Funding infrastructure projects like I-49 North, LA 1 or I-10 is absolutely vital for Louisiana’s economy and we’re glad David Vitter thinks so today, even though he said the exact opposite a few months ago and no one knows for sure what he’ll say tomorrow,” Franck added.

A quick digression: Vitter also made news two days ago. In an article reported in The Washington Times, Vitter attempts to defend Republicans from the South against statements made by Ohio Republican Senator George Voinovich, bemoaning the alleged takeover of the Republican Party by inarticulate Southerners and singling out Senators Jim DeMint and Tom “Dr. No” Coburn. In all fairness, I also can’t stand DeMint and Coburn, but either way, Voinovich’s comment was stupid. Maybe it’s true that Southern Republicans are ruining the party, but if you’re only going to drop two examples, try to make sure that both of them are actually Southerners. Senator Tom Coburn is from Oklahoma, and Oklahoma may have a lot of wide open spaces and country farms. But it’s not the South.

In defending his fellow Southern Republican Senators, Vitter reintroduced a phrase that formed the basis of his first Senatorial campaign: “conservative values.” Quoting:

Sen. David Vitter disagreed Wednesday with criticism that Southern Republicans are ruining the party and said a return to conservative values is the best way to restore political power.

“I’m on the side of conservatives getting back to core conservative values,” said Mr. Vitter, Louisiana Republican and member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. “There are a lot of us from the South who hold those value, which I think the party is supposed to be about. We strayed from them in the past few years, and that’s why we performed so badly in the national elections.”

I won’t go after the low-hanging fruit here, but suffice it to say, given his track record, David Vitter would be well-advised to avoid speaking about using so-called “conservative values” as a means to “political power.” Free advice: Instead of using the word “values,” use the word “principles.”

Anyway, back to the story at hand:

I doubt anyone has a problem with a Senator’s ability to bring home the bacon. But it certainly seems as if both Jindal and Vitter split against the President’s stimulus bill for ideological reasons. And now that checks are being written and funds are being dispersed, both of these men, ironically, are using stimulus funds to their own political advantage, which could pose two problems:

1. Accepting billions of dollars in stimulus funding they both believe to be unable to stimulate should create the very type of (hypothetical) economic environment both Vitter and Jindal ostensibly fear will destroy America. Put more simply, by accepting this funding, they are contributing to and enabling an economy they claim is doomed to failure. If the stimulus turns out to a complete failure (which does not seem likely), they may be able to say, “I told you so.” But they won’t be able to deny their own active complicity.

2. If the stimulus proves to be successful (something, I believe, we won’t be able to measure for at least six to eight more months), then, no matter how much they may share in that success as elected officials, any worthwhile opposition will remind the public that, if Vitter or Jindal had it their way, Louisiana would be at the very least $7.6 billion poorer. And it wouldn’t be too difficult to tie in a laundry list of projects in all corners of Louisiana that benefited because of stimulus money.

So, in the meantime, Vitter quietly attempts to ask for $7 billion (nationally) in stimulus funds, and the Governor delivers over-sized vanity checks.

It may be more difficult for Vitter to cover his tracks, but Jindal, at least, understands that it is probably not in his political best interest to show how the stimulus is actually working in Louisiana. Already, his administration has refused to place signs that identify stimulus projects; after all, despite the funding source, Bobby Jindal is the name on the dotted line.

Cenla.org

Jim Clinton and the good people at Cenla Advantage Partnership have decided to fully enter the 21st century.

A few weeks ago, CAP quietly launched Cenla.org, which includes, among other things, Cenla Daily, a blog about economic development in Central Louisiana.

Add them to your blogroll. Visit them daily.

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Seriously Congressman Boustany?

I really can’t believe these wingnut Birthers have received as much attention as they have. I thought this issue was definitively resolved over a year and a half ago, when Presidential candidate Barack Obama posted a copy of his birth certificate on his campaign website, a birth certificate backed up by the Republican governor of Hawaii and bolstered by birth announcements in both Honolulu newspapers.

Apparently, some Republican elected officials still have questions, including Louisiana’s own Charles Boustany. Check this out:

Seriously Congressman Boustany? Seriously? You STILL have questions?

I wonder what questions he has, and I also wonder why it’s so difficult for some of these elected Republican officials to simply say, “While I may disagree with the President on policy, I think it is absurd and cynical to call into question this man’s legitimacy as a natural born citizen. President Obama was born in the State of Hawaii. Period.”

obama-birth-certificate1birth_certificate_2birth_certificate_9birth_certificate_1

Brilliant Woman Solves All of California’s Problems

H/t to College Humor

Rising Tide IV

If you have not already done so, hurry up and register for Rising Tide IV on August 22 in New Orleans.

3751404022_fb76c3301e

Not only will you get the chance to hear the comedic genius Harry Shearer, you’ll also have the opportunity to hear me pretend like I know what I am talking about, alongside Clancy DuBos and John Slade (who actually know what they’re talking about) on the politics panel. A special thanks to Adrastos for the invitation. I promise to only be slightly disappointing as a panelist.

“We’re not going to cry ‘emergency’ every time we have a Katrina”

H/t to Think Progress

Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN):

Uhhhh…

Two Days Later…

Yesterday, Politico published an op-ed, presumably about health care policy, by Governor Bobby Jindal, and today, Jindal worked the Fox News circuit to promote himself and his opinion on health care reform.

Commentators are claiming this as Jindal’s “reemergence” in the national discourse, following his disastrous response to President Obama’s very first speech to a joint session of the United States Congress. Welcome back, Governor.

To be fair, Bobby Jindal is considered by many to be a wonk in health care policy. After serving a brief stint with McKinsey, one of the nation’s top corporate “consulting” firms, Jindal, at the age of 24, wrote a compelling white paper on health care that attracted the attention of gubernatorial candidate Mike Foster, to whom he was first introduced during a summer internship with former Congressman Jim McCrery.

When Foster was elected, he appointed Jindal as Secretary of Health and Hospitals. Improbably, at the age of only 25, Jindal was in charge of 40% of the State’s entire budget, thousands of employees, and numerous hospitals and health care centers. Even for an Ivy League educated Rhodes Scholar, it was a meteoric rise.

Jindal was the “boy genius,” the wunderkind, yet during his tenure as Secretary of DHH, Louisiana’s health care rankings sank. Afterward, Jindal was given a few incredibly important appointments: Governor Foster  made him the youngest-ever President of the University of Louisiana system, and President George W. Bush gave him a couple of appointments related to health care policy. Then he ran for Governor of Louisiana at the age of 32, and after losing the Governor’s race, Jindal waged a successful campaign for David Vitter’s old Congressional seat.

All of that said: I don’t know what makes Jindal an “expert” in heath care policy. Although he has a degree in Biology from Brown University, Governor Jindal has, so far, appeared more willing to pay lip service to creationists than to champion established scientific theory. The arguments Governor Jindal makes against the Obama health care agenda are inaccurate and disingenuous. Consider Governor Jindal’s main points:


• Most Americans would end up, over time, with government-run health care.

• The only folks who would be able to stave this off are the wealthy.

• The quality of our health care would diminish.

• Someone other than patients and doctors would make decisions on the treatments and medicines we can have.

• The taxes on the rich, otherwise known as employers, would further damage the economy and potentially drive up unemployment at a time we can least afford it.

First, there is no way of knowing whether or not “most Americans would end up, over time, with government-run health care.” The irony is that Jindal recognizes the ways in which a public option would be more competitive in the market than some private insurance plans. We should be honest: In this country, health care has become a bloated industry in desperate need of intervention and action. If the government is more competitive than the private sector, then there is something fundamentally wrong with the economics of private health care.

Second, if the rich seek to “stave off” a more affordable and competitive alternative health care plan, it is their right. I find it hard to have confidence in a Governor who does not have faith in his government. The argument seems to be a) A public option would be competitive b) This competition would not only attract many of the 47 million Americans currently uninsured; it could also attract people in need of stability, at the expense of entrenched, corporate interests c) Health care is not about human rights; it’s about economics And d) Although our elected officials may be geniuses, the people who work for them are inherently incompetent (primarily because they are the government).

Third, there is absolutely no empirical data to suggest that the “quality of our health care would diminish” because of Obama’s reforms. Cite your sources and studies, Governor.

Fourth (and this really irks me), “someone other than patients and doctors” already makes decisions about treatments and medicines, Governor. The market makes those decisions. For many Americans, our health care is literally tied to the whims and urges of the market. And the market comprehends health care as a profit center, not a human right.

Fifth, the majority of Americans are employed by small businesses, not the “rich.” Small businesses are burdened by health care costs. Reducing those costs by sharing this responsibility, using our taxpayer dollars, will only benefit small businesses. Moreover, the “rich” are not necessarily the “employers,” though they are known to contribute heavily to political campaigns.

Most ironic, Governor Jindal, in the same op-ed piece, lambastes the effectiveness of the stimulus:

Let’s review: the Troubled Asset Relief Program, bailouts for American International Group and others, CEOs of bankrupt businesses that receive billions of tax dollars running off with millions in bonuses, a $ 3.5 trillion budget, a nearly trillion-dollar stimulus that has not stimulated, unemployment continuing to climb, government in the banking business, and of course, the U.S. government now making cars.

Here’s what Governor Jindal did two days ago:

jindaljumbostimuluscheckHe presented an over-sized stimulus check to Vernon Parish. From Think Progress:

Gov. Bobby Jindal (R-LA) reemerged on the national stage yesterday, penning an op-ed in the Politico to slam efforts to reform health care and declaring the Economic Recovery Act a failure. Jindal declared the Recovery Act “a nearly trillion-dollar stimulus that has not stimulated.” However, less than 24 hours before Jindal published his op-ed, Jindal traveled to Anacoco, Louisiana to present a jumbo-sized check to residents of Vernon Parish. The funds included hundreds of thousands of dollars directly from the Recovery Act — at least $157,848 in Community Block Grant money authorized by the Recovery Act and $138,611 for Byrne/JAG job training programs created by the Recovery Act. Rather than credit the federal government or the Recovery Act he opposed, Jindal printed his own name on the corner of the massive check.

It appears as if Jindal is taking credit for a program he actually opposes.

Chris Matthews Grills “Birther” Bill Sponsor

Telling It Like It Is

New Orleans Councilwoman Shelley Midura on announcing her decision not to seek reelection:

She then issued a challenge to the city’s other elected leaders.

“What troubles me most about New Orleans is the democracy gap between the priorities of the people and the priorities of the decision-makers in power,” she wrote. “Too many of our elected officials and influential citizens continue to do the public wrong by protecting the status quo or their own self-interest.

“Rather than using data or best practices or evidence of success, policy and budget decisions with long-term consequences for the city’s future are too often made in the absence of sufficient public input, and instead on the basis of personal whim, anecdotal evidence, or alliance with entrenched institutions that have much to lose or gain by a given decision.

I don’t pretend to be an expert or an insider in New Orleans politics, but this strikes me as one of the most succinct and honest observations I have ever read.

Banning Mermaids and Centaurs

In what will surely be a major setback to anyone hoping to genetically engineer the world’s first mermaid or centaur, today, Senator Mary Landrieu joined 19 Republicans in co-sponsoring Senator Brownback’s Human-Animal Hybrid Prohibition Act, a piece of policy that, as Politico points out, is modeled after a bill recently signed by our very own Governor, Bobby Jindal.

Politico also points out that the legislation fails to give a specific example of what these human-animal hybrids would look like, but isn’t it obvious?

Mermaid:

Little_Mermaid

Centaur:

centaurPlanet of the Apes:

charltonhestonkissesmonkeyGoatboy:

Goat Boy 2

I agree with this legislation. No hybrids! It would get way too confusing.

I have one suggestion, however. While we’re at it, why don’t we amend the bill to include a ban on reanimating corpses?

frankenstein

Louisianan Elected Chair of Young Republicans

Oyster’s been covering this woman’s antics for a few years now, and recently, she made national headlines after seemingly endorsing an overtly racist comment about President Obama.

Her name is Audra Shay, and on Saturday, she was elected as the next Chairperson of the Young Republicans.

Some people may question whether or not a 38-year-old is truly a “young Republican.” That’s not fair. Clearly, this woman is immature beyond her years. John Avlon of The Daily Beast has been on her trail, and on Friday, he posted a scathing article uncovering some of Shay’s most absurd comments on the social networking site Facebook.

Young Republicans, meet your new leader:

* In October 2008, in the wake of news that an effigy of Sarah Palin was being hung outside an affluent Hollywood home as an offensive Halloween decoration, Shay replied, returning to the “LOL” style that she employed after the “coons” comment: “What no ‘Obama in a noose? Come on now, its just freedome [sic] of speech, no one in Atlanta would take that wrong! Lol.”

She picked up the thread again the next morning with a clarification and a new insight. “Apparently I could not spell last night. I am wondering if the guys with the Palin noose would care if we had a bunch of homosexuals in a noose.”

* Posting and endorsing a conspiracy-theory video that attempts to prove that Obama believes he can only “ensure his own salvation” and “fate” if he helps African Americans above whites, complete with Barnum-esque captions (“LISTEN AS HE ATTACKS WHITE PEOPLE”).

* Numerous posts in which Shay says that President Obama is “anti-American” and has “disdain of this country.”

….

A newly discovered Facebook thread from June 30 shows her Obama Derangement Syndrome in full bluster, when she reacted with extreme displeasure with Obama’s cautious stance on the Honduran crisis.

“This is an outrage and I CAN NOT believe this nation has him as our leader! It makes me sick!” She posted a few minutes later: “My disdain for Obama is directly proportionate for his disdain of this country.”

By the way, Shay was endorsed by Governor Bobby Jindal (as well as Congressman Cao and Congressman Cassidy), and as Oyster points out, in 2006, Shay was the Chairperson of the Greater New Orleans Republicans, which publicly endorsed Democrat Ray Nagin for Mayor of New Orleans.

Here’s a picture of Ms. Shay with Congressman Steve Scalise:

ScaliseImage

A refreshing approach to Consumer Activism

As I have mentioned in several other entries, our dollars as consumers are by far our biggest tool for affecting change and ensuring the companies we buy from (or choose not to buy from) act in a responsible and ethical manner.

When a company does wrong, the best thing we can do is take our dollars elsewhere and if possible make sure the company and as many of their potential customers know exactly why we no longer give that firm our money.

I believe this is an effective tool. I haven’t eaten at a Burger King for around 15 years due to a couple of really horrible customer service incidents and I don’t miss them one bit. I also boycotted Wendy’s until a few years after Dave Thomas’ death because he directed the philanthropic arm of the company to give millions each year to anti-gay reprogramming camps. Seriously, millions of bucks to fund those guys that kidnap GLBT people and then hold them against their will while subjecting them to psychological torture until they “repent” And just think you may have thought the movie “Saved” was a joke lol. Dave Thomas didn’t think so, and he made sure your hamburger purchases funded every victim they could find. After his death, Wendy’s discontinued this financial support, due largely to pressure from GLBT groups and today has one of the most progressive partner benefits programs in the industry.

Anyway, I ran across this online. Dave Carroll is the lead singer of Sons of Maxwell, a Canadian based band. Dave describes his experience with United Airlines below:

In the spring of 2008, Sons of Maxwell were traveling to Nebraska for a one-week tour and my Taylor guitar was witnessed being thrown by United Airlines baggage handlers in Chicago. I discovered later that the $3500 guitar was severely damaged. They didn’t deny the experience occurred but for nine months the various people I communicated with put the responsibility for dealing with the damage on everyone other than themselves and finally said they would do nothing to compensate me for my loss. So I promised the last person to finally say “no” to compensation (Ms. Irlweg) that I would write and produce three songs about my experience with United Airlines and make videos for each to be viewed online by anyone in the world.

Carroll’s musical response to his mistreatment by United Airlines is a gloriously comical retort to what is sadly a system which gives seemingly weak consumers the brush off more often than not. It’s also quite catchy, and more than anything I would think it’s much more than United thought.

This is only the first of three promised songs regarding the incident. And, I would think that UAL will end up taking a PR hit worth much more than the $3500 they should have paid Mr. Carroll in the first place.

Read the full story at Carroll’s site: http://www.davecarrollmusic.com/story/united-breaks-guitars/

I truly think this sort of activism is great. I encourage you all to link this post to as many sites as possible and email it to your friends. Let’s help David Carroll send a strong message about proper treatment of customers.

Out of the wilderness

hurricanechris_handclap480I know I’ve been MIA for a while now, and may continue to be for a week or so while my store gets up and running, but I just wanted to jump out of the woods for a moment with this little snippet about our dear old state.

Has anyone else heard about this? How did I manage to miss this? I don’t really have the brainpower right now to analyze what it means, but it doesn’t seem like a good thing – from the intro that the poster gives to the state’s political realm, right up through the video snippet, we don’t come off too well. There’s a brief writeup of the event on the New York Magazine’s website as well.

Another Reason The Town Talk Should Reconsider Its “Blog”

Blatantly false “Associated Press report” posted as a comment on both stories about local Teabag Parties:

Picture 11Uncontested for hours.

You would think they would pay more attention to deliberately misleading and completely false reports attributed to the Associated Press. One has to also wonder if the AP has safeguards against this in their agreement with Gannett.

Either way, this also proves the extent to which the intellectually dishonest Birthers will lie and manipulate the facts in order to continually undermine President Obama’s legitimacy.

Geaux Karen Gadbois