On Monday, July 21st, a protest was held outside the Michigan campaign headquarters of Senator John McCain. This protest – with a heavy presence by members of ACORN – was launched in response to the financial connection between McCain and the law offices of Trott and Trott – a law firm that owns the building in which McCain’s HQ has taken up residence and has also carved out a reputation as one of the most brutal, cutthroat foreclosure practices in the state, as pointed out by Eric Baerren and Todd Heywood of the blogs Michigan Liberal and Michigan Messenger, respectively.
Given the fact that McCain’s camp has chosen to either pay rent to or receive generous “in-kind” contributions from a law firm that profits off of the suffering of so many Michiganders who have lost their homes, it’s perhaps not surprising that the McCain camp responded to the protest by pleading ignorance. A spokeswoman for the campaign stated that she was “unaware” of the protest outside: a statement which only served to further reiterate the image of the ostrich with its head firmly planted in the sand attitude that seems to be a defining mainstay of McCain’s approach to the issues.
Displaying this kind of obtuse “bunker” mentality demonstrates just how truly out of step McCain’s perception of the real world seems to be. From 2006 to the end of 2007, Southeast Michigan had seen its foreclosure rates jump a staggering 90%, and Michigan’s overall rate of home foreclosures pushed us into the third place slot in 2007, only trailing Nevada and Florida in terms of the highest number of state-wide foreclosure rates in the nation. By aligning with those who profit off the backs of others who have lost or are losing their homes, McCain is affecting an attitude much like the administration of George Bush before him – see what you want to see and ignore everything else.
The groups called on McCain to move his HQ and stand with the people of Michigan, not firms that profit from predatory lending. To date, McCain has failed to respond…surprised?
You, too, can tell McCain to move by going to: http://www.progressmichigan.org/mccain.
Minnesota had Jesse “The Body” Ventura, California has its “Governator” Schwarzenegger, and now Michigan can boast the dubious distinction of its own cleverly coined politician: Sen. “Smokestack” Patty Birkholz.
So what do we really know about Senator Birkholz? We know that she’s a Republican from Michigan’s 24th district; she’s a woman who seems to keep her nails trim and her hair neat. She has a simple, unremarkable sense of style. And from the looks of her recent role in the Senate’s energy bill, she’s a person whose insatiable appetite for fossil fuels should cast her out to live among wild mastodons, dressing in saber-tooth tiger skin fashions every day before saddling up Smoky, her pet triceratops, to ride to work on the Capitol. Yes, my friends, Patty Birkholz is hell-bent on keeping Michigan stuck in the Jurassic age, and her tendencies towards coal-ophilia seem to verify this monstrous truth.
Two weeks ago, when Sen. “Smokestack” Birkholz and her Big Coal Stooges in the Michigan Senate voted to keep Michigan locked in the dark ages of coal dependency, they simultaneously sent a signal to the rest of the world that we here in the mitten are not serious about moving forward with an investment in renewable energy and cutting-edge energy efficiency, or even about satisfying our state’s desperation for a diverse economy based on 21st century, good-paying jobs. In a completely boneheaded move, they even defined coal as “renewable,” putting it in the same category as real renewables like wind and solar power.
Michigan has reached an important crossroads, and we are all facing a real choice: we can either move our energy production and consumption into the future, or we can continue to cling to the past, relying on resources straight out of the Industrial Revolution to power our state. Come to think of it, coal has a lot of problems; way more than simply being old and unfashionable:
· Investing in coal will create far fewer jobs than renewable energy will: in fact, Michigan stands to gain 46,000 new jobs if we choose to invest in renewable energy and efficiency
· It will hurt jobs and the economy. States like Pennsylvania and Texas – even gun-toting, oil worshipping Texas – have done more to embrace renewable energy and seen thousands of jobs added to their state-wide employment rates. That’s thousands more than coal will create
· Major banks like Chase, JP Morgan, and Morgan Stanley have backed out of financing coal projects, due to concerns over the inherent costs and risks involved
· Not only is coal bad for jobs and bad for the economy, but it harms public health and contributes to global warming. Cardiovascular disease, asthma, chronic respiratory problems and premature deaths caused by air pollution from these plants cost Americans an estimated $160 billion every year in health-care expenses
· Coal is a leading contributor to global warming. A typical coal-fired plant emits 3.7 million tons of CO2 in the Earth’s atmosphere annually
What’s more, a consistent reliance on coal-fire will send much of our hard-earned money out of state and – as mentioned above – send a powerful signal to the rest of the contemporary world that Michigan isn’t serious about investing in 21st century jobs and becoming a part of the world’s energy future. And the recent actions of Smokestack Patty and her sooty, fossil-fueled ilk are firmly placing Michigan in the “clinging to the past” column.
It’s unfortunate that Senator Birkholz has chosen to wield her power in such a way that will seriously disable Michigan’s energy future when she could be acting in the interest of pushing our state forward. As we’ve seen, investing in 21st century clean energy has already moved other states forward. Take Texas and Pennsylvania: two of the 23 states that have already planned a Renewable Energy Standard, and are consequentially presented with the same opportunities for growth that we here in Michigan should be embracing, too. Shame on Smokestack Patty and her coal-loving cronies for pandering to dinosaur, coal-burning energy giants instead of moving our state forward. In order to embrace the future and recast Michigan as a leader in emerging industries, we need to accept more clean energy alternatives that will propel our state forward.
To learn more about how to stop Sen. “Smokestack” Patty, please go to http://www.smokestackpatty.com. Help set Birkholz straight, and to kick coal to the curb by keeping it where it belongs: tucked away in the pages of history.Risen from the ashes of the Health Care for Michigan Ballot Campaign is Health Care for America Now phoenix, who, in two short weeks, not only didn’t quit the fight against America’s health care crisis, but took the strategy to a whole new level, too, by launching a $40 million campaign, committed to eliminating America’s health care crisis once and for all. Praise to Michigan health care advocates and their quick turn from ballot drive to full-fledged pressure campaign.
This coalition includes the groups Health Care for Michigan, MichUHCAN, MOSES, Michigan Citizen Action, Progress Michigan, ACORN, AFSCME, Americans United for Change, Campaign for America's Future, Center for American Progress Action Fund, Center for Community Change, MoveOn, NEA, National Women's Law Center, Planned Parenthood, SEIU, UFCW, and USAction.
Many important factors in America’s health care crisis include the inability for many to afford good, quality health care, as well as the millions of American’s who loose coverage because of a preexisting condition. What’s more, the health care crisis in America saps job creation - $1,500 from each car produced in the US alone goes to pay health care costs, putting American manufacturers at a competitive disadvantage, and hampering companies’ ability to create jobs. These costs have gotten so out of control that people now pay more for health care out of pocket than ever before – an average of $2,126, a doubled rate since 1998 – according to the New York Times. All this goes without mentioning that almost 1 million Michiganders alone are currently living without health care coverage, and millions more live in everyday fear of having their coverage stripped without adequate notice.
In the formation of this new coalition, leaders and members alike are expected to take on an untouchable giant that has benefited from the health care crisis for far too long: the insurance industry. For longer than should have been allowed, insurance companies have been continuously driving up health care costs for average Americans and make it harder for people to afford health care coverage on an out-of-pocket basis. They have profited, but people have not.
Bob Dylan once said that the times were a-changing, and this sentiment is certainly as true of America’s ongoing health care crisis as it was of the social scene in the 1960s. We need an American solution to an American problem, and the scrappy warriors from Health Care for America Now are just the ones to bring it for us.
Michigan Blogs
Statewide:
Black Bear Speaks, Great Lakes Environmental News
Blogging for Michigan
Bloggin.OUT (Triangle Foundation's Generation.OUT)
Blog O'Queer
Capital Viewpoint
Choice Words from Planned Parenthood Advocates of Michigan
[Con]serving Michigan (Michigan LCV)
DailyKos (Michigan tag)
Democratic Underground, Michigan Forum
Jack Lessenberry
LeftyBlogs (Michigan)
Media Mouse
MIbLAWg (Michigan Supreme Court)
Michigan Coalition for Progress
Michigan Messenger
Michigan Young Democrats
Republic of M, Gay Michigan
State Action Blog (Center for Policy Alternatives)
The SuperSpade
West Michigan Rising
Upper Peninsula:
Keweenaw Now
Save the Wild UP
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Benzie Dems
Manistee Talks Politics
Northern Michigan Caucus
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coit avenue
Democratic Edge
Great Lakes Guy
Great Lakes, Great Times, Great Scott
In The Middle of it All
Mostly Sunny with a Chance of Gay
My Left Pinkie
West Michigan Politics
West Michigan Rising
WMU College Democrats
Mid-Michigan:
Among the Trees
Blue Chips (CMU College Democrats Blog)
Christine Barry
Conservative Media
Far Left Field
Graham Davis
Honest Errors
ICDP:Dispatch (Isabella County Democratic Party Blog)
Liberal, Loud and Proud
Livingston County Democratic Party Blog
Mid-Michigan DFA
Multi Media Netroots
Pohlitics
Random Ramblings of a Somewhat Common Man
Waffles of Compromise
YAF Watch
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Blue November
Genesee County Young Democrats
Greed, Eggs, and Ham
Saginaw County Democratic Party Blog
Stone Soup Musings
Voice of Mordor
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A Jared Manifesto
arblogger
Arbor Update
The BiWonkette
Democracy for Metro Detroit
Detroit Skeptic
Detroit Uncovered (formerly "Fire Jerry Oliver")
Grosse Pointe Democrats
I Wish This Blog Was Louder
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LJ's Blogorific
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Michigan Progress
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Our Michigan
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