Recent comments

  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    Instead of citizens voting on the marijuana issue we should have law enforcement and judges decide how to effectively use their time. I know of law enforcement officers who feel that much of their time is a waste in having hookers picked up and put in jail for the night and for people smoking marijuana.

    We should ask the inmates from our prisons how the state can help them to not be repeat offenders for a crime. Prisoners serve their time and when they are released they return to the same environment that caused the problem for them to go to prison. We should not treat former convicts as idiots.

  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    Re: It's a turf war

    I should add the "alcohol" corporations are part of the turf war as well.

  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    It's a turf war

    The pharmaceutical companies oppose the legalization of marijuana because it will cut into their turf.

  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    War-On is appropriately close to Mor-On.

  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    Prohibition has always been good for business. Our "civic leaders" don't want to talk about that point. The money behind prohibition makes millionaires out of successful criminals and state prison privateers.

  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    Don't forget Harry Anslinger and his campaign to make marijuana illegal when it was obvious that the Vollstead Act (prohibition) was going to be repealed, cutting his Alcohol Control department. The only "expert" evidence presented to Congress was a news article penned by Anslinger.

  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    Don't forget that alcohol affects EVERY cell in your body. When my wife was undergoing chemotherapy she had severe nausea and could not hold down a glass of water, I demanded that her doctor prescribe some form of marijuana. The doctor prescribed Marinol, a Roche product that was very hard to find because it requires a triplicate controlled substance prescription. I once spent a whole day trying to find it in local hospital pharmacies, only to be turned down by one whose supply had been kept past the expiration date. Another time, the mailed prescription took eight days to get to my mail box, and the prescription was out of date - it had to be filled within three days. I got the doc to mail me another prescription with no issue date. The pharmacist gave me a dirty look as I filled out the date field with the current date.

    Gawd, we're just crazy.

  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago
  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    My wife heard from Keith and Lawrence that Obama has conceded the midterms and Congress to the conservatives. Obama says that he will work with the Republicans. Apparently Obama has accepted the fact that he will be a one term president. Obama has failed the Grand Experiment in America.

    Eighty-five percent of the students will return home to Mom and Dad after college graduation. Why??? There are no jobs!!!

  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    Please everyone in WI get out and Vote early you can vote now.

  • Daily Topics - Thursday October 14th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    Vote Today | Early Vote Wisconsin

  • Cash For Geezers and The French   14 years 35 weeks ago

    I wonder how well Libertarians would have fared, trapped in the Chilean mine for seventy days? If you think of humans as trapped on the planet earth with finite resources, this could be good lesson for what humans need to do to insure their survival on this planet.

  • FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: The Thom Hartmann Program Moves to the Capital   14 years 35 weeks ago

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  • Cash for Geezers? Lower the Retirement Age to 55 Now!   14 years 35 weeks ago

    /\Chris and Matt\/ I Couldn't agree more. I don't understand the short-sighted-ness of people that listen to the airheads in mainstream media and buy the idea that France and other European countries are always "in trouble" or "in debt." They've only come close when they start connecting theirselves to, or start emulating are messed up economics like severe globalism (i.e. corporate socialism.) I love this country as much as anyone, which is exactly why I don't just instantly hear that this is "are" idea and we should stick to it for that reason... which is no reason. We should be the country that uses the best ideas from all over the world, and when it's clear that something works somewhere else we should be the very next people to do it. I don't know where this idea came from that we should just be proud that we work so hard and are the most productive. I would be more proud that my work actually comes to anything for me and or my family and not just some corporate pig. I wouldn't be proud to be some drone for theives that take everything for no real reason than to be jerks. I don't consider that "making something of myself" and I never will. The idea that the retirement age should be raised only because people are living longer is shortsighted not only for the reasons listed on this page but also for the fact that the people making it to even 70 have more health problems than ever before, and it was recently stated that children born recently will live shorter life spans than their parents anyway so the longer life idea is out the window. It's quite simple tax the rich [bleeps] that make more than the next 95% combined which they have absolutley no right to anyway which would quickly fund SS to where it needs to be and bring this country to the 21st century in tech and infrastructure. And this BS idea that-that would send jobs away...1st of all they're leaving anyway, corporations and jobs are already moving overseas (Halliburton's in Dubayy to avoid paying taxes,) and already most larger corporations are paying 0 of some types of taxes that regular non reptiles are, and foriegn corporations with U.S. ops pay 2/3's less. Either way I say LET THEM "go to Ireland" or whatever their vacancy would easily be filled with smaller companies that aren't being allowed to compete and whom would actually hire instead of making employees do far more than their share with threats they would just hire the desperate and pay them less.

  • Is Newt Gingrich Giving Aid and Comfort to the Enemy?   14 years 35 weeks ago

    This is going to be an argument that continues for quite sometime I think. I mean, there is such a huge conflict of interest here. It's really sad that this is the way it has to be.

  • Daily Topics - Wednesday October 13th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    When you said there are no more communist 'groups' in Europe, I am pretty sure you meant to say 'governments.' Of course there are still communist labor groups and even political parties in Euroope, the leading one of which is perhaps the Partito della Rifondazione Comunista or PRC, the Communist party of Italy (an even more left wing organization than the the PRI, which it succeeded. It's always discouraging to hear you make little, forgiveable errors of fact because it gives you crits a wedge to undermine your real message.

  • Daily Topics - Wednesday October 13th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    The Long War!!! How can any American deny that we have lunatics running our asylums in Washington, D.C.?

    The 'Long War' quagmire

    The doctrine, which posits an 80-year or so war against insurgents in the Middle East to South Asia, needs more scrutiny.

    March 28, 2010|By Tom Hayden

    Without public debate and without congressional hearings, a segment of the Pentagon and fellow travelers have embraced a doctrine known as the Long War, which projects an "arc of instability" caused by insurgent groups from Europe to South Asia that will last between 50 and 80 years. According to one of its architects, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan are just "small wars in the midst of a big one."

    Consider the audacity of such an idea. An 80-year undeclared war would entangle 20 future presidential terms stretching far into the future of voters not yet born. The American death toll in Iraq and Afghanistan now approaches 5,000, with the number of wounded a multiple many times greater. Including the American dead from 9/11, that's 8,000 dead so far in the first decade of the Long War. And if the American armed forces are stretched thin today, try to conceive of seven more decades of combat.

    The costs are unimaginable too. According to economists Joseph E. Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes, Iraq alone will be a $3-trillion war. Those costs, and the other deficit spending of recent years, yield "virtually no room for new domestic initiatives for Mr. Obama or his successors," according to a New York Times budget analysis in February. Continued deficit financing for the Long War will rob today's younger generation of resources for their future.

    The term "Long War" was first applied to America's post-9/11 conflicts in 2004 by Gen. John P. Abizaid, then head of U.S. Central Command, and by the retiring chairman of the Joint Chiefs of State, Gen. Richard B. Myers, in 2005.

    According to David Kilcullen, a top counterinsurgency advisor to Army Gen. David H. Petraeus and a proponent of the Long War doctrine, the concept was polished in "a series of windowless offices deep inside the Pentagon" by a small team that successfully lobbied to incorporate the term into the 2006 Quadrennial Defense Review, the nation's long-term military blueprint. President George W. Bush declared in his 2006 State of the Union message that "our own generation is in a long war against a determined enemy."

    The concept has quietly gained credence. Washington Post reporter-turned-author Thomas E. Ricks used "The Long War" as the title for the epilogue of his 2009 book on Iraq, in which he predicted that the U.S. was only halfway through the combat phase there.

    It has crept into legal language. Federal Appeals Court Judge Janice Rogers Brown, a darling of the American right, recently ruled in favor of holding detainees permanently because otherwise, "each successful campaign of a long war would trigger an obligation to release Taliban fighters captured in earlier clashes."

    Among defense analysts, Andrew J. Bacevich, a Vietnam veteran who teaches at Boston University, is the leading critic of the Long War doctrine, criticizing its origins among a "small, self-perpetuating, self-anointed group of specialists" who view public opinion "as something to manipulate" if they take it into consideration at all.

    The Long War has momentum, though the term is absent from the 2010 Quadrennial Defense Review unveiled by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates in February. One commentator has noted the review's apparent preference for finishing "our current wars before thinking about the next."

    Still we fight wars that bleed into each other without clear end points. Political divisions in Iraq threaten to derail the complete withdrawal of U.S. troops scheduled for 2012.

    As troop levels decline in Iraq, they grow to 100,000 in Afghanistan, where envoy Richard C. Holbrooke famously says we'll know success "when we see it." The Afghan war has driven Al Qaeda into Pakistan, where U.S. intelligence officers covertly collaborate with the Pakastani military. Lately our special forces have stepped up covert operations in Yemen.

    It never ends. British security expert Peter Neumann at King's College has said that Europe is a "nerve center" of global jihad because of underground terrorists in havens protected by civil liberties laws. Could that mean NATO will have to occupy Europe?

    It's time the Long War strategy was put under a microscope and made the focus of congressional hearings and media scrutiny. The American people deserve a voice in the strategizing that will affect their future and that of their grandchildren. There are at least three important questions to address in public forums:

    What is the role of the Long War idea in United States' policy now? Can the Pentagon or president impose such war-making decisions without debate and congress?

    Who exactly is the enemy in a Long War? Is Al Qaeda (or "Islamic fundamentalism") considered to be a unitary enemy like the "international communist conspiracy" was supposed to be? Can a Long War be waged with only a blanket authorization against every decentralized group lodged in countries from Europe to South Asia?

    Above all, what will a Long War cost in terms of American tax dollars, American lives and American respect in the world? Is it sustainable? If not, what are the alternatives?

    President Obama has implied his own disagreement with the Long War doctrine without openly repudiating the term. He has pledged to remove all U.S. troops from Iraq by 2012, differing with those like Ricks who predict continuing combat, resulting in a Korean-style occupation. Obama also pledges to "begin" American troop withdrawals from Afghanistan by summer 2011, in contrast to those who demand we remain until an undefined victory. Obama told West Point cadets that "our troop commitment in Afghanistan cannot be open-ended, because the nation that I'm most interested in building is our own."

    Those are naive expectations to neoconservatives and to some in the Pentagon for whom the Long War fills a vacuum left by the end of the Cold War. They will try to trap Obama in a Long War by demanding permanent bases in Iraq, slowing American withdrawals from Afghanistan to a trickle and defending secret operations in Pakistan. Where violence flares, he will be blamed for disengaging prematurely. Where situations stabilize, he will be counseled it's because we keep boots on the ground. We will keep spending dollars we don't have on wars without end.

    The underlying issues should be debated now, before the future itself has been drafted for war.

  • Daily Topics - Wednesday October 13th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    Hillary needs to look in the mirror and come to grips with her intolerance. Hillary has asked Obama for more troops in the Middle East. She is a warmonger. Obama is not the worst president but he is the dumbest president.

    http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columns/Government-secrets-can-be-pretty-killer-1184263-104724149.html

  • Daily Topics - Wednesday October 13th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago
  • Daily Topics - Wednesday October 13th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago
  • Cash For Geezers and The French   14 years 35 weeks ago

    We are slumbering in an economy that unfairly exploits global resource while corporate promotes a false economy based on pushing debt and trading IOU 's. Our homeless and unemployed march in step with the protest in Europe but our masses have yet to reach critical mass. Eventually too many pockets will be picked for the perps to perpetuate this fraud but apparently that event remains in the future.

  • Daily Topics - Wednesday October 13th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    Why isnt anyone on the left talking about the deadly Turnidge bombing in Oregon? They are on trial right now and they admitted they did it because of Obama's election. They were told on hate radio that Obama would be coming after their guns. Another example of RIghtwing terrorism.

    http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2010/09/trials_begin_today_for_turnidge_father-son_in_woodburn_bank_bombing_case_that_killed_two_police_offi.html

  • Daily Topics - Wednesday October 13th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    What is responsible for the rise of radical Islam throughout the world? C'mon Thom, the root of it is America subjugating several Islamic countries economically so it can control their oil rich resources. Radical Islam began to come about in Eisenhower's day, and America was aware, Eisenhower was aware, that the Islamic peoples were beginning a campaign of hate because of the way America was interfering in their culture just by being omnipresent. Yes it is doubtless the G W Bush and his administration exacerbated the problem through their inept, or probable intentional handling of the region.

    To Thom listeners (Thom too if you have the time), check out some of Noam Chomsky's speeches on YouTube, also check out The Power of Nightmares 3 hour British Documentary also on YouTube. Either source separately covers my statements above and go far more in depth (as well as being far more elegant). If you want the background, both sources go back to the 1950's, and history wise, that's actually a very small slice of time.

    N

  • Daily Topics - Wednesday October 13th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

    The word got through . . . on the KTLK AM 1150 Progressive Talk stream . . .

  • Daily Topics - Wednesday October 13th, 2010   14 years 35 weeks ago

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