Sunday, April 15, 2012

Gates Foundation Will No Longer Make Grants to ALEC Nonprofit

Gates Foundation Will No Longer Make Grants to ALEC Nonprofit


The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation today became the latest backer to withdraw financial support for the American Legislative Exchange Council.
A foundation spokesman told Roll Call that it does not plan to make future grants to the conservative nonprofit, which has come under fire from progressive activists for its support of voter identification laws and other contentious measures.
The foundation, run by the co-founder of Microsoft Corp. and his wife, contributed more than $375,000 to ALEC in the past two years and was the target of an online petition launched today by the liberal Progressive Change Campaign Committee that garnered more than 23,000 signatures in a matter of hours.
“We have made a single grant, narrowly and specifically focused on providing information to ALEC-affiliated state legislators on teacher effectiveness and school finance,” said Chris Williams, the spokesman, noting that the foundation was never a dues-paying member. The foundation advocates for global health initiatives and efforts to reduce poverty.
It’s the latest in a string of victories for groups bent on persuading corporations and foundations to cut ties with ALEC, which helps corporations advance their public-policy agenda in state legislatures.
Last week, Kraft Foods Inc., Coca-Cola Co. and Intuit Inc. each said they would withdraw support. The announcements came after months of behind-the-scenes pressure from another liberal group, Color of Change, an African-American advocacy group.
Color of Change went public today with demands that AT&T Corp., one of ALEC’s 21 corporate board members, also sever ties with the organization. Over the past year, the group has reached out to 15 consumer product companies that back ALEC, highlighting the organization’s connections to voter ID laws passed in at least a half-dozen states.
Civil rights activists say the laws disproportionately target minority, student and elderly voters, who tend to vote Democratic, and could bar up to 5 million voters from the polls this fall. In recent weeks, other liberal groups have joined the effort.
Color of Change Executive Director Rashad Robinson said the group is using Internet appeals to pressure companies that have made explicit efforts to build a strong relationship with African-American customers.
“Our goal is to ensure that these companies can’t have it both ways,” he said. “AT&T touts its support of civil rights groups and unions, which ALEC works to weaken.”
A spokesman for AT&T declined to comment.
Color of Change went live Wednesday with a website targeting Coca-Cola for its support of ALEC. Within hours, the company pulled its membership. Later in the week, Kraft Foods and Intuit, which develops Quicken and QuickBooks software, followed suit.
The public debate over Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” law connected to the slaying of Trayvon Martin gave the advocacy groups more leverage over the companies. ALEC, they said, was behind an effort to pass similar laws in other states.
ALEC has played down its ties to both sets of laws. A spokesman declined to comment on the withdrawal of funders.
“Our private members and legislators are independent thinkers and don’t necessarily agree on all policy initiatives from ALEC,” said Kaitlyn Buss, an ALEC spokeswoman.
Several corporate board members have remained steadfast in their support for the organization.
These companies argue that their participation is limited to issues that directly affect their business. They note that the organization is split into nine task forces made up of state legislators and private sector representatives that serve as a clearinghouse for the legislative proposals.
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the powerful Washington lobby for prescription drug manufacturers, told Roll Call it would continue to support the organization.
“PhRMA has a long history of partnering with and supporting diverse stakeholders and organizations who share our goals of helping patients access the medicines and care they need and fostering medical innovation,” Matthew Bennett, a senior vice president of the trade group, said in a statement to Roll Call. “As such, our involvement with ALEC concentrates on public health issues that directly relate to these goals.”
Dennis Bartlett, the executive director of the American Bail Coalition, another ALEC board member, said he has received upward of 3,000 e-mails prompted by the Color of Change campaign but has no plans to cut ties with ALEC because of the access it gives him to state legislators.
“I’m getting literally thousands of these ‘dump ALEC’ communications,” Bartlett told Roll Call. “They go directly into a spam folder.”

Monday, April 2, 2012

The Colbert Super PAC Super Fun Pack - Now With More Super Fun!

Colbert Super PAC

Dear Colbert Super PAC Inner Circle Members,

Thursday was historic. I think all of us will remember where I was on that day.

That's when I unveiled the new Colbert Super PAC Super Fun Pack, an exclusive kit that gives college students everything they need to start their own Super PACs. It is full of stuff young people love: federal election commission paperwork, detailed filing instructions, and more legal disclaimers than you can shake a stick at!*

Plus, the Colbert Super PAC Super Fun Pack also includes a "Turtles Don't Like Peanut Butter" T-Shirt, a pair of Colbert Super PAC socks, an official-seeming certificate, and a genuine Super PAC dorm room sign -- in stunning 2-D!

Today, I'm happy to announce we've sweetened the deal -- although not literally, as we discovered that cardboard boxes cannot withstand being filled with high fructose corn syrup. However, every Colbert Super PAC Super Fun Pack will now contain your very own miniature version of my trusted advisor, Ham Rove. Your "Hamlet" Rove is guaranteed to raise your political stature or, if eaten, your cholesterol.

And we've got a special bonus if you order right now (or any time after now): a genuine 24-carat aluminum decoder ring. That's a prize previously available only in fifty-year-old boxes of Cracker Jacks.

This decoder ring will come in handy when you follow the clues on the enclosed Colbert Super PAC Super Fun Pack Treasure Map to discover a hidden treasure -- and win your college a visit from me, Stephen Colbert. And as a special treat, I'll even allow students to make eye contact with me. Not even my masseuse gets that!

So put down your computer, get online, and head over to www.colbertsuperpac.com today for your Colbert Super PAC Super Fun Pack. Remember: You can't buy happiness, which is why, technically, the $99 for the Colbert Super PAC Fun Pack is just a "donation."

Ponzily yours,

Stephen Colbert
President and Chief Ham Canner Americans For A Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow


*Colbert Super PAC is not responsible for any injury resulting in stick-shaking, stick-waggling, stick-jabbing, stick-stickling, or dead-cat-swinging.

Paid for by Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow
Not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.
www.colbertsuperpac.com

Party In the C.I.A.-Weird Al

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Rombo

Megadeth Frontman Dave Mustaine Supports Rick Santorum

Megadeth Frontman Dave Mustaine Supports Rick Santorum


That the founder of a popular metal band would embrace the GOP’s most passionate religious ideologue might seem shocking. But looking over Mustaine’s conspiratorial obsession with politics and his personal religious journey, it’s no surprise. Plus, see photos of other GOP celebrity endorsements.

On Wednesday, Dave Mustaine, a former Metallica guitarist who founded the heavy-metal band Megadeth, seemed to join a side that has historically been a mortal foe of his kind: the Christian right. In an interview with Music Radar, Mustaine expressed support for the GOP’s resident religious ideologue, Rick Santorum, saying he was impressed that Santorum left the trail to be with his sick daughter and kept his distance from the Mitt-Newt character savagery.
Considering the kinds of things conservative Christians had to say about hard music in the 1980s and '90s, it might seem like Mustaine, 50, is trying to love his enemies. Religious antipathy toward rock music goes all the way back to the Beatles and beyond, but the attacks on Mustaine’s genre were particularly passionate. Conservative Christian books and magazines overflowed with warnings to parents about the dangerous influence of heavy metal, citing everything from satanic symbols on album covers to subliminal messages to the supposedly demonic effects of the “rock beat.” Metallica and Marilyn Manson were among the leading cultural villains, tempting the youth of America toward subversive movements like the game Magic: The Gathering and Wiccanism.

But if they’d listened a little more closely, they might have heard people like Mustaine articulating a message—though admittedly a version decked out in the F word, black leather, and faux-Satanism—not altogether unlike their own cultural alarmism. In a 1988 interview in the British music newspaper Sounds, Mustaine said, “It says in the Bible that men should not lay with men like they lay with women. I mean I don’t wanna f--k up and not go to heaven.” In the same interview, he added some thoughts on immigration that seem ripped from a 2012 GOP debate transcript. "If I were president of the United States, I'd build a great wall along the Mexican border and not let anybody in.” He also dished to conspiracy theorist and radio personality Alex Jones about the “new world order,” a pervasive scare trope of '90s evangelical entertainment, including the Left Behind series.



Dave Mustaine of Megadeath
Dave Mustaine, former member of Metallica and founder of Megadeth, endorsed the GOP’s resident religious ideologue, Rick Santorum, Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Mustaine’s socially conservative values, however, weren’t doing much for his own life at the time. His rocky two-year stint in Metallica in the early '80s ended in large part over his raging alcoholism and drug use. Some years later, he turned to Christianityafter growing discontent with Alcoholics Anonymous. In a 2007 interview with Decibelmagazine, Mustaine explained: “It's supposed to be founded in believing in God, but say the word God in an AA meeting and most people's asses grow together. So I kinda just went to the source … I figured I'd go direct to God, cut out the middleman, and not have to pay my dollar every week.”

Today, Mustaine has swung even further into line with the religious right. He can hardly get through an interview without going on about how bad 2012 will be for the country.

In the mid-2000s, the now-born-again Mustaine belatedly discovered the '90s religious right’s passion for boycotts. He threatened to pull Megadeth out of a 2005 festival that featured other metal bands named Rotting Christ and Dissection over their professed Satanism. “I’ve never believed in singing about Satan and thinking he's cool, because he's not,” he told Decibel. “As far as me playing with bands like that, I started thinking, ‘You know what, Dave? You're a headliner. If you don't wanna play with people that make you uncomfortable, you don't have to.’ Especially if they're singing about the confessed enemy of someone you believe in. I mean, what idiot gets onstage with their confessed enemy?’ ”




Today, Mustaine has swung even further into line with the religious right and its latest iteration, the Tea Party. Obama is “the most divisive president we’ve ever had.” Mustaine can hardly get through an interview without going on about how bad 2012 will be for the country. “Given our choices for president, I think next year is going to be just terrible,” he said in December. “Everything is pretty s--tty right now, with the eradication of the middle class, and we've got an attorney general who won't come clean about the [ATF's Operation] Fast and Furious stuff. I think that we're headed for a lot of trouble. We've got an incredible debt, which is just continuing to get higher and higher. We need jobs right now, man. We don't need any more Washington deals, we need jobs.”

He’s even down with Rick Perry’s notion that President Obama is waging a “war on religion,” a notion that has now been adopted and even intensified by the remaining candidates. “It's pretty clear that they're taking prayer out of school. It's been happening for a very long time. The very first schoolbook that was written had God all over it. I collect books and I have some really, really old schoolbooks, and God is mentioned on every single page. They're taking God out of the schools to dumb us down.”

So despite the flowing yellow mane, the profanity, and the decades in a grungy subculture that contrasts sharply with the sweater-vest family values embodied by Rick Santorum, his latest endorsement is not much of a turn for Mustaine at all. But Santorum should think twice before inviting Mustaine onstage to give his endorsement publicly. You never know if the frontman might pick that moment to open up to Santorum’s Catholic base about the well-documented fact that “the first corporation in the world was the Catholic church.”

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Paul Babeu, Immigration Hawk Sheriff, Outed by Alleged Mexican Gay Lover

Paul Babeu, Immigration Hawk Sheriff, Outed by Alleged Mexican Gay Lover

In a bombshell report, a Mexican immigrant alleges a gay love affair with an Arizona immigration-hawk sheriff and Romney campaign co-chair. Terry Greene Sterling reports.


Known only as “Jose,” a Mexican immigrant has outed a famous Arizona immigration-hawk sheriff, CPAC speaker, and congressional candidate who rose to conservative stardom after a cameo appearance in John McCain’s famous “Dang Fence” campaign ad. In an explosive story published in the Phoenix New Times, Jose claims that Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu's lawyer threatened him with deportation if he spilled the beans about their alleged love affair.
Following the report, Babeu hastily called a press conference on Saturday during which he announced, “I’m gay." He admitted having a “personal relationship” with Jose but said “at no time” did he or anyone who worked for him threaten Jose with deportation.
Babeu, 43, a Mitt Romney supporter, said that in light of his “coming out” he “chose” to step down as a co-chairman of the Republican presidential candidate's campaign. Surrounded by supportive deputies, Babeu said the Republican Party had a big tent, and he would continue actively campaigning for an Arizona congressional seat.
“This is my private life,” he said, “and now it’s out for the world to see ... The measure of who I am is how I’m handling this today.”
Jose told the Phoenix New Times that he and the sheriff had been romantically involved for several years. When the relationship ended, Jose told the newspaper, Babeu’s lawyer threatened Jose with deportation if he revealed the affair.
The story included a photo, allegedly of Babeu with his hand in Jose’s shirt. The newspaper also published a screen shot from a gay dating website showing an Anthony Weiner–style bathroom self-portrait, allegedly of Babeu, describing himself as “one good guy looking for another” who is HIV negative and seeks safe one-on-one sex. At the press conference, Babeu didn’t deny the ad and said that unlike Weiner, he wasn’t married and didn’t “lie” about the photo.
Arizona sheriff Paul Babeu
Arizona sheriff Paul Babeu has stepped down as a co-chairman of Mitt Romney's campaign after confirming having had a gay relationship with a Mexican immigrant., Joshua Lott, Reuters / Landov
Babeu and his lawyer, Chris DeRose, told The Arizona Republic that Jose was a campaign volunteer for Babeu and had improperly accessed Babeu’s campaign website. As a result, DeRose sent Jose a cease-and-desist order in September. DeRose denied he threatened to deport Jose.
Jose was in charge of Babeu’s social-media sites, according to Babeu, and he began posting “uncomplimentary” information on those sites. That prompted the cease-and-desist order, Babeu said.
As Arizona reached the height of illegal-immigration hysteria in 2010, Babeu made acameo appearance on John McCain’s desperate Senate campaign video imploring the president to build the “dang fence," referring to a fence on the U.S.-Mexico border. Though illegal immigration in Arizona declined for six straight years and FBI statistics deemed border cities safe, Babeu remained a strong illegal-immigration hawk.
Babeu served for 20 years in the National Guard and was once a headmaster of a Massachusetts school for boys. The Arizona Daily Star reported that as a boy Babeu had been molested by a Catholic priest. He became sheriff of Pinal County, on the east side of the Phoenix metro area, in 2009. He is a staunch ally of Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio.
Babeu admitted having a “personal relationship” with Jose but said “at no time” did he or anyone who worked for him threaten Jose with deportation.
In January, he announced his run for Congress and recently spoke at a CPAC convention, painting himself as a “first responder” to the immigration crisis
Babeu was criticized for appearing on a white-supremacist radio show and was embarrassed when one of his deputies claimed to have been shot by pistol-packing narcos while on duty. The wound was widely believed to have been self-inflicted, no narcos were ever found, and the deputy was fired.
On Saturday, Babeu expressed relief at having come out but repeatedly said his personal life was his own business.
“I’m not married, I’m a single guy, I don’t have a fake girlfriend,” he said. “I haven’t seen women for a long time on a romantic basis.”
He also said countless women had tried to date and marry him, but he is “off the market.”