Author's posts
Mar 05 2011
Let’s Stand With Wisconsin Workers Today!
The AFL-CIO has called for another massive demonstration today in Madison, Wisconsin.
If you’re too far away from Madison to participate in person, please stand in Solidarity with the demonstrators by doing something to show your support. Buying pizza is always good. Posting on a blog is good. Organizing your own demonstration is great. You get the idea. Let’s do it.
Mar 05 2011
This Week In The Dream Antilles
And what a weak week it was in Weequahic. Also, in the Dream Antilles. Your bloguero’s seasonal affective grouchiness (SAG) kicked into high gear as Old Man Winter continued to torture the inhabitants of the Northeast with inclemency and frigidity . Meanwhile, the radio station was broadcasting the Mets from sunny Port Saint Lucie in Florida. It did not help your bloguero’s disposition at all that Luis Castillo was playing second and Ollie Perez was on the mound. These two guys, who should have been traded or fired at the end of last season, still get paid 8 figures to do nothing. Your bloguero would be willing to do nothing for mid 6 figures, and he’ll negotiate. You know where to send the offers.
The week ended with Bloguer@s: Play the Game Right, a meta discussion of recent flameouts at Port Writers Alliance blogs. The post spares you the details but notes that most of the hostilities are provoked by uncontrolled ego and ego’s stepchild, defensiveness. Your bloguero asks, “Can’t we play the game right?”
In Obama: Get Our Your Comfortable Shoes you will find a video of President Obama on the campaign trail in 2007 telling workers in South Carolina how he’ll put shoe leather to the pavement and walk the pick line with them if they have to strike. Right. Get out your Guccis. And Wisconsin? No, he’s not going there. Nope. He’s not even going to give a sternly worded letter to the Governor. Posts like this heighten the contradictions, as if they needed heightening.
The Times had an article explaining how books were going to be sold in odd locations like clothing stores. Books And Non Books notes in passing that the “books” being sold aren’t literary gems, they’re non-books. Put another way, the publishers are going to foist a lot of paper junk on shoppers in the vain hope of keeping themselves above water. News like this makes your bloguero think about withholding the life preserver.
Duke Snider, RIP notes the passing of a childhood hero, Brooklyn Dodger outfielder Duke Snider. Your bloguero didn’t think Snider was better than Mays or Mantle, the other iconic New York outfielders of the era, but he loved the Dodgers, and Duke was a part of that team.
Thank You For Supporting Wisconsin’s Workers thanks readers of The Dream Antilles for going to demonstrations on Solidarity Saturday and for buying pizza for Wisconsin’s demonstrators.
Your bloguero notes in passing that this Digest is a weekly feature of the Port Writers Alliance and is supposed to be posted early Sunday morning. Well, things happen. The best laid plans of mice, etc. See you next week if the creek don’t rise on Sunday early.
Mar 01 2011
Obama: Get Out Your Comfortable Shoes
h/t to Sam Pratt:
I invited you to please go to Wisconsin. You apparently declined. Or didn’t get the invitation. Ok. I guess you forgot about this.
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from The Dream Antilles
Feb 28 2011
Thank You For Supporting Wisconsin’s Public Workers
Thank you for attending the demonstration near you yesterday on Solidarity Saturday. It’s important to turn up in physical as opposed to digital form, to link arms, to carry signs, to speak out, to be counted on this important issue. This is a terribly old fashioned way to petition the Government for redress of grievances, to take the First Amendment’s phrase, but alas, it’s all there is.
Feb 26 2011
Two Birds, One Stone: Solidarity Saturday In The Dream Antilles
Today is Solidarity Saturday. Your bloguero and thousands of others will brave the cold and head to Albany, New York, and other cities across America for demonstrations in support of Wisconsin’s beleaguered public workers and their unions. So the first bird (in this case a phoenix, for America’s labor unions) is this: join me in Albany, New York today at high noon or in the zillions of other places where at the same time progressives will apply shoe leather to pavement, lift every voice, link arms and stand up for public employees. You can find the demonstration nearest you by following this link. As Mother Jones said, “Pray for the dead, fight like hell for the living.” Your bloguero notes in passing the additional salubrious effect of exposure to cold winter air in battling cabin fever and inevitable Seasonal Affective Grumpiness (SAG).
The phoenix was your first bird. The second bird (in this case almost a complete turkey): the Dream Antilles Weekly Digest. Your bloguero notes that this week was not the finest at The Dream Antilles, but also, thank goodness, not its worst . It was a week dominated by concerns about events in Wisconsin and never ending Winter. Here’s what there was:
The week began much as it ends with Solidarity With Wisconsin’s Workers, complete with Pete Seeger and historical video, a recollection of the importance of unions public and private and a call to stand in solidarity with the workers in Wisconsin.
Haiku for a blustery, winter night with high wind and low, low, low prices temperatures.
Cuba’s Celebration Of Books: Can We Have One? notes the delights of the Havana International Book Fair and wonders whether an event like that, focusing on the reader, wouldn’t be wonderful for New York City. The Dream Antilles began as a Lit Blog. Sometimes it actually finds its way back to its original topic.
In response to a New York Times piece prematurely hinting at the demise of blogs and utterly clueless about the evolution of the Internet, your bloguero felt compelled to post I’m Nor Goin Nowhere, complete with Bob Dylan video and an analysis of why people migrate from platform to platform as the Internet evolves.
Your bloguero confesses it. Your bloguero always aspired to be a philanthropist. Alas, that has not happened yet, though, of course, hope for such things springs eternal. Buying some pizza for the demonstrators was as close as your bloguero came this week to being a philanthropist. Ian’s Pizza answers your bloguero’s telephone call. The Governor answers the call of “Koch.” Please contrast and compare. The story of feeding the demonstrators and a call for others to buy pizza for those in Madison is in Feed The Wisconsin Demonstrators Pizza. The success of this movement is noted in today’s New York Times
Annoyed that none of the major Democratic powers had visited the striking demonstrators in Madison, your bloguero issued an invitation to the President, Obama: Please Go To Wisconsin. As I look out the frozen window here in preparation for today’s demo, I note in passing that Our Nation’s President has not responded to this clarion call for action. Question for later: how not surprised is your bloguero?
Haiku about yet another approaching, forecasted snowstorm. Yes, it did arrive. Yes, there is more snow. Columbia County, New York has had a snow cover for months. Climate change has made this winter in your bloguero’s humble opinion the worst in decades. More to come, he fears.
And you end up where you began, today is Solidarity Saturday. Be There. I hope we can all push back from the monitor and keyboard, pull on the appropriate clothing, and get out there. After all, what else is there to do?
Your bloguero notes in passing that this Digest is a weekly feature of the Port Writers Alliance and is supposed to be posted early Sunday morning. Well, things happen. The best laid plans of mice, etc. Or as your bloguero’s great grandmother, an organizer of the ILGWU used to say, “Mann tracht; Gott lacht.” See you next week if the creek don’t rise on Sunday early.
Feb 24 2011
Obama: Please Go To Wisconsin
Well, here I go again, oversimplifying, being idealistic, possibly ranting. To all of these I plead guilty. In advance.
President Obama’s made a few statements about the demonstrations in Wisconsin. The most widely disseminated one is this one, reported in TPM:
Well I’d say that I haven’t followed exactly what’s happening with the Wisconsin budget. I’ve got some budget problems here in Washington that I’ve had to focus on. I would say, as a general proposition, that everybody’s gotta make some adjustments to new fiscal realities. And I think if we want to avoid layoffs — which I want to avoid, I don’t want to see layoffs of hard-working federal workers.We had to impose, for example, a freeze on pay increases for federal workers for the next two years, as part of my overall budget freeze. You know, I think those kinds of adjustments are the right thing to do.
On the other other hand, some of what I’ve heard coming out of Wisconsin — where you’re just making it harder for public employees to collectively bargain, generally — seems like more of an assault on unions.
And I think it’s very important for us to understand that public employees, they’re our neighbors, they’re our friends. These are folks who are teachers, and they’re firefighters, and they’re social workers, and they’re police officers. You know, they make a lot of sacrifices, and make a big contribution, and I think it’s important not to vilify them, or to suggest that somehow all these budget problems are due to public employees.So, I think everybody’s gotta make some adjustments, but I think it’s also important to recognize that public employees make enormous contributions to the well being of our states and our cities.
Sounds, feels, smells and looks like a politician. It’s balanced. It’s cautious. It looks over his shoulder to wonder which side might ultimately win the Battle of Madison. It sounds like he’d like to be on the winning side for 2012. What it doesn’t sound like by any means is leadership.
Leadership would be going to Madison and linking arms and standing in solidarity with the demonstrators and union members against the reactionaries and would-be union busters. It would be standing up to the Koch funded “movement.” It would be explaining clearly to all who would listen that these unions are important to sustained high pay in Wisconsin and the nation, and that the antedeluvian effort to kill these unions must be defeated. The Wisconsin football stadium might be a good place to hold the rally.
The President, however, hasn’t shown any signs that he’s ready to lead a fight for labor, his largest supporter. It looks like he might still want to invoke politesse and refer to these union busters as “the right to work” advocates with whom he has a small disagreement.
These people don’t deserve that kind of deference. They have ginned up a plan to destroy public unions and are inflexible about it. They will not modify it or back off from it. They plan to destroy public unions. Period. They have begun by trying drive a wedge between public workers’ unions. The teachers and highway workers and bureaucrats are ok to beat up on and they won’t be able to bargain, but those the cops and firefighters, which are more traditionally Republican, will.
Today’s mock phone call with “David Koch” proved beyond all cavil that Scott Walker is the lead dog running a national union busting movement. He doesn’t care at all about the state’s budget. This is another item entirely. This for Walker is only about destroying public unions. Yes, it’s happening through the state legislatures, but this is a manifestation of an organized, well funded, nationwide movement to emasculate public workers’ unions.
That’s why the unions can’t afford to lose this battle. And it’s why President Obama needs to organize an appearance in Wisconsin. The unions have already conceded on the economic issues in this confrontation by agreeing to pay more for their health insurance and to contribute more to their pensions. Those issues are not what’s keeping 14 Wisconsin legislators under cover in Illinois (or elsewhere). No. They are outside the state solely to protect collective bargaining. It bears repeating. What makes the confrontation persist is only one thing: the governor’s adamant refusal to drop his plan for withdrawal of collective bargaining rights for certain Wiaconsin public workers. Plain and simple: the Governor insists on destroying these unions.
That’s why the national democratic leadership in Washington needs to go to Wisconsin. And they need to go now. This is a confrontation that can and should be won. Obama and the national leadership have to stop playing Bert Lahr. They have to show up in numbers, and they have to roar.
cross-posted from The Dream Antilles
Feb 22 2011
Feed The Wisconsin Demonstrators Pizza!!
I just ordered 2 pizzas to be delivered to demonstrators in Madison, Wisconsin. Rachel Maddow has the story:
You’re probably already familiar with ordering take-out food online. Some restaurants let you do it directly and others use a middle man service, but the idea is that you log on, place your order, plug in your credit card info and tell it where to deliver the food. But there’s nothing that says you have to have the food delivered to yourself. In fact, there’s nothing that says you have to even be in the same country as the food you’ve just ordered.And so we arrive at Ian’s Pizza by the Slice where donations literally from around the world are coming into their State Street store in the form of online pizza orders to feed Wisconsin protesters. As Politico reports, “On Saturday alone, Ian’s gave away 1,057 free slices in their store and delivered more than 300 pizzas to the Capitol itself.”
You get it. I got it. I sent 2 20″ 3 topping pizzas to the assembled democracy demonstrators. Join me. It’s easy. You go to badgerbites.com and order a pie for the demonstrators. You know how to order for yourself. It’s just as easy to order for others. Go for it. It will make you smile.
And by the way. This does not mean that my allegiance to Pizza Bob’s in Ann Arbor has been violated in any regard. The way I see it, when in Madison, you do like the Badgers.
simulposted at The Dream Antilles
Feb 19 2011
Solidarity With Wisconsin’s Union Workers
I haven’t forgotten. And I’m here to remind you about unions. And union members. Here’s Pete Seeger:
Yes, I know. I lament that union membership is now so small. And that union power is at an all time low. I regret that so few workers are organized in the US, and I am aggrieved by the constant libels unions endure: for example, that the auto industry needed to be bailed out because of its union workers, not because of an overpaid, greedy management as dumb as a sack of hammers. The dominant narrative is that the unions and not the capitalists have caused the problems in the economy. So the unions and not the bankers should make changes. And that the unions are unattractive. That they are fossils. What a joke. What utter nonsense.
Feb 19 2011
This Week In The Dream Antilles
Pitchers and catchers reported to Spring Training, so the end of winter must be nearing. Ojala! That’s good, because your bloguero has an acute case of seasonal affective grumpiness (SAG) that just won’t quit. Tonight there is a high wind warning. That means gusts of over 60 mph. If Winter is going out to go out like a lamb, at the moment it’s acting like Rodan. But enough about him and your bloguero, here’s what this week brought to read and look at:
Solidarity With Wisconsin’s Union Workers features a great historical video and Pete Seeger singing Solidarity Forever. Normally, your bloguero would have cross posted this, so consider it a gift if you read this far.
Almost Spring Haiku. Things started to melt, your bloguero was inspired. Briefly.
Futbol, Galeano, Mexico a story by Uruguayan genius Eduardo Galeano about football and Mexico and some context by your bloguero.
Hello Cruel World!, an invitation to blog readers who might be looking for a new place to hang out to visit Port Writers Alliance blogs.
Haiku that wonder about what one tells oneself, about one’s inner voice.
Your bloguero notes in passing that this Digest is a weekly feature of the Port Writers Alliance and is supposed to be posted early Sunday morning. Well, things happen. The best laid plans of mice, etc. See you next week. if the creek don’t rise on Sunday early.
Feb 16 2011
Hello Cruel World!!!
Welcome, welcome, welcome. Bienvenidos! This is a blog welcome mat. Welcome to a wonderful, corner of the Leftblogosfero that you might not have encountered before. Especially if you are leaving the Orange Giant and looking for a new place to hang out. And, of course, welcome to the Writers Port Alliance!
If, like me, you miss the free-for-all (one with some basic, human rules of respect and decency for others) of the old group blogs, and if you’re looking for a new “home” for your pajama clad (or unclad or formally attired) self, you’ve found the right place for joining once again in the unrestrained, unsegmented joy of reading and writing in the Leftblogosfero.
A blog free-for-all. That’s what I was looking for when I originally came here. The fun of a crowd of participants. The excitement of learning others’ views. A free-for-all. A “place” where everyone and everything got mixed together and you could pick and choose at your leisure. It’s a noun (a phrase?) I haven’t used in decades. In fact, it’s been so long, that I wanted to check its connotation:
Definition of FREE-FOR-ALL:
a competition, dispute, or fight open to all comers and usually with no rules : brawl; also : a chaotic situation resembling a free-for-all especially in lacking rules or structure (the press conference deteriorated into a free-for-all) …
Synonyms: affray (chiefly British), broil, donnybrook, fracas, fray, free-for-all, melee (also mêlée), rough-and-tumble, row, ruckus, ruction
Antonyms: order, orderliness
Ooops. Free-for-all. Well, so maybe it was the wrong word after all. I don’t think of this blog as a fight or a donnybrook. Truth be told, donnybrook is one of those words I know, but it isn’t in my primary vocabulary. And when it comes to my brothers and sisters in the typing class, we all know and dread what can happen when the basic rules of human decency are breached. So it’s not about creating chaos, or biting off other combatants’ ears, it’s about freedom and excitement that group blogging is so very good at.
There are eight blogs in the Writers Port Alliance. You can find their links at the top of the page. Two of these (The Dream Antilles and Ignoring Asia) are solo acts; the others, group blogs with varying points of view and characteristics. They are much smaller than the mega-blog, which means that they are slower to gather comments, and that essays are available for longer before they are disappeared and pushed off the page. Items printed in one space might fit in all or some or none of the others, and the members and writers cross-post freely.
Welcome! As a favorite band says, “Just poke around.”
originated at The Dream Antilles
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