Mar 112013
 

Suffusion handles the creation and display of  Custom Post Types differently than WordPress. Here are the easy steps to creating and displaying your custom post types with the Suffusion Theme.

Create a Custom Post Type:

Suffusion Theme by Aquoid.com makes it easy to create multiple custom post types and display them without coding.

  • Install and activate the Suffusion Custom Post Type Plugin
1

Dashboard>Plug ins>Add New>Suffusion Custom Post Types.

3

The Suffusion Custom Post Types item will now show in the Admin>Appearance Menu.

Dashboard with Custom Post Types in Appearance menu

Dashboard with Custom Post Types in Appearance menu

  • Create a custom post type

In this example the custom post type is Pipe. Be sure to check the Arguments ‘Show in Navigation Menu’, ‘Public’, ‘Publicly Queriable’, ‘Show UI’. And in the ‘Supports’ section, check ‘Custom Fields’ and any others. Click ‘Save/Reset’ and save your changes.

  • Create some ‘pipes’ Posts

4

In the Dashboard, you now have a new menu item: ‘pipes’. Add a few new pipes posts.

After creating a post, click Save Daft and ‘Preview Page’. This is the individual page for each pipe. Here, you can put a Buy Now button from Paypal or other Payment Gateway. When you are satisfied with the post, click ‘Publish’.

Display All The Pipes in a grid

In the Dashboard, create a new WordPress Page for the pipes archive.

Choose Custom Post Archive as the Template in the Page Attributes box to the right of your content.

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When you create a page, and assign this template to the page and save this page as a draft, upon saving you will see a new tab in the Additional Options for Suffusion titled Custom Post Type Archive. In this tab you can pick things such as which post type you want to show, what kind of layout you want for it (Full posts, Excerpts, Tiles, Mosaic or List), what taxonomies you want to show for it, where you want the bylines displayed, etc.

  • A new set of options for displaying the single posts:
Suffusion Options>Customize>Custom>Layouts Under Suffusion Options → Custom Types → Layouts: Options for the single post displays for Custom Post Types.

Suffusion Options>Customize>Custom>Layouts
Under Suffusion Options → Custom Types → Layouts: Options for the single post displays for Custom Post Types.

 Posted by at 6:09 pm
Mar 112013
 

Robert ReichRobert ReichChancellor’s Professor of Public Policy, University of California at Berkeley; Author, ‘Beyond Outrage’

bullballs_300

This post originally ran on Robert Reich’s Web page.

On Tuesday the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose above 14,270 – completely erasing its 54 percent loss between 2007 and 2009.

The stock market is basically back to where it was in 2000, while corporate earnings have doubled since then.

Yet the real median wage is now 8 percent below what it was in 2000, and unemployment remains sky-high.

Why is the stock market doing so well, while most Americans are doing so poorly? Four reasons:

 

First, productivity gains. Corporations have been investing in technology rather than their workers. They get tax credits and deductions for such investments; they get no such tax benefits for improving the skills of their employees. As a result, corporations can now do more with fewer people on their payrolls. That means higher profits.

Second, high unemployment itself. Joblessness all but eliminates the bargaining power of most workers – allowing corporations to keep wages low. Public policies that might otherwise reduce unemployment – a new WPA or CCC to hire the long-term unemployed, major investments in the nation’s crumbling infrastructure – have been rejected in favor of austerity economics. This also means higher profits, at least in the short run.

Third, globalization. Big American-based corporations have been expanding and hiring around the globe where markets are growing fastest – even while the U.S. market is lackluster. Tax policies and trade policies have encouraged them.

Finally, the Fed’s easy-money policies. They’ve pushed investors into the stock market because bond yields are so low. On Tuesday, the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note was just 1.9%.

All of this spells widening inequality in America, because the people who invest the most in the stock market have high incomes. Those who rely most on wages have lower incomes.

Corporate profits are claiming a larger share of national income than at any time in 60 years, while the portion of total income going to employees is near its lowest since 1966.

As my colleague Immanuel Saez recently found, all the economic gains between 2009 and 2011 (the last year for which data were available) went to the richest 1 percent of Americans. The bottom 99 percent has continued to lose ground.

And yet the tax code continues to give preference to capital gains over ordinary income — a huge boon to investors.

The sequestration is likely to make all this worse, since it will slow the U.S. economy and keep unemployment higher than otherwise.

It will also hurt the most vulnerable. Some $1.9 billion in low-income rental subsidies are being eliminated, affecting 125,000 people. Cuts to the Department of Agriculture will eliminate rental assistance for another 10,000 low-income rural people. Meanwhile, 100,000 formerly homeless Americans are likely to be removed from their current emergency shelters.

More than 3.8 million Americans receiving long-term unemployment benefits will have their monthly payments reduced by as much as 9.4 percent, and lose an average of $400 in benefits over their period of joblessness.

The Department of Education’s Title I program, which helps schools serving more than a million disadvantaged students, will be cut $715 million, and $400 million will be cut from Head Start, the preschool program for poor children. And major cuts will be made in the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, which provides nutrition assistance and education.

The health of an economy is not measured by the profits of corporations headquartered within it or the value of its stock market. It depends, rather, on how many of people have jobs and whether those jobs pay decent wages.

By this measure, we are a long way from economic health. Rarely before in American history have public policies so blatantly helped the most fortunate among us, so cruelly harmed the least fortunate, and exposed so many average working Americans to such widespread insecurity.

Robert B. Reich, chancellor’s professor of public policy at UC Berkeley, was secretary of labor in the Clinton administration. Time magazine named him one of the 10 most effective Cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written 13 books, including the best-sellers “Aftershock” and “The Work of Nations.” His latest, “Beyond Outrage,” is now out in paperback. He is also a founding editor of The American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common Cause.

 Posted by at 5:09 pm
Nov 092012
 

More with a sense of relief than anything else I announce the arrival of version 4.4.0 of Suffusion, a.k.a. the Responsive edition, which went live just a while back. The following are the changes in this version:

New Features
As mentioned above, this release was all about checking the box against “Responsive”. I did try to put a good amount of power in the hands of the users:
The feature is “opt-in”. It is turned off by default and you can configure your settings by going to Suffusion Options → Layouts → Responsive Layout.
You can pick which breakpoints you want to configure. Note that for every breakpoint there is a good bit of CSS added, so exercise prudence.
Typically themes either kill a sidebar or shove it to the bottom of the content when they decide to go responsive. Suffusion lets you as a user decide what you want to do. If your sidebars have enough content to warrant a display on a small screen you can decide to show them at the bottom, and more importantly you have the choice of putting your sidebars side-by-side if you have more than one sidebar. This is of particular advantage on midway screen sizes such as 650px.
You can also do some fancy things like switch your navigation menus to “select” boxes if your width goes down below a point.
While most elements have been made responsive, the following need to be noted:
Featured content is responsive only if you check the setting to make images stretch to the full width. It took a huge effort getting JQuery Cycle to behave in a responsive manner.
The Headline box in the Magazine template and the Masonry-based layouts are NOT responsive.
The featured content slider doesn’t respond to swipe gestures – that will be handled in a later release.
I have to make some modifications to the menus so that they play well with touch devices. Currently if you tap on a menu item on a touch device it opens up the sub-menu if the menu item itself is not linked to a separate page. However if the menu item is linked to a separate page, tapping takes you to the page rather than showing the sub-menu.
Bug Fixes
A missing CSS file was being loaded for BP 1.6+. This has been corrected.
The setting for the number of widgets in the “Widgets in Header” was not being respected. This has been fixed.
I fixed an issue where the audio shortcode was not showing the audio player even if it was enabled.
A couple of layout-related issues have been addressed: Webkit browsers (Chrome and Safari) weren’t automatically setting boxes to a fixed height in the Custom Layout and the Magazine template. In addition, Opera 12.x was misbehaving for the Custom Layout template.
The Featured Posts widget was, in some cases, repeating the post index. This has been addressed.
I have corrected a bug where the left and right arrow icons were reversed in some iconsets.
Another bug was causing a post with no title in the Query Posts widget to show up with no linking text. This has been rectified to match the behaviour of the Recent Posts widget, where an id is shown as the linking text.
Activating FancyBox was causing a lot of errors to show up in the logs for IE browsers. Since Suffusion doesn’t support IE6, I saw no harm in removing the lines causing the errors.
Changed Features
I have removed the version of the Meta widget that came with Suffusion. This widget was mostly identical to the default Meta widget and it served no great purpose by itself. If you had the meta widget in your sidebar, you will need to re-add it.
Ever since version 4.0.0 I have had a combination of JS and CSS3 multi-columns to balance the widths and margins of blocks of text, such as the Custom Layout widget areas. I have now moved to a pure CSS solution that works on all browsers and is much more robust and stable.
This is more techno-speak than anything else. I had some static markup calls in the main sidebar, which I have now replaced with calls to the_widget.
I used to use an online PO file generator to build the theme’s PO file. But I realized that this generator tended to drop quite a few strings. So starting from this release I am using a different PO file generation technique. Naturally this has caused a spike in the number of strings that are to be translated.
Do bear in mind that I am not a fan of the common interpretation of “responsive” design – it only adds a lot more page weight for the measly benefit of showing your site differently on a device not capable of handling the extra page weight. However, there are times when ideology takes a backseat and one has to adapt. This happens to be one of those times. Personally I am still a fan of a dedicated mobile site for handling mobile requirements – responsive designs are a fad in this regard. Of course, you could still establish server-side controls for a lot of these things. E.g. The code could be made to detect a mobile browser behind the scenes and automatically give out an image with a lower resolution. Unfortunately such techniques haven’t been perfected yet.

So here’s hoping that you enjoy this release. For support continue using the forum, and please feel free to rate Suffusion or Photonic or FontMeister.
via: Aquoid Themes/news.

 Posted by at 8:22 pm
Nov 072012
 

We Built It? Sure, as long as the “We” includes a healthy dose of all levels of government involvement, and impressive influence from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, building on a long history of strong centralized planning and rebellion against unfettered capitalism and the Western frontier individualist ethos.

via How the Mormon GOP runs Utah with a collectivist touch — High Country News.

 Posted by at 5:16 pm
Oct 252012
 

Watch actor Bradley Whitford (Josh Lyman from The West Wing) and Rick Jacobs explain what’s really going on and who’s really behind Props. 30 and 32. Use the tools below to share the video online and educate other voters. You can customize the posts provided in any way you like.

via Watch This | Courage Campaign | Bradley Whitford and Rick Jacobs explain Props. 30 and 32.

 Posted by at 8:12 pm
Oct 232012
 

by Greg Palast | Truthout

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

He’s kidding, right? Did I just hear Mitt Romney say, “I would do nothing to hurt the US auto industry”

Really? REALLY?

Here’s the facts, ma’am:

…the Romneys are in a special partnership with the vulture fund that bought Delphi, the former GM auto parts division.

…But when I heard that Son of a …Detroit, Mr. Romney, tell us, ‘I would do nothing to hurt the US auto industry,’ I thought I’d lose my dinner. I suggest Romney repeat this directly to the Naylor family of Kokomo, Indiana.

Bruce Naylor lost his job at Delphi, then his health insurance (terminated by the Romney syndicate) – then his home to foreclosure.

Read the article and watch the video: Greg Palast | Investigative Reporter.

 Posted by at 6:56 pm
Oct 192012
 

 

Actor, director, and environmental activist

We simply can’t let Mitt Romney buy the keys to the White House and let the special interests write our nation’s energy plan behind closed doors, like it did in the previous administration. That old saw didn’t work then, and it won’t work now.

I was in the early days of my acting career in 1962, when Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring made its way onto best-seller lists and college campuses and into living rooms across America and sowed the seeds of today’s environmental movement. The story of that movement still represents for me who we are as a country: a people dedicated to something greater than ourselves, and a nation that recognizes our responsibility to each other. Read the article: Robert Redford: Why I’m Supporting President Obama.

 Posted by at 3:09 pm
Oct 172012
 

 

 

 

He’s back.

Tuesday night our president was articulate and forceful — in sharp contrast to his performance in the first presidential debate. He stated his beliefs. He defended his record. He told America where he wanted to take the nation in his second term.

And he explained where Romney wanted to take us.

For example:

Romney says he’s got a five-point plan. Governor Romney doesn’t have a five-point plan; he has a one-point plan. And that plan is to make sure that folks at the top play by a different set of rules. That’s been his philosophy in the private sector; that’s been his philosophy as governor; that’s been his philosophy as a presidential candidate. You can make a lot of money and pay lower tax rates than somebody who makes a lot less. You can ship jobs overseas and get tax breaks for it. You can invest in a company, bankrupt it, lay off the workers, strip away their pensions, and you still make money.

And:

Governor Romney… was on 60 Minutes just two weeks ago, and he was asked, is it fair for somebody like you, making $20 million a year, to pay a lower tax rate than a nurse or a bus driver, somebody making $50,000 a year? And he said, yes, I think that’s fair. Not only that, he said, I think that’s what grows the economy. Well, I fundamentally disagree with that.

Obama told voters what Romney’s plan was for women (take away their freedom of choice), and for Hispanics (allow police to stop them and demand proof of citizenship, as in the Arizona law “that’s his [Romney's] policy, and it’s bad policy.”)

via Robert Reich: Obama Is Back.

 Posted by at 5:05 pm
Oct 162012
 
anca11

Mosoiu is bringing together the people who want to do what City Hall has been unable to do: lay the groundwork to build a much-needed tech industry in Oakland.

“Tech Liminal was the first place where techies, nerds and geeks could come together and feel at home,” said Deborah Acosta, of 2. Oakland and iDotconnect, which tries to attract tech businesses to Oakland….

Just because you have the technology doesn’t mean you know how to use it,” she said.

‘That’s what Tech Liminal does,’ she added. “If they get stuck they can ask for help.”

OAKLAND — It was a Wednesday night and Anca Mosoiu, a software engineer, was digging through a tangle of fat computer cables.

She extracted one and walked past a table filled by a group of six people working on a project to turn Oakland’s budget data into a graphic showing how city money is spent.

This night, as is often the case, Mosoiu was wearing a T-shirt and big green-rimmed glasses. She handed off the cable to another table, walked to the back of the room and stood next to a lanky programmer who had been sitting silently for about an hour, facing his computer screen.

“He’s learning Python,” she said, smiling.

This is a typical scene at Tech Liminal on 14th Street near Lake Merritt. Mosoiu calls it a “technology hotspot and salon.” And it’s easy to picture it as nothing more than a bunch of geeks hunched over their laptops talking about things that have nothing to do with the real world.” Read the article from The West County Times and Inside Bay AreaHometown Hero: Anca Mosoiu, founder of Oakland’s Tech Liminal – Inside Bay Area.

Check out Tech Liminal: http://techliminal.com/

 Posted by at 6:00 pm
Oct 072012
 

In Wednesday night’s debate, Romney won on style while Obama won on substance. Romney sounded as if he had conviction, which means he’s either convinced himself that the lies he tells are true or he’s a fabulous actor.

But what struck me most was how much Obama allowed Romney to get away with: Five times Romney accused Obama of raiding Medicare of $716 billion, which is a complete fabrication. Obama never mentioned the regressiveness of Romney’s budget plan — awarding the rich and hurting the middle class and the poor. He never mentioned Bain Capital, or Romney’s 47 percent talk, or Romney’s “carried-interest” tax loophole. Obama allowed Romney to talk about replacing Dodd-Frank and the Affordable Care Act without demanding that Romney be specific about what he’d replace and why. And so on.

 

Robert Reich: The First Presidential Debate.

 Posted by at 4:42 pm
Sep 012012
 
Aug032012

 

 

Party!

As I sit alone in a large house with no furniture save a sleeping bag, a couple of suitcases and an internet modem, Suffusion is celebrating its third birthday. These have been 3 long years of toil and happiness, and I have all of you to thank for its success.

During this year Suffusion has crossed several milestones:

  1. Over 800,000 downloads – The default themes TwentyTen and TwentyEleven get the benefit of being bundled with all WP installations, but them apart, the only non-default theme with more downloads than Suffusion is Atahualpa, which has been around for about 2 years more than Suffusion.
  2. A 5-star rating – It is one thing to have one rating of 5 stars. Slight credibility is gained when you have 10 ratings averaging close to 5 stars. But doing it for over 270 ratings is, well, impressive. As things stand, Suffusion is second in the list of all-time number of ratings, and very few in the first page come close to Suffusion’s average rating. Thanks to all of you who have rated Suffusion so highly!
  3. Alexa-verified popularity – In a study done of the top 1 million visited websites in the world, the ones using WP were analyzed. And Suffusion featured very prominently among the top 20 WP themes usedon these most popular websites.

During this year I took away some development focus from Suffusion and managed to release a bunch of plugins:

  1. Photonic – A year back I pulled out the planned photo-blogging features of Suffusion and released them as Photonic a few weeks later. By far my favourite plugin, this is an absolutely fantastic way of including photos from Flickr, Picasa, Smugmug and 500px.com on your site. More importantly, I am working on a few enhancements that will let you include from Facebook, Instagram and some other sources too!
  2. FontMeister – This was something I had promised in the second birthday announcement. It is a very simple yet fully functional plugin that lets you include fonts from various sources in your sites. More importantly, this integrates with Suffusion’s font drop-downs too.
  3. Suffusion Commerce Pack – This helps users use popular e-commerce plugins with Suffusion.
  4. Suffusion bbPress Pack – This lets users use bbPress with Suffusion.
  5. Suffusion Custom Post Types – This is more of a basic transitional plugin to help users use custom post types that they have formerly defined in Suffusion with new themes. The whole objective is to not make you feel shackled by Suffusion.

Of course, Suffusion received some nice additions too:

  1. New Skins – I added the “Photonique” and the “Scribbles” skins. The former is ideally suited for a photoblog.
  2. HTML5 Support and Semantic Markup – This was the big addition of the year, obviously, and the only one that could potentially break things. And I am happy to report that the transition was generally smooth, thanks to the extensive testing by Mark van Jaarsveld.
  3. More Framework-like Features – There are some things that you cannot customize via Suffusion’s options panels. For those rare situations I have been steadily adding framework-like features to Suffusion.
  4. Custom Post Types – I have added some good support for Custom Post Types, letting you define their layouts and take advantage of custom taxonomies associated with them.
  5. Custom Layouts & Mega Menus – These are features that are hard to find in commercial themes, and Suffusion gets them to you for free.

As for the future, obviously there is the whole aspect of responsive design. For once I will be coding something I don’t believe in. I have also been promising some interesting sidebar concepts for a while now. With all my work I never got around to delivering those.

To close, I reiterate something I said last year – very few big features will be added, apart from the ones committed. Of course, you will see responsive design. But apart from that you will mostly see new skins and support for new WP features.

Lastly, thanks are in order to all the ardent supporters of the theme:

  1. To Colin and Drake for the awesome job on the support forum
  2. To Mark for extensive testing during the beta releases
  3. To all the fine folks who donate to and / or vote for the theme
  4. To all of you who write to me in person thanking me for a release, or help me out with snippets of code that I can add to my theme or plugins (Bart, Marcel etc.).

If nothing else, Suffusion and my other projects showcase the power of community collaboration. 3 Years of Suffusion » Aquoid Themes.

 Posted by at 10:41 pm
Sep 012012
 

AUGUST 30, 2012

by Greg Palast

If you’re not sick and outraged and ready to vomit, then don’t talk to me.

When I see a cruel bucket of garbage and winky-winky racism and bullshit and venom like Paul Ryan talk to America like he’s some kind of Boy Scout, I want a gun, or a TV network where I can tell the truth or a giant washing machine to dunk America and rinse off the crud of lies and pure manipulative evil that they’re feeding us.

But I don’t like guns, I don’t have a TV network, I just have this:  A book.

It’s called Billionaires & Ballot Bandits:  How to Steal an Election in 9 Easy Steps.

An investigation of Karl Rove, the Koch Gang and their billionaire Buck-Buddies. The guys who bought Ryan.

It’s the most important bullet I’ve ever fired.

I watch these smug jerks at the Republican Convention and I’m ill … because I know something they won’t tell you on CNN or CBS, let alone Fox.  And here’s the facts, ma’am:

In 2008, no fewer than 2,706,275 ballots were cast—and never counted.

It didn’t make a difference then, but it will make a difference now.

And, in 2008, no fewer than 3,195,539 legal voters were denied the right to vote.   Told to get the hell out of the polling station.

Add it up.  That’s at least 5,901,814 legitimate votes and voters tossed out of the count.

So God Bless America. By the way, these numbers are from the raw data supplied to me by the US Elections Assistance Commission.

It’s official. It’s in your face.  It’s sick.  It’s unreported.

I cry.  I scream.  I retch.  Then I make jokes — but I give you the inside info on the Koch Brothers (“Target 67C” as federal prosecutors called Charles Koch) that will make your eyes pop.

Fact: The 2012 election’s been stolen.  Already.  Stolen by billionaires who’ve created data bases called “Themis” (the Kochs own that) and “DataTrust” (Karl Rove’s satanic machine).

The election has not been stolen from Barack Obama — it’s been stolen from you.  From We the People who march to the polls believing America is still a democracy, the land of the Brave, home of The Free, and that our votes count.

The Rove-bots and the monsters behind the data bases have figured out how to fiddle, finagle and ultimately throw your vote in the garbage.

America is on the line.  ON THE LINE.  I have two kids and God forbid I stand here silent with my hands in my pockets whistling at my shoes.

How did a sick little monster like Paul Ryan end up on the Republican ticket?  Follow the money.  The big sugar daddy behind Ryan, his donor Numero Uno, is Paul “The Vulture” Singer.  Singer’s the guy who started the Romney super-PAC “Restore Our Future” and he’s funded Ryan up the Wazoo.

Why?  Because Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton told a federal court that Singer The Vulture is a “threat to the entire financial system” of the planet.  And now Singer wants their blood—and your dead carcass.

Frankly, I don’t care, as Shakespeare said, if Obama’s campaign “farts or flies.”  I do care if a billionaire can steal the votes of Black soldiers just so he can make another billion.

So I want, I demand, I insist, that you order a copy of the exposé on The Vulture and Romney’s billionaires (and Obama’s, too):  Billionaires & Ballot Bandits:  How to Steal an Election in 9 Easy Steps.

With a foreword by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., “The Hostile Takeover of America”. RFK is as outraged as I am but a lot calmer.

And inside it, there’s a 48-page comic book by Ted Rall because every cartoon is worth a thousand bullets.

Don’t be fooled again. This election is about a bunch of madly dangerous financiers — ”The Vulture,” the “Ice Man,” and guys so evil they don’t even have nicknames — who can’t tolerate the idea that Americans have a right to choose our leaders, our destinies.

via « Billionaires & Ballot Bandits.

Aug 192012
 

“Now, am I crazy to suspect that his “God not government” usage is less an homage to Thomas Jefferson or John Locke than it is a rhetorical boost for the right-wing project to claim a divine mandate for the Tea Partys radically restricted view of the role of government?”

 

Religious Right leaders are excited that Rep. Paul Ryan, in accepting Mitt Romney’s invitation to be his running mate, said that our rights come from nature and God, not from government.

I can be moved to tears by the ideals included in our founding documents. My wife and I sent an original printing of the Declaration of Independence on a 10-year road trip around the country to let Americans have the thrill of reading these words in our nation’s birth certificate, and in their own home towns: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal and are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights….”

Now, am I crazy to suspect that his “God not government” usage is less an homage to Thomas Jefferson or John Locke than it is a rhetorical boost for the right-wing project to claim a divine mandate for the Tea Party’s radically restricted view of the role of government?

This wasn’t the first time that our new Republican candidate for vice president used that formulation; several weeks ago he cited nature and God as the rationale for repealing health care reform too, criticizing the law’s supporters for believing that health care was a government-granted right.

Other politicians and Religious Right leaders use the notion that our rights come from God to justify their opposition to legal equality for those who they believe displease God, particularly LGBT Americans — the way some once argued that it was God’s will or the natural order for certain people to be enslaved, or for women to subordinate their legal rights to their husbands. Or the way some people believe that wealth and success are signs of divine blessing (or simply of natural superiority à la Ayn Rand) so that we as a society shouldn’t be too worried about those born into positions of want and restricted opportunity.

Some even argue that the Constitution was meant to create a government of, by and for Christians. They are demonstrably wrong. The authors of the Constitution explicitly considered and rejected proposals to insert Christianity into the Constitution, and they chose not to. The framers chose the more radical path of separating church and state and creating a country in which one’s religious beliefs or lack thereof were no bar to citizenship or public office. Of course, on this as on many other issues, the reality is that in life and in law, at the nation’s founding our society was far from the ideal. We struggled for the progress we have made and that struggle continues. So let’s do celebrate the legacies from our founders, and at the same time maintain a healthy skepticism toward those who use the rhetoric of nature and God to deny the government’s role in promoting the general welfare or securing the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity.

via Norman Lear: Paul Ryan: God Says That I Can Carry a Gun?.

 Posted by at 9:40 pm
Aug 082012
 

“By 1984, the media had thoroughly exposed connections between the death squads and the Salvadoran oligarchy, including the families that invested with Romney.”

In 1983, Bill Bain asked Mitt Romney to launch Bain Capital, a private equity offshoot of the successful consulting firm Bain & Company. After some initial reluctance, Romney agreed. The new job came with a stipulation: Romney couldn’t raise money from any current clients, Bain said, because if the private equity venture failed, he didn’t want it taking the consulting firm down with it.

When Romney struggled to raise funds from other traditional sources, he and his partners started thinking outside the box. Bain executive Harry Strachan suggested that Romney meet with a group of Central American oligarchs who were looking for new investment vehicles as turmoil engulfed their region.

Romney was worried that the oligarchs might be tied to “illegal drug money, right-wing death squads, or left-wing terrorism,” Strachan later told a Boston Globereporter, as quoted in the 2012 book “The Real Romney.” But, pressed for capital, Romney pushed his concerns aside and flew to Miami in mid-1984 to meet with the Salvadorans at a local bank.

It was a lucrative trip. The Central Americans provided roughly $9 million — 40 percent — of Bain Capital’s initial outside funding, the Los Angeles Times reported recently. And they became valued clients.

“Over the years, these Latin American friends have loyally rolled over investments in succeeding funds, actively participated in Bain Capital’s May investor meetings, and are still today one of the largest investor groups in Bain Capital,” Strachan wrote in his memoir in 2008. Strachan declined to be interviewed for this story.

When Romney launched another venture that needed funding — his first presidential campaign — he returned to Miami.

“I owe a great deal to Americans of Latin American descent,” he said at a dinner in Miami in 2007. “When I was starting my business, I came to Miami to find partners that would believe in me and that would finance my enterprise. My partners were Ricardo Poma, Miguel Dueñas, Pancho Soler, Frank Kardonski, and Diego Ribadeneira.”

Romney could also have thanked investors from two other wealthy and powerful Central American clans — the de Sola and Salaverria families, who the Los Angeles Times and Boston Globe have reported were founding investors in Bain Capital.

While they were on the lookout for investments in the United States, members of some of these prominent families — including the Salaverria, Poma, de Sola and Dueñas clans — were also at the time financing, either directly or through political parties, death squads in El Salvador. The ruling classes were deploying the death squads to beat back left-wing guerrillas and reformers during El Salvador’s civil war.

The death squads committed atrocities on such a mass scale for so small a country that their killing spree sparked international condemnation. From 1979 to 1992, some 75,000 people were killed in the Salvadoran civil war, according to the United Nations. In 1982, two years before Romney began raising money from the oligarchs, El Salvador’s independent Human Rights Commission reported that, of the 35,000 civilians killed, “most” died at the hands of death squads. A United Nations truth commission concluded in 1993 that 85 percent of the acts of violence were perpetrated by the right, while the left-wing Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front, which was supported by the Cuban government, was responsible for 5 percent.

When The Huffington Post asked the Romney campaign about Bain Capital accepting funds from families tied to death squads, a spokeswoman forwarded a 1999Salt Lake Tribune article to explain the campaign’s position on the matter. She declined to comment further.

“Romney confirms Bain had investors in El Salvador. But, as was Bain’s policy with any big investor, they had the families checked out as diligently as possible,” theTribune wrote. “They uncovered no unsavory links to drugs or other criminal activity.”

Nobody with a basic understanding of the region’s history could believe that assertion.

By 1984, the media had thoroughly exposed connections between the death squads and the Salvadoran oligarchy, including the families that invested with Romney. The sitting U.S. ambassador to El Salvador charged that several families, including at least one that invested with Bain, were living in Miami and directly funding death squads. Even by 1981, El Salvador’s elite, largely relocated to Miami, were so angered by the public perception that they were financing death squads that they reached out to the media to make their case. The two men put forward to represent the oligarchs were both from families that would invest in Bain three years later. The most cursory review of their backgrounds would have turned up the ties.

The connection between the families involved with Bain’s founding and those who financed death squads was made by the Boston Globe in 1994 and the Salt Lake Tribune in 1999. This election cycle, Salon first raised the issue in January, and theLos Angeles Times filled out more of the record earlier this month.

There is no shortage of unsavory links. Even the Tribune article referred to by the Romney campaign reports that “about $6.5 million of $37 million that established the company came from wealthy El Salvadoran families linked to right-wing death squads.”

The Salaverria family, whose fortune came from producing cotton and coffee, had deep connections to the right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA), a political party that death-squad leader Roberto D’Aubuisson founded in the fall of 1981. The year before, El Salvador’s government had pushed through land reforms and nationalized the coffee trade, moves that threatened a ruling class whose financial and political dominance was built in large part on growing coffee. ARENA controlled and directed death squads during its early years.

On March 24, 1980, Oscar Romero, the archbishop of San Salvador and an advocate of the poor, was celebrating Mass at a chapel in a small hospital when he was assassinated on D’Aubuisson’s orders, according to a person involved in the murder who later came forward.

The day before, Romero, an immensely popular figure, had called on the country’s soldiers to refuse the government’s orders to attack fellow Salvadorans.

“Before another killing order is given,” he advised in his sermon, “the law of God must prevail: Thou shalt not kill.”

In 1984, Robert White, the former U.S. ambassador to El Salvador, named two Salaverria brothers — Julio and Juan Ricardo — as two of six Salvadoran exiles in Miami who had directly funded death squads, repeating in sworn congressional testimony a claim he’d made earlier as ambassador. The group became known as the “Miami Six.” White testified that a source close to the Miami Six had notified the U.S. embassy of their activities in January 1981.

White was pushed out of his job by the incoming Reagan administration in 1981; he was considered insufficiently supportive of the Salvadoran ruling class. (D’Aubuissonendorsed Ronald Reagan in 1984.) When contacted by phone recently, White reiterated his claim about the Salaverria brothers, but said he couldn’t reveal his source’s identity in order to protect the source.

“The Salaverria family were very well-known as backers of D’Aubuisson,” White told The Huffington Post. “These guys were big-money contributors. … They were total backers of D’Aubuisson and the extremist solution, including death squads.”

Alfonso Salaverria was a close associate of Orlando de Sola, a leading death-squad figure, and, like him, supported D’Aubuisson.

The Salaverria family also violently resisted land reform efforts. When the Salvadoran government seized about 140 of the country’s largest farms in March 1980, 73-year-old Raul Salaverria was the only landowner to openly resist, the Washington Postreported at the time. A brief exchange of gunfire between government forces and Salaverria’s people resulted in two injuries, and 1,500 weapons were allegedly found on the property.

Eight years later, workers in an agrarian reform co-operative whose land once belonged to the Salaverrias barely escaped an assassination attempt. “Members of the co-op suspect the former owners, the Salaverria family, were behind the violence,” a 1988 Human Rights Watch report said. The family denied involvement.

Francisco de Sola and his cousin, Herbert Arturo de Sola, also invested early in Bain, according to the Los Angeles Times. Two other members of the de Sola family were “limited partners,” according to the Boston Globe, but the Romney campaign declined to provide The Huffington Post with their names. The de Sola family was one of El Salvador’s most powerful coffee growers and a financier of the ARENA party.

Herbert’s brother was the notorious Orlando de Sola, who resisted the peace negotiations toward the end of the civil war. The Romney campaign acknowledges Orlando de Sola’s connection to death squads but insists he is not representative of the de Sola family investors. While Romney told the Tribune in 1999 that the backgrounds of the families had been checked diligently, he had explained to theBoston Globe in 1994 that Bain’s due diligence included only the backgrounds of the individual investors, not their family members. “We investigated the individuals’ integrity and looked for any obvious signs of illegal activity and problems in their background, and found none. We did not investigate in-laws and relatives.” Deflecting the association with Orlando, Strachan, whom Romney had charged with vetting the investors, described him that same year to the Globe as “the black sheep of the family. … He was kicked out of the family business.”

Yet there is strong evidence that Orlando was anything but a black sheep in the de Sola family. Indeed, he was a leading public face of the Salvadoran elites in Miami, speaking, for example, on behalf of the El Salvador Freedom Foundation, the organization which arranged a U.S. press conference for D’Aubuisson as part of its public relations activities on behalf of the oligarchs and ARENA. An Associated Press story from April 1981 includes Orlando de Sola and Alfonso Salaverria speaking on behalf of the oligarchs in exile. The story also makes reference to White’s charges regarding the funding of death squads, indicating that the charges were already well known by that point.

But the ties run deeper still. In 1990, Orlando de Sola, D’Aubuisson and founding Bain investor Francisco de Sola allegedly assassinated two left-wing activists then in Guatemala, according to a report by that country’s government, which cited its intelligence sources. The activists had just held a meeting with then-Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), who was attempting to broker a Salvadoran peace deal.

Francisco de Sola later pleaded his and his cousin Orlando’s innocence to the U.S. ambassador. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights looked further into the killings and concluded that elements of the Salvadoran right were indeed the mostly likely assassins, but said that it couldn’t confirm the guilt of the de Solas or D’Aubuisson. It deemed the investigation incomplete and called for a deeper look. The three men were never charged.

Francisco de Sola is now president of the Salvadoran Foundation for Economic and Social Development. His assistant, Ada Chang, said that he was traveling and unavailable to comment, but she confirmed to HuffPost that he had been accused of murdering the two leftists in 1990. Whether he committed the crime or not, the fact that Guatemalan intelligence would associate him with Orlando de Sola and D’Aubuisson, and place them in Guatemala together, casts further doubt on Strachan’s claim that Orlando de Sola was merely a “black sheep” who had been “kicked out of the family business.”

Orlando de Sola, who is serving an unrelated prison sentence for fraud, told the Los Angeles Times that he did not personally benefit from the Bain investments. “I would say their relationship with Bain Capital was a step to diversify into foreign investments,” he said of his family.

Ricardo Poma was the first investor Romney thanked when he traveled to Miami in 2007. The head of the Poma Group, he became one of the three members of the Bain Capital investment committee, according to Strachan’s memoir. The Poma family were financiers of D’Aubuisson’s ARENA party.

The Regalado-Dueñas family, like many of El Salvador’s other powerful clans, amassed much of their wealth and political power through the coffee industry. Along with the Alvarez family, they also helped to found Banco Comercial, one of the biggest banks in El Salvador.

The Regalado-Dueñas and Alvarez families were leading supporters of ARENA. Arturo Dueñas “regularly supplied” the head of an ARENA-affiliated “paramilitary unit … with a variety of official Salvadoran documents,” according to a redacted 1984 CIA document, which uses the euphemism for death squad. (Salvadoran government documents were used by death squads to assemble lists of people to kill.)

Miguel Dueñas and Ricardo Poma did not respond to requests for comment. The Salaverria brothers are dead, according to Ambassador White.

Jeffery Paige, author of “Coffee and Power: Revolution and the Rise of Democracy in Central America” and a professor at the University of Michigan, has studied the political economy of Central American oligarchies. Romney’s claim to have checked out the backgrounds of the families and come away satisfied befuddles Paige.

“These people benefited from one of the most exploitative and repressive agricultural systems in Latin America. That’s why they had a revolution,” Paige said. “This money, certainly there wasn’t much concern where it came from and what these people had done to make that money.”

Sergio Bendixen, who now does polling for President Barack Obama, spent a significant amount of time in El Salvador in the early ’80s, doing political polling for Univision. He said that he met D’Aubuisson on many occasions and found him to be one of the warmest, most charming and charismatic people he has ever met. But he said D’Aubuisson was also very upfront about what he saw as the justifiable use of death squads.

“There were 10 or 30 bodies in the street every morning,” Bendixen recalled of his time there. “D’Aubuisson said it was necessary. The message needed to be sent [that] if you were associated with the communists or socialists, you had to be killed. He said it was an instrument in keeping the violence down, because others would see the consequences.”

Bendixen suggested that a cursory look would have shown Romney what those families were involved with. “If anybody tries to tell you there was a line, a Chinese wall, between ARENA and the death squads, that’s just not the way it was,” he said.

The Salvadoran elite in Miami talked openly at the time, he said, of supporting the death squads battling the rebels. It wasn’t a source of shame, Bendixen recalled, but a source of pride. “They were proud of the fact that they were supporting their country against the communists,” he said.

As Romney now seeks support from the Latino community in his campaign for president, his knowledge of Bain’s all-too-few degrees of separation from Salvadoran death squads may become a topic of interest.

“Under Ronald Reagan, the U.S. sent billions of dollars to the murderous regime, which utilized that aid to fund the military and death squads in an effort to preserve the unjust privileges of the Salvadoran oligarchy,” said Arturo J. Viscarra, an immigration lawyer, who, like many other Salvadorans, emigrated to the United States in order to escape the civil war. He said his family left the country in 1980 after his father began receiving death threats.

“To now learn that a man that may become president of the U.S. deserves some of his success due to the incredible inequality that the U.S. helped to preserve in El Salvador is ironic,” Viscarra said. “It’s morbidly funny.”

The U.S. involvement in the bloodshed is now seen as a black mark on the nation’s record. When President Obama visited Central America in March 2011, he made a symbolic stop at Romero’s grave, lighting a candle for the archbishop.

Romney, however, has shown no public remorse for signing up such investors, although the concept of culpability is not foreign to him. When he returned to Miami in 2007, he condemned those who had financed torture and other human rights abuses during the Salvadoran civil war — just not those he was connected to.

“These friends didn’t just help me; they taught me,” Romney said. “Ricardo’s brother had been tortured and murdered by rebel terrorists in El Salvador. Miguel himself had been chained to a floor in Guatemala for weeks and tortured. And their torturers were financed by Fidel Castro. I learned from these friends about the human cost when Castro has money.”

source: Mitt Romney Started Bain Capital With Money From Families Tied To Death Squads.

 

 

 Posted by at 6:51 pm
Jul 172012
 

Here’s something I haven’t spoken much about outside of Michigan, mainly because I live here and I like what modicum of privacy I have in this place I call home and where I try to live a “normal” life. For instance, not a day goes by here where a Republican doesn’t stop and shake my hand. Seriously.

But I think it’s time you guys come here and hang out with me! So consider this your invite to make your way to Traverse City, Michigan, where each summer I hold afilm festival that is a favorite for filmmakers all over the world. More on this in a bit.

For the past seven years, in addition to my day job of making movies and writing books, I have spent a significant amount of my time volunteering in the town where I live in northern Michigan. Read more:Michael Moore: I Built a Movie Theater — and a Film Festival — and I’d Like You to Come to It.

 Posted by at 8:22 pm
May 312012
 

Taking Your Development Site Live

WordPress v.3.3.2, pypMyAdmin V: 3.4.10.1, MySQL client version: 5.1.62

You may want to create a site in a development environment rather than working on a live site. (No Cowboy Coding allowed). This ‘dev’ site would then have to be moved to a production site when it is ready to go live. Here are steps to follow when moving a site to a new location.

Overview: Four Steps

  1. BACKUP: Backup development site manually or with the backWPup plug in
  2. INSTALL: Make new WordPress install on server in new location
  3. IMPORT: Import your backed up site into the new WordPress Install and update paths to db and uploads
  4. LOCATE: Tell the new install, the location of the new db and login and change login and password

Detailed Instructions

1. BACKUP
There are 2 parts of your WP install to back up when you are moving a site.

  • Your mysql db
  • The ‘wp-content’ folder which includes all customizations. More specifically, your WP php files, plugins, themes, customizations and all media files you have uploaded.

1. Backing up the mySQL db

phpMyAdmin is a small application that serves as a front end to the mySQL databases living at your web host. This app allows you to access and work with the WordPress Database that is installed on your web host’s server when you do a new install of WP. Follow thsese steps to export the WordPress MySQL db as a .sql file.

  • Log into your web host.
  • Go to cpanel>phpMyAdmin to connect to the mysql db.(Note: Some hosts don’t use cPanel, so you have to navigate once you have logged into your web host to find your mySql DB. (wp-config.php has the password to phpMyAdmin))
  • In the left sidebar of phpMyAdmin, select the mySQL db you want to export. (Note the name of the db.)(don’t touch ‘information schema’ db if you see it.)
  • At the top of the screen, Click Export, and then>Custom for the kind of Export.
  • Once you have clicked ‘Custom’, you will get some options. Scroll down to: ”Object creation options>Add statements:” Check the following option: “add/drop table.      See: Add DROP TABLE / VIEW / PROCEDURE / FUNCTION / EVENT statement.” This will tell mySQL to drop any new tables in the new database when it is importing the backed up db to your new install.
  • Click ‘GO’. This will download a database file called name_of__db.sql to your downloads folder or Desktop.

2. Backing up your WP php files and media files (images videos, pdfs, etc.)

The wp-content folder holds all your Themes, child themes, plugins, customizations, uploads, (videos, images, .pdf files) that you have added to your site.

  • Log into your server (your webhost) with an FTP application. (Cyberduck, Transmit, Filezilla, etc.)
  • Drag the wp-content folder onto your Desktop to back it up.

Alternative backup system: Use the backWPup plug in.

BackWPup plug in allows scheduling, back up to DropBox and and other cloud servers. Note: When using the backWPup plug in, it is best practice to create 2 jobs rather than one big job. Job 1 is the db backup, and job 2 is the files backup.
2. INSTALL
Make New WordPress Install
Do a brand new install of WP into a folder called ‘sandbox’ or into client’s directory where they will host  the new site. Note: As an alternative to using a “sandbox folder for development sites: use subdomains for ea. WP install. Each subdomain would be a new install of WP subdomain.domainname.com. Note: If you are using this plug in, Now that you have created your new WP install, skip down to “Restore using backWPup plugin”.
3. IMPORT
Bring In Dev. Site To New Location

  • Import wp MySQL Db From dev site
  • Import the mySQL DB you exported to your downloads directory or folder on your computer. Here’s how: Go back to your webhost, open phpMyAdmin, in left sidebar, select the name of the database of the new install, click Import, navigate to the .sql file you exported to your downloads folder to upload it
  • Once the file has uploaded, click “Go”.

Replace Wp-Content Directory On New Install With The wp-content Directory From The Dev. Site

The wp-content folder holds all your personalized content from WordPress installations.On your new install, replace the existing content. This installs the media library and any other content.

  • Log into your server (your webhost) with your FTP application. (Cyberduck, Transmit, Filezilla, etc.)
  • Drag the WP content folder onto the WordPress folder. It will replace the wp-content folder that was installed at the time of the new WP install. This will bring in your customized content.

4. LOCATE
Tell The New Install’s DB, The Location Of New WP Install
Edit 3 fields in the Options Table of your mySQL db. Record numbers are approximate.

  1. SITEURL: Edit record one, change it to new directory: Here is how: In phpMyAdmin, Select the new mysql db that was installed with your new install. In left sidebar where the list of tables are, select wp_options. (these record numbers might change): Change record 1- Options table tells wp where your files live. (This is the same as wp address in General Settings in Dashboard). e.g. if you have a subdomain setup, it will be something like, subdomain.domainname.com/wp. Or dev.domainname.com, or domainname.com/sandbox/wp/
  2. HOME OPTION: Edit record 37: Options table->possibly record 37 or 39.>site address. Change this to your new directory. Click Go to set your edit.
  3. UPLOAD PATH OPTIONS: Edit Record 56- change upload path. This is the directory that your media will go to: e.g. (/home/yourdomain/public_html/sandbox/01/wp-content/uploads. this example has a new subdomain name called dev, for the new install. /home/username/public_html/dev/wp/wp-content/uploads. Click “Save” and “Go” to save your edit.

At This Point, You Should Be Able To Log Into Your Dashboard

Change Login And Password:

Edit users table: change user login and password, must have old one to login to site after setup

Install The Search And Replace Plug In

Will let you go into the content urls and change from the old site to the new site. Note: if you have changed the permalinks (Dashboard>Settings>Permalinks), you may have to make the same changes in your new site to avoid 404 messages). Also, if you have any external links in a post, these may have to be relinked manually as the Search and Replace Plug in only searches the WP db.

Alternative  Restore System: Restore using backWPup plugin

After creating the new wp install, restore files from the backWPup files into your new WP install. Assuming you created two jobs, a db backup and a files bu, first restore the db .sql file and then the files backup:

  • Unzip db backup and locate the .sql file.
  • Login to Dashboard in the new install. Go to Dashboard>backWPup>Tools. Choose the .sql backup file to import and click the Upload button. Once it has uploaded, click the ‘Import’ button.
  • Locate the Files backup, unzip it and copy it to the new install via your FTP client replacing the wp-content of the new install.

Other Things To Think About

Visibility For Working Not Published Sites

If this is a development site, we Don’t want it to be visible: Go to privacy under settings>block search engines.

Password protect entire site while in development

To available to anyone at all, there is a plug in for that. so it is password protected.Or, the ‘Members only’ plug in password protect your site while you are developing it.

Other Options for a working site:

Install wp on your computer rather than a web host. BUT: You can’t show it to the client unless you bring your laptop to him. (possibly join.me  would work?) You have to run a web server like MAMP.
Or: With WP, make a static page that says, coming soon, and other pages would be password protected.

Other Options For Moving Sites

Back up buddy plug in

One other way TO MOVE WP INSTALLS is to use backupbuddy– about $75/year for two sites. 10 sites/ BackUP Buddy provides one button solutions, is very convenient for those doing a lot of installs and moves.

 Posted by at 4:11 am
Apr 242012
 

SAN FRANCISCO — A measure to abolish California’s death penalty qualified for the November ballot on Monday.

If it passes, the 725 California inmates now on Death Row will have their sentences converted to life in prison without the possibility of parole. It would also make life without parole the harshest penalty prosecutors can seek.

Backers of the measure say abolishing the death penalty will save the state millions of dollars through layoffs of prosecutors and defense attorneys who handle death penalty cases, as well as savings from not having to maintain the nation’s largest death row at San Quentin prison.

Those savings, supporters argue, can be used to help unsolved crimes. If the measure passes, $100 million in purported savings from abolishing the death penalty would be used over three years to investigate unsolved murders and rapes.

The measure is dubbed the “Savings, Accountability, and Full Enforcement for California Act,” also known as the SAFE California Act. It’s the fifth measure to qualify for the November ballot, the California secretary of state announced Monday. Supporters collected more than the 504,760 valid signatures needed to place the measure on the ballot.

“Our system is broken, expensive and it always will carry the grave risk of a mistake,” said Jeanne Woodford, the former warden of San Quentin who is now an anti-death penalty advocate and an official supporter of the measure.

The measure will also require most inmates sentenced to life without parole to find jobs within prisons. Most death row inmates do not hold prison jobs for security reasons.

Though California is one of 35 states that authorize the death penalty, the state hasn’t put anyone to death since 2006. A federal judge that year halted executions until prison officials built a new death chamber at San Quentin Prison, developed new lethal injection protocols and made other improvements to delivering the lethal three-drug combination.

A separate state lawsuit is challenging the way the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation developed the new protocols. A judge in Marin County earlier this year ordered the CDCR to redraft its lethal injection protocols, further delaying executions.

Since California reinstated the death penalty in 1978, the state has executed 13 inmates. A 2009 study conducted by a senior federal judge and law school professor concluded that the state was spending about $184 million a year to maintain Death Row and the death penalty system.

Supporters of the proposition, such as the American Civil Liberties Union, are portraying it as a cost-savings measure in a time of political austerity. They count several prominent conservatives and prosecutors – including the author of the 1978 measure adopting the death penalty – as supporters and argue that too few executions have been carried out at too great a cost.

“My conclusion is that he law is totally ineffective,” said Gil Garcetti, a former Los Angeles county district attorney. “Most inmates are going to die of natural causes, not executions.”

Garcetti, who served as district attorney from 1992 to 2000, said he changed his mind after publication of the 2009 study, which was published by Judge Arthur Alarcon of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and law professor Paula Mitchell.

Opponents of the measure, such as former Sacramento U.S Attorney McGregor Scott, argue that lawyers filing “frivolous appeals” are the problem, not the death penalty law.

“On behalf of crime victims and their loved ones who have suffered at the hands of California’s most violent criminals, we are disappointed that the ACLU and their allies would seek to score political points in their continued efforts to override the will of the people and repeal the death penalty,” said Scott, who is chairman of the Californians for Justice and Public Safety, a coalition of law enforcement officials, crime victims and others formed to oppose the measure.

The Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, meanwhile, remains one the biggest backers of the death penalty in the state and opposes the latest attempt to abolish it in California. The foundation and its supports argue that federal judges are gumming up the process with endless delays and reversals of state Supreme Court rulings upholding individual death sentences.

The foundation on Thursday filed a lawsuit seeking the immediate resumption of executions in California. The foundation’s lawsuit, filed directly with the state Court of Appeal, argues that since the three-drug method has been the subject of so much litigation – and the source of the execution delays – a one-drug method of lethal injection like Ohio uses can be substituted immediately.

California Death Penalty Ban: Residents To Vote On Controversial Ban In November.

 Posted by at 5:59 pm
Apr 172012
 

WASHINGTON — Democrats’ attempt to pass a Buffett Rule tax on the super wealthy failed Monday in the Senate, as Republicans blocked the measure in a sharply partisan debate.

…House Republicans are planning to counter the Buffett Rule push later this week with an attempt to cut taxes. A proposal by House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) would cut small business taxes by 20 percent. Since his bill would provide a disproportionately large benefit for the wealthy, it would mark an especially sharp contrast with the Democratic measure.

…Schumer vowed to keep bringing the Buffett Rule back until Republicans give in, the way they did on the payroll tax cut fight.

“We’ll keep pushing this issue all year long, and we think we’ll pick up more and more Republicans,” Schumer said. Read the article: Buffett Rule Vote: Tax Measure Fails In Senate.

 Posted by at 6:11 pm
Apr 152012
 

Lease Sale 193 approval flawed by missing science on impacts

April 12, 2012

Anchorage, AK —

A coalition of groups filed an appeal today in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals challenging the approval of Lease Sale 193, which opened for oil drilling the remote Chukchi Sea, home to iconic species such as polar bear, bowhead whale, and walrus and to a vibrant indigenous subsistence culture.

There are widely recognized gaps in what we know about nearly every species in the Chukchi Sea, including beluga whales. Chukchi Sea / Alaska. (Florian Schulz / visionsofthewild.com)

There are widely recognized gaps in what we know about nearly every species in the Chukchi Sea, including beluga whales. (Florian Schulz / visionsofthewild.com)

The appeal, filed by Alaska Native and conservation groups, represented by Earthjustice, is the next step in their long‐standing effort to ensure that decisions about the Chukchi Sea are based on sound science and precaution.

The lease sale was originally held in 2008 by the Bush administration. The Alaska Federal District Court in 2010 determined that the original lease sale violated the National Environmental Protection Act, one of the nation’s bedrock environmental laws, and required the Department of Interior to reconsider the decision. Last fall, the Obama administration affirmed the decision to offer millions of acres of the ocean for sale to oil companies despite widely recognized gaps in what we know about nearly every species in the Chukchi Sea.

via Groups Appeal Arctic Oil Drilling Decision in Chukchi Sea | Earthjustice.

 Posted by at 6:10 pm
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