Air America

What You Should Be Watching For This Election

While most of the country remains blithely unaware that Election Day occurs once a year, rather than just on leap years, voters in a few states know that even the odd-numbered years can bring hot political action to the voting booths. This year, that action's all along the eastern seaboard, but even a cold autumn wind won't chill anyone out.

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Is the Military Ignoring Its Heroin Problem in the Ranks?

The U.S. military has known about the problem of drug use in its ranks since the Vietnam War, when contemporaneous accounts suggested up to 15 percent of enlisted men tried or became addicted to opiates. But, for the first time since then, the military has soldiers in combat in a producer-country: Afghanistan, which produces more than 90 percent of the world's heroin despite decades of eradication efforts.

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RadioNation with Laura Flanders

The billions promised for Gulf Coast recovery haven't trickled down. Congresswoman Barbara Lee, D-CA, says the solution's got to be big not small. We'll talk about rebuilding our democracy in unlikely places with Frances Moore Lappe, author of 'Democracy's Edge: Choosing to Save Our Country by Bringing Democracy to Life.' Our media roundtable features Katrina Vanden Heuvel, Editor and Publisher of The Nation magazine and Michelle Garcia of the Washington Post. Plus legendary record producer Joel Dorn on 'Gospel Music,' a fabulous compilation from Hyena Recordsulf Coast recovery haven't trickled down. Congresswoman Barbara Lee, D-CA, says the solution's got to be big not small. We'll talk about rebuilding our democracy in unlikely places with Frances Moore Lappe, author of 'Democracy's Edge: Choosing to Save Our Country by Bringing Democracy to Life.' Our media roundtable features Katrina Vanden Heuvel, Editor and Publisher of The Nation magazine and Michelle Garcia of the Washington Post. Plus legendary record producer Joel Dorn on 'Gospel Music,' a fabulous compilation from Hyena Records.

GOP Disrupts the Ohio Vote

You know what the Republicans are up to?

The party of pre-emptive war is trying to pre-empt democracy.

They couldn't find any weapons of mass destruction, now they're trying to manufacture weapons of mass disruption ... to disqualify likely Democrats from voting.

It's all over the news. In Ohio, the state Republican Party has challenged the eligibility of 35,000 newly registered voters. ... It's necessary they say, to prevent fraud in a state where polls show President Bush and John F. Kerry are in a statistical tie. Most of the 35,000 you'll not be surprised to hear, live in urban, which is to say, multi-racial, which is to say, Democratic, areas.

The Party's also announced that it's dredging up some dusty old law to send thousands of recruits to polling places Election Day to challenge the qualifications of Americans as they try to cast their votes. Ohio election officials said that the parties' challengers would have to show "reasonable" justification for doubting the qualifications of a voter before asking a poll worker to question that person. The challenges could be made on four main grounds: whether the voter is a citizen, is at least 18, is a resident of the county and has lived in Ohio for the previous 30 days.

Hmm. Let's see, what chapter in U.S. history does that remind you of?

Officials in other swing states, from Arizona to Wisconsin and Florida, say they are bracing for the same thing. It's all part of an organized effort by Republicans to challenge new voters at the polls.

In Philadelphia, Republican operatives made a last ditch attempt Friday to relocate 63 polling places – many of them in Black neighborhoods – all of them in districts where Democrats have an advantage ... luckily the move came too late ... but it's a sign of the times – the Bush and Cheney crew are freaked.

They don't call it the GOP – the Good Old Boy Party for nothing.

But you know what? That was Jim Crow America, Mr. President, Mr. Cheney. That was the America of Jim Crow.

This is the America of Barack Obama. This is Tiger Woods' America.

Majority America is not going to let democracy be denied us forever.

We've lived through that century already.

Dredge up dusty laws from history? Can't you do any better than that? We've fought that battle before, Mr. President and guess what, our side won. For all of the 20th century, Democracy's been on the rise. Blacks got the vote, women got the vote, 18-year-olds got the vote – African Americans have had to fight the same fight many times over, just like immigrants.

Voting in America's never been easy. The rich white guys who wrote the rules, set it up that way. But that just means the upstarts get smarter and better organized.

Why is the GOP so darn freaked? Because 21st century America, the New America, Majority America is turning out in droves.

The Washington Post reports that record numbers across the country are voting early – and they're disproportionately Democratic. When it comes to new voters, Dems have out-registered Republican voters from coast to coast.

The union movement reports the largest member mobilization in its history.

Students are registered as never before – 87 percent, and they intend to vote, they told a Harvard poll released this week. And 52 to 39 percent say they'll vote for Kerry over Bush. Even children polled by the TV channel Nickelodeon say they'd prefer Kerry over Bush 57 to 43 percent. They may not be voting age yet, but for the last four presidential elections the Nickelodeon poll's been right.

Your down-with-democracy days are over Mr. President.

The same Majority America that never voted for you the first time, is going to make sure you're defeated once and for all a week from Tuesday.

Because there are two Americas, Mr. Bush, Mr. Cheney. Ours is new and yours is old.

And if you think you're going to take us back, with your dusty old laws from American Apartheid history ...

And if you think your attorney general and your Supreme Court judges are going to hand our country over a second time ...

Well let me remind you, Mr. B: That attorney general of yours was defeated by a dead man.

And that chief justice we already know. He's an old hand at voter supression. He's got no credentials when it comes to supporting democracy. He spent his early year intimidating voters in minority precincts in Arizona. That's right, William Rehnquist was part of a GOP voter challenge effort that tried to prevent blacks and Hispanics from voting in Arizona in the 1960s.

We know these tactics Mr. President, Mr. Chief Justice, Mr. Attorney General. We've been down that road.

And this is a new century. A new rainbow century of democracy and diversity.

And sooner, not later, the American Majority is going to send you throw-backs home.

This commentary first appeared on The Laura Flanders Show on Air America Radio.

Protester Scare Stories

"Anarchists Emerge as the Convention's Wild Card." That was the headline of a front page piece of the August 20 New York Times. The story by Randal C. Archibold kicked off this way:

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Finding Our Own Dignity and Power

This is an excerpt from an interview with Rickie Lee Jones, conducted by Laura Flanders for Air America Radio. Jones has released a new album, "The Evening of My Best Day."

Laura Flanders: Rickie Lee Jones isn't famous for protest songs exactly, more for being cool, jazzy, romance-y... what happened?

Rickie Lee Jones: I think this is inspired so much by the moment in time of the Panthers in Oakland – a moment when dignity and power came to this depressed population, created totally by themselves. ...So I'm thinking, how do we find that now; how do we make our own dignity and power in a grassroots way that's not sold to us before we have a chance to grow it?
....

Caller: I wanted to ask Ricky why more celebrities aren't coming out and making a stand on the Patriot Act.

Jones: I'm not sure. I tried to get a lot of artists I know involved to put together a concert to educate people about the Patriot Act. There were only two or three people who said they would consider it. I pushed a lot of Latin bands, and they are very interested in participating, but Dave Matthews, Ben Harper, none of them wanted to participate in this. I think this is dangerous stuff, and to be frank and perhaps cruel, I also think they always use these things professionally. Like, "How does this make me stand professionally. Is this going to be a good concert for me to participate in professionally." I am completely baffled by this, because if we operate in numbers, we can't be stopped, and as long as people are separated, it's going to be hard for us....

Flanders: You felt the Patriot Act should be posted on your website?

Jones: Yeah, people don't actually know what it says.... The Patriot Act attacks two segments of the population. The first is the "fighting man." It calls the fighting man an "enemy combatant," instead of calling him a soldier, and by calling him that they get around the Geneva Convention as we have seen. And they must have wanted to do exactly what they have done in those prisons, otherwise why would they have created a law giving themselves the right to do so? They could do it before, but they wanted to do it legally, so they created the Patriot Act. If you are an "enemy combatant" you have no rights. We can arrest you at any age, we don't have to tell you why we are arresting you, we can hold you forever, and we don't have to tell any [other country] that we have you....

The other segment of the population that the Patriot Act attacks that John Ashcroft was so eager to test it on are American citizens. If we decide to prosecute you under the Patriot Act, you have no Miranda rights.

John Ashcroft announced with great glee that he was going to prosecute a drug dealer under the Patriot Act – drug dealing is a crime, it's not an act of terror. As far as I can tell, this is creeping from underneath. It's the end of all of our civil rights, the end of our country as we know it. If we don't stop this – I'm laughing – but if we don't stop this, I think we are done. [My song on the album,] "Tell Somebody" imagines a time in the future when we hadn't stopped it, and I say "tell somebody how it used to be just a few years ago, because we will never have it back again."
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