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How the other 0.00000003 Percent live or “Why there may be a revolution in the USA”

June 10, 2009 in Bailout, Banks, Corporations, Is Poverty a Forgotten Issue?, Mainstream Media, Obama, Obama Administration, Stingy Billionaires, The Rich, Working Families Party

QUEEN’S COMMENTS: I just read an interesting article in the Dissident Voice.  It comments on an article published by newsweek magazine that they ran back in February.  The article was titled: “Why there won’t be a Revolution.”  Newsweek wanted to reassure the rich–and convince working people–that the masses weren’t getting ready to dust off their pitchforks and head to the town square.

The article stated “American might get angry sometimes, but we don’t hate the rich.  We prefer to laugh at them.”

Adam Turl, author of the article referenced in this post, disagrees.  I’m with Turl on this one.  I don’t think Americans are laughing either and they will even be laughing less if they read Turls article.

” . . . The 10 percent of Americans who rely on food stamps, the 25 percent of Ohioans who are waiting in lines at food banks, the 500,000 people who lost their jobs last month and the millions more who can’t find work–these people aren’t laughing.

And plenty of Americans–rightly–hate the rich. While our homes go into foreclosure, while our credit card rates go up, while our jobs disappear and college tuition shoots up, the well-heeled “masters of the universe” on Wall Street are still making out like bandits, but now with hundreds of billions of dollars in taxpayer money, courtesy of the Obama administration.

A lot more people would be even angrier if the mainstream media reported the truth about the rich and powerful in America–who they are and how they “made it” to the top. Consider the 10 richest people in the country as of last September, according to the annual Forbes magazine list. . .”

GO HERE TO CONSIDER HOW THE 10 RICHEST PEOPLE IN THE COUNTRY LIVE.
And then check your own laugh meter to see how loud you are laughing.

Proclaim the Queen!

    Yesterday was Workers Memorial Day

    April 28, 2009 in Conservative Nonsense, Corporations, George Bush, Jobs, Stingy Billionaires, The Rich, Working Families Party

    Queen’s Comments: In case  you missed it, remember today.  It is workers, not the people who make billions from their labor who make the world go around.  And remember all the harm that conservatives and their greediness have done.

    The very real threat of being killed or seriously hurt on the job hangs over every worker and workplace in the nation. In 2007—the year with the latest available figures—5,657 workers lost their lives on the job and more than 4 million other workers were hurt or made ill, according to the AFL-CIO’s 18th annual “Death on the Job” report.

    “Death on the Job” reports that another 50,000 to 60,000 workers died due to occupational diseases. On an average day, 15 workers lose their lives as a result of workplace injuries and disease, and another 10,959 are injured. Yet little has been done in recent years, says the report, to improve job safety and protect workers.

    For eight years, the Bush administration failed to take action to address major safety and health problems. Many OSHA and [Mine Safety and Health Administration] MSHA rules were withdrawn or blocked. The rules that were issued were largely in response to court challenges, congressional mandates or tragedies. New and emerging hazards were not actively addressed. Voluntary efforts were favored over strong enforcement.

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    Proclaim the Queen!

      At last! Viable Party for Working Families has arrived!

      March 21, 2009 in Banks, Working Families Party

      Who is Working Families?

      Working Families is Connecticut’s fastest growing political party. We were formed by a coalition of community organizations, labor unions and neighborhood activists to hold politicians accountable on the issues that matter most to working and middle class families like good jobs, affordable healthcare, decent living wage jobs, fair taxes, good schools, reasonable utility rates and more.

      We’re bus drivers from Hartford, students in New Haven, small business owners in Fairfield, Wal-Mart workers from New Britain, lawyers from South Windsor, building service workers in Danbury, police officers in Waterbury, submarine builders in Groton, and school paraprofessionals in Ellington. We’re Working Families.

      Why vote Working Families?

      When you vote on the Working Families line on the ballot, you’re voting your values. You’re using your vote to take a stand and send a message about the world you want to see. One with an economy that works for everyone, where politicians put working people before CEOs, and where basic rights like access to healthcare or time off to take care of a sick family member are upheld.

      Unlike other political parties, our work doesn’t end on election day.  We’re always fighting for a working families-friendly agenda, and Working Families votes help push politicians to support progressive legislation. (Find Working Families on your ballot.)

      What is cross-endorsement?

      Cross-endorsement is when one party, like Working Families, “cross endorses” the same candidate as another party. The votes from each party are tallied separately, but then combined for that candidate’s total. It gives voters a way to “vote their values” by voting for the party of their choice without spoiling an election.

      And it lets third parties like Working Families demonstrate support for the issues we’re fighting for. When votes cast on the Working Families line push a candidate to victory, we can hold that politician accountable to working people.

      Do I have to be registered in the Working Families Party to participate?

      No. Most Working Families members and supporters are independents or registered in other parties.. All of them, however, share our vision. They vote on our line, join local chapters to work on campaigns, decide who we should endorse, and fund our work.

      Does the Working Families Party ever run its own candidates?

      Most of the time, Working Families cross-endorses Democrats or Republicans who promise to fight for issues that matter to working familes.

      We hate to ask our supporters to throw their votes to a candidate who doesn’t have a shot. But if we think we can win, we’ll run on our own. We’ve elected two members to the Hartford City Council (Luis Cotto and Larry Deutsch), a member to the Hartford Board of Education and two members of the Willimantic Board of Selectmen.

      If we think that there’s no difference between the two major party candidates, running our own candidate can send a powerful message to both the Democrats and the Republicans that working people can’t be taken for granted.

      How does the Working Families choose what candidates to support?

      We support candidates who stand who have the courage to stand up and fight for the issues that really matter to us.  Local Working Families chapters interview candidates and make recommendations on who to endorse. It’s an original, exciting, democratic process that allows ordinary people to decide what candidates their party should support. (more)

      Does Working Families exist in other states?

      Working Families Party was founded as an experiment in independent politics in New York in 1998. When they started racking up victories, activists, community leaders and union members began to plan the formation of a Working Families Party here in Connecticut. (New York Working Families website)

      Over the last few years, based on the successes and victories in Connecticut and New York, new Working Families Parties have started organizing in Oregon, South Carolina, and Delaware too.

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      QUEEN’S COMMENTS: It was only a matter of time until this group gained some real traction.  My prediction is that their candidates will take over Washington DC in 2012 including the president.

      Americans are FED UP with the greedy rich.  FED UP.  The legislative body that eventually makes the final decision on whether our bills are enacted consists of an overwhelming majority of multimillionaires.  That is ridiculous if you think that multimillionaires are going to represent the needs of ordinary Americans.  That’s about as realistic as expecting the AIG to give back their bonuses–”ain’t” happening.

      Today they have organized a “Life Styles of the Rich and Infamous” bus tour of Connecticut homes belonging to executives from AIG’s disasterous Financial Products Division.

      Proclaim the Queen!