Updates from May, 2013 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Sunset Daily 9:33 AM on May 23, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , Jim Graves, , , Minnesota's 6th congressional district,   

    Sign your name to defeat Michele Bachmann 

    Michele Bachmann is having a terrible start to her week (and that’s just fine by us!). So far this week:

    Let’s make sure that this is Bachmann’s last go in Congress.

    Add your name right now if you want to defeat the Tea Party mouthpiece in 2014:

    Sign your name: Tell Michele Bachmann it’s time to take a hike >>

    From threatening to investigate political opponents for being anti-American to plain old extremism, Bachmann is among the most radical members of Congress. But the polls show we’ve got a real chance to beat her.

    If you think it’s time for Bachmann to take a hike, sign your name and help us make it happen.

    http://dccc.org/Defeat-Bachmann

    Visit The Sustainable Action Network

     
  • Sunset Daily 9:52 AM on May 17, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: Gallup, Great Recession, , Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, , , , United States House Committee on Agriculture, United States Senate Committee on Agriculture Nutrition and Forestry   

    Think Progress: 5 Major Scandals The Media Isn’t Obsessing About 

    This week, the national media has focused on the three different scandals surrounding the White House, devoting hours of coverage to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) improperly targeting conservative groups applying for tax exempt status, the talking points Susan Rice used in the aftermath of the attacks in Benghazi, and the Justice Department’s subpoena of phone records from the Associated Press as part of an investigation into a national security leak. The around-the-clock coverage comes even as a new Gallup poll finds that interest in the ongoing controversies is “lower comparable to major news stores in the past.”

    And while these stories raise serious concerns about money in politics, embassy security, and freedom of the press, they aren’t the only problems impacting the American people. Here are five big stories the media isn’t obsessing about:

    1. Carbon pollution reaches historic highs, threatening human existence. The concentration of climate warming carbon dioxide in the atmosphere “has passed the milestone level of 400 parts per million (ppm),” scientists estimate. “At the beginning of industrialisation the concentration of CO2 was just 280ppm,” said Prof Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. “We must hope that the world crossing this milestone will bring about awareness of the scientific reality of climate change and how human society should deal with the challenge.” The last time the Earth saw carbon dioxide levels that high, humans did not exist. The West Antarctic ice sheet also did not exist, and sea levels were as much as 82 feet higher than they are today. During an earlier period when CO2 levels were this high, temperatures were 5° to 10°F warmer globally.

    2. The devastating impact of sequestration on kids, cancer patients and first responders. On Tuesday, the Congressional Budget Office reported that the budget deficit will shrink to its smallest level since before the Great Recession in 2013, and it will continue to decrease through 2015. But despite the smaller deficits, Republicans remain focused on spending reductions — even as the most recent round of cuts has kicked children out of preschool, left cancer patientswithout needed screeningsundermined public health and fire safety, and gutted programs that help low-income Americans in a variety of ways. Those cuts have also threatened to derail the economic recovery, which has sputtered along despite the headwinds created by a consistent focus on deficit reduction.

    3. Massive cuts to food stamps for the most vulnerable Americans. The House Agriculture Committee approved a farm bill late Wednesday night that would cut federal food stamps by $20.5 billion — more steeply than any legislation since the welfare reforms of the 1990s. Earlier this week, the Senate Agriculture Committee also agreed to a $4.1 billion reduction. The program keeps hundreds of thousands of vulnerable Americans out of the deepest pits of poverty, and even as the Great Recession swelled SNAP rolls, the program continued to push its erroneous payments rates to record lows.

    4. 1100 workers die in garment factory collapse in Bangladesh and most American retailers plan business as usual. Since a factory collapsed in Bangladesh, killing 1,100 clothing industry workers, American retailers have been hesitant to adopt safety plans that could prevent similar tragedies. Abercrombie & Fitch announced it would sign a safety upgrade plan that has been approved by six major European retailers and one other American company, but many other manufacturers — including Walmart and Gap — are holding out. Although some retailers fear the costs of upgrades, they could pass them on entirely to consumers and only raise prices by10 cents per garment.

    5. 4,000 gun deaths due to gun violence since Newtown. A crowdsourced effort to count every person killed by a gun in the United States since the Newtown tragedy is currently being hosted by Slate. As of this writing, the count is 4,150. The Senate rejected gun safety legislation in April and has not yet set a date for reconsidering the measure.

    Visit The Sustainable Action Network

     
  • Sunset Daily 8:18 PM on May 9, 2013 Permalink  

    Happy Jazzfest! 

     
  • Sunset Daily 5:28 PM on May 8, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , Campaign manager, , , , Immigration reform, ,   

    Tonight’s policy briefing; RSVP Now! 

    Tonight’s policy briefing is a little bit different than previous weeks — and I think you’ll really like it.

    You’ll get a chance to hear from each of OFA‘s issue campaign managers on where we stand, and look at the path forward.

    Emmy Ruiz will update you on where our fight for comprehensive immigration reform is at as the Senate begins to consider the bill.

    Tomorrow, we’ll be delivering our petition to Congress demanding action to reduce gun violence (with more than 1.4 million signatures on it!) — and Kelly Byrne will fill you in tonight on where we go from there.

    And since we’ve just launched our campaign to change the conversation and make real progress to combat climate change, Jack Shapiro will explain what our goals are and how we’re going to get it done.

    RSVP here and join us at 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time tonight:

    http://my.barackobama.com/Wednesday-Policy-Briefing-RSVP

    All three will be able to answer questions — just email questions@barackobama.com and let us know what you want to know.

     
  • Sunset Daily 1:05 PM on May 3, 2013 Permalink  

    We have moved Offices This Week to the rock…Please update your records accordingly…all distributed labels and all of the Sunset/S2e Companies have moved this week to: 

    Sunset Distribution Company an S2e Company
    45 Rockefeller Plaza, Suite 2000
    New York, NY 10111
    Same Phone: 646.670.8589

    New Address for Sunset:

    Sunset Distribution Company an S2e Company
    45 Rockefeller Plaza, Suite 2000
    New York, NY 10111
    Same Phone: 646.670.8589

     
  • Sunset Daily 10:57 AM on May 3, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: ,   

    Your Weekly Democracy Now! Wrap Up at S2e TV! 

    Democracy Now! Friday, May 3, 2013
    Democracy Now! - Democracy Now! Thursday, May 2, 2013

    Democracy Now! Thursday, May 2, 2013
    Democracy Now! - Democracy Now! Wednesday, May 1, 2013

    Democracy Now! Wednesday, May 1, 2013
    Democracy Now! - Democracy Now! Tuesday, April 30, 2013
    Democracy Now! Tuesday, April 30, 2013
    Democracy Now! - Democracy Now! Monday, April 29, 2013
    Democracy Now! Monday, April 29, 2013
    Democracy Now! - Democracy Now! Friday, April 26, 2013
     
  • Sunset Daily 6:07 PM on April 24, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , , Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, Fourth Geneva Convention, , Geneva Conventions, , George W. Bush Presidential Center, , , , , , Southern Methodist University,   

    The Bush Lie Bury opens tomorrow…Although, they do have an exhibit that lets everyone choose some of that platforms and (suspect) decisions he made while in office…. 

    GRAPHIC: Sign here button

    Share this action on Facebook
    Share this action on Twitter

    I feel worse about making these claims on Bush for some reason these days, and I wish we could shift what is said here by the Roots Action team….directly to (Dick) Cheney but anyway….a half-billion dollar George W. Bush Library is being dedicated in Dallas with help from four other current or former U.S. presidents.

    Protesters of this Bush Lie Bury — this burying of a lying leader’s record with a lying version of history — believe Bush should be facing criminal prosecution instead.

    Join us in urging the U.S. Department of Justice to act by clicking here.

    We don’t need vengeance, but deterrence.  Warrantless spying, imprisonment without trial, secret prisons, assassinations, and illegal wars didn’t end with Bush’s presidency — because he’s only been rewarded, never punished.

    A new report last week on Bush-authorized torture has helped to reawaken awareness.  But we knew Bush tortured.  He confessed as much on television.  We don’t so much need to know what was done as we need to know that those who do such things will be held accountable.*

    We’ve tried “looking forward not back” for five years.  It hasn’t worked.  Crimes in the future cannot be prosecuted in anticipation.  Only crimes in the past can be brought to account.  And only when those in power are subject to the rule of law can we avoid the catastrophes inevitably brought on by the law of rulers.

    Contact the Justice Department now!

    Please forward this email widely to like-minded friends.

    – The RootsAction.org team

    *Laws clearly violated by George W. Bush include, among many others: The U.S. Constitution Article I, Sections 8, 9, Article II, Sections 1, 3, Article VI, and the Fourth and Fifth Amendments, the prohibition on covert propaganda, Title 2 U.S. Code Section 194, Title 18 U.S. Code Sections 4, 371, 1341, 1346, 1385, 2340A, 2441, The War Powers Act, the United Nations Charter Chapter 1 Article 2 Section 3, the Kellogg-Briand Pact, the Hague Convention of 1899, Joint Resolution 114 Section 3, Additional Protocol I to Geneva Conventions, the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2008 Section 1222, the Fourth Geneva Convention, the Third Geneva Convention, the International Covenant on Human Rights Articles 7, 10, the Convention Against Torture, the Optional Protocol to the Fourth Geneva Convention on Rights of the Child, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the Voting Rights Act, and the Stored Communications Act.

    Background:
    The People’s Response to the George W. Bush Library and Policy Institute
    David Swanson: “Why I’m Attending the Dedication of the Bush Lie Bury”
    The 35 Articles of Impeachment and the Case for Prosecuting George W. Bush

    Visit the Sustainable Action Network

     
  • Sunset Daily 10:20 AM on April 10, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , Aramark, , CCA, Corrections Corporation of America, , , Hewlett-Packard, , Lake Erie, , , ,   

    Think Progress: Over 18 Months, Nation’s First Privately Owned State Prison Has Declined Rapidly 

    In an unprecedented experiment fueled by budget concerns, Ohio sold a state prison to Corrections Corporation of America, one of the largest private prison corporations in the country, in 2011. Within a year, a state audit of Lake Erie Correctional Institute, the nation’s first privately owned state prison, found rampant abuse and abysmal conditions well below state standards. The CCA prison was given another chance to pass, but flunked another inspection four months later.Independent reports continue to illuminate filthy, broken facilities, as well as much higher rates of crime and violence in and around the prison. On Tuesday, the ACLU of Ohio sent Ohio lawmakers a comprehensive timeline of the prison’s decline since CCA took over.

    The Lake Erie prison is now reportedly overcrowded at 130 percent capacity, with single-person cells holding 3 inmates each, according to internal documents obtained by the ACLU. Assaults on guards and other inmates have skyrocketed by 40 percent.

    In fact, on the same day the ACLU released their timeline, the Lake Erie prison had to tamp down a series of inmate fights that lead to the confinement of 500 inmates.

    Private prison companies have been repeatedly caught cutting corners on space, sanitation, and staff in order to maximize their profits. As a result, deadly riots frequently break out at these facilities, sparked by poor food quality, lack of health care access, and unsanitary conditions.

    Despite Lake Erie’s multiple violations of state standards, Ohio has stubbornly maintained its infatuation with private prisons. The state plans to outsource prison food to Aramark, a private vendor already under investigation in Kentucky for multiple contract violations, including serving old food that had not been stored properly and overbilling the state.

    Republican-dominated state legislatures are all too eager to ignore the private prison industry’s dismal record. CCA and other companies like GEO are paying well to maintain their massively profitable government contracts; the industry spent $45 million on lobbying in the past decade. CCA has done especially well for itself, rebounding from near bankruptcy in 2000 to rake in a net income of $162 million in 2011.

    Visit The Sustainable Action Network

     
  • Sunset Daily 6:05 AM on April 10, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , ,   

    Bold Progressives Visit the White House….. 

    PCCC co-founder Stephanie Taylor speaks in front of the White House.Stephanie Taylor, PCCC co-founder, talks with media and delivers petitions to the White House. 

    Click here to watch a recording of the event.

    Today, along with our progressive allies, we delivered 2 million signatures directly to the White House!

    NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN, Washington Post, and others covered the event.

    You can watch video of the event here, courtesy of our friends at We Act Radio.

    Tomorrow, we’re keeping up the pressure against cuts to Social Security benefits — and taking our message to Congress

    Reps. Alan Grayson (D-FL) and Keith Ellison (D-MN) will join us for a national media call, where we’ll give a progressive response to the president’s budget that officially gets submitted to Congress tomorrow.

    Want to join our national media call at 2pm Eastern by phone or online? Click here to RSVP “yes” or “maybe.”

    On the call, you can ask questions along with national media. We’ll also give an update on how many members have joined Reps. Alan Grayson and Mark Takano (D-CA) in promising to vote against any bill that cuts Social Security benefits!

    (If you aren’t one of the 200,000 citizen supporters of the Grayson-Takano letter, sign here right now so our pressure on Congress builds.)

    All of this momentum is possible because good people like you are taking action across this country!

    Visit The Sustainable Action Network ad back the PCCC and the Bold progressives for their hard work on this issue. Thanks!

    MORE PHOTOS FROM TODAY’S WHITE HOUSE EVENT:

    PCCC member Phyllis Zolotorow  discusses how she will be affected by cuts to Social Security payments.PCCC member Phyllis Zolotorow speaks to the crowd.
    Rep. Marc Pocan speaks out against Chained CPI in the president's budget.Rep. Mark Pocan (WI-2) addresses the crowd.
    (2012 PCCC candidate!)
    PCCC Co-founder Stephanie Taylor speaks out against Social Security benefit cuts.PCCC Co-founder Stephanie Taylor speaking to the crowd.
    Rep. Mark Takano speaks on the "sacred promises" of Social Security.PCCC candidates Mark Takano (CA-41) and Mark Pocan (WI-2) gather with PCCC co-founder Stephanie Taylor and others before the event.
    The crowd at the White House petition delivery.The crowd at the White House petition delivery.
    PCCC ally, Terry O'Neill from NOW, addresses the crowd.PCCC ally, Terry O’Neill from NOW, addresses the crowd.
    Reps. Rick Nolan and Mark Takano; our allies Jim Dean of Democracy for America, Nancy Altman of Social Security Works, and Damon Silvers of AFL-CIO; and PCCC co-founder Stephanie Taylor after the rallyReps. Rick Nolan (MN_08) and Mark Takano (CA-41); our allies Jim Dean of Democracy for America, Nancy Altman of Social Security Works, and Damon Silvers of AFL-CIO; and PCCC co-founder Stephanie Taylor at the White House.
     
  • Sunset Daily 11:04 AM on April 7, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , , ,   

    Sustainable Sundays Presents: Pipeline Spill Another Ugly Reminder of Keystone’s Dangers, Renowned Climatologist Retires From NASA to Fight Global Warming, Update: Charges Filed in Three-State Dog Fighting Raid, EXCLUSIVE: State Dept. Hid Contractor’s Ties to Keystone XL Pipeline Company, Bills Seek to Halt Calif. Fracking to Protect Water, Air and Climate, Be a Voice for New York’s Animals, Take Action: Don’t Delay Grand Canyon Cleanup and the ASPCA Pet of the Week: Buffy 


    Sustainable Sundays

    Weekly E-Newsletter for the Sustainable Action Network (SAN)


    April 7, 2013

    Pipeline Spill Another Ugly Reminder of Keystone’s Dangers

    Renowned Climatologist Retires From NASA to Fight Global Warming

    Bills Seek to Halt Calif. Fracking to Protect Water, Air and Climate

    EXCLUSIVE: State Dept. Hid Contractor’s Ties to Keystone XL Pipeline Company

    Update: Charges Filed in Three-State Dog Fighting Raid

    Be a Voice for New York’s Animals

    Take Action: Don’t Delay Grand Canyon Cleanup

    ASPCA Pet of the Week: Buffy

    FEATURED PARK: Mississippi National River and Recreation Area, Minnesota

    The mighty Mississippi is one of the largest and most fabled rivers in the country and home to seven national parks—but only the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area was specifically created to share the history and science of the river itself. This urban oasis has a bit of everything, from canoeing and bird-watching opportunities to military relics and historic buildings.

    View the Slideshow »

    Learn More »


    Pipeline Spill Another Ugly Reminder of Keystone’s Dangers

    Arkansas oil spillAs if we needed any more evidence of the kind of havoc that Keystone XL could deliver, a pipeline carrying tar-sands oil ruptured on Friday in a small Arkansas town, spilling 400,000 gallons of crude in a subdivision and forcing people to evacuate 22 homes.

    It’s a nasty truth about oil pipelines: Systems fail — and people and wildlife pay the price. If the Keystone XL pipeline is built, it will transport as many as 35 million gallons of oil a day through a 1,700-mile pipeline from Canada to Texas, cutting across waterways and wildlife habitat for more than 20 imperiled species, including white whooping cranes and the massive, prehistoric pallid sturgeon.

    The U.S. State Department says Keystone XL could spill as many as 100 times during the course of its life. We just can’t take that risk. The Center for Biological Diversity is joining with people across the United States and beyond in opposing Keystone.

    Read more in The WeekVisit The Sustainable Action Network.


    Renowned Climatologist Retires From NASA to Fight Global Warming

    Dr. James HansenAfter almost 50 years as a climate scientist at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York, Dr. James Hansen — easily the U.S. government’s most visible scientific figure on climate change — retires this week. Besides being a leading voice urging action on climate change, Hansen, 72, has been arrested or cited at climate protests six times.

    Hansen says he intends to be more active in lawsuits against the government over its failure to limit greenhouse gas emissions; he also plans to advocate against the development of dirty tar-sands oil in Canada.

    “Dr. Hansen has been an extraordinary, singular force in the scientific and governmental community for swift, ambitious action against climate change,” said the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute Director Kassie Siegel. “We’ll be excited to see him making an impact as a private citizen.”

    Read more in The New York TimesVisit The Sustainable Action Network.


    Update: Charges Filed in Three-State Dog Fighting Raid

    Fighting victimLast week we told you about our role in a multi-state dog fighting raid in Texas, Missouri and Kansas. Now we’re able to update you on the nearly 100 dogs we transported to a temporary shelter and the dog fighters who harmed these animal victims. Get the latest news about this unfolding case. Read more… Visit The Sustainable Action Network.


    Bills Seek to Halt Calif. Fracking to Protect Water, Air and Climate

    Fracking rigThree California assembly members — Richard Bloom, Holly Mitchell and Adrin Nazarian — are introducing a trio of bills to halt hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, in the state while the threats it poses to the environment and public health are studied. Using huge volumes of water mixed with sand and dangerous chemicals to blast open rock formations and extract oil and gas, fracking — so far unregulated and unmonitored by the state — has already been deployed widely: More than 600 wells were fracked in California in 2011 alone.

    The move to halt fracking, supported by the Center for Biological Diversity and numerous other groups, reflects growing public concern about fracking’s threats to people, wildlife and the climate. All three bills seek to limit destruction as oil companies gear up to frack the Monterey Shale, a geological formation that holds an estimated 15 billion barrels of oil and lies beneath some of the state’s most important farmland and wildlife habitat.

    “We applaud these legislators for their leadership in protecting California from a dangerous fracking boom,” said the Center’s Brian Nowicki. “State regulators have shrugged off fracking’s dangers, so it’s up to lawmakers to stop oil companies from polluting our air, contaminating our water and undermining our fight against climate change.”

    Learn more about the Center’s fight against California frackingVisit The Sustainable Action Network.

     


    EXCLUSIVE: State Dept. Hid Contractor’s Ties to Keystone XL Pipeline Company

    Late on a Friday afternoon in early March, the State Department released a 2,000-page draft report downplaying the environmental risks of the northern portion of the controversial Keystone XL pipeline, which would ferry oil from Canada’s tar sands to refineries in Texas, passing through Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, and Oklahoma. But when it released the report, State hid an important fact from the public: Experts who helped draft the report had previously worked for TransCanada, the company looking to build the Keystone pipeline, and other energy companies poised to benefit from Keystone’s construction. State released documents in conjunction with the Keystone reportin which these experts’ work histories were redacted so that anyone reading the documents wouldn’t know who’d previously hired them. Yet unredacted versions of these documents obtained by Mother Jones confirm that three experts working for an outside contractor had done consulting work for TransCanada and other oil companies with a stake in the Keystone’s approval. Visit The Sustainable Action Network.


    Patriotic DogBe a Voice for New York’s AnimalsPlease join the ASPCA, the New York State Animal Protection Federation, the Mohawk Hudson Humane Society and fellow animal lovers on Monday, May 6, in Albany for New York Voices for Animals Lobby Day! This is an exciting opportunity to let your state lawmakers know, in person, that you support animal protection and oppose laws that would allow animals to be hurt and exploited.

    During Lobby Day, you and other animal advocates will be the voices for animals in your state.

    New York Voices for Animals Lobby Day provides animal advocates with a structured, comfortable setting in which to meet their elected officials. We’ll organize and help prepare you for these meetings with insider tips and an overview of pending or upcoming legislation that directly impacts animals.

    Legislative topics will likely include:

    • Cracking down on puppy mills
    • Dog control officer training
    • Strengthening cruelty penalties
    • Stopping dog breed-specific insurance policy discrimination

    This event is critical to our lobbying efforts and to preventing animal cruelty. It’s also a great networking activity, and is invigorating, inspiring and very personally rewarding. Don’t miss out! RSVP today.

    New York Voices for Animals
    Lobby Day 2013

    Date: Monday, May 6, 2013

    Time: 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.

    Place: Legislative Office Building
    (in the Well)
    198 State Street
    Albany, NY 12210

    Cost: None! You must register by April 29 if you plan to attend. Visit The Sustainable Action Network


    Take Action: Don’t Delay Grand Canyon Cleanup

    Navajo Generating Station

    Great news: The EPA recently proposed significant, long-awaited pollution reductions for a coal plant that has been dirtying the air at the Grand Canyon and at least ten other pristine public lands for decades. The bad news: It could take a decade or more to see pollution reduced. Please commend the EPA for working to clean the air at the Grand Canyon, but urge them to require cleanup measures in the next five years so we can soon breathe easier.

    Take Action »


    ASPCA Pet of the Week: Buffy

    Fighting victimASPCA Pet of the Week: Buffy
    Buffy is a sweet, sensitive little puppy with lots of energy. If you’re ready to dedicate time to socializing and training this chocolate-colored sweetheart, adopt Buffy today in NYC!

    Visit The Sustainable Action Network

     


     


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  • Sunset Daily 6:47 AM on April 1, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , George Will, , Kevin Rashid Johnson, , , Solitary confinement,   

    Conservative columnist George Will recently wrote: “Tens of thousands of American prison inmates are kept in prolonged solitary confinement that arguably constitutes torture.” 

    Torture: it’s closer than we think.


    GRAPHIC: Sign here button

    Given the recent history of torture inflicted by U.S. agents abroad, we’d be wise to ask if torture is also being practiced in the U.S. prison system.

    Conservative columnist George Will recently wrote: “Tens of thousands of American prison inmates are kept in prolonged solitary confinement that arguably constitutes torture.”

    It’s time to ask government officials to end prolonged solitary confinement, and investigate how widely punitive isolation has been used.

    Prisoners in solitary commit half of all suicides inside our country’s prisons. “Isolation changes the way the brain works . . .”  writes George Will. “The mental pain of solitary confinement is crippling: Brain studies reveal durable impairments and abnormalities in individuals denied social interaction.”

    While our country has 5% of the world’s population, it has 25% of the world’s prisoners — and the number of U.S. prisoners held in isolation is growing.

    I’m urging officials to investigate and discontinue punitive, long-term solitary confinement.

    Although allegedly aimed at separating out prisoners who are violent or mentally ill, solitary confinement has often been used to demoralize and “break” prisoners, especially those who are politically active. Of the “Angola 3” — former Black Panthers who were incarcerated in Louisiana’s notorious prison — two have now been held in solitary for 40 years.

    In “liberal” Oregon, where Democrats control the governor’s mansion and the state legislature, abuses of solitary confinement are being reported – including the case of politically active prisoner Kevin “Rashid” Johnson, currently housed in the Intensive Management Unit at the remote Snake River Correctional Institution. Johnson recently wrote an article on Oregon prisoners committing suicide while in solitary; he is currently being kept in isolation for that and other acts of resistance.

    Yes, it’s time for officials — including Oregon’s governor — to stop prolonged solitary confinement, and investigate whether prisoners are being punished for objecting to this abusive treatment.

    Thank you for taking action with RootsAction.

    – The RootsAction.org team

    P.S. Our small staff is supported by contributions from people like you; your donations are greatly appreciated.

    P.P.S. RootsAction is an independent online force endorsed by Jim Hightower, Barbara Ehrenreich, Cornel West, Daniel Ellsberg, Glenn Greenwald, Naomi Klein, Bill Fletcher Jr., Laura Flanders, former U.S. Senator James Abourezk, Coleen Rowley, Frances Fox Piven, and many others.

    Visit The Sustainable Action Network

    Background:
    George Will: “The Cruel and Unusual Nature of Solitary Confinement”
    The New Yorker: “Hellhole: The United States holds tens of thousands of inmates in long-term solitary confinement. Is this torture?” 
    Physicians for Human Rights: “UN Advisor Says Solitary Confinement in the US is Torture” 
    Solitary Watch: “Total Isolation – Solitary Confinement in Oregon”
    Kevin Rashid Johnson: “Oregon Prisoners Driven to Suicide by Torture in Solitary Confinement Units”
    “Kevin Rashid Johnson and Oregon’s Isolation Torture Unit” 
    Kevin Rashid Johnson: “The South Is Risen: Old Jim Crow Thrives Inside Oregon Prisons”
    New York Times editorial: “The Abuse of Solitary Confinement”
    Democracy Now! on the Angola 3 
    NBC News: “Criminal justice system’s ‘dark secret’ – Teenagers in solitary” (Mar 22, 2013)  

     

     
  • Sunset Daily 12:15 PM on March 24, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , ,   

    Sustainable Sundays: EXCLUSIVE: State Dept. Hid Contractor’s Ties to Keystone XL Pipeline Company, Calif. Bill Would Ban Lead Hunting Ammo — Take Action, Bills Seek to Halt Calif. Fracking to Protect Water, Air and Climate, Tell Senators to Reject Keystone XL — Take Action, 50 Cities to Obama: Use Clean Air Act Against Climate Chaos, New campaign to protect ocean life in the “Grand Canyon” of the sea, Happy Tails Pet of the Week: Mr. Coffee’s Cup of Tea, True Tails of A Pet Sitter AND Here’s the insanely long list of amendments filed to the Senate budget; I think anyone could attached anything on to this budget: 


    Sustainable Sundays

    Weekly E-Newsletter for the Sustainable Action Network (SAN)


    March 24, 2013

    Calif. Bill Would Ban Lead Hunting Ammo — Take Action

    Tell Senators to Reject Keystone XL  Take Action

    Bills Seek to Halt Calif. Fracking to Protect Water, Air and Climate

    EXCLUSIVE: State Dept. Hid Contractor’s Ties to Keystone XL Pipeline Company

    50 Cities to Obama: Use Clean Air Act Against Climate Chaos

    New campaign to protect ocean life in the “Grand Canyon” of the sea

    Here’s the insanely long list of amendments filed to the Senate budget; I think anyone could attached anything on to this budget:

    Happy Tails Pet of the Week: Mr. Coffee’s Cup of Tea

    True Tails of A Pet Sitter

    FEATURED PARK:
    Padre Island National Seashore, Texas

    Padre Island National Seashore, Texas

    Dunes, lagoons, tidal flats, and coastal prairie… Padre Island’s 70 miles of protected shoreline offer a surprising diversity of terrain. For bird lovers, early spring is one of the best times to plan a trip: The park’s location on the Central Flyway makes it an ideal stop for watching the winged migration overhead.

    View the Slideshow »

    Learn More »


    Calif. Bill Would Ban Lead Hunting Ammo — Take Action

    California condorA new bill in California would remove toxic lead from hunting ammunition and provide important protections for people and wildlife. Assemblyman Anthony Rendon’s bill to require nonlead ammo for all hunting in California, A.B. 711, was made public this week; a hearing is expected next month. The Center for Biological Diversity, which has been working for a decade to get lead out of hunting ammunition, is supporting the bill. If you live in California, we need you to speak out for it.

    Lead that’s left in the wild takes a deadly toll on wildlife, poisoning and killing bald eagles, endangered California condors, swans, loons and millions of other birds yearly. It also poses significant health risks to people eating wild game. A new national poll commissioned by the Center finds that 57 percent of Americans support requiring a switch to nontoxic hunting bullets.

    Hunters in much of central and Southern California have been hunting with copper and other lead-free ammunition since 2008, when state regulations required use of nonlead hunting ammo in California condor range. Rendon’s bill extends the protection from lead poisoning toall wildlife in the state and safeguards human health.

    Read our press release, and if you’re a California resident, take a moment to voice your support for the bill.


    Tell Senators to Reject Keystone XL  Take Action

    The U.S. Senate could vote as early as Tuesday on whether the disastrous Keystone XL pipeline gets built. We can’t let that happen. The 1,700-mile pipeline would, every day, carry up to 35 million gallons of oil strip-mined from Canada’s tar sands — some of the dirtiest, most climate-hostile fuels on the planet. The pipeline would also cut through rivers, streams, and wildlife habitat for at least 20 imperiled species, including whooping cranes and pallid sturgeon.

    If we’re going to stop this destructive behemoth in its tracks, we need to show massive opposition. This week that means joining the Center for Biological Diversity to contact your senators and tell them to reject Keystone XL, a project that leading climate scientist Dr. James Hansen says will be game “over” for our ability to avoid a climate catastrophe — a project even the State Department admits could spill 100 times over the course of its lifetime.

    Please stand with the Center today in calling on the Senate to reject Keystone.


    Bills Seek to Halt Calif. Fracking to Protect Water, Air and Climate

    Fracking rigThree California assembly members — Richard Bloom, Holly Mitchell and Adrin Nazarian — are introducing a trio of bills to halt hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, in the state while the threats it poses to the environment and public health are studied. Using huge volumes of water mixed with sand and dangerous chemicals to blast open rock formations and extract oil and gas, fracking — so far unregulated and unmonitored by the state — has already been deployed widely: More than 600 wells were fracked in California in 2011 alone.

    The move to halt fracking, supported by the Center for Biological Diversity and numerous other groups, reflects growing public concern about fracking’s threats to people, wildlife and the climate. All three bills seek to limit destruction as oil companies gear up to frack the Monterey Shale, a geological formation that holds an estimated 15 billion barrels of oil and lies beneath some of the state’s most important farmland and wildlife habitat.

    “We applaud these legislators for their leadership in protecting California from a dangerous fracking boom,” said the Center’s Brian Nowicki. “State regulators have shrugged off fracking’s dangers, so it’s up to lawmakers to stop oil companies from polluting our air, contaminating our water and undermining our fight against climate change.”

    Learn more about the Center’s fight against California fracking.



    EXCLUSIVE: State Dept. Hid Contractor’s Ties to Keystone XL Pipeline Company

    Late on a Friday afternoon in early March, the State Department released a 2,000-page draft report downplaying the environmental risks of the northern portion of the controversial Keystone XL pipeline, which would ferry oil from Canada’s tar sands to refineries in Texas, passing through Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, and Oklahoma. But when it released the report, State hid an important fact from the public: Experts who helped draft the report had previously worked for TransCanada, the company looking to build the Keystone pipeline, and other energy companies poised to benefit from Keystone’s construction. State released documents in conjunction with the Keystone reportin which these experts’ work histories were redacted so that anyone reading the documents wouldn’t know who’d previously hired them. Yet unredacted versions of these documents obtained by Mother Jones confirm that three experts working for an outside contractor had done consulting work for TransCanada and other oil companies with a stake in the Keystone’s approval.


    50 Cities to Obama: Use Clean Air Act Against Climate Chaos

    Polar bear cubsIt’s the biggest milestone yet in the Center for Biological Diversity’s ambitious Clean Air Cities campaign. Fifty cities across the nation have passed resolutions urging the federal government to use the Clean Air Act ambitiously — and quickly – to halt otherwise irreversible climate catastrophe, from city-swallowing sea-level rise to polar bear-killing sea-ice melt to coral reef-obliterating ocean acidification. Cities that have heeded the Center’s call to action include Los Angeles; Nashville; Washington, D.C. — and now our 49th and 50th municipalities, San Leandro, Calif., and Newton, Mass.

    Joining our cause is especially urgent: The Obama administration is reportedly considering putting off or weakening a key Clean Air Act rule aimed at cutting greenhouse gas pollution from new power plants. Congress is also once again taking aim at the Clean Air Act’s authority to reduce carbon pollution through an amendment inserted into the latest budget debate.

    So a big thanks to all our Clean Air Advocates and participating cities — but if your hometownisn’t on our Clean Air Cities list, please use our Clean Air Cities Take-action Toolbox to get it there now, before it’s too late.


    New campaign to protect ocean life in the “Grand Canyon” of the sea

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    The majority of the fish caught in the United States comes from the Bering Sea. Home to whales, seals, polar bears and underwater canyons teeming with life, the Bering Sea is one of our most productive ecosystems. Just like our national parks, we must protect ecosystems like the Bering Sea whose underwater canyons are larger than the Grand Canyon itself.


    Here’s the insanely long list of amendments filed to the Senate budget; I think anyone could attached anything on to this budget:

    (AFP PHOTO / Saul Loeb)Here’s the insanely long list of amendments filed to the Senate budget; I think anyone could attached anything on to this budget:

     



     

     

     

     

     

    Happy Tails Pet of the Week: Mr. Coffee’s Cup of Tea

    Striped cat wearing collar looking straight ahead

    In this week’s Happy Tail, In early February, Virginia Stevenson brought home a ten-month-old cat named Coffee from the ASPCA Adoption Center in Manhattan, and the two experienced an immediate connection. Coffee, since renamed Mr. Coffee, also became fast friends with Virginia’s resident rescue cat and has wasted no time making himself right at home…

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    True Tails of A Pet Sitter

    Updates Daily!


     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Sustainable Action Network - Sunset Daily Blog

     

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  • Sunset Daily 5:58 PM on March 23, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: Collins, , Keith Hennessy, , , , Suzy Khimm, ,   

    Here’s the insanely long list of amendments filed to the Senate budget; I think anyone could attached anything on to this budget: 

    The Senate passed a budget for the first time in four years shortly before 5 a.m. on Saturday. Why was the night so long? Before the debate could end, senators spent hours wading through a long series of symbolic, non-binding votes on amendments to the budget, a.k.a. “vote-a-rama.”

    (AFP PHOTO / Saul Loeb)

    (Saul Loeb/AFP)

    Senators filed more than 500 amendments, but just a fraction of the total was actually brought to the floor last night for a vote. (For more explanatory background on vote-a-rama read David Graham and Keith Hennessy.) Here’s a list of nearly all the amendments that were filed, with the ones that were actually voted on in bold. (Vote results courtesy of the Library of Congress’s invaluable THOMAS database.)

    • Ayotte amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for the prohibition of funding of the medium extended air defense system. (#136) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 94 – 5.
    • Isakson amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund related to establishing a biennial budget and appropriations process. (#138) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 68 – 31.
    • Inhofe amendment to uphold Second Amendment rights and prevent the United States from entering into the United Nations Arms Trade Treaty. (#139) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 53 – 46.
    • Inhofe amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to modify the methodology of the Department of Transportation’s Compliance, Safety, Accountability Program. (#140)
    • Inhofe amendment to create a point of order against legislation that would impose a user fee with respect to general aviation. (#141)
    • Collins amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to require the President, the Vice President, and members of the President’s cabinet to obtain their health insurance coverage through health insurance exchanges established under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. (#143)
    • Collins amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to restore a sensible definition of full-time employee for purposes of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. (#144) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Collins amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for sensible regulatory reform for Executive departments and independent regulatory agencies, including cost-benefit analysis for major and significant rules, good guidance practices, and relief from first-time, nonharmful paperwork violations. (#145)
    • Barrasso amendment to increase funds for National Defense to prevent 57,795 National Guard military technicians from being furloughed in order to maintain a high level of National Guard readiness to respond to State emergencies and overseas missions and to provide an offset. (#146)
    • Shaheen amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide assistance to small businesses in accessing foreign markets. (#147)
    • Shaheen amendment to end the feedstock flexibility program for bioenergy producers and reform the Federal sugar program. (#148)
    • Shaheen amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to increase the capacity of Federal agencies to ensure effective contract management and contract oversight. (#149) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Bennet amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to fund a broad range of underfunded wildfire-related activities. (#150)
    • Bennet amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to promote energy conservation and clean energy. (#151)
    • Portman amendment to provide reconciliation instructions to reduce the deficit by $63,860,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2014 through 2023. (#152) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 43 – 56.
    • Portman amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to promote exports. (#153) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Portman amendment to require the Congressional Budget Office to include macroeconomic feedback scoring of tax legislation. (#154) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 51 – 48.
    • Portman amendment to repeal the budget’s tax increases and tax reconciliation instructions, and replace them with it a deficit-neutral reserve fund for legislation that would cut corporate tax rates while reducing lower-priority business tax preferences. (#155)
    • Grassley amendment to protect Americans from a $1,000,000,000,000 tax increase and provide for pro-growth revenue-neutral comprehensive tax reform. (#156) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 45 – 54.
    • Ayotte amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure equality under the law by guaranteeing that Congress and the President live under the same laws they create. (#157)
    • Ayotte amendment to prohibit consideration of a budget resolution that includes revenue increases while the civilian unemployment rate is above 5.5 percent, the administration’s prediction for the unemployment rate without the stimulus. (#158) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 45 – 54.
    • Ayotte amendment to establish a point of order prohibiting the consideration of any legislation after April 15th until a budget resolution is agreed to in the Senate. (#159)
    • Ayotte amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to improve transparency in the value-added producer grant program to prevent spending taxpayer dollars on wasteful government giveaways. (#160)
    • Ayotte amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for achieving full auditability of the financial statements of the Department of Defense by 2017. (#161) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Ayotte amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to expand and enhance the no contracting with the enemy provisions and ensure that no United States taxpayer dollars go to the enemies of the United States. (#162)
    • Ayotte amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to modernize the nuclear weapons complex and strategic delivery systems of the United States to maintain America’s nuclear deterrent, which is critical to the security of the American people. (#163)
    • Ayotte amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to put more Americans back to work by removing burdensome and costly regulations from the backs of employers. (#164)
    • Ayotte amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prohibit the Department of Labor from implementing a proposal to expand the definition of “fiduciary” under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) to include appraisals of employee stock ownership plans. (#165)
    • Ayotte amendment to include the reining in of onerous regulations on our nation’s fishing industry in a deficit-neutral reserve fund. (#166)
    • Ayotte amendment to prohibit raising taxes to offset new spending. (#167)
    • Ayotte amendment to prohibit raising taxes to offset new spending. (#168)
    • Ayotte amendment to prohibit raising taxes to offset new spending. (#169)
    • Ayotte amendment to prohibit raising taxes to offset new spending. (#170)
    • Ayotte amendment to prohibit raising taxes to offset new spending. (#171)
    • Collins amendment to prohibit certain revisions of allocations for workforce investment measures that lack program integrity controls for the Job Corps program. (#172)
    • Inhofe amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect low-income families from electricity cost increases. (#173)
    • Inhofe amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect vulnerable families from job killing regulations. (#174)
    • Inhofe amendment to create a point of order against legislation that would allow funds to be used to enforce any oil refinery rule or regulation against family farms. (#175)
    • Roberts amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund related to the reduction of wasteful spending, which may include but is not limited to the establishment of a new committee of the Senate with the purpose of examining and proposing annually legislation to reduce wasteful, inefficient, and duplicative spending. (#177)
    • Roberts amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to remove contradictory data collection requirements for financial institutions. (#178)
    • Roberts amendment to increase funding for the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act while cutting untested educational programs elsewhere in the budget. (#179)
    • Roberts amendment to eliminate the low-income home energy assistance loophole in the supplemental nutrition assistance program. (#180)
    • Roberts amendment to eliminate the employment and training program of the supplemental nutrition assistance program. (#181)
    • Roberts amendment to enact the reforms described in S458, the Improve Nutrition Program Integrity and Deficit Reduction Act of 2013. (#182)
    • Roberts amendment to reduce resources provided for categorical eligibility. (#183)
    • Roberts amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to expedite exports from the United States through reform of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 in such a manner that greenhouse gas emissions produced outside the United States by any good exported from the United States are not subject to the requirements of that Act. (#184) Agreed to in the Senate by voice vote.
    • Roberts amendment to prohibit the Secretary of Health and Human Services from using funds for the implementation or management of health benefit exchanges until the chief actuary of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services certifies that the implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 have resulted in a reduction in the average health insurance premiums for Americans of $2500. (#185)
    • Roberts amendment to protect all patients by prohibiting the use of data obtained from comparative effectiveness research to deny coverage of items or services under Federal health care programs and to ensure that comparative effectiveness research accounts for advancements in genomics and personalized medicine, the unique needs of health disparity populations, and differences in the treatment responses and the treatment preferences of patients. (#186)
    • Roberts amendment to prohibit the use of funds for promotional or marketing materials promoting the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. (#187) Not agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Roberts amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to address what the President of the United States has called a “health spending problem”. (#188)
    • Roberts amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to address what the President of the United States has called a “health spending problem”. (#189)
    • Manchin amendment to ensure sufficient funding for underground and surface coal mining safety and health research. (#190)
    • Manchin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to reduce the dependence of the United States on imports of rare earth metals from the People’s Republic of China. (#191)
    • Udall (NM) amendment to modify the deficit-neutral reserve fund for America’s service members and veterans to increase access to health care for veterans in rural areas. (#192). Agreed to by unanimous consent.
    • Udall (NM) amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to strengthen and reform the National Nuclear Security Administration. (#193)
    • Coats amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to repeal the 3.8 percent tax on investment income imposed by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. (#194)
    • Coats amendment to require fuller reporting on possible costs to taxpayers of any budget submitted by the President. (#195) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Coats amendment to create a point of order against legislation that would increase net direct spending when the national debt exceeds the size of the economy of the United States. (#196)
    • Coats amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for revenue-neutral tax reform that grows the economy rather than growing the size of government. (#197)
    • Sanders amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect the benefits of disabled veterans and their survivors, which may not include a chained CPI. (#198) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to limit Federal land to a certain percentage of the total land mass of any State. (#199)
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for preventing domestic drone killings. (#200)
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for choice-based early education scholarships. (#201).
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for the repeal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 and to encourage patient-centered reforms to improve health outcomes and reduce health care costs, promoting economic growth. (#202) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 45 – 54.
    • Sessions amendment to balance the Democrat’s budget by 2023. (#203)
    • Sessions amendment to reduce spending, provide for State revenue sharing, and decrease dependence on OPEC oil imports through the leasing of certain areas of the coasts of North Carolina and Virginia in the mid-Atlantic region of  the outer Continental Shelf for oil and gas exploration. (#204)
    • Sessions amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to reform the use of Federal funds paid in civil litigation that seeks to compel Federal regulatory action.  (#205)
    • Sessions amendment to reduce the growth in welfare spending from 80 percent to 60 percent. (#206)
    • Sessions amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to end payment of Federal funds used in promoting nutrition programs through any partnerships between Federal agencies and foreign embassies. (#207)
    • Sessions amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to achieve savings by prohibiting illegal immigrants or illegal immigrants granted legal status from qualifying for federally subsidized health care. (#208)
    • Sessions amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to achieve savings by prohibiting illegal immigrants or illegal immigrants granted legal status from qualifying for a refundable tax credit. (#209)
    • Manchin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to strengthen sanctions imposed with respect to the energy sector of Iran to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapons capability. (#210)
    • Johnson (WI) amendment to establish a point of order against a budget resolution that does not achieve a unified budget surplus after 2022. (#211)
    • Johnson (WI) amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent the use of Federal funds for the bailout of improvident State and local governments. (#212)
    • Johnson (WI) amendment to force Congress to ensure the solvency of the Social Security and Medicare programs. (#213) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 46 – 53.
    • Toomey amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to increase funding for the inland waterways system. (#214)
    • Blunt amendment to improve the deficit-neutral reserve fund to promote manufacturing in the United States. (#215)
    • Hoeven amendment to ensure funds are available in fiscal year 2014 for the Air Force to conduct an analysis of alternatives to determine the next generation intercontinental ballistic missile and to provide an offset. (#216)
    • Hoeven amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to support programs related to the nuclear missions of the Department of Defense and the National Nuclear Security Administration. (#217)  Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Hoeven amendment to ensure funds are available in fiscal year 2014 for the Air Force to develop a replacement for the air-launched cruise missile and to provide an offset. (#218)
    • Burr amendment to protect Americans’ traditional and Roth retirement savings accounts from being used as source of revenue to pay for increased Government spending. (#219)
    • Burr amendment to protect America’s voluntary employer-provided defined benefit retirement system from being used as a source of revenue to pay for increased Government spending. (#220)
    • Burr amendment to protect America’s pensions and retirement accounts from being used as a source of revenue to pay for increased Government spending. (#221)
    • Crapo amendment to establish a deficit neutral reserve fund to repeal the tax increases enacted under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act that were imposed on low- and middle-income Americans. (#222) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 45 – 54.
    • Johanns amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund related to the reform of applicable statutes to eliminate the risk of the Environmental Protection Agency conducting aerial surveillance for the inspection of agricultural operations. (#223)
    • Johanns amendment to amend the deficit-neutral fund for a farm bill. (#224)
    • Flake amendment to prohibit earmarks. (#225)
    • Moran amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for Department of Homeland Security ammunition. (#226)
    • Burr amendment to provide the American people with information about how much their health care premiums will skyrocket as a result of the implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. (#227)
    • Burr amendment to lower health care costs, promote job growth, ensure America’s global leadership in innovation, and provide tax relief to middle-class families. (#228)
    • Burr amendment to provide regulatory relief to small businesses so that they can grow American jobs and strengthen our nation’s economy. (#229)
    • Burr amendment to provide regulatory relief to small businesses so that they can grow American jobs and strengthen our nation’s economy. (#230)
    • Burr amendment to ensure that millionaires on Medicare pay the full premium costs in order to strengthen the Medicare program for seniors and put the program on a sustainable path for taxpayers. (#231)
    • Burr amendment to protect the American people and strengthen our national security by fully funding the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) and the BioShield Special Reserve Fund. (#232) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Moran amendment to increase funding for research at the National Institutes of Health. (#233)
    • Begich amendment to exclude efforts on the Medium Extended Air Defense System from authorized efforts covered by the deficit-neutral reserve fund for national defense. (#234)
    • Begich amendment to provide an additional element on the Ground-based Midcourse Defense System to the deficit-neutral reserve fund for national defense. (#235)
    • Begich amendment to provide an additional element on the Ground-based Midcourse Defense System to the deficit-neutral reserve fund for national defense. (#236)
    • Begich amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for the closure and consolidation of overseas military properties and installations, consistent with the recommendation in title XXIV of Senate Report 112-173 to accompany S. 3254, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013, given the increasing ability to rapidly deploy from the United States in support of contingencies around the globe and to encourage the Department of Defense to evaluate relocating overseas missions and troops in the United States to promote domestic economic development and growth, and to create a point of order against legislation that would authorize domestic base realignment and closure (BRAC) rounds in fiscal years 2015 and 2017 as requested by the Department of Defense, given the inaccurate cost estimates of the Department of Defense in every previously authorized BRAC round, including 2005 BRAC round, the implementation cost estimates for which grew from $21,000,000,000 to an actual $35,100,000,000, a 67 percent increase, and the estimated 20-year savings for which decreased by 72 percent, from $35,600,000,000 to $9,900,000,000, according to the 2012 Government Accountability Office report entitled, “Military Base Realignments and Closures: Updated Costs and Savings Estimates”. (#237)
    • Shaheen amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to studying the exposure of United States financial institutions to the Eurozone. (#238)
    • Udall (CO) amendment to provide additional suppression resources to the Forest Service and the Department of the Interior for the protection of communities, homes, water supplies, utility infrastructure, and natural resources from catastrophic wildfires. (#239) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Shaheen amendment to clarify that budget levels can be revised for a measure involving on-the-job training programs. (#240)
    • Sanders amendment to provide for a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for legislation to reduce the deficit and create jobs by eliminating offshore tax shelters used by large profitable corporations to avoid paying federal income taxes. (#241)
    • Grassley amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for a Medicaid FMAP bonus for any State that enacts medical liability reform. (#242)
    • Grassley amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for preventing reductions in Medicaid disproportionate share hospital allotments of States that choose not to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. (#243)
    • Cornyn amendment to reduce funds available to the Director of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service for listing activities that are based on arbitrary decision deadlines reached in closed-door settlements under the Endangered Species Act, including Texas salamanders and lesser prairie chickens, and to reduce the deficit. (#244)
    • Cornyn amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to exempt American farmers and ranchers in foreclosure from a tax increase. (#245)
    • Cornyn amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to exempt families with sick children and seniors from a tax increase on medical expenses enacted in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. (#246)
    • Cornyn amendment to ensure if the President fails to submit his budget by the deadline set in law the Director of the Office of Management and Budget does not get paid until he submits a budget; and that any savings will reduce the deficit. (#247) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Cornyn amendment to protect small businesses from higher taxes. (#248)
    • Barrasso amendment to exempt all Americans from the unconstitutional individual insurance mandate and ensure that the President’s promise to reduce premiums by $2,500 is fulfilled. (#249)
    • Barrasso amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to decrease premiums, increase jobs, allow for more affordable health care options by repealing the $100,000,000,000 tax on health insurance plans purchased by individuals, families and business. (#250)
    • Hoeven amendment to require the Congressional Budget Office to include in its annual update to the Budget and Economic Outlook an analysis of the impact of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act on major economic indicators measured relative to prior law and an estimate of the budgetary effects of such impacts. (#251)
    • Lee amendment to express the sense of the Senate regarding abortion of pain-capable unborn children in the Nation’s capital. (#252)
    • Lee amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to increase the pool of highly skilled workers in the United States by removing per-country limits. (#253)
    • Begich amendment to provide for a deficit-neutral reserve fund to require public disclosure of certain crop insurance information. (#254)
    • Lee amendment to establish  a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prohibit funding for construction, planning, or support of a new United Nations building on the property of the Robert Moses Playground. (#255)
    • Lee amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to limit funds for institutions or organizations established by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. (#256)
    • Lee amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for an accounting of total United States contributions to the United Nations. (#257)
    • Sessions amendment to create a point of order against legislation increasing the deficit. (#258)
    • Sessions amendment to prohibit consideration of legislation that increases direct spending. (#259)
    • Hoeven amendment to strike a provision relating to the clean energy fund. (#260)
    • Blunt amendment to create a point of order against legislation that would create a Federal tax or fee on carbon emissions. (#261)
    • Roberts amendment to increase funding for the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act while cutting untested educational programs elsewhere in the budget. (#262)
    • Paul amendment in the nature of a substitute. (#263) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 18 – 81.
    • Sanders amendment to provide for a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for legislation to reduce the deficit and create jobs by eliminating offshore tax shelters used by large profitable corporations to avoid paying federal income taxes. (#264)
    • Casey amendment to prohibit certain revisions of allocations for workforce investment measures that lack program integrity controls for the Job Corps program. (#265) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Casey amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fun to provide for on-the-job training in the Marcellus Shale region. (#266)
    • Baucus amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to support rural schools and districts. (#267) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Hagan amendment to clarify that budget levels can be revised for a measure providing training that leads to recognized postsecondary credentials. (#268)
    • Hagan amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to strengthen the enforcement of provisions of free trade agreements that relate to textile and apparel articles. (#269) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Casey amendment to provide for a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for legislation that enables individuals with disabilities to use existing savings vehicles. (#270)
    • Casey amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide Federal tax incentives for life sciences research. (#271)
    • Cardin amendment to improve the bill. (#272)
    • Cardin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to improve oral health care for children with Medicaid coverage. (#273) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Cardin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide greater outreach and education about the saver’s tax credit. (#274)
    • Cardin amendment to provide for a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for election reform. (#275)
    • Cardin amendment to provide for a deficit-neutral reserve fund on health care improvement. (#276)
    • Lautenberg amendment to amend the deficit-neutral reserve fund to invest in clean energy and preserve the environment in order to protect the public  health, including the health of children, pregnant women, workers, and communities, from toxic chemicals. (#277)
    • Hagan amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for the families of United States service members and veterans. (#278) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Inhofe amendment to prevent the Department of Health and Human Services from waiving Federal work requirements under the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) programs. (#279)
    • Inhofe amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to requiring States to implement drug testing for Federal welfare programs for applicants and recipients of assistance including, but not limited to, the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program. (#280)
    • Inhofe amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure that impact aid payments under sections 8002 and 8003 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 do not fall below 2012-2013 school year levels. (#281)
    • Inhofe amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect community banks from Basel III capital standards. (#282)
    • Inhofe amendment to reduce spending and decrease the risk of drastic energy price increases by prohibiting further greenhouse gas regulations for the purposes of addressing climate change. (#283)
    • Inhofe amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect jobs by preventing Federal agencies from overriding efforts by States to conserve species. (#284)
    • Wicker amendment to provide for the repeal of new spending under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. (#285)
    • Wicker amendment to increase the vote threshold required to waive a budget point of order prohibiting unfunded mandates in excess of limit. (#286)
    • Rubio amendment to create a point of order against increases in Federal spending that are not offset by equivalent spending cuts. (#287)
    • Rubio amendment to protect the housing market from being used as a source of revenue to pay for more spending by protecting the deduction for mortgage interest from being capped, limited, or eliminated to pay for new spending as part of any tax increase. (#288)
    • Rubio amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for reforming the United Nations in the spirit of transparency, respect for basic human freedoms, and effective nonproliferation. (#289)
    • Rubio amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to serve low- and middle-income students by providing access to private elementary and secondary schools. (#290)
    • Rubio amendment to create a point of order against tax increases on middle income taxpayers. (#291)
    • Rubio amendment to express the sense of the Senate to enact the Child Interstate Abortion Notification Act. (#292)
    • Heller amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure that the Bureau of Land Management collaborates with States in efforts to promote sustainable sage-grouse populations and the conservation of sage-grouse habitat by developing and approving State plans that prevent the listing of the bird under the Endangered Species Act of 1973 and preserve the way of life in, and economic health of, the impacted areas. (#293) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Heller amendment to express the sense of the Senate that the proposal made by National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform should be considered by the Senate. (#294)
    • Corker amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to secure resources generated through more effective implementation of Department of State staff right-sizing processes for improvements in embassy and diplomatic security. (#296)
    • Hatch amendment to promote innovation, preserve high-paying jobs, and encourage economic growth for manufacturers of lifesaving medical devices and cutting edge medical therapies. (#297) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 79 – 20.
    • Hatch amendment to repeal the $130,000,000,000 job-crushing mandate so employers can continue to grow, create new jobs, expand the economy, and provide families with more coverage of their choices. (#298)
    • Hatch amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prohibit the Obama Administration’s unconstitutional attempt to gut welfare reform and to provide for a 5-year reauthorization of the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program that honors the dignity of real work. (#299)
    • Hatch amendment to modify the deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to trade and international agreements to increase the competitiveness of the United States and United States exports. (#300)
    • Hatch amendment to modify the deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to trade and international agreements to protect United States innovation and intellectual property interests. (#301)
    • Hatch amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to promote government efficiency. (#302)
    • Murkowski amendment to allow Medicare health care providers to negotiate with Medicare beneficiaries. (#303)
    • Murkowski amendment to exempt advance appropriations for the Indian Health Services and Indian Health Facilities accounts of the Indian Health Service from a point of order against legislation that would provide an advance appropriation. (#304)
    • Thune amendment to protect charitable organizations from being used as a source of revenue to pay for more spending by protecting the deduction for charitable giving from being capped, limited, or eliminated to pay for new spending as part of any tax increase. (#305)
    • Thune amendment to protect charitable organizations from being used as a source of revenue to pay for more spending by protecting the deduction for charitable giving from being capped, limited, or eliminated to pay for new spending as part of any tax increase. (#306)
    • Thune amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to permanently eliminate the Federal estate tax. (#307) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 46 – 53.
    • Thune amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund that may establish biennial budgeting and appropriations, among other budget process reforms. (#308)
    • Thune amendment to increase spending for the impact aid program under title VIII of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 in an offset manner. (#309)
    • Thune amendment to increase funds for public safety in tribal areas and provide for an offset. (#310)
    • Udall (NM) amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to strengthening and reforming the National Nuclear Security Administration. (#311)
    • Casey amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for State and local law enforcement. (#312)
    • Begich amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to improving the well-being of American Indian and Alaska Native individuals and families by meeting the contract support costs of Indian tribes. (#313)
    • Landrieu amendment to modify the deficit-neutral reserve fund for America’s service members and veterans to include leases of major medical facilities of the Department of Veterans Affairs. (#314) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Brown amendment to ensure a pro-growth corporate tax code that prevents U.S. firms from avoiding taxation by using foreign subsidiaries to exploit U.S. markets or by shifting profits to foreign subsidiaries in amounts disproportionate to the activities and tangible business assets of such entities, as determined by the Joint Committee on Taxation. (#315)
    • Manchin amendment to address prescription drug abuse in the United States. (#316) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Wicker amendment to establish a point of order against any budget resolution containing greater projected spending on net interest than on national defense. (#317)
    • Crapo amendment to amend the reconciliation instruction to include instructions to the Committee on Finance to achieve the Budget’s stated goal of $275 billion in mandatory health care savings.(#318) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 47 – 52.
    • Hoeven amendment to provide additional resources to Criminal Investigations and Police Services of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. (#319) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Hoeven amendment to provide additional resources to the natural gas technologies and unconventional fossil energy technologies programs of the Department of Energy. (#320)
    • Hoeven amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to streamlining Bureau of Land Management regulations. (#321)
    • Barrasso amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve relating to preventing the implementation and use of certain guidance. (#322)
    • Barrasso amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to maintain and modernize United States nuclear forces, including nuclear warheads and delivery vehicles of all three legs of the nuclear triad (ICBMs, SLBMs, and nuclear-capable bombers), at levels no lower than the maximum allowed for under the New START Treaty until such time as the President certifies that the Russian Federation is in compliance with all its arms control obligations with the United States and is not engaging in activity inconsistent with such obligations and the Senate advises and consents to ratification of a treaty providing for the reduction of United States strategic nuclear forces to levels lower than New START levels. (#323)
    • Barrasso amendment to create a point of order against legislation that increases the deficit, if the true cost of the legislation is not provided. (#324)
    • Barrasso amendment to express the sense of the Senate that the levels of public debt outlined in section 101(5) of this resolution are responsible, reasonable, and in a sustainable place and that increasing the public debt to $24,364,925,000,000 through fiscal year 2023 under that section will be good for our children and grandchildren. (#325)
    • Graham amendment to reduce the Federal poverty level qualification established in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act for the exchange subsidies from 400 percent of the Federal poverty level to 300 percent of the Federal poverty level. (#326)
    • Graham amendment to reduce Medicare subsidies to wealthy beneficiaries by adopting the President’s proposal to increase income-related premiums and require beneficiaries earning more than $250,000 per year pay the total amount of their Medicare premium. (#327)
    • Graham amendment to reduce spending for the National Labor Relations Board. (#328)
    • Graham amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to broaden the effects of the sequester, including allowing Members of Congress to donate 20 percent of their salaries to charity or to the Department of Treasury during sequestration. (#329) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Graham amendment to amend the deficit-neutral reserve fund to replace sequestration to ensure balance in spending cuts. (#330)
    • Graham amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund that pertains to any legislation reducing the 2017 Federal matching rate in Medicaid for the expansion population in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and clarifies that States may opt-out of the Medicaid expansion at any time. (#331)
    • Vitter amendment to express the sense of the Senate regarding sex-selection abortions. (#332)
    • Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to clarify eligibility for the child tax credit. (#333)
    • Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prohibit the Department of Homeland Security from granting legal status to individuals illegally present in the United States before fully implementing the integrated entry and exit data system. (#334)
    • Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to  prohibit funding for any international organization, agency, or entity (including the United Nations) that requires the registration of, or taxes a gun owned by a citizen of the United States. (#335)
    • Vitter amendment to end automatic pay raises for members of Congress and reduce spending, deficits, and debt. (#336)
    • Vitter amendment to establish a border security fee on international remittance transfers if the sender is unable to verify legal status in the United States, and for other purposes. (#337)
    • Vitter amendment to end the mobile phone welfare program. (#338) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 46 – 53.
    • Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to requiring States to implement drug testing programs for applicants for and recipients of assistance under the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, which would encourage healthy, drug-free families instead of encouraging dependent behavior or ongoing drug abuse. (#339)
    • Shelby amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for legislation that requires financial regulators to conduct rigorous cost-benefit analyses on all proposed rules. (#340) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 47 – 52.
    • Begich amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to the labeling of genetically engineered fish. (#341) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to improve education in the United States by allowing funding under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to follow children to the school they attend. (#342)
    • Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to support the creation or expansion of high-quality charter schools. (#343)
    • Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to support State and local education agency compensation programs for teachers who have a demonstrated record of improving student academic achievement. (#344)
    • Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to  waive requirements of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act law if the Chief Actuary of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services determines that States and employers can better protect consumers from escalating health insurance premiums, providing individuals with more job opportunities and families with more health coverage options. (#345)
    • Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to fulfill President Barack Obama’s promise that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will lower premiums by up to $2,500 for a typical family per year. (#346)
    • Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to give States the certainty and flexibility they need to serve their Medicaid beneficiaries by holding Washington accountable for deciding on Medicaid waiver applications in a timely manner. (#347)
    • Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent restrictions to public access to fishing downstream of dams owned by the Corps of Engineers. (#348) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent funding for enforcing National Labor Relations Board decisions and regulations issued by a majority whose quorum was constituted by invalid recess appointments. (#349)
    • Franken amendment to clarify the deficit-neutral reserve fund to promote employment and job growth. (#350)
    • Franken amendment to provide additional uses for the deficit-neutral reserve fund for higher education. (#351)
    • Franken amendment to amend the deficit-neutral reserve fund for unemployment relief to expand and expedite training opportunities for unemployment compensation recipients so they can gain the necessary skills to compete in the 21st century workforce. (#352)
    • Franken amendment to amend section 308 relating to broadband infrastructure investments in rural areas. (#353) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Franken amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to support tribal energy independence, economic development, and job creation through the development of renewable-energy resources and energy efficiency on Indian land. (#354)
    • Begich amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to protecting the right of individuals to bear arms at water resources development projects. (#355)
    • Moran amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for the prohibition of funding for ammunition for the Department of Homeland Security. (#356)
    • Burr amendment to delay implementation of the President’s health care law for 2 years. (#357)
    • Inhofe amendment to address the impacts of sequestration on the Department of Defense. (#358)
    • Inhofe amendment to reduce spending and decrease the risk of drastic energy price increases by prohibiting further greenhouse gas regulations for the purposes of addressing climate change. (#359) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 47 – 52.
    • Inhofe amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to uphold Second Amendment rights and prohibit the establishment of a national firearm registry. (#360)
    • Hoeven amendment to ensure funds are available in fiscal year 2014 for the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s HOME Investment Partnership Program and to provide an offset. (#361)
    • Hoeven amendment to ensure funds are available in fiscal year 2014 for the Department of Education’s Impact Aid program and to provide an offset. (#362)
    • Hoeven amendment to ensure funds are available in fiscal year 2014 for the National Science Foundation’s Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) Program and to provide an offset. (#363)
    • Kirk amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent Iran from directly or indirectly accessing the Trans-European Automated Realtime Gross Settlement Express Transfer System of the European Central Bank and to prevent the Government of Iran from accessing its euro-denominated foreign exchange holdings. (#364)
    • Stabenow amendment to provide for a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for legislation to close tax loopholes for companies that ship jobs overseas and instead reward companies that bring jobs home. (#365)
    • McCaskill amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to support the transition of service members to the civilian workforce by streamlining the process associated with Federal and State credentialing requirements. (#366) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Risch amendment to create a point of order against legislation that would provide funds for regulations that have not been reviewed, modified, or specifically authorized by Congress in statute. (#367)
    • Risch amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for replacing the Medicaid program and the Children’s Health Insurance program with a block grant to the States. (#368)
    • Inhofe amendment to achieve domestic energy independence. (#369)
    • Murkowski amendment to create jobs, generate new receipts, and positively impact the energy security of the United States by increasing oil and natural gas production on Federal land and waters. (#370)
    • Murkowski amendment to jobs, generate new receipts, positively impact the energy security of the United States, and reverse the decline of oil flowing through the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System by increasing oil production on Federal land in the State of Alaska that is not currently leased. (#371)
    • Murkowski amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to the establishment of an advanced energy trust fund with receipts from new production on Federal land and waters that are not currently leased or scheduled to be made available for lease by fiscal year 2017. (#372)
    • Lee amendment to provide a point of order against budgets spending more on net interest payments on the debt than on national defense, and to ensure the United States government funds its military at higher levels than the militaries of foreign holders of its debt. (#373) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 46 – 53.
    • Lee amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to eliminate a source of corporate welfare by phasing out the authority of the Export-Import Bank of the United States. (#374)
    • Paul amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for the restriction of drones in the United States. (#375)
    • Paul amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund related to procedures for approval of major rules. (#376)
    • Paul amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for the reform of aviation security. (#377)
    • Paul amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to eliminate economic and military aid to Egypt unless and until the President of Egypt pledges in English and Arabic his intent to abide by the Camp David Accords. (#378)
    • Paul amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to reduce foreign aid to Pakistan until it grants the release of Dr. Shakil Afridi, who is being held in prison for his assistance to the United States Government in capturing Osama bin Laden. (#379)
    • Paul amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to clarify the definition of waters of the United States and to provide property rights protections. (#380)
    • Paul amendment to reduce spending by withdrawing the United States from membership in the United Nations. (#381)
    • Paul amendment to provide funding to the Department of Transportation for interstate bridge infrastructure projects and to reduce the Federal deficit by decreasing the amounts available for foreign assistance and loan guarantee programs administered by the Department of Energy. (#382) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 26 – 72.
    • Paul amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to allow disciplinary measures to be taken against Department of State employees whose actions result in loss of life, serious injury, or significant destruction of property at or related to a United States mission overseas. (#383)
    • Brown amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure that the Federal Government prioritizes American companies in awarding non-defense procurement contracts before granting Buy America waivers. (#384)
    • Tester amendment to modify the deficit-neutral reserve fund to invest in clean energy and preserve the environment. (#385)
    • Udall (NM) amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to tribal higher education for tribal higher education programs in the Department of the Interior for tribal scholarships, operating expenses, and other necessary purposes. (#386)
    • Hagan amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to support export promotion for small businesses. (#387)
    • Boozman amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to strengthening and reforming Federal offices of Inspectors General, reducing vacancies in offices of Inspectors General, and providing for improvements in the overall economy, efficiency, and effectiveness of Inspectors General. (#388)
    • Boozman amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to address the disproportionate regulatory burdens on community banks. (#389) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Lautenberg amendment to include in the deficit-neutral reserve fund for service members and veterans a continuation of limitation on increases in certain health care fees, premiums, and costs for uniformed services beneficiaries in excess of percentage increases in uniformed services retired pay. (#390)
    • Lautenberg amendment to express the sense of the Senate regarding preventing terrorists from purchasing guns. (#391)
    • Lautenberg amendment to express the sense of the Senate regarding domestic violence and firearm possession. (#392)
    • Lautenberg amendment to express the sense of the Senate regarding background checks at gun shows. (#393)
    • Wyden amendment to ensure that chronic illness is addressed as part of health care improvement. (#394) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Inhofe amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect vulnerable families from unnecessary increases in fuel costs. (#395)
    • Levin amendment to provide for a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for legislation to eliminate offshore tax shelters used by large corporations. (#396)
    • Rockefeller amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect pension and health care benefits from retired UMWA workers. (#397)
    • Merkley amendment to increase investment in high-impact breakthrough clean energy technologies through the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy of the Department of Energy. (#398) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Toomey amendment to repeal the tax increase on catastrophic medical expenses created by Obamacare. (#399)
    • Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure election integrity by requiring a valid government-issued photographic ID for voting in federal elections. (#400)
    • Coburn  amendment to eliminate program duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within the 15 “financial literacy” programs under 13 departments and agencies identified by 2012 report of the Government Accountability Office, entitled “Opportunities to reduce Duplication, Overlap and Fragmentation, Achieve Savings, and Enhance Revenue”. (#401)
    • Coburn amendment to eliminate program duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within the 160 “housing assistance” programs under 20 Departments and Agencies identified by the Government Accountability Office’s 2012 report, “Opportunities to reduce Duplication, Overlap and Fragmentation, Achieve Savings, and Enhance Revenue”. (#402)
    • Coburn amendment to eliminate program duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within the 253 Department of Justice grant programs under 10 departments and agencies identified by the Government Accountability Office’s 2012 report, “Opportunities to reduce Duplication, Overlap and Fragmentation, Achieve Savings, and Enhance Revenue”. (#403)
    • Coburn amendment to eliminate duplication in 15 Federal unmanned aircraft programs. (#404)
    • Coburn amendment to eliminate program duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within the 209 “Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math” programs under 13 Departments and Agencies identified by the Government Accountability Office’s 2012 report, “Opportunities to reduce Duplication, Overlap and Fragmentation, Achieve Savings, and Enhance Revenue”. (#405)
    • Coburn amendment to prohibit individuals with adjusted gross income over $1,000,000 from receiving unemployment compensation. (#406)
    • Coburn amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to reduce Social Security for individuals with an adjusted gross income of $1,000,000 or more to extend the solvency of the Social Security Trust Fund. (#407)
    • Coburn amendment to reduce the federal matching rate for Medicaid expansions and prevent the federal government from making an unrealistic promise to States to fund any State’s expansion of the Medicaid program at a higher level of federal reimbursement.  (#408)
    • Coburn amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to sunset the provision of Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act that increases payments to hospitals in a few States by reducing payments to the majority of States through the Medicare hospital wage index. (#409) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 68 – 31.
    • Coburn amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure that health savings account-eligible high deductible health plans are considered to be qualified health plans and an employer offer of coverage for purposes of compliance with the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. ( #410)
    • Coburn amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to furlough Federal employees with seriously delinquent tax liability. (#411)
    • Coburn amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund that addresses the nonprofit postal discount for State and national political committees. (#412) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Coburn amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to reform the Lifeline program of the Federal Communications Commission to require minimal payments from subsidized cell phone recipients. (#413)
    • Coburn amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to eliminate tax loopholes and special interest tax breaks for the PGA tour, the NFL, NASCAR, Hollywood, fish tackle box manufacturers, and Eskimo whaling captains. (#414)
    • Coburn amendment to eliminate or defund congressional committees that do not conduct oversight of the programs within its jurisdiction. (#415)
    • Coburn amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to eliminate non-defense related spending by the Department of Defense. (#416) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 43 – 56.
    • Coburn amendment to reduce the burden on middle-class taxpayers by eliminating subsidies for the purchase of health insurance to wealthier Americans with annual incomes above 300 percent of the federal poverty level. (#417)
    • Coburn amendment to achieve at least $630 billion in health care savings, the same level of health care savings proposed by the President’s own Bipartisan Fiscal Commission, often Bowles-Simpson plan. (#418)
    • Coburn amendment to prevent the Food and Drug Administration from approving prescription opioids that are subject to abuse without requiring abuse-deterrent formulations. (#419)
    • Coburn amendment to eliminate improper or overlapping payments made by the Social Security Disability Insurance and Unemployment Insurance programs. (#420)
    • Coburn amendment to prohibit the use of supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP) benefits to purchase junk food. (#421)
    • Coburn amendment to establish a database for all unclassified reports submitted to Congress. (#422)
    • Coburn amendment to prohibit the sale of Federal grants.  (#423)
    • Baucus amendment to include livestock and specialty crop disaster assistance programs in a deficit-neutral reserve fund for a farm bill. (#424)
    • Merkley amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to expanding, enhancing, or otherwise improving science, technology, engineering, mathematics, or career and technical education. (#425)
    • Cardin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for the establishment of robust and uniform accountability guidelines for United States foreign assistance programs (#426)
    • Cardin amendment to provide additional resources for the Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Director of the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection, to provide a report on strategies for the most efficient use of resources to develop financial goals, build wealth and increase consumers’ financial knowledge. (#427)
    • Cardin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to protecting drinking water and providing clean water for communities. (#428)
    • Udall (NM) amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to general education, which may include fully funding the impact aid program under title VIII of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 and supporting school programs for children living on Federal property and Indian land. (#429)
    • Levin amendment to provide for a deficit-reduction reserve fund to provide for legislation to eliminate offshore tax shelters used by large corporations. (#430) As modified agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Mikulski amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to require equal pay policies and practices. (#431) Agreed to by Voice Vote.
    • Stabenow amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect Medicare’s guaranteed benefit and to prohibit replacing guaranteed benefits with the House passed budget plan to turn Medicare into a voucher program. (#432). Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 96 – 3.
    • Murray amendment to amend the resolution. (#433) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 40 – 59.
    • Toomey amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to increasing funding for the inland waterways system. (#434) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Hoeven amendment to provide additional resources to maintain funding for research activities conducted by the Agricultural Research Service and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture. (#435)
    • Hoeven amendment to ensure funds are available in fiscal year 2014 for the Tribally Controlled Postsecondary Career and Technical Institutions Program administered by the Department of Education and provide for an offset. (#436)
    • Burr amendment to provide regulatory relief to small businesses so that they can grow American jobs and strengthen our nation’s economy. (#437)
    • Shaheen amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect women’s access to health care, including primary and preventative health care, family planning and birth control, and employer-provided contraceptive coverage, such as was provided under the Affordable Care Act (PL 111-148). (#438) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 56 – 43.
    • Murray amendment to amend the deficit-neutral reserve fund for tax relief for low and middle income families. (#439) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 99 – 0.
    • Sanders amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to the need to vigorously combat global warming by establishing policies that transform the energy system of the United States away from fossil fuels and into energy efficiency and sustainable energy. (#440)
    • McCaskill amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to end earmarks and reform the process of amendment the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States to temporarily suspend or reduce duties, in a manner that creates a transparent, streamlined, and merit-based process for the business community. (#441)
    • Casey amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for State and local law enforcement. (#442) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Lee amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to establish reasonable deadlines for processes under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969. (#443)
    • Lee amendment to eliminate all funds made available to the Director of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service for purposes related to the listing, management, and enforcement of regulations relating to the Greater and Gunnison Sage grouse. (#444)
    • Lee amendment to eliminate all funds made available to the Director of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service for the management and enforcement of regulations pursuant to the Endangered Species Act of 1973 as the regulations relate to the Utah Prairie Dog, a species that exists only in the State of Utah. (#445)
    • Lee amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to end all energy subsidies on a technology-neutral basis. (#446)
    • Kirk amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to the expansion of the Visa Waiver Program. (#447)
    • Hatch amendment to protect Americans from a $1,000,000,000,000 tax increase and provide for pro-growth revenue-neutral competitive international business tax reform. (#448)
    • Hatch amendment to protect Americans from a $1,000,000,000,000 tax increase and provide for pro-growth revenue-neutral individual tax reform. (#449)
    • Hatch amendment to protect charitable organizations, home owners with mortgages, state and local taxpayers, retirement plan participants, and other taxpayers from the tax increase in the President’s budget’s proposed 28% cap on tax benefits and to prevent the revenue raised being used to pay for more spending by protecting these widely-available and applicable tax benefits from being capped at 28% or otherwise limited to pay for new spending as part of any tax increase. (#450)
    • Hatch amendment to protect the incentive for innovative research and development, including the jobs produced from American’s cutting edge research-based businesses, by making permanent the research and development tax credit, preventing any repeal or limitation on the existing incentive and to prevent the revenue raised being used to pay for more spending as part of any tax increase. (#451)
    • Paul amendment to create a point of order against legislation relating to a gun ban treaty. (#452)
    • Cardin amendment to provide for a deficit-neutral reserve fund on health care improvement. (#453) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Murphy amendment to improve a deficit-neutral reserve fund to invest in clean energy and preserve the environment. (#454)
    • Brown amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to establish a national network for manufacturing innovation that leverages private and public sector investments for proven United States based manufacturing industries. (#455) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Boxer amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure that the taxpayer-funded salaries of government contractor employees do not exceed the taxpayer-funded salary earned by the President of the United States. (#456)
    • Vitter amendment to create a point of order against legislation relating to the regulation of greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide emission, until the date on which the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, the Energy Information Administration, and Secretary of Commerce certify in writing that each of the People’s Republic of China, the Republic of India, and Russia have proposed, implemented, and enforced measures requiring greenhouse gas, including carbon dioxide, emission reductions that are substantially similar to carbon dioxide emissions reductions proposed for the United States. (#457)
    • Manchin amendment to create a point of order against legislation that would establish an unrealistic or unattainable standard for carbon dioxide emissions from new coal-fired electricity-generating units. (#458)
    • Collins amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for sensible regulatory reform, including cost-benefit analysis for major and significant rules, good guidance practices, and relief from first-time, nonharmful paper work violations. (#459)
    • Johanns amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to require the Inspector General of Environmental Protection Agency to report to Congress twice a year on whether the Environmental Protection Agency has met regulatory reporting and regulatory agenda-setting requirements. (#460)
    • Johanns amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to require the Environmental Protection Agency to provide technical assistance and data, modeling, or technical support to any State that requests it pursuant to the development of a State implementation plan under the Clean Air Act. (#461)
    • Johanns amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure that agency guidance documents are subject to resolutions of disapproval in the same manner as agency rules. (#462)
    • Johanns amendment to amend the deficit-neutral reserve fund to reform the use of guidance documents in agency rulemaking to consider their effect on manufacturing. (#463)
    • Johanns amendment to encourage proposals related to cooperative federalism with State agencies that issue permits to manufacturing facilities. (#464)
    • Johanns amendment to provide for the reform of rulemaking (including regulatory agenda publishing). (#465)
    • Johanns amendment to clarify a provision relating to the deficit-neutral reserve fund to promote manufacturing in the United States. (#466)
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for prohibiting drone killings of citizens of the United States on United States soil, absent an imminent threat. (#467)
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to eliminate corporate welfare. (#468)
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for choice-based scholarships for low-income children. (#469)
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to preventing the Federal Government from owning more than 50 percent of the land of any State. (#470)
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to reduce foreign assistance to Egypt and increase funding for an east coast missile defense shield. (#471) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 25 – 74.
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund  to challenge costly Federal regulations. (#472)
    • Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prohibit millionaires from being eligible for or receiving any means-tested welfare payments. (#473)
    • Heller amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to increasing the use of audits by Federal agencies to recover erroneous Government payments and using the money for deficit reduction. (#474)
    • Heller amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect and uphold Second Amendment rights and ensure that the Department of Justice may not create or compile a national registry of firearms. (#475)
    • Heller amendment to ensure proper access to services for women and veterans and members of the Armed Forces. (#476)
    • Heller amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to authorize the provision of per diem payments for the provision of services to dependents of homeless veterans under laws administered by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs. (#477) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Franken amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to increasing access to dual enrollment, concurrent enrollment, or early college high schools for low-income students. (#478)
    • Franken amendment to provide an additional use for the deficit-neutral reserve fund for higher education. (#479) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Schumer amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prohibit the TSA from changing its policy regarding the prohibition against passengers carrying small, non-locking knives onto commercial airplanes. (#480)
    • Carper amendment to provide funds for infrastructure improvements necessary for continued progress on the Department of Homeland Security headquarters consolidation.  (#481)
    • Reed amendment to provide funding for low-income weatherization and energy efficiency retrofit programs. (#482) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Udall (NM) amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to hardrock mineral royalty and fee reform. (#483) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • McCaskill amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to improving or eliminating the Lifeline program, which has grown by more than 250 percent in 5 years because of waste, fraud, and abuse, an inability to enforce a one-line per household requirement, and inclusion of prepaid wireless providers. (#484)
    • ·         Manchin amendment to create a point of order against legislation that would allocate any savings achieved through spending cuts or new revenue that are not included in the concurrent resolution on the budget for any purpose other than deficit reduction or investment in the Nation’s infrastructure. (#485)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to create a deficit-neutral reserve fund that addresses the nonprofit postal discount for State and national political committees. ( #486)
    • ·         Murkowski amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to authorizing advanced appropriations for the Indian Health Service and Indian Health Facilities accounts of the Indian Health Service, without raising new revenue. (#487)
    • ·         Murkowski amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide assistance for fishery disasters declared during 2012. (#488)
    • ·         Enzi amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to phase-in any changes to the individual or corporate tax systems. (#489) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • ·         Enzi amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for legislation that requires each federal agency to identify and prioritize each of its programs, projects, and activities. (#490)
    • ·         Enzi amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to protecting and restoring money in established, dedicated funds. (#491)
    • ·         Coats amendment to express the sense of the Senate that the budget supports enabling prompt action relating to the Presidential exemption for the rule of the Environmental Protection Agency commonly known as the Mercury and Air Toxins Standard for affected electric utility steam generating units that need additional time to install the major emissions control equipment, construct replacement generation, or implement other mitigation measures in order to ensure the reliability of the grid. (#492)
    • ·         McConnell amendment to provide for critical transportation infrastructure projects, including bridge construction, through offsets provided by repeal of the Davis-Bacon Act. (#493)
    • ·         Hoeven amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to promote investment and job growth in the United States manufacturing, oil and gas production, and refining sectors through the construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline. (#494) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 62 – 37.
    • ·         Thune amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for generational accounting that would provide a score of the fiscal and economic impacts that proposed policy changes would have on current and future generations. (#495)
    • ·         Schumer amendment to provide tax relief for victims of recent federally-declared major disasters. (#496)
    • ·         Cantwell amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to prioritizing funds for fishery stock surveys and stock assessments to support, protect, and develop the United States fishing economy. (#497)
    • ·         Warren amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for disaster assistance for commercial fishery failures. (#498)
    • ·         Manchin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure that abundant domestic energy sources and technologies can meet present and future greenhouse gas emissions rules. (#499) agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • ·         Lautenberg amendment to crack down on tax cheats and reduce the deficit by at least $2.5 billion in FY 2014. (#500)
    • ·         Manchin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to the commercialization of technologies such as carbon capture, carbon storage, and other carbon utilization technologies required for coal and natural gas electric generating units (EGUs) to meet proposed and future greenhouse gas regulations. (#501)
    • ·         McCaskill amendment to redirect funding from a Department of Defense contractor bonus program, which benefits a limited class of subcontractors, to deficit reduction. (#502)
    • ·         McCaskill amendment to ensure that funds available for mental health services for individuals eligible to purchase a weapon are not reduced. (#503)
    • ·         McCaskill amendment to strengthen the deficit-reduction reserve fund for Government reform and efficiency. (#504)
    • ·         Feinstein amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to strengthening privacy protections for Americans from drones. (#505)
    • ·         Wicker amendment to preserve funding for the National Guard Counterdrug School Program and State Counterdrug Support Programs and to provide an offset. (#506)
    • ·         Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent the regulation of the size and quantity of food and beverages. (#507)
    • ·         Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to restore federalism in labor regulation. (#508)
    • ·         Paul amendment to reduce Federal spending by discontinuing reimbursement of Federal employees for conducting union business while on duty as a Federal employee. (#509)
    • ·         Wicker amendment to provide additional resources to the Department of Justice transitional housing program to provide shelter for domestic abuse survivors. (#510)
    • ·         Feinstein amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to reduce firearm violence. (#511)
    • ·         Lautenberg amendment to express the sense of the Senate regarding the utilization of high-capacity ammunition magazines. (#512)
    • ·         Landrieu amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to providing infrastructure funds to high-performing public elementary schools and secondary schools, including high-performing public charter schools. (#513)
    • ·         Coats amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to enable prompt action relating to the Presidential exemption for the rule of the Environmental Protection Agency commonly known as the Mercury and Air Toxins Standard for affected electric utility steam generating units that need additional time to install the major emissions control equipment, construct replacement generation, or implement other mitigation measures in order to ensure the reliability of the grid. (#514) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 46 – 53.
    • ·         Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund related to the education of low-income children, which may include allowing funding under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to follow children from low-income families to the school the children attend. (#515)  Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 39 – 60.
    • ·         Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to repeal the medical device tax and the wind production tax credit. (#516)
    • ·         Toomey amendment to ensure that Medicare savings are used to make Medicare more solvent. (#517)
    • ·         Murkowski amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve related to authorizing advanced appropriations for the Indian Health Service and Indian Health Facilities accounts of the Indian Health Service, without raising new revenue. (#518)
    • ·         Donnelly amendment to amend the deficit-reduction reserve fund for Government reform and efficiency to establish a process to review Federal programs that are inefficient or duplicative. (#519)
    • ·         Heinrich amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to strengthening the economy by accelerating the transfer of technologies from Department of Energy laboratories to the marketplace. (#520)
    • ·         Lee amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to supporting the reauthorization of the Payments in Lieu of Taxes program at levels roughly equivalent to property tax revenues lost to the presence of Federal land. (#521) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • ·         Lee amendment to express the sense of the Senate regarding a balanced budget amendment. (#522)
    • ·         Alexander amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to repeal the medical device tax and the wind production tax credit. (#523)
    • ·         McCaskill amendment to provide for the transfer of $500,000,000 from spending on wasteful and unsustainable infrastructure projects in Afghanistan to funding for road and bridge projects in the United States. (#524)
    • ·         Durbin amendment to establish a deficit neutral reserve fund to increase funding for the National Institutes of Health.  (#525)  Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure election integrity by requiring a valid government-issued photographic ID for voting in federal elections. (#526) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 44 – 54
    • ·         Boozman amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect private property rights by discouraging eminent domain abuse by State and local governments, while providing for continued economic development assistance eligibility where eminent domain is used for customary purposes, including to acquire property for public use, for public rights of way, to acquire abandoned property, or to remove immediate threats to public health and safety, and to provide that any savings will reduce the deficit. (#527) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • ·         Murkowski amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to authorizing advanced appropriations for the Indian Health Service accounts, without raising new revenue. (#528)
    • ·         Inhofe amendment to create a point of order against per flight user fees on general aviation. (#529)
    • ·         McConnell amendment to protect Americans from a massive tax increase. (#530)
    • ·         McConnell amendment to modify the deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to trade and international agreements to promote and protect United States agricultural exports. (#531)
    • ·         Wicker amendment to de-fund the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) through reductions to the International Affairs account, with the savings to be used for increased funding for the President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI) and deficit reduction. (#532)
    • ·         Grassley amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to ensure accountability and transparency the Bureau of Consumer and Financial Protection. (#533)
    • ·         Toomey amendment to reduce costs for American manufacturers and make U.S. factories more competitive by repealing punitive import taxes on inputs that are not produced domestically. (#534)
    • ·         Toomey amendment to repeal the tax increase on catastrophic medical expenses created by Obamacare. (#535) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 45 – 54.
    • ·         Shaheen amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to providing assistance to small businesses in accessing foreign markets. (#536)
    • ·         Tester amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to authorizing children who are eligible to receive health care furnished under laws administered by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to retain such eligibility until age 26. (#537) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • ·         Wicker amendment to increase the vote threshold required to waive a budget point of order prohibiting unfunded mandates in excess of limit. (#538) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure that peer review panels have sufficient real world expertise. (#539)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to create a point of order against legislation that would lengthen the delivery time of any surface transportation project. (#540)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide for legislation that would improve the solvency of the Highway Trust Fund by amounts resulting from the imposition of fees on any Federal agency that fails to meet specified deadlines relating to surface transportation projects under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969. (#541)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to improve the solvency of the Highway Trust Fund by the amounts provided by the net increase in Federal revenues from onshore and offshore domestic energy leasing on Federal land. (#542)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent the Attorney General from prosecuting energy producers for incidental killings of migratory birds until such time as the Attorney General submits to Congress a report. (#543)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to require congressional approval of national monuments. (#544)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to reinstate the reservation of use and occupancy and special use permits to conduct certain commercial operations. (#545)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent the Secretary of the Interior from offering offshore wind leases if the royalty rate for the leases is below the value of the wind production tax credit. (#546)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to vacate any major rule for which private or alias emails were used in the drafting process. (#547)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure that agency advisory boards have a balanced perspective. (#548)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prohibit the Environmental Protection Agency from promulgating certain rules. (#549)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to require the issuance by all Federal agencies of mandatory guidelines on the use of electronic communications. (#550)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure increased domestic offshore leasing and production on the vast outer Continental Shelf resources of the United States. (#551)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for economic-impact analyses for a species listed under the Endangered Species Act of 1973 at the time of the listing decision. (#552)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to create a point of order against legislation that raises the prices of energy during high unemployment. (#553)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prohibit the payment of attorneys’ fees under settlement agreements for civil litigation under the Clean Air Act or the Endangered Species Act of 1973 when impacted State and local government are not a party to the settlement agreement. (#554)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent the Environmental Protection Agency and the United States Fish and Wildlife Service from engaging in closed-door settlement agreements that ignore impacted States and counties. (#555)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate program duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within the 80 economic development programs under 4 departments and agencies identified by the Government Accountability Office. (#556)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate program duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within the 53 “support for entrepreneurs” programs under 4 departments and agencies identified by the 2012 report of the Government Accountability Office, entitled “Opportunities to Reduce Duplication, Overlap and Fragmentation, Achieve Savings, and Enhance Revenue”. (#557)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate program duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within the 17 “preparedness grants” within the Federal Emergency Management Agency identified by the Government Accountability Office’s 2012 report, “Opportunities to Reduce Duplication, Overlap and Fragmentation, Achieve Savings, and Enhance Revenue”. (#558)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate federal duplication and consolidate the 94 Federal green building programs spread across 11 different federal agencies. (#559)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate federal duplication and consolidate the 14 Federal diesel emissions programs at 3 different federal agencies. (#560)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within the 45 Federal early learning and child care programs and 5 tax expenditures within 8 departments. (#561)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within 18 domestic food assistance programs. (#562)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within 80 teacher quality programs at ten different federal agencies. (#563)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within 30 food safety programs at 15 different federal agencies. (#564)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within 18 Defense language and cultural training programs. (#565)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate duplication, fragmentation, and overlap within 21 nuclear nonproliferation programs. (#566)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to provide for a reduction in the number of general and flag officers of the Armed Forces commensurate with reductions in the strengths of the Armed Forces. (#567)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to require increased compliance by the federal agencies with the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006, the online database of federal spending, USASpending.gov. (#568)
    • ·         Coburn amendment to eliminate and consolidate program duplication within the six federal counter-IED efforts. (#569)
    • ·         Isakson amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent funding to implement, create, apply or enforce certain standards for initial bargaining unit determinations governed by the National Labor Relations Board. (#570)
    • ·         Isakson amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent funding to promulgate a regulation relating to the definition of “fiduciary” by the Department of Labor. (#571)
    • ·         Menendez amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide tax credits to businesses that finance training for long-term unemployed persons in programs that produce certificates or credentials. (#572)
    • ·         Menendez amendment to express the sense of the Senate on the creation of a future Smithsonian American Latino Museum. (#573)
    • ·         Menendez amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to close wasteful big oil tax subsidies for the Big 5 oil companies and invest in energy conservation. (#574)
    • ·         Menendez amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to close wasteful big oil tax subsidies for the Big 5 oil companies and reduce the deficit. (#575)
    • ·         Udall (CO) amendment to express the sense of the Senate that a reasonable path to a balanced budget is the foundation for economic growth and prosperity. (#576)
    • ·         Blumenthal amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for legislation to ensure operation of all contract air traffic control towers receiving funding through the contract tower program of the Federal Aviation Administration as of March 20, 2013, and that are located at airports still in service as of the date of the introduction of such legislation. (#577) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • ·         Durbin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure marketplace fairness by allowing States to enforce State and local use tax laws. (#578) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • ·         Barrasso amendment to express the sense of the Senate that the levels of public debt outlined in section 101(5) of this resolution are responsible, reasonable, and in a sustainable place and that increasing the public debt to $24,364,925,000,000 through fiscal year 2023 under that section will be good for our children and grandchildren. (#580).
    • ·         Baucus second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578, to exempt remote sales of business inputs. (#581) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • ·         Wyden second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578, to provide that uniforms required for employment may be exempted. (#582)
    • ·         Baucus second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578, to provide that food and school supplies may be exempted.  (#583)
    • ·         Tester second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578, to require a sufficient physical nexus to the State. (#584)
    • ·         Wyden second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578,  to prohibit disparate treatment between domestic and foreign businesses. (#585)
    • ·         Baucus second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578,  to require a calculation of the cost of the legislation to businesses. (#586)

     

    • ·         Wyden amendment to provide that pharmaceutical drugs and healthcare products may be exempted. (#587)
    • ·         Baucus second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578, to prohibit the use of Federal taxpayer dollars for enforcement. (#588)
    • ·         Ayotte second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578, to allow States to protect their own businesses against audit and tax collection enforcement by other States. (#589)
    • ·         Shaheen second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578, to allow States to opt out of any requirement to transfer data.  (#590)
    • ·         Wyden second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578,  to provide that natural resources and building supplies may be exempted.  (#591)
    • ·         Wyden second-degree amendment to Durbin amendment #578, to provide that such legislation may require no increase in State sales taxes before 2023. (#592)
    • ·         Johnson (SD) amendment to establish a scorekeeping rule to ensure that increases in guarantee fees of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac shall not be used to offset provisions that increase the deficit. (#593) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • ·         Sanders amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to the Older Americans Act of 1965, which may include congregate and home-delivered meals programs, or other assistance to low-income seniors. (#594) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • ·         Franken amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to community bank and small institution regulations, including Basel III capital standards. (#595)
    • ·         Cardin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to invest in surface transportation projects. (#596)
    • ·         Scott amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to the prohibition of taxpayer dollars and resources being used to automatically deduct union dues from the pay of Federal employees. (#597) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 43 – 56.
    • ·         Hoeven amendment to ensure funds are available in fiscal year 2014 for the National Science Foundation’s Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) Program and to provide an offset. (#598)
    • ·         Hoeven amendment to ensure funds are available in fiscal year 2014 for the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s HOME Investment Partnership Program and to provide an offset. (#599)
    • ·         Ayotte amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund for the improvement of the ground-based missile defense system of the United States to better defend against ballistic missile threats from the Middle East. (#600)
    • ·         Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to eliminate corporate welfare. (#601)
    • ·         Cruz amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to prevent the Federal regulation of the size and quantity of food and beverages. (#602)
    • ·         Ayotte amendment to eliminate wasteful spending on the essential air service program and airport improvement grants for rural airports. (#603)
    • ·         Wicker amendment to reduce budget authority for Function 800 for the purpose of eliminating the Office of the Financial Research. (#604)
    • ·         Wicker amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to reform Federal employee retirement programs. (#605)
    • ·         Menendez amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide funding for the purposes of embassy or diplomatic security. (#606)
    • ·         Whitehouse second-degree amendment to Blunt #261, to ensure that any revenues resulting from a Federal carbon tax or fee are returned to the American people. (#607)
    • ·         Boozman amendment to create a point of order against legislation relating to expanding the workforce of the Environmental Protection Agency to enforce regulations. (#608)
    • ·         Cochran amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to health care for low-income populations. (#609)
    • ·         Cochran amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to improving or delaying regulations promulgated by the Department of Health and Human Services that reduce access to health care. (#610)
    • ·         Gillibrand amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to presumptive benefits coverage for exposure to Agency Orange for Vietnam veterans who served in the territorial seas of the Republic of Vietnam. (#611)
    • ·         Bennet amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to address health care access problems in rural areas, which may include access to primary care and outpatient services, hospitals, or an adequate supply of providers in the workforce. (#612
    • ·         Kirk amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to sanctions with respect to Iran. (#613)
    • ·         Sessions amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to achieve savings by prohibiting illegal immigrants or illegal immigrants granted legal status from qualifying for federally subsidized health care. (#614) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 43 – 56.
    • ·         Baucus amendment to improve the deficit-neutral reserve fund for America’s servicemembers and veterans. (#615)
    • ·         Wicker amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to ensuring Federal green building policies are based on the best available science, do not arbitrarily discriminate against products or source materials from the United States, and achieve cost-effective savings in energy and water use without raising new revenue. (#616)
    • ·         Wicker amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to reforming the management of natural resources on Federal land and waters to create jobs, further reduce dependence on OPEC imports, and protect the environment. (#617)
    • ·         Wyden amendment to provide for the enforcement of the trade remedy laws of the United States. (#618) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • ·         Menendez amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to helping homeowners and small businesses mitigate against flood loss. (#619) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • ·         Manchin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to upholding Second Amendment rights and prohibiting the establishment of a national firearm registry. (#620)
    • ·         Manchin amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to strengthen American infrastructure. (#621)
    • ·         Boxer amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to protecting the interests of the United States in making a decision relating to the Keystone XL pipeline. (#622) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 33 – 66.
    • ·         Rubio amendment to express the sense of the Senate on underutilized facilities of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and their potential use. (#623) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • ·         Johanns amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to restore families’ health care flexibility by repealing the $2,500 federal cap on flexible spending accounts and the requirement that individuals obtain a prescription from a physician before purchasing over-the-counter drugs with their own flexible spending account or health savings account dollars in order to safeguard families’ capacity to plan ahead for the rising cost of care, make their own health care decisions, and ensure children who have special needs can receive adequate care. (#624) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • ·         Johanns amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to restore families’ health care flexibility by repealing the $2,500 federal cap on flexible spending accounts and the requirement that individuals obtain a prescription from a physician before purchasing over-the-counter drugs with their own flexible spending account or health savings account dollars in order to safeguard families’ capacity to plan ahead for the rising cost of care, make their own health care decisions, and ensure children who have special needs can receive adequate care. (#625)
    • ·         Johanns amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to restore families’ health care flexibility by repealing the $2,500 federal cap on flexible spending accounts and the requirement that individuals obtain a prescription from a physician before purchasing over-the-counter drugs with their own flexible spending account or health savings account dollars in order to safeguard families’ capacity to plan ahead for the rising cost of care, make their own health care decisions, and ensure children who have special needs can receive adequate care. (#626)
    • ·         Hatch amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to protect Medicare’s guaranteed benefits and provide future beneficiaries health care options like those available to Members of Congress. (#627)
    • ·         Vitter amendment to save billions in lowered prescription drug costs by stopping anti-competitive pay-for-delay deals between pharmaceutical and generic drug corporations that stall generic drugs to market. (#628)
    • ·         Grassley amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to respecting the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens while providing truly meaningful solutions to the issue of gun violence. (#631)
    • Fisher amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to protect women’s access to health care, including primary and preventive care, in a manner consistent with protecting rights of conscience. (#630)  Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 44 – 55.    ·
      ·
    • Whitehouse amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to ensuring that all revenue from a fee on carbon pollution is returned to the American people. (#646) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 41 – 58
    • Menendez amendment to call for a comprehensive approach for wage index reform. (#651) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 49 – 50.
    • Hoeven amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to increases in aid for tribal education programs, including the Tribally Controlled Postsecondary Career and Technical Institutions Program administered by the Department of Education. (#655) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Kirk amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to sanctions with respect to Iran. (#671) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Murkowski amendment to permit a deficit-neutral reserve fund to provide assistance for fishery disasters declared during 2012. (#672) Agreed to in Senate by Unanimous Consent.
    • Lee amendment to create a point of order against legislation that would further restrict the right of law-abiding Americans to own a firearm. (#673) Ruled out of order by the chair.
    • Vitter amendment to end “Too Big To Fail” subsidies or funding advantage for Wall Street mega-banks (over $500 billion in total assets). (#689) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 99 – 0.
    • Warner amendment to repeal or reduce the estate tax, but only if done in a fiscally responsible way. (#693) Agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 80 – 19.
    • Merkley amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to facilitate the criminal prosecutions of financial institutions operating in the United States, regardless of size. (#696) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Cruz amendment to create a point of order against any legislation that would provide taxpayer funds to the United Nations while any member nation forces citizens or residents of that nation to undergo involuntary abortions. (#702) Not agreed to in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 38 – 61.
    • Menendez amendment to address the eligibility criteria for certain undocumented immigrant individuals with respect to certain health insurance plans. (#705) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
    • Leahy amendment to establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund to ensure that the United States will not negotiate or support treaties that violate Americans’ Second Amendment rights under the Constitution of the United States. (#710) Agreed to in Senate by Voice Vote.
     
  • Sunset Daily 11:30 AM on March 17, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , ,   

    Sustainable Sundays: There are THREE (3) Budgets Laid Out For the People; Ironically, the ONE that even the RNC pollsters voted for, let alone what the Dems like the most, etc….is the ONLY one not being discussed i any way: 

    Budget of the Congressional Progressive Caucus
    Fiscal Year 2012

    Read the People’s Budget

    Read The Technical Analysis by the Economic Policy Institute (External Link)

    Read And Share The One-Page Handout

    Presupuesto del Pueblo (Español)

    The People’s Budget eliminates the deficit in 10 years, puts Americans back to work and restores our economic competitiveness. The People’s Budget recognizes that in order to compete, our nation needs every American to be productive, and in order to be productive we need to raise our skills to meet modern needs.

    Our Budget Eliminates the Deficit and Raises a $31 Billion Surplus In Ten Years 
    Our budget protects Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid and responsibly eliminates the deficit by targeting its main drivers: the Bush Tax Cuts, the wars overseas, and the causes and effects of the recent recession.

    Our Budget Puts America Back to Work & Restores America’s Competitiveness
    • Trains teachers and restores schools; rebuilds roads and bridges and ensures that users help pay for them
    • Invests in job creation, clean energy and broadband infrastructure, housing and R&D programs

    Our Budget Creates a Fairer Tax System
    • Ends the recently passed upper-income tax cuts and lets Bush-era tax cuts expire at the end of 2012
    • Extends tax credits for the middle class, families, and students
    • Creates new tax brackets that range from 45% starting at $1 million to 49% for $1 billion or more
    • Implements a progressive estate tax
    • Eliminates corporate welfare for oil, gas, and coal companies; closes loopholes for multinational corporations
    • Enacts a financial crisis responsibility fee and a financial speculation tax on derivatives and foreign exchange

    Our Budget Protects Health
    • Enacts a health care public option and negotiates prescription payments with pharmaceutical companies
    • Prevents any cuts to Medicare physician payments for a decade

    Our Budget Safeguards Social Security for the Next 75 Years
    • Eliminates the individual Social Security payroll cap to make sure upper income earners pay their fair share
    • Increases benefits based on higher contributions on the employee side

    Our Budget Brings Our Troops Home
    • Responsibly ends our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to leave America more secure both home and abroad
    • Cuts defense spending by reducing conventional forces, procurement, and costly R&D programs

    Our Budget’s Bottom Line
    Deficit reduction of $5.6 trillion
    • Spending cuts of $1.7 trillion
    • Revenue increase of $3.9 trillion
    • Public investment $1.7 trillion

    Support for the People’s Budget

    President Bill Clinton

    “The most comprehensive alternative to the budgets passed by the House Republicans and recommended by the Simpson-Bowles Commission

    “Does two things far better than the antigovernment budget passed by the House: it takes care of older Americans and others who need help; and much more than the House plan, or the Simpson-Bowles plan, it invests a lot our tax money to get America back in the future business”

    Paul Krugman

    “genuinely courageous”

    “achieves this without dismantling the legacy of the New Deal”

    Dean Baker

    “if you want a serious effort to balance the budget, here it is.”

    Jeffrey Sachs

    “A bolt of hope…humane, responsible, and most of all sensible”

    Robert Reich

    “modest and reasonable”

    The Economist

    “Courageous”

    “Mr Ryan’s plan adds (by its own claims) $6 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, but promises to balance the budget by sometime in the 2030s by cutting programmes for the poor and the elderly. The Progressive Caucus’s plan would (by its own claims) balance the budget by 2021 by cutting defence spending and raising taxes, mainly on rich people.”

    The New Republic

    “…something that’s gotten far too little attention in this debate. The most fiscally responsible plan seems to be neither the Republicans’ nor the president’s. It’s the Congressional Progressive Caucus plan…”

    The Washington Post

    “It’s much more courageous to propose taxes on the rich and powerful than spending cuts on the poor and disabled.”

    Rachel Maddow

    “Balances the budget 20 years earlier than Paul Ryan even tries to”

    The Guardian

    “the most fiscally responsible in town… would balance the books by 2021“

    The Nation

    the strongest rebuke…to the unconscionable ‘Ryan Budget’ for FY 2012.”

    Center for American Progress

    “once again put[s] requiring more sacrifice from the luckiest among us back on the table”

    Economic Policy Institute

    “National budget policy should adequately fund up-front job creation, invest in long-term economic growth, reform the tax code, and put the debt on a sustainable path while protecting the economic security of low-income Americans and growing the middle class. The proposal by the Congressional Progressive caucus achieves all of these goals.”

    The Washington Post

    “The Congressional Progressive Caucus plan wins the fiscal responsibility derby thus far.”

    Rolling Stone

    “This is more than a fantasy document. It’s sound policy.”

    Forbes

    “instead of gutting programs for the poor like Medicaid and Medicare, food stamps, and the new healthcare law, the People’s Budget focuses on cuts in defense. It also doesn’t scrap new financial regulations designed to at least partly stave off another massive financial collapse like the one that put us in this mess in the first place.”

     
  • Sunset Daily 6:14 PM on March 8, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , Federal Aviation Administration, FOOD SAFETY AND INSPECTION SERVICE, , National Nuclear Security Administration, SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES ADMINISTRATION, U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION   

    Think Progress: The 32 Dumbest And Most Devastating Sequester Cuts 

    With Congress unable to reach a deal to avert the indiscriminate spending cuts put in place in the Budget Control Act of 2011, President Obama on Friday signed an order authorizing the government to begin canceling $85 billion from federal accounts for this fiscal year.

    As Obama said during a press conference yesterday, “This is not going to be a apocalypse, I think as some people have said. It’s just dumb. And it’s going to hurt. It’s going to hurt individual people and it’s going to hurt the economy overall.” In a 83-page letter to House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), the Office of Management and Budget details the specific reductions each government program will face. Here are the dumbest and most painful cuts:

    Health care

    $20 million cut from the Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Programs
    $10 million cut from the World Trade Center Health Program Fund
    $168 million cut from Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
    $75 million cut from the Aging and Disability Services Programs

    Housing

    $199 million cut from public housing
    $96 million cut from Homeless Assistance Grants
    $17 million cut from Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS
    $19 million cut from Housing for the Elderly
    $175 million cut from Low Income Home Energy Assistance

    Disaster and Emergency

    $928 million cut from FEMA’s disaster relief money
    $6 million cut from Emergency Food and Shelter
    $70 million cut from the Agricultural Disaster Relief Fund at USDA
    $61 million cut from the Hazardous Substance Superfund at EPA
    $125 million cut from the Wildland Fire Management
    $53 million cut from Salaries and Expenses at the Food Safety and Inspection Service

    Obamacare

    $13 million cut from the Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan Program (Co-ops)
    $57 million cut from the Health Care Fraud and Abuse Control
    $51 million cut from the Prevention and Public Health Fund
    $27 million cut from the State Grants and Demonstrations
    $44 million cut from the Affordable Insurance Exchange Grants program

    Education

    $633 million cut from the Department of Education’s Special Education programs
    $184 million cut from Rehabilitation Services and Disability Research
    $71 million cut from administration at the Office of Federal Student Aid
    $116 million cut from Higher Education
    $86 million cut from Student Financial Assistance

    Immigration

    $512 million cut from Customs and Border Protection
    $17 million cut from Automation Modernization, Customs and Border Protection
    $20 million cut from Border Security Fencing, Infrastructure, and Technology

    Security

    $79 million cut from Embassy Security, Construction, and Maintenance
    $604 million cut from National Nuclear Security Administration
    $232 million cut from the Federal Aviation Administration
    $394 million cut from Defense Environmental Cleanup

    Republicans, who refused to raise any additional revenue to avoid the budget cuts, have described the reductions as “modest” a “homerun” and something that “needs to happen” in order to “get this economy rolling again.”

    The latest projections from the Congressional Budget Office show that the nation’s deficits haveshrunk by trillions of dollars, and the debt is close to being stabilized as a percentage of the economy. Meanwhile, budget cuts have already reduced spending by $1.5 trillion and even with the revenue included in the fiscal cliff deal, the ratio of cuts to revenue stands at an unbalanced3 to 1.

     
  • Sunset Daily 11:54 AM on March 6, 2013 Permalink  

    Democracy Now! 

    Democracy Now! Friday, February 11, 2011 - Democracy Now!The national, daily, independent, award-winning news program hosted by journalists Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez. 

    Democracy Now!

    Watch Now or At Any Time at the S2e TV Network! Go To Democracy Now!

     
  • Sunset Daily 5:49 PM on March 3, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , Charles M Schulz, Charlie Brown, Chuck Brown, , , Metaphor, Peanut,   

    OMG…NEW RULES: Please stop using the new GOP catch phrase that the POTUS has somehow “Moved The Goal Posts…” as your next talking point…but besides it…that makes no sense anyway; i think u mean the lucy pulling the ball away from Charlie Brown metaphor… 

    The President has now “Moved The Goal Posts…” as the brand new talking point…but forget about it anyway……that makes no sense to move goal posts. No one ever moves the goal posts and its only been done one time in the history of the NFL….i think it has but anyway, I also think u dumb asses mean the lucy pulling the ball away from Charlie Brown metaphor….

    After all at first in 2008, we had to deal with ONLY just a few of those bad Apples…before kicking the can down the road…over the fiscal cliff…to the sequester….after now, they MOVED THE GODDAM GOAL POSTS….

    BTW, that was the dems analogy or metaphor they used last summer, but again, it was the real one with lucy moving the ball when Charlie Brown tried to kick it…besides, who moves the goal posts anyway? That makes zero sense in the real world….tools…

     
  • Sunset Daily 12:34 PM on March 3, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , Environmental impact statement, , , ,   

    Sustainable Sundays: Sequester Cuts Threaten National Parks, Shell Pulls Out of Arctic Drilling This Summer, California’s Draft Fracking Rules Among Weakest in Nation, Think Progress’ 8 Inspiring Things That Happened Since Trayvon Martin Was Tragically Killed One Year Ago Today and more on Sustainable Sundays! 


    Sustainable Sundays

    Weekly E-Newsletter for the Sustainable Action Network (SAN)


    March 3, 2013

    Shell Pulls Out of Arctic Drilling This Summer
    California’s Draft Fracking Rules Among Weakest in Nation
    Poll: Americans Connect Population With Wildlife Extinctions, Climate Crisis
    State Department released a new environmental impact statement for the pipeline.
    Think Progress’ 8 Inspiring Things That Happened Since Trayvon Martin Was Tragically Killed One Year Ago Today
    How Republicans Plan To Rig The Next Presidential Election!
    Sequester Cuts Threaten National Parks
    Build On Our 757 Agreement
    ASPCA’s Pet Of The Week and True Tails of a Pet Sitter Blog!

    Featured National Park

    Channel Islands National Park


    Shell Pulls Out of Arctic Drilling This Summer

    Bearded sealGreat news for the Arctic, polar bears and other creatures of the Far North: Shell Oil has announced it won’t drill in Alaska’s Beaufort or Chukchi seas this summer. Wednesday’s announcement follows a series of mishaps for Shell in the Arctic, including one of its drilling rigs running aground earlier this year.

    The Center for Biological Diversity and allies have been pushing for years to stop drilling in the Arctic ocean, home to polar bears and other imperiled creatures that would be devastated by an oil spill. More than a million people sent messages to President Obama last year urging him not to allow Arctic drilling. Shell began exploratory drilling operations last summer but was beset by a series of mishaps.

    “Although Shell calls this simply a ‘pause’ in its plans for Arctic drilling, we think it ought to be a permanent stop,” said Rebecca Noblin, the Center’s Alaska director. “Drilling in the Arctic can never be made safe for polar bears, whales and ice seals or the fragile ecosystems where they live. President Obama ought to use the opportunity to rethink his support for Arctic drilling and take if off the table forever.”

    Coincidentally, Wednesday was also International Polar Bear Day. What a great way to celebrate.

    Read more in The New York Times.


    California’s Draft Fracking Rules Among Weakest in Nation

    Fracking rigAs oil companies gear up for a hydraulic fracturing boom in California, state regulators have proposed industry-friendly fracking regulations that would do little to protect the state’s air, water and wildlife from pollution. The Center for Biological Diversity, in comments submitted this week, is pressing officials to recognize that the draft fracking rules fail to protect the public and fall far short of legal requirements.

    In a boisterous public meeting in Los Angeles earlier this month, the Center’s Kassie Siegel told California officials that their proposal would not allow for a real assessment of the impacts of fracking, or for compliance with the California Environmental Quality Act. The state’s proposal to exempt fracking with diesel from the state’s Underground Injection Control Program would also violate the federal Safe Drinking Water Act. The federal government has already criticized California’s Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources for not doing enough to protect state water from oil industry pollution.

    The Center also pointed out other fatal flaws in the draft regulations and urged state officials to replace the extraordinarily weak regulatory proposal with a simple prohibition on fracking.

    Read more about Natural Gas.



    Poll: Americans Connect Population With Wildlife Extinctions, Climate Crisis

    Florida pantherA new national poll commissioned by the Center for Biological Diversity found that a majority of Americans – 60 percent – believe the world’s growing human population is driving wildlife species toward extinction; 57 percent say human population is making climate change worse. A majority of Americans (54 percent) also say stabilizing the human population will protect the environment.

    The poll, conducted by Public Policy Polling last weekend, also found that 60 percent believe our society has a “moral responsibility” to address wildlife extinctions in the face of a growing population. That’s important vindication for the work the Center’s been doing for years highlighting the connection between population growth and wildlife declines and other environmental problems.

    “It’s now more clear than ever that Americans are concerned about the toll that human population growth is having on wildlife and the planet,” said Jerry Karnas, population campaign director at the Center. “Population is clearly a driving factor in so many of our environmental issues today, whether it’s sprawling development crowding out Florida panthers and sea turtles, loss of wild habitat for San Joaquin kit foxes in California or the climate crisis pushing polar bears and ice seals toward extinction. It’s heartening to see that most Americans understand these connections and don’t want to see them ignored.”

    Read more about the poll in an op-ed from Jerry in The Daily Beast the share it on Facebook and Twitter.


    Yesterday Time Magazine declared that Keystone had become the Stonewall and the Selma of the climate movement — and today we got a reminder of just how tough those fights were, and how tough this one will be.

    On a Friday afternoon, with Secretary of State John Kerry half a world away and D.C. focused on the budget fight, the State Department released a new environmental impact statement for the pipeline. Like the last such report, it found that approving a 800,000 barrel-a-day fuse to one of the planet’s biggest carbon bombs was “unlikely to have a substantial impact” on the tar sands or the climate.

    That, in a word, is nonsense — some of our most important climate scientists in the U.S. have written the State Department to explain exactly how dangerous Keystone is. Just yesterday Europe’s top climate diplomat pointed out that it would send a truly terrible signal to the rest of the world.

    President Obama will be making a decision in a few short months. I won’t lie: today’s report makes the odds look even tougher — and the power of the fossil fuel lobby hasn’t waned one bit.

    But I’m reminded that the last time the State Department issued an environmental impact statement about the pipeline, we were just beginning this fight. That day in 2011, 50 people were arrested at the White House during the very first wave of protests against the pipeline.

    This time around we’re tens of thousands of people stronger, and once again, I think we are just beginning to fight.

    In these next months we need to send a signal to the White House that we’re not standing down. There are two things I think we should begin working on immediately.

    First — since it’s clear that the polite but firm warnings of our top climate scientists aren’t being heard –anytime that the President or Secretary of State Kerry appears in public, it’s crucial that we let them know that we won’t accept this pipeline or the damage it will do to our climate. We need a team of rapid responders coast-to-coast who can turn around with 24 hours notice and raise a ruckus at these events when we find out about them.

    If you can be on call to respond quickly when they visit near you, let us know by adding your name here.

    I should also say that with our global network, both President Obama and Secretary Kerry can expect to hear from folks when they head abroad as well.

    Second, we need to raise the heat this spring and summer. Significantly. To get a jump on the season, 350.org and our allies will be hosting a massive day of action and training at venues across the country in May. It will be the first muster for the grassroots army we hope will fan out across the nation this summer, and a unified statement of our intention to fight this pipeline.

    If you’re keen to get involved, click here to add your name as well and we’ll get in touch about how to make it happen

    Even as we stick it to the pipeline, we’re going on offense as well, with a student-led divestment campaign that grows by the day (and increasingly moves off campus to city governments and faith communities too), and a Global Power Shift gathering this June in Turkey to gather young leaders across the globe.

    I don’t know how this will all go down — only that it won’t go down easily. After watching Arctic sea ice practically disappear last summer, and Superstorm Sandy hit New York, I can also tell you that this is a key moment for our planet, and your role in it will be remembered for a long, long time — as will the President’s.

    Here’s how Time put it yesterday: “There are many climate problems a President can’t solve, but Keystone XL isn’t one of them. It’s a choice between Big Oil and a more sustainable planet.” As with those historic moments at Stonewall or Selma, “The right answer isn’t always somewhere in the middle.”

    Thanks for all you’ve done, and thanks for all you’ll do.


    Think Progress’ 8 Inspiring Things That Happened Since Trayvon Martin Was Tragically Killed One Year Ago Today

    One year ago today, Trayvon Martin — an unarmed 17-year-old boy on his way home from 7-11 — was shot and killed by George Zimmerman. The murder trial is scheduled to begin this June. A separate hearing may be held in April to determine whether Florida’s controversial “Stand Your Ground” law gives Zimmerman immunity.

    While nothing can make up for the events of February 26, 2012, many people have responded to the tragedy with compassion, courage and strength. Here are some of the most inspiring things that have happened over the last year.

    1. 192 colleagues of Trayvon Martin’s mother donated 1,362 hours of their vacation time so she could grieve.

    “Sybrina Fulton, who has worked at the Miami-Dade County housing authority for 23 years, collected $40,825 worth of donated vacation time, county records show… the Miami-Dade County Commission passed a resolution sponsored by Bruno Barreiro, Barbara Jordan and Jose “Pepe” Diaz to allow county employees to donate vacation time to Fulton…Records show 192 county employees gave Fulton some of their hours” [Miami Herald, 5/12/2012]

    2. Sanford, Florida has a new police chief who has pledged to finally address “long-standing racial tensions between the police department and the African-American community.”

    The police chief who decided not to charge George Zimmerman was fired. [ABC7, 2/18/2013]

    3. Dozens of major companies ended their support for ALEC, the right-wing group who championed “Stand Your Ground” laws.

    The companies that ended their support for the American Legislative Exchange Council include “Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Kraft, McDonalds, Wendy’s, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Procter & Gamble, Amazon.com, Wal-Mart, Johnson & Johnson, Dell Computers, Best Buy, General Motors and Walgreens.” ALEC was also forced to end it’s “Public Safety and Election Task Force,” which advocated for “Stand Your Ground” laws around the country. At least 39 lawmakers have also ended their association with ALEC.[ThinkProgress, 4/17/2012; ThinkProgress, 8/7/2012; ThinkProgress, 5/18/2012]

    4. Thousands of people peacefully gathered in Sanford, Florida to demand justice for Trayvon Martin.

    [News 10, 3/22/2012]

    5. A United States Congressman went on the floor of the House of Representatives in a hoodie to show solidarity with Trayvon.

    Illionis Rep. Bobby Rush said, “Racial profiling has to stop Mr. Speaker. Just because someone wears a hoodie does not make them a hoodlum.” After delivering a rousing speech, he was escorted from the floor for violating decorum. [NBC News, 3/28/2012]

    6. Legislation to repeal “Stand Your Ground” laws was introduced in four states.

    The law was cited by the police as the reason Zimmerman was not arrested for weeks after Martin was killed. [Yahoo, 1/26/2013]

    7. Students at Howard University produced this video to highlight the racial profiling of young black men.

    “All young black men are not suspicious. We don’t deserve to be harassed, murdered, prosecuted or denied the protections of the justice system all because America believes that we are suspicious… Some of us have already and will eventually change the world. All are not suspicious.”

    8. President Obama spoke out about Trayvon Martin in the Rose Garden.

    “My main message is to the parents: If I had a son he’d look like Trayvon. I think they are right to expect that all of us as Americans are going to take this with the seriousness it deserves.” [3/23/2012]

    By Judd Legum (Think Progress)

    Learn More »


    How Republicans Plan To Rig The Next Presidential Election!


    Sequester Cuts Threaten National Parks

    Renewing Our National Park PromiseBy now, I’m sure you know just how serious the situation is for our national parks due to the sequester cuts which will go into effect later today. I know you are as concerned as we are about this. Below is an NPCA press release with more information. Please help us do everything we can in the days ahead to protect our national parks from these damaging cuts.


    Battle of the Climate Process

    Coal-fired power plantWe have been on the front lines of the fight against global warming — and on front pages, too — for years now with some of the country’s most innovative legal, policy and grassroots campaigns to save the globe from irreversible climate catastrophe. Last year we started our Clean Air Cities campaign, which urges cities to sign formal resolutions calling on the Obama administration and the Environmental Protection Agency to use the Clean Air Act to make dramatic reductions in greenhouse gas pollution; we’ve already signed on 40 cities, including Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Seattle, Miami and Nashville. We’ll grow that number substantially in 2013.

    Our Climate Law Institute will continue with our other pioneering climate work, including to save the Arctic from oil drilling, to stop dirty fuel-extraction methods like oil and tar sands development and fracking, to improve fuel economy, to protect warming-threatened species under the Endangered Species Act, and more. So stay tuned to find out what new tricks we have up our sleeves; we’re not giving it all away yet.

    Learn about our work at the Climate Law Institute.


    ASPCA Pet Of The Week
    American Bulldog mix Cupid lives to love, despite all she’s been through in her little life. Won’t you be her valentine?She’s waiting for you in NYC!Also, Please visit the Tales Of A Pet Sitter Blog at Any Time and for more Available Animals!

     Sustainable Action Network - Sunset Daily Blog

    Sunset Records - Sunset Urban - Tropical Records - Sunset Connect - Bomb Baby
    Sunset Records Soundtracks - 
    Sunset Strategic Marketing (SSM)
    Sunset Classics & Sunset Jazz Recordings (SC&J) - S2e TV - Sunset Films

    Sustainable Action Network - Sunset Daily Blog

     
  • Sunset Daily 4:50 PM on February 28, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , Martin Bashir, , Sean Hannity,   

    Finally, someone said it! 

    WATCH: 

    Rep. Keith Ellison makes Sean Hannity look foolish.

    WATCH: Keith Ellison vs. Sean Hannity

    Why is right-wing hate monger Michelle Malkin accusing Progressive Caucus Co-Chair Keith Ellison — the first Muslim American in Congress — of waging “verbal Jihad” against FOX‘s Sean Hannity?

    Because Ellison showed guts with an ”utter evisceration of Mr. Hannity on his own broadcast,” according to MSNBC‘s Martin Bashir.

    (If you can’t afford $3, write him a thank-you note here.)
    The National Republican Congressional Committee is also attacking Ellison, and Sean Hannity put out a statement saying, “I mark this night as the beginning of the end for the Obama Democrats.”
    Ellison is more than a typical Democrat. He’s a leading progressive voice in Congress, and that’s why they are attacking him.
    Ellison stood with Alan Grayson on a letter promising to “vote against any and every cut to Medicare, Medicaid, or Social Security benefits.” He fought for the public option. He offered the progressive alternative to Paul Ryan’s budget. And he’s been a partner to the PCCC as we fight to build progressive power in Congress.
     
  • Sunset Daily 11:19 AM on February 28, 2013 Permalink  

    Washington still has “chores” to do regarding our fiscal crisis 

    Nab

    When we were kids we had to finish our chores before going outside to play. The same can’t be said for Washington these days. Apparently, they don’t realize they still have “chores” to do regarding our fiscal crisis because they keep taking breaks.

    Sign the petition telling Congress to stay in Washington and do their jobs!

    Visit The Sustainable Action Network

     
  • Sunset Daily 11:11 AM on February 27, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , , ,   

    President Obama to Meet Congressional Leaders Friday; What are all of them doing today, tonight, tomorrow and tomorrow night? 

    Obama called a meeting withJohn Boehner, Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi and Mitch McConnell…but on fri…not today or tomorrow but on fri…i thinkthats the day after the deadline

    ap obama boehner nt 121231 wblog President Obama to Meet Congressional Leaders FridayPresident Barack Obama, accompanied by House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, speaks to reporters in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Nov. 16, 2012. The  last time the two met in person to discuss government spending was Dec. 13, 2012. (Carolyn Kaster/AP Photo)

    They are finally going to have a meeting.

    A congressional source with direct knowledge of the plans tells me the top four congressional leaders – John Boehner, Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi and Mitch McConnell – will meet with President Obama at the White House Friday to attempt to negotiate a way to avoid the spending cuts that both sides have said should be avoided.

    This meeting – the first one the president has had with Republican leaders to talk about the across-the-board cuts known as the sequester – will come after the cuts actually go into effect (midnight Thursday).

    White House Press Secretary Jay Carney would not confirm the meeting, but the source told ABC News that the White House reached out to the congressional leadership Tuesday afternoon to request the meeting.

    Related: What is Sequestration?

    Watch my Good Morning America report on sequestration:

     
  • Sunset Daily 11:00 AM on February 27, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , Patrick Gaspard, , , ,   

    If Republicans in Congress don’t act by Friday to stop the so-called sequester, there will be far-reaching consequences on our economy. 

    These disastrous consequences are completely avoidable, and the President has a balanced plan to stop the sequester.

    Share the graphic below to make sure your friends know we need to stop the sequester — the more people who spread this information, the better chance we have of convincing Republicans in Congress to avoid these harmful spending cuts:

    Stop the sequesterStop the sequesterStop the sequesterStop the sequester

    Share on Facebook Share on Twitter

    http://my.democrats.org/Stop-the-Sequester

    Visit The Sustainable Action Network

     

     
  • Sunset Daily 7:04 PM on February 25, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: Bobby Jindal, , , , , , Sri Lanka,   

    From Now (w/ Alex Wagner) and issued from WH: Finger pointing 101: How hard will it be to find a sequester solution in less than 1 week? Close to impossible considering the GOP is not on the same page with what solution they want. 

    This is what I wrote on her blog just now…with alex…wagner: Lets see now….I agree that healthcare needs to be slashed but why did we do that obama care if we were gonna chop it 6 months later….and, Is it farm or agriculture…i assume the latter has too many digits but i have no issues cutting the tobacco people, etc….i like this proposal..i am posting it….but i hope this is NOT a negotiation…i dont care about social security….i am way into the tax term…and wait a sec…how does 50 bill on infrastructure equal a cut but dont get me wrong now…i am totally for that one….i want more money spent that way….

    NOW (w Alex wagner) discussed the brewing sequester battle. (http://nbcnews.to/15eZTlN)

     
  • Sunset Daily 11:48 AM on February 24, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , Florida Atlantic University, GEO group, George Zoley, , , , Walnut Grove Youth Correctional Facility   

    And Last of the Sustainable Sundays Presents: (Drum Roll Please….) Florida Atlantic’s Folly: Why GEO Group Should Not Have Naming Rights 

     

    Sometimes the sports world doesn’t just reflect the real world. It mocks our world with a vicious veracity. Recently, we learned that Florida Atlantic University had sold the naming rights to its football field. This isn’t unusual at all, but the company the school chose amongst many suitors certainly was. The stadium will be known as GEO Group Stadium.

    For those who have never heard about—or protested—GEO Group, it is a highly profitable private prison corporation. Governments across the world, from South Africa to the United Kingdom to Australia, pay the GEO Group to take over their jails and run them as privatized, for-profit enterprises.

    In the United States, where the prison population has more than doubled since 1992 and is now the highest in the world, this is known as a growth industry. In many communities, where people of color are victimized by callously punitive laws (promoted by the lobbying arms of for-profit prisons), it’s known as the New Jim Crow. The GEO group is the second largest for-profit prison company in the United States, behind only the Correctional Corporation of America.

    Florida Atlantic University President Mary Jane Saunder gushed over the GEO Group payment of $6 million over the next 12 years for stadium naming rights. She called the GEO Group a “wonderful company” and said the university was “very proud to partner” with it. “This gift is a true representation of the GEO Group’s incredible generosity to FAU and the community it serves,” she said. Given how cash-strapped most universities are, and given how university presidents have increasingly become glorified fundraisers, her joy is unsurprising.

    But fortunately, her acceptance of this money is sparking anger and protest on campus and beyond.

    “It’s startling to see a stadium will be named after [the GEO Group],” Bob Libal, executive director of Grassroots Leaders, told The New York Times. “ It’s like calling something Blackwater Stadium. This is a company whose record is marred by human rights abuses, by lawsuits, by unnecessary deaths of people in their custody and a whole series of incidents that really draw into question their ability to successfully manage a prison facility.”

    Getting the naming rights is part and parcel of an effort by GEO Group CEO (and Florida Atlantic alum) George Zoley to rebrand the corporation as beneficent, as it undergoes a high-profile effort to take over a significant section of Florida’s prison system, the third largest in the United States. The company needs this makeover after being dogged with protests and lawsuits throughout the state on charges that it, as the Palm Beach Post reported, pads its “profits by cutting worker wages, skimping on inmate health care and ignoring safety and sanitation.”

    Undeterred, the GEO Group is looking longingly at Florida’s more than three million undocumented workers, fourth highest in the nation. The future of private prisons may lie in warehousing many of these immigrants. It’s a potential windfall worth billions of dollars to a company that already counts its earning with nine zeroes. And it already has been cashing in on this bonanza, running the Broward Transitional Center for immigrants jailed minor nonviolent offenses or for not having their papers in order.

    Its record at Broward has been scandalous, according to the Sun Sentinel, which reported on an undercover investigation by immigrants that revealed “incidents of substandard or callous medical care, including a woman taken for ovarian surgery and returned the same day, still bleeding, to her cell, and a man who urinated blood for days but wasn’t taken to see a doctor.”

    In Mississippi, the GEO Group also was embroiled in scandal for the way it ran the Walnut Grove Youth Correctional Facility in Mississippi. The Justice Department found that prison personnel engaged in “systemic, egregious and dangerous practices,” including participating in gang fights. Guards and even the warden were allegedy engaging in sex with inmates, the report said, saying such practices were “among the worst that we’ve seen in any facility anywhere in the nation.” A federal judge also called the prison “a cesspool of unconstitutional and inhuman acts and conditions.”

    Six million dollars is a small price to pay for the kind of public relations that would whisk these scandals under the sand. The GEO Group aims to be as Florida as a roseate spoonbill and a glass of orange juice—or make that an orange jumpsuit.

    Students understand this reality and aren’t going to just let it happen without putting up a fight. “The fact that they are locking up people of color and immigrants like my parents is shameful,” says Noor Fawzy, a twenty-two-year-old member of the student government whose parents are Palestinian immigrants. “We don’t want our university to be associated with an entity that is being investigated for human rights abuses.” Other students who have had relatives locked away in GEO facilities, only to emerge with horror stories of mistreatment, are also speaking out.

    It’s long been said that for too many people of color in the state of Florida, your future is confined to either playing football or ending up in the penitentiary. Universities like Florida Atlantic are supposed to represent an alternative to that kind of dystopic state of affairs. Florida Atlantic may go down in history as the school that dropped all pretense and brought the gridiron and the prison together.

    Dave Zirin is the host of Sirius XM Radio’s popular weekly show, “Edge of Sports Radio.” His newest book is “Game Over: How Politics Has Turned the Sports World Upside Down” (The New Press).

    Visit the Sustainable Action Network

     
  • Sunset Daily 11:42 AM on February 24, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , ,   

    Sustainable Sundays Presents: You Guide To The Looming Spending Cuts: Where They Came From And What They Will Mean 

    The United States is rapidly approaching March 1, the date on which the automatic spending cuts put in place by the summer 2011 debt ceiling deal will begin taking effect. There is little indication that Congress will avert the cuts as it did in January, as Republican leaders have thus far been unwilling to negotiate with President Obama and Senate Democrats.

    Congress is currently on recess until next Monday, leaving just five legislative days until the automatic cuts — known as sequestration — will take effect. Here’s a breakdown of why the sequester was created and what it will mean for programs facing cuts and the nation’s overall economic recovery:

    Why the sequester was created. The sequester was a result of the GOP’s wrangling over the debt ceiling in the summer of 2011, when Republican leaders — who had previously passed clean debt increases 19 times under President Bush — demanded spending cuts as the price for averting a costly default. On the brink of default, Congress passed the Budget Control Act, which enacted immediate spending cuts and created a supercommittee tasked with striking a “grand bargain” to reduce the deficit. Republicans walked away from the committee after refusing to consider tax increases on the wealthy, setting sequestration into motion. The sequester, which cuts from both domestic and defense spending, was designed to be painful enough that both sides would negotiate to avert it.

    How to avoid it. The sequester was originally supposed to take effect on January 1, but it was avoided as part of the overall “fiscal cliff” deal that maintained most of the Bush-era tax cuts and enacted spending reductions to offset the first round of automatic cuts. In the past, Republicans offered plans to offset the sequester by cutting more spending, even though deficit reduction efforts have been heavily skewed toward spending cuts to domestic programs already. Democrats have offered multiple proposals that would bring more balance to efforts to reduce the deficit. A plan from the Congressional Progressive Caucus would replace the sequester largely with new revenue, evening the balance of spending cuts and revenue increases in overall deficit reduction efforts. Senate Democrats proposed a plan that reduced the deficit by $110 billion, enough to offset the sequester until next January. Half of the reduction comes from cuts, the other half from tax increases on the wealthy. Republicans, however, have again refused to negotiate over new revenues, even from tax reform that would close corporate loopholes.

    What it will mean. Because its cuts are across-the-board, the sequester will affect most domestic programs. Jobless workers will lose access to unemployment benefits, while safety net programs for women and children and early childhood education programs will face deep cuts. The sequester willcut funding for law enforcement and border security, food safety, airline travel security, Head Start, disaster relief, and health research. Defense programs will also see reductions. These cuts will have broad ramifications for the country’s recovering economy, pushing it down the austere path Europe has followed into second recessions. Independent reports predict that sequestration would reduce economic growth by 0.6 percent over the year while also leading to the loss of 700,000 jobs. The debt limit fight that created the sequester alreadypummeled the recovery, and allowing these spending cuts to take effect would cause even bigger problems. Travis Waldron

    Visit the Sustainable Action Network

     

     
  • Sunset Daily 1:52 PM on February 21, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: John Kiriakou   

    I never tortured anyone… 

    The wrong person is going to jail.


    GRAPHIC: Sign here button

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    A Note to RootsAction members from whistleblower John Kiriakou, who was the first CIA employee to publicly acknowledge an official U.S. policy of torture under George W. Bush’s administration:

    I refused torture training.

    I never tortured anyone, ordered torture, or destroyed the videotapes of it, and I’m certainly not on a book tour glorifying it.

    Those are the people who should be going to jail, not me.

    Please click here to ask Congress to investigate both the real crimes and the treatment of whistleblowers by the Obama administration.

    Thank you!

    Please forward this email widely to like-minded friends.

     
  • Sunset Daily 8:03 AM on February 12, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , Courier-Journal, , , , , , ,   

    Boy, did our investment pay off.

    Thanks to over 3,000 grassroots donors, our TV ad featuring a local gun owner holding Mitch McConnell accountable ran many times in Kentucky and DC.

    And check out the 27 national and local news reports our TV ad generated!

    Together, we’re impacting the national debate — big time! Thanks for joining our campaign for new gun laws, and for being a bold progressive.

    P.S. You can help air the gun ad during the State Of The Union tomorrow! Donate $3 here.


    THE HILL: Progressive group expands ad buy targeting McConnell

    A progressive group attacking Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on gun control is expanding its ad buy through Tuesday after receiving thousands of donations following the initial airing of the ad.

    The ad, launched by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, began airing earlier this week. Within the first 24 hours of its airing, PCCC raised over $25,000 from more than 1,500 small-dollar donations, and it has raised overall $50,000 from more than 3,000 donations since it began.
    That money raised will go towards airing the ad during the upcoming Cardinals basketball game, the Sunday morning political talk shows in Lexington and Louisville, Ky., and to bracket the State of the Union in both Kentucky and Washington, D.C.

    “Thanks to over 3,000 small-dollar donations at GunOwnersForReform.com, we are expanding our TV ad buy in a way that will pressure Mitch McConnell where he’ll feel it most. Thousands of families across Kentucky will tune into the basketball game, the Sunday political talk shows, and the State of the Union address,” said PCCC co-founder Adam Green.

    The ad marked the early launch of what will be one of the nation’s most hotly-contested races. 

    CNN: Progressive group hits McConnell on guns

    A group whose aim is to elect progressive Democrats to Congress released an ad Tuesday hitting Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell for opposing gun control legislation while receiving campaign donations from gun manufacturers.

    The spot, from the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, will run on broadcast and cable television in McConnell’s home state, as well as in Washington, D.C., including on CNN. The group said they would spend $27,000 initially to air the ad for one week.

    It features Rodney Kendrick, a Kentucky gun owner who takes McConnell to task for his opposition to gun control measures like a ban on military-style assault weapons.

    “I was born and raised right here in Kentucky,” Kendrick says in the spot. “I served my country as a marksman and we were trained to use guns safely. It’s unthinkable that guns meant for war could be used on civilians and children. As a gun owner and a veteran, I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands, because I know these guns. I know what they can do.”

    “Sen. Mitch McConnell has taken thousands of dollars from gun manufacturers, and he opposes common sense reforms,” he continued. “Senator McConnell, whose side are you on?”

    McConnell, who is serving his fifth term in the Senate, faces re-election next year, and is hoping to fend off any possible conservative primary challenges. Actress Ashley Judd has been mentioned as a potential Democratic rival.

    Responding to the ad, McConnell’s spokesman Jesse Benton said the minority leader predicted “that protecting Kentucky from President Obama’s gun control agenda would result in a flurry of attack ads from left-wing groups.”

    “It’s no secret to Kentuckians that Leader McConnell is a stalwart supporter of their Second Amendment rights and George Soros funded commercials aren’t going to change that,” he continued.

    LOUISVILLE COURIER-JOURNALAd attacks Sen. Mitch McConnell’s stance on guns

    Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is coming under attack in a new ad for taking money from gun manufacturers and opposing gun safety initiatives.

    The Kentucky Republican recently told potential campaign contributors that President Barack Obama’s effort to enact comprehensive background checks for gun purchasers was a move toward “full-scale confiscation” and “an attempt to gut our Constitution.”

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee is going after McConnell in a new ad that features a gunowner from Berea and his grandson.“Senator McConnell, whose side are you on?”

    Rodney Kendrick asks in the ad, which shows his grandson Mason sitting on his lap.The committee said it is spending $27,700 for at least a one-week ad buy on cable and broadcast outlets in Louisville, Lexington and Washington.

    Kendrick was among the 115,000 people who have signed the committee’s petition at GunOwnersForReform.com that calls on Congress to pass Obama’s plan for background checks and a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines.

    WASHINGTON POST: Pressuring Mitch McConnell on guns

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee is going up with a new ad — in Kentucky, of all places — hitting the Senate Republican leader over gun control, with a focus on the assault weapons ban:
    Is it really possible to sell an assault weapons ban in a deep, deep red state? The spot tries to solve this problem by allowing a veteran to make the case:
    “It’s unthinkable that guns meant for war could be used on civilians and children. As a gun owner and veteran, I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands. Because I know these guns. I know what they can do.”
    Expanding background checks — which the ad alludes to with the suggestion about keeping guns “out of the wrong hands” — probably would be an easier sell than the assault ban. The group also has a Web site touting gun owners for reform.

    WPSD-TV (NBC, Paducah):

    KY WPSD (NBC) covers "Rodney" ad.

    A Washington-based group took to television to attack US Senator Mitch McConnell’s pro-gun record. [Ad begins playing] “Senator McConnell, whose side are you on?” [Ad fades out]. That ad from the Progressive Change Campaign Committee features a Berea resident, Rodney Kendrick, who calls it unthinkable that guns made for war could be used on civilians and children. Kendrick also claims McConnell has taken campaign money from gun manufacturers. McConnell’s campaign manager responded to that ad saying the Senator knew “protecting Kentucky from Obama’s gun control agenda would result in a flurry of attack ads from left-wing groups.”

    WDRB-TV (FOX, Louisville):

    KY WDRB (FOX) covers "Rodney" ad.

    A Washington-based group has begun airing a TV ad in Kentucky that criticizes Mitch McConnell’s pro-gun record. The Progressive Change Campaign Committee says it’s spending an initial $27,000 to run these ads in Lexington, Louisville and Washington. McConnell’s campaign manager said the Senator knew that opposing President Obama’s gun control agenda would open him up to political attacks.

    MSNBC’S ED SHOW:

    MSNBC'S Ed Show covers "Rodney" ad.
     

    A liberal group is attacking Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell in a new television ad over his opposition to gun control measures.

    The group Progressive Change Campaign Committee is launching the commercial, which will air in Kentucky and Washington, D.C. area. It features gun owner and former military marksman Rodney Kendrick from Berea, calling on McConnell to support a ban on assault weapons and background checks on gun purchases.

    “On pretty much every major issue Mitch McConnell sides with his big campaign contributors over everyday people in Kentucky,” PCCC co-founder Adam Green told WFPL. “Right now the gun debate is front and center, and therefore we’re elevating the fact that after the gun industry has spent (hundreds of thousands of dollars) to elect Mitch McConnell. He is opposing the will of the people in Kentucky and basic things like background checks to buy a gun.”

    POLITICO: Group attacking McConnell’s pro-gun record

    A liberal group is airing an ad in Kentucky starting Tuesday attacking Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell for opposing gun control measures while taking campaign donations from gun manufacturers.

    The ad, from the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, features Rodney Kendrick, a veteran and gun owner from Berea, Ky.

    “I was born and raised right here in Kentucky,” Kendrick says in the ad while holding his grandson, Mason, in his lap. “I served my country as a marksman and we were trained to use guns safely. It’s unthinkable that guns meant for war could be used on civilians and children. As a gun owner and a veteran, I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands, because I know these guns. I know what they can do. Senator Mitch McConnell has taken thousands of dollars from gun manufacturers, and he opposes common sense reforms. Senator McConnell, whose side are you on?”

    The ad says McConnell has taken nearly $200,000 from gun manufacturers…The tactic is unusual for deep-red Kentucky, one of the most heavily-armed states in the country. McConnell is up for reelection in 2014…The PCCC also simultaneously released a poll Tuesday from Democratic pollster Public Policy Polling showing 82 percent of Kentuckians backing universal background checks and 50 percent supporting an assault weapons ban.

    ABC NEWS: THE NOTE
     
    PROGRESSIVE GROUP LAUNCHES ADS AGAINST MITCH MCCONELL. The Progressive Change Campaign Committee unveiled a new television ad aimed at Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., featuring a local gun owner shaming McConnell for opposing gun reform while taking money from the gun industry. “As a gun owner and a veteran, I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands, because I know these guns,” says Rodney Kendrick of Berea, Kentucky in the ad. “I know what they can do. Senator Mitch McConnell has taken thousands of dollars from gun manufacturers, and he opposes common sense reforms. Senator McConnell, whose side are you on?” WATCH: http://act.boldprogressives.org/go/13689?t=15&akid=12013.1644153._Zw8sA
     

    FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — A Washington-based group has begun airing a TV ad in Kentucky criticizing U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell’s pro-gun record.

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee said Tuesday it is spending an initial $27,700 to run the ads in Lexington, Louisville and Washington.

    The ad features a Berea resident, Rodney Kendrick, who calls it “unthinkable” that guns meant for war could be used on civilians and children. Kendrick said McConnell has taken campaign money from gun manufacturers, and he asks “Sen. McConnell, whose side are you on?”
    McConnell campaign manager Jesse Benton said the senator knew that “protecting Kentucky from President Obama’s gun control agenda would result in a flurry of attack ads from left-wing groups.”

    Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has come out fiercely against President Obama’s efforts at passing new gun control measures, but now a progressive grassroots group is hitting back against the Republican leader.

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee (PCCC) launched an ad in McConnell’s home state of Kentucky today, slamming him for taking political donations from gun manufacturers and opposing “common sense reforms.”

    “I was born and raised right here in Kentucky. I served my country as a marksman and we were trained to use guns safely,” Kentucky resident Rodney Kendrick says in the ad, with his grandson Mason seated on his lap. “It’s unthinkable that guns meant for war could be used on civilians and children. As a gun owner and a veteran, I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands, because I know these guns. I know what they can do.”

    The ad is running on broadcast and cable in Louisville and Lexington, as well as on cable in Washington, D.C., and should run for at least one week. PCCC is fundraising to air more ads featuring Kentucky gun owners.

    Mr. Obama yesterday took his campaign for reducing gun violence to Minnesota to garner public support, but it’s unclear what measures can pass in Congress. McConnell’s re-election campaign last month sent supporters an email charging that Mr. Obama and Senate Democrats are “coming for your guns.”

     
    Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell knows he is a target of the right for being a party leader and a symbol for the party establishment (and he told Yahoo News as much in an exclusive interview last week.) But some progressives believe the Kentucky Republican’s opposition to gun reform is enough to give Democrats a foothold in McConnell’s 2014 re-election race in his conservative home state..
    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee (PCCC) on Tuesday launched an ad campaign against McConnell over his gun stance.
    “Senator Mitch McConnell has taken thousands of dollars from gun manufacturers, and he opposes common sense reforms. Senator McConnell, whose side are you on?” the ad’s narrator, Kentucky voter Rodney Kendrick, asks in the ad as he holds his young grandson on his lap.
    The ad launched Tuesday with a $27,700 initial buy on broadcast and cable in Louisville, Lexington, and on cable in Washington, D.C., according to the committee.
    The PCCC released polling they commissioned from Democratic firm Public Policy Polling that suggests Kentucky voters support some of the reforms for which McConnell has not issued public support including universal background checks and an assault weapons ban. Eighty-two percent of likely Kentucky voters surveyed by the firm stated support for universal background checks. Thirteen percent opposed. That question’s margin of error was plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.
    The firm also asked about an assault weapons ban and found wide support. Actress Ashley Judd has expressed interest in running for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate but it remains unclear if she is serious about pursuing a campaign.

    USA TODAY: Liberal Group hits McConnell on guns in TV ad

    Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is being targeted by a liberal group in a new TV ad criticizing the Republican’s opposition to gun control.

    “I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands, because I know these guns,” says Rodney Kendrick of Berea, Ky., as he holds his grandson, Mason, in the TV ad. “I know what they can do.”

    The ad by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee (PCCC) also highlights campaign money McConnell, who is up for re-election in 2014, from gun manufacturers. The ad will run on broadcast and cable in Kentucky markets and Washington starting Tuesday.

    PCCC, which counts the election of Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., as one of its victories, commissioned polling by a Democratic-leaning pollster on gun control in Kentucky. The Public Policy Polling survey shows 8 in 10 Kentucky voters support background checks while 50% back an assault weapons ban.

     

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee released an ad Tuesday pressuring Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on gun control.

    “I was born and raised right here in Kentucky. I served my country as a marksman and we were trained to use guns safely. It’s unthinkable that guns meant for war could be used on civilians and children,” says Rodney Kendrick, a Kentucky gun owner, in the ad. “As a gun owner and a veteran, I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands, because I know these guns. I know what they can do. Senator Mitch McConnell has taken thousands of dollars from gun manufacturers, and he opposes common sense reforms.”

    “Senator McConnell, whose side are you on?” asks Kendrick

    The spot is part of a $27,700 campaign on television in Lexington, Ky., and Louisville, Ky., and on cable in Washington.

    McConnell is using President Barack Obama’s push for gun control measures in an apparent attempt to shore up support for his 2014 re-election. A recent call went out toKentuckyians with McConnell saying, “President Obama and his team are doing everything in their power to restrict your constitutional right to keep and bear arms.” A similar fundraising email by McConnell’s campaign said gun owners are “literally surrounded” by “gun-grabbers in the Senate.”

    Despite Kendrick’s plea on the new ad, The Huffington Post’s Sam Stein reported Monday that the assault weapons ban is likely to die in the Senate. Other gun-control measures — a universal background check for firearms sales, a federal trafficking law, and a ban on high-capacity magazines — are likely to be part of a final bill, Stein wrote.
     
    A progressive group is issuing the first television ad in Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.) reelection campaign, attacking McConnell for his opposition to gun control — an issue the group believes, due to new polling, could be a winner even in red Kentucky.
    The ad, launched by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, features Kentuckian Rodney Kendrick addressing the camera with his grandson on his lap, calling it “unthinkable that guns meant for war could be used on civilians and children.”
    “As a gun owner and a veteran, I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands, because I know these guns. I know what they can do,” he says.
    The ad closes with Kendrick asking: “Senator McConnell, whose side are you on?”
    It’s backed by a $27,700 buy and is running on broadcast and cable in  Louisville and Lexington, and on cable in Washington, D.C.
    And the PCCC commissioned polling from Democratic firm Public Policy Polling that indicates Kentuckians do want to see movement on gun control, despite McConnell’s outspoken opposition to the measures proposed by President Obama.
    Eighty-two percent of the likely Kentucky voters polled support background checks “to keep guns out of the wrong hands,” with only 13 percent opposing.
    There is less consensus, however, on banning assault weapons; 50 percent of likely Kentucky voters polled support a ban, while 42 percent oppose one.
    An overwhelming 64 percent of those polled own guns.
    McConnell has been a staunch opponent of gun control, issuing a fundraising email pledging to block the expansion of any gun control measures. He could be facing a challenge from either the right or left going into 2014, and opposition to gun control measures is one way in which he can guard against a contested primary.
    But the PCCC seems to be banking on a belief that the gun control issue, especially at a time when it’s at the forefront of the national conversation, could be a winner for Democrats in Kentucky.
     
    A group called the Progressive Change Campaign Committee is hitting Mitch McConnell this morning with a new ad campaign in both Kentucky and Washington, D.C. It features Kentuckian Rodney Kendrick of Berea and is, well, just watch:
    The initial advertising buy is $27,700 and it’ll appear on MSNBC, CNN and ESPN in Louisville and Lexington.
    They’ve also launched a website called GunOwnersForReform.com and have some new polling data from PPP:

    Do you support or oppose criminal background checks to keep guns out of the wrong hands?

    Support ………………………………………………….. 82%

    Oppose ………………………………………………….. 13%

    Not sure …………………………………………………. 5%

    (Asked of 663 Kentucky likely voters, MOE+/-3.8%:)

    Do you support or oppose banning assault weapons?

    Support ………………………………………………….. 50%

    Oppose ………………………………………………….. 42%

    Not sure …………………………………………………. 8%

    (Asked of 712 Kentucky likely voters, MOE +/-3.7%:)

    Are you a gun owner?

    Yes………………………………………………………… 64%

    No …………………………………………………………. 36%

    (Asked of 1,375 Kentucky likely KY voters, MOE +/-2.6%)

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committe is directly confronting Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on the issue of gun violence in his home state. Starting Tuesday, the group will air a TV spot featuring a Kentucky veteran calling on McConnell to support an assault weapons ban and other firearms reforms.
    “As a gun owner and a veteran, I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands, because I know these guns. I know what they can do,” Rodney Kendrick of Berea, Ky., said in the ad.
    PCCC says the ad will run “on broadcast and cable in Louisville, KY; Lexington, KY; and cable in Washington, DC.” A spokesperson for the group told TPM the initial ad by is $27,700 and lasts one week, “with more ads featuring Kentucky gun owners to come.”
    The spot is part of a larger push PCCC plan to pressure McConnell with a website and pollingfrom the firm PPP showing 82% of Kentuckians favor background checks “to keep guns out of the wrong hands,” in the words of the poll.
    McConnell has said he doubts Congress’ busy schedule will allow a gun bill to move early in the term.

    LEO WEEKLY: New TV ad in KY slams McConnell on assault weapons

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee is up with a new ad in Kentucky targeting Sen. Mitch McConnell for opposing new gun control measures such as banning military style assault weapons. Here’s the ad:

    While a recent C-J poll on gun control did not ask about military style assault weapons, it did find that a majority of Kentuckians favored a number of President Obama’s proposed measures, such as closing the gun show loophole and limiting the size of ammunition clips.

    McConnell’s campaign will now send out an email claiming that Obama’s minions are attacking the senator for not going along with his nefarious (and fictional) scheme to confiscate all of your guns.

    LEO WEEKLY: The rich and fabulous cross-country club catering adventures of Team Mitch

    Shortly after the Progressive Change Campaign Committee released their new TV ad in Kentucky targeting Sen. Mitch McConnell’s refusal to back common sense gun control measures, McConnell’s campaign fired off a statement slamming those wealthy, out-of-state elitists for daring to enter his Bluegrass turf.

    Besides name-dropping the ubiquitous “George Soros” boogeyman, McConnell sought to point out how the group was nothing but outsider moneyed influence, claiming PCCC had only one donor from Kentucky.

    And if you know anything about Addison Mitchell McConnell, you shouldn’t be shocked to find out that this statement was a complete falsehood.

    McConnell’s campaign cited a federal database that only compiles donations over $200, but PCCC would subsequently point out that they actually have raised over 2,000 contributions from their 7,000 members in Kentucky, averaging less than $15 per donation.

    But perhaps McConnell — the PAC-gorged, money-is-speech, king of the corporate-stuffed campaign war chest — has trouble seeing such small donors as “people” that he can identify with? McConnell’s recent Senate campaign filing with the FEC illustrates that fact as well as just about anything.

    McConnell stuffed $715,000 more into his now $7.4 million campaign war chest, full of contributions from out-of-state big donors and corporate PAC money. Of the amount he raised, only just over 1 percent of the donations he brought in were unitemized — those lowly under $200 contributions from so-called “persons”. Of the itemized contributions, twice as many came from donors outside of Kentucky, with $184,000 coming in from PACs all stationed outside of the Bluegrass.

    A further examination of his campaign distributions shows that McConnell spent much of those three months criss-crossing the country, wining and dining wealthy donors.

    McConnell’s campaign racked up large hotels bills as it traveled to San Diego, Seattle, Atlanta, and Chicago, spending anywhere from $669 to $1,048 a pop at Romney-esque locales. It also paid out some impressive catering bills for his bourbon-defiling, Manhattan-sipping clientele.

    His campaign paid Hollywood player Bruce Ramer $3,100 for catering and rental space to woo the Ashley Judd crowd in Beverly Hills. It also paid catering bills of $6,509 at The Olde Farm in Bristol, VA, $828 to Undine in Boston, $677 to the Duquesne Club in Pittsburgh, $765 to The Chicago Club in Obama City, $770 to the Chops Lobster Bar in Atlanta, and $741 to Mangia Caterers in Bloomberg’s gun-grabbing Big Apple. McConnell also spent well over $10,000 of catering bills inside the Beltway to Belle Haven and Bon Vivant Catering, perhaps feeding the good folks at pharmaceutical giant Amgen, whose PAC threw a fundraiser in his honor on Dec. 17 in DC.

    This Amgen fundraiser just happened to be little over a week before the fiscal cliff compromise deal was reached — which McConnell himself helped broker — and also just happened to give Amgen a gigantic $500 million secret windfall. Because giant Big Pharma corporations are “people” too, right?

    Speaking of “people,” McConnell’s former chief of staff Hunter Bates just happened to give $3,000 to McConnell between the Amgen fundraiser and McConnell’s fiscal cliff deal… and Bates just happened to be Amgen’s DC lobbyist in charge of monitoring “budget discussions surrounding sequestration and fiscal cliff issues and their potential impact on healthcare.” All coincidences, we’re sure, as stuff as seedy-looking as this has neverhappened before around McConnell.

    Nevertheless, it’s certainly a glamorous life of influence among the wealthy and elite job creators of others states for Mitch McConnell, which perhaps is fitting for a man who has turned a profession as a career politician into a personal net worth of $27 million. God forbid those lowly “people” who don’t have over $200 to give to the political machine ever threaten the precious career of our Senate minority leader.

    ROLL CALL: Liberal Group Launches Ad Targeting McConnell on Gun Control

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee, a liberal third-party group, began airing an ad Tuesday in Kentucky targeting Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on gun control.

    “As a gun owner and a veteran, I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands, because I know these guns. I know what they can do,” an older man says in the ad. “Senator Mitch McConnell has taken thousands of dollars from gun manufacturers, and he opposes common sense reforms. Senator McConnell, whose side are you on?”

    CHANNEL 2 (Kentucky): Pure Politics

    A national progressive group pushing for gun control is slamming U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell in an ad for opposing gun control measures while taking nearly $200,000 in donations from gun manufactures.

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee launched the ad featuring a Kentucky native and veteran with his grandson voicing his support for an assault weapons ban and asking Senator McConnell “Whose side are you on?”

    National media organizations from the Washington Post to the Huffington Post reported on the ad, which is airing in Kentucky markets and Washington, D.C.

    Page One also reported the story with poll numbers put out by the group that show 50 percent of Kentuckians are in favor of an assault weapons ban, and 64 percent of those polled are gun owners. The poll was conducted by Public Policy Polling out of North Carolina.

    PUBLIC CAMPAIGN: Round up

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee was out yesterday with a TV spot in Kentucky featuring a Kentucky veteran criticizing Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell for opposing gun reform, while taking nearly $200,000 in campaign contributions from gun interests.

    The McConnell camp fired back crowing that only one Kentuckian gave PCCC over $200, apparently forgetting that unitemized, small donors count. PCCC says 2,000 Kentuckians contributed under $200. Kentucky’s LEO Weekly reports that McConnell might have forgotten that donors at this size exist after spending the past three months criss-crossing the country for big money fundraisers from Beverly Hills and Chicago to the December 17 D.C. fundraiser for Amgen just days before McConnell negotiated the fiscal cliff deal that included a $500 million giveaway to the company. Only one percent of McConnell’s contributions were under $200 in the past three months.

    CURRENT TV:

    Current TV covers "Rodney" ad.

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee is going after Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on guns in a new TV ad. [Ad begins playing] “As a gun owner and veteran, I support the plan to ban assault weapons and keep guns out of the wrong hands. Because I know these guns, I know what they can do.”

    THE NATION: Does Mitch McConnell’s Pro-Gun Stance Threaten His 2014 Chances?

    You may have heard that there’s a tough pro-gun control ad up in Kentucky this week targeting Senator Mitch McConnell, who faces re-election in 2014. The powerful spot features a veteran speaking to camera with his grandson on his lap. The man, a Kentucky resident named Rodney, calls for an assault weapons ban and background checks—but the thrust of the ad is to depict McConnell’s anti-gun law stance as a direct byproduct of his gun industry funding. Says Rodney: “Senator Mitch McConnell is funded by the gun industry, and he opposes common-sense reforms. Senator McConnell, whose side are you on?”

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee is behind the ad, and they released some polling earlier this week as well, showing that 82 percent of Kentuckians favor criminal background checks for gun owners (versus 13 opposed) and 50 percent favored an assault weapons ban (versus 42 opposed). It was conducted by Public Policy polling, rated by Fordham University as the most accurate pollster in 2012.

    Now, in more PPP polling results released first to The Nation, we see that hitting McConnell for his gun industry backing is indeed fertile territory in Kentucky:

    Who do you think Mitch McConnell represents more in Congress: his big campaign contributors or regular Kentucky voters?

    His big campaign contributors: 53%

    Regular Kentucky voters: 36%

    Not sure: 11%

    …The PCCC received significant small-dollar donations this week after word of the ad spread, allowing it to extend the buy until Tuesday—including during the Louisville Cardinals game this weekend, the Sunday talk shows, and the State of the Union address.

    This has larger implications not only for 2014, but for the gun debate in Washington now—if McConnell feels threatened at home by his pro-gun stance, he might be more willing to move bills on universal background checks and other measures.

     
    The U.S. Senate race in Kentucky is already the nastiest Senate fight in the country, twenty-one months before voters head to the polls…Democrats are honing in on Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell for his stance on gun rights as new legislation moves through Congress…

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee said Friday they were expanding their ad buy hitting McConnell for his stance on gun control. On Tuesday the group announced they would spend $27,000 to air the ad for one week on broadcast and cable television in Kentucky and Washington, D.C.
    That buy was expended Friday to include airings during Saturday night’s Louisville vs. Notre Dame college basketball game. McConnell is an alumnus of the University of Louisville
    and a self-professed fan of their basketball team.
    The ad will also air in commercial breaks during Obama’s State of the Union address Tuesday.
    “Thousands of families across Kentucky will tune into the basketball game, the Sunday political talk shows, and the State of the Union address. They will see that despite 82% of Kentuckians supporting criminal background checks for gun purchases, Mitch McConnell sides with the big gun industry that has spent $198,615 to get him elected,” Adam Green, the co-founder of PCCC, said in a statement.

    POLITICO: Poll: Voters Think McConnell Represents Special Interests

    The liberal group Progressive Change Campaign Committee is circulating a new poll by the Democratic-leaning firm PPP that shows that Kentucky voters believe Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) represents special interests more than “regular” folks. The poll finds 53 percent say that McConnell represents his campaign contributors more, while 36 percent say he represents the people of the state. Eleven percent are not sure. The poll comes on the heels of a new PCCC ad that hits McConnell on the amount of money he has taken from the gun manufacturers industry. Given the poll results, the group is hoping to further link McConnell to special interests with their ad campaign.

    HUFFINGTON POST: Progressive Change Campaign Committee Expands Anti-Mitch McConnell Advertising

    The Progressive Change Campaign Committee said Friday it would expand advertising attacking Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) for his resistance to gun control, signaling that the Kentucky senator’s 2014 re-election will meet heavy resistance on the airwaves.

    The new purchase of more than $15,000 in advertising adds to an ongoing $27,700 campaign for ads that will air in Kentucky. The ads will run during Saturday’s basketball game featuring the Louisville Cardinals and Notre Dame, during the Sunday political talk shows and during President Barack Obama’s State of the Union Address on Tuesday. The ads also will air on Washington cable television during the game and the State of the Union address.

    The expansion follows Karl Rove’s American Crossroads’ purchase of $10,000 in online advertising Wednesday targeting actress Ashley Judd, who has suggested she may challenge McConnell.

    McConnell has tried to rally gun owners to shore up support for re-election. A recent call went out to Kentuckyians with McConnell saying, “President Obama and his team are doing everything in their power to restrict your constitutional right to keep and bear arms.” A fundraising email by McConnell’s campaign said gun owners are “literally surrounded” by “gun-grabbers in the Senate.”


    AND WE’RE NOT DONE YET! We are airing the ad as much as possible Tuesday night in DC and Kentucky during the State of the Union address!
    Thanks again for being a bold progressive. Together, we are impacting the national debate!
    New ad! A gun owner who wants gun reform.
    P.S. You can help air the gun ad during the State Of The Union tomorrow! Donate $3 here.
     
  • Sunset Daily 9:49 PM on February 10, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , ,   

    Sustainable Sundays: ‘COMPASSION AWARDS’ SEEK ENTRIES…Help Us Make Climate History…Can’t Make It to D.C. for the Rally? Hope and progress for the wolverine!…Senate Passes Sandy Supplement: Restoring Communities and Natural Infrastructure…Battle the Climate Crisis, How Republicans Plan To Rig The Next Presidential Election, ASPCA’s Pet Of The Week, Featured National Park and True Tails of a Pet Sitter Blog 


    Sustainable Sundays

    Weekly E-Newsletter for the Sustainable Action Network (SAN)


    January 27, 2013

    ‘COMPASSION AWARDS’ SEEK ENTRIES…
    Help Us Make Climate History.
    Can’t Make It to D.C. for the Rally?
    Hope and progress for the wolverine!
    Senate Passes Sandy Supplement: Restoring Communities and Natural Infrastructure
    Battle the Climate Crisis
    How Republicans Plan To Rig The Next Presidential Election!
    Build On Our 757 Agreement
    ASPCA’s Pet Of The Week and True Tails of a Pet Sitter Blog!

    Featured National Park

    Channel Islands National Park


    COMPASSION AWARDS’ SEEK ENTRIES.. 

    Justice for MaryThe San Diego Humane Society and Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals will be recognizing kindness to animals through the shelter’s first Animal Compassion Awards. Entries will be accepted through Feb. 15.

    Applications can be submitted in three categories:

    • Human-Animal Bond — An animal that has had a major effect on a human life, or vice versa.

    • Humane Hero — An individual, business or group that goes the extra mile to bring awareness of the love animals give people.

    • Pet-Friendly Destination — A local business that supports an extraordinary pet-friendly environment.

     

     

    Award winners will be chosen based on their unique and compelling relationship with an animal companion or their service to animals in the community, as discussed in an essay of up to 500 words along with two to six digital images.

    For information on submitting an application, go to sdhumane.org or call (760) 757-4357 or (619) 299-7012.

     


    Help Us Make Climate History. 

    Barack Obama’s legacy as 44th president of the United States of America rests squarely on his response, his resolve, and his leadership on solving climate disruption. We need to fire up our clean-energy economy.

    Join the Sierra Club, 350.org, and other groups in Washington, D.C., for the Forward On Climate Rally on February 17 (Presidents Day weekend).

    This will be the largest climate rally in American history, and 2013 must be the year of climate solutions. It is time to respond, and the next step President Obama must take is to reject the Keystone XL pipeline.

    Join me at rally. I have signed up to be a Volunteer Marshall at the event.

    The Sierra Club is also hosting Solidarity Rallies on February 17 — mostly in the far West — for those who want to participate but simply cannot make it to the nation’s capital. 


    Can’t Make It to D.C. for the Rally?

    Move America #ForwardOnClimate

    Thunderclap is a new social media tool for “amplifying your Tweet into a sonic boom.” You can join a virtual “hurray” by scheduling a Thunderclap post from Facebook or Twitter to show your support for those on the ground. Every Thunderclap post will go up at the same time on February 17, creating one of the biggest joint social media posts ever.

    Schedule your Thunderclap today — the climate needs the noise!


    Hope and progress for the wolverine!

    WolverinesOver the past 12 years, Defenders has fought hard to get wolverines the federal protection they deserve. We are happy to report that on February 1st, 2013 the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service finally proposed to protect wolverines in the Lower 48 under the Endangered Species Act.

    Take action now, and tell the USFWS that you support federal protection for wolverines »

     

     


    Senate Passes Sandy Supplement: Restoring Communities and Natural Infrastructure

    hurricane-sandy-oiled-debris-field-sheepshead-bay-ny_coast-guardRestoration is finally a reality for those affected by superstorm Sandy. The Senate passed the $50 billion supplemental bill; a historic action that recognizes that rebuilding our natural landscapes is just as important as rebuilding our homes.

     

     

     

     


     

    Learn More »


    How Republicans Plan To Rig The Next Presidential Election!


    Build On Our 757 Agreement

    Yellow-billed cuckooSince our 757 species agreement in July 2011, we’ve won positive protection decisions for hundreds of species, from the giant, aquatic Ozark hellbender salamander to the beautifully bright-colored, tree-dwelling scarlet Hawaiian honeycreeper. In 2012 we won positive decisions for 104 species and more than 31 million acres of protected wildlife habitat — positively unprecedented.

    And in 2013 the Center plans to set some more precedents, too. We’ll use the inertia behind the string of victories we’ve set in motion to win even more positive decisions, moving more species closer to protection, as well as making sure the federal government sticks to every aspect of our agreement. This year we’re expecting protection decisions (and they’d better be good ones) for scores more imperiled animals and plants, including the pocket-sized Oregon spotted frog; the small, sea-diving Kittlitz’s murrelet; the tenacious American wolverine; and the slender, beautiful yellow-billed cuckoo.

    Learn more about our historic victory for 757 species.


    Battle of the Climate Process

    Coal-fired power plantWe have been on the front lines of the fight against global warming — and on front pages, too — for years now with some of the country’s most innovative legal, policy and grassroots campaigns to save the globe from irreversible climate catastrophe. Last year we started our Clean Air Cities campaign, which urges cities to sign formal resolutions calling on the Obama administration and the Environmental Protection Agency to use the Clean Air Act to make dramatic reductions in greenhouse gas pollution; we’ve already signed on 40 cities, including Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Seattle, Miami and Nashville. We’ll grow that number substantially in 2013.

    Our Climate Law Institute will continue with our other pioneering climate work, including to save the Arctic from oil drilling, to stop dirty fuel-extraction methods like oil and tar sands development and fracking, to improve fuel economy, to protect warming-threatened species under the Endangered Species Act, and more. So stay tuned to find out what new tricks we have up our sleeves; we’re not giving it all away yet.

    Learn about our work at the Climate Law Institute.


    ASPCA Pet Of The Week
    American Bulldog mix Cupid lives to love, despite all she’s been through in her little life. Won’t you be her valentine? 

     

     

     

    She’s waiting for you in NYC!

    Also, Please visit the Tales Of A Pet Sitter Blog at Any Time and for more Available Animals!

    Sustainable Action Network - Sunset Daily Blog

     

    Sunset Records - Sunset Urban - Tropical Records - Sunset Connect - Bomb Baby
    Sunset Records Soundtracks - 
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    Sustainable Action Network - Sunset Daily Blog

     
  • Sunset Daily 12:10 PM on February 8, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , California Institution for Men, , , , , ,   

    Mother Jones: The Big House That Wayne LaPierre Built; The NRA spent millions in the 1990s pushing the largest prison construction boom ever—and harsh sentencing to keep them full. 

    It sounded like a throwaway line. Toward the end of a four-hour Senate hearing on gun violence last week, Wayne LaPierre, the National Rifle Association’s executive vice president of over two decades, took a break from extolling the virtues of assault rifles and waded briefly into new territory: criminal justice reform. “We’ve supported prison building,” LaPierre said. Then he hammered California for releasing tens of thousands of nonviolent offenders per a Supreme Court order—what he’d previously termed ”the largest prison break in American history.”

    But California’s overflowing prisons, which the Supreme Court had deemed “cruel and unusual punishment” in 2011 because of squalid conditions, were partly a product of the NRA’s creation. Starting in 1992, as part of a now-defunct program called CrimeStrike, the NRA spent millions of dollars pushing a slate of supposedly anti-crime measures across the country that kept America’s prisons full—and built new ones to meet the demand. CrimeStrike’s legacy is everywhere these days.

    CrimeStrike arose out of necessity. The NRA had come into its own as a political power during the Reagan era, but by the early 1990s, it was strapped for cash. The organization ran up a $9 million deficit in 1991 and was on pace for a $30 million shortfall in 1992, even as it was preparing to go to the mattresses over assault weapons and background checks. The NRA needed a shot in the arm.

    LaPierre launched CrimeStrike that spring with $2 million in seed money from the parent organization and a simple platform: mandatory minimums, harsher parole standards, adult sentences for juveniles, and, critically, more prisons. “Our prisons are overcrowded. Our bail laws are atrocious. We’ll be the bad guy,” he announced.

    The NRA took its case to the public. “Will you let criminals rape your rights?” asked a four-page ad in a 1994 issue of Field & Streammagazine. And the real culprit was in the White House: “The Clinton administration has already cut federal prison construction by $550 million in favor of ‘community placement’ and ‘criminal rehabilitation programs.’” This was reviving an old conservative talking point: Democrats were soft on crime. The ads featured LaPierre’s signature and bespectacled, stoic face at the bottom, alongside a 1-800 number interested volunteers could call. It was a membership hotline.

    A month later, CrimeStrike took out a full-page ad in USA Today asserting that then-Rep. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) “wants to rob the crime bill of $8 billion that could be spent building the prisons that put bars between criminals and your family.” The NRA fix: “Tell them you want a crime bill with $8 billion more to build prisons, or you don’t want their crime bill at all!”

    A 1994 CrimeStrike ad. Google Books

    Although the NRA lost on the assault weapons front, it got what it wanted in one respect: funding for prison construction increased threefold. That was on top of its own concurrent successes at the state level. In 1993, in the midst of what advocates on all sides agreed was a serious crisis, Texas held a referendum on a $1 billion bond for prison construction. The NRA spent big on advertisements in support of the initiative, which would expand the state’s capacity by 37,000 beds. It passed, along with a package of reforms designed to make it much harder for convicted felons to go home early. (A $750 million bond for school construction failed, however.) That was a driving force in what the Houston Chronicle  described as “the biggest prison construction boom in U.S. history”—18 new state jails at a cost of $3 billion, in just five years. CrimeStrike lobbied successfully for similar construction projects in Mississippi and Virginia.

    States needed prisons in part because the NRA was pushing a legislative agenda designed to keep them full. In 1993, CrimeStrike spent $90,000 to put on the ballot in Washington state a new kind of sentencing law called “Three strikes and you’re out,” in which third-term offenders would be given a mandatory life sentences, on the ballot. Voters in the state passed the measure. The next year, CrimeStrike set its eyes on a bigger prize: California.

    Mike Reynolds, a wedding photographer from Fresno, had been pushing for a three-strikes law in the Golden State ever since his daughter was murdered by a repeat offender in 1992. But his previous attempts at getting it on the ballot fell well short. Enter CrimeStrike. The NRA dropped $130,000 in support of the initiative (much of it early) and worked with the state’s biggest prison guard lobby to collect signatures. “That was very instrumental at getting us up and going,” Reynolds says. The measure set off an avalanche. Within just a few years, 23 states had enacted variations of the three-strikes statutes.

    By the late 1990s, after attempting to block the Violence Against Women Act (over a provision that would have disarmed abusive spouses) and fighting to curtail prison weightlifting programs, CrimeStrike had outlived its usefulness and was quietly phased out. But its accomplishments had been literally set in stone. Thanks to stricter sentencing guidelines and increased capacity, the United States was locking up more people than at any point in its history, and for longer. Even as violent crime dropped across the country, incarceration rates continued to increase.

    The number of people serving time in state or federal prisons increased 100 percent between 1990 and 2005. But California and Texas, the two states where the NRA had expended the most capital, were the most striking examples. The Golden State’s three-strikes law differed from most of the other 29 in that it applied to an exceedingly broad definition of what amounted to a “strike.” Under its guidelines, nonviolent crimes—including, in one famous case,the filching of a slice of pizza—were enough to put someone behind bars for life.

    “There’s actual real-life academics who have studied this stuff, and there’s actually no evidence whatsoever it’s had an impact,” says Marc Mauer, executive director of the Sentencing Project, a criminal justice nonprofit.

    But mandatory life sentences ensure that thousands of inmates will grow old behind bars, which is rather expensive. Senior-citizen inmates cost the state about twice as much per year (approximately $68,000) than their younger counterparts, due to health care expenses—even as those inmates become increasingly less likely to commit crimes should they be released.

    The prisons became simultaneously more crowded and more expensive to maintain. Writing for the majority in 2011, Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy noted that inmates in California were forced to live in “telephone-booth-sized cages without toilets,” and often went more than a year without receiving medical attention. The state’s corrections system, Kennedy argued, was “incompatible with the concept of human dignity and has no place in civilized society.”

    The consequence of California’s reforms is that Texas now leads the nation in incarceration, with 154,000 people behind bars—more prisoners per capita than all but three countries. The construction boom addressed what criminal-justice watchdogs considered to be a serious problem: Violent felons were being released before they were even eligible for parole because there simply wasn’t any room. But CrimeStrike and its allies did nothing to curb the underlying problem—a sentencing system that locked people up for the smallest of crimes, kept them there for a while, and openly mocked efforts to keep them from coming back.

    All that’s left of the NRA’s prison-building arm 20 years later is a television show by the same name. Hosted by LaPierre, Crime Strike features weekly reenactments of gun owners defending their turf, with the mantra: “Take aim and fight back.” But the program’s legacy lives on in concrete ways.

    Prisons “cost $3.3 billion a year in Texas alone,” Deitch says. “Around the country it adds up to about $52 billion a year. It’s just a phenomenal cost, and what social cost is this causing?”

    Visit the Sustainable Action network for the fight vs Private Prisons For Profit. (http://sunsetdistribution.wix.com/sustainableaction#!private-prisons-for-profit/c1lgp)

    Read Three weeks In June.

     
  • Sunset Daily 9:02 AM on January 27, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , Ocean acidification, Recovery Plan,   

    Sustainable Sunday’s: Forward On Climate Rally, True Tails of a Pet Sitter’s Pet of the Week: Buusa, How Republicans Plan To Rig The Next Presidential Election!, Learn What’s Going on with “Luck” and “The Hobbit”, Tell USFWS to Protect African Lions Under the Endangered Species Act, Help Us Make Climate History, Suit Filed to Save Florida Corals From Global Warming, Ocean Acidification!, World’s Most Endangered Whales to Get Recovery Plan at Long Last — Take Action!, 


    Sustainable Sundays

    Weekly E-Newsletter for the Sustainable Action Network (SAN)


    January 27, 2013

    Help Us Make Climate History.
    World’s Most Endangered Whales to Get Recovery Plan at Long Last — Take Action!
    Suit Filed to Save Florida Corals From Global Warming, Ocean Acidification!
    Learn What’s Going on with “Luck” and “The Hobbit
    Tell USFWS to Protect African Lions Under the Endangered Species Act
    Battle the Climate Crisis
    How Republicans Plan To Rig The Next Presidential Election!
    Build On Our 757 Agreement
    True Tails of a Pet Sitter’s Pet of the Week: Buusa

    Featured National Park
    Grand Canyon

    Safeguarding the Grand Canyon.

    January Is Unchain A Dog Month!

    Ssb


    Help Us Make Climate History. 

    Barack Obama’s legacy as 44th president of the United States of America rests squarely on his response, his resolve, and his leadership on solving climate disruption. We need to fire up our clean-energy economy.

    Join the Sierra Club, 350.org, and other groups in Washington, D.C., for the Forward On Climate Rally on February 17 (Presidents Day weekend).

    This will be the largest climate rally in American history, and 2013 must be the year of climate solutions. It is time to respond, and the next step President Obama must take is to reject the Keystone XL pipeline.

    Join me at rally. I have signed up to be a Volunteer Marshall at the event.
     


    World’s Most Endangered Whales to Get Recovery Plan at Long Last — Take Action!

    North Pacific right whales, among the world’s most endangered marine mammals, are finally getting a federal recovery plan. The National Marine Fisheries Service proposed the recovery plan this week, after the Center for Biological Diversity threatened to sue last March because of agency delays.

    There are as few as 30 individual North Pacific right whales left in the Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska, and only a few hundred in Russia’s Okhotsk Sea. The whales are extremely vulnerable to ship strikes, oil development and spills, and entanglement in fishing gear. Although the proposed recovery plan provides a much-needed strategy for additional research, it doesn’t provide a clear roadmap for reducing those threats. The public has 45 days to comment on the plan — and we’re pushing to ensure it includes stronger protections.

    “North Pacific right whales have a long road to recovery, but we hope it starts here,” said Sarah Uhlemann, a Center attorney. “With just a small number of these great animals left in the world, the loss of even one of them could threaten this population’s existence.”

    Read more in the Alaska Dispatch, then take action to push for a stronger recovery plan.


    Suit Filed to Save Florida Corals From Global Warming, Ocean Acidification! 

    The Center for Biological Diversity filed a lawsuit against the National Marine Fisheries Service on Wednesday for failing to develop a recovery plan for elkhorn and staghorn corals. The corals were protected under the Endangered Species Act in 2006, in response to a Center petition, but still lack a recovery plan — a necessary blueprint for their recovery.

    Reefs in Florida and the Caribbean were once dominated by these beautiful, branching corals, but now the species are in steep decline due to bleaching from increasing ocean temperatures, disease, fishing, pollution and ocean acidification. Corals reef ecosystems are called the “rainforests of the sea,” and an array of marine life — including the brightly colored clownfish of Finding Nemo fame — depend on reefs.

    “Time is short for saving coral reefs. If we want a future with beautiful reefs, healthy fisheries and thriving marine life, we have to act now to reduce carbon dioxide pollution,” said Jaclyn Lopez, a Florida attorney at the Center. 

    Read more in the Sun-Sentinel and learn about the Center’s campaign for elkhorn and staghorn coral.


    Learn What’s Going on with “Luck” and “The Hobbit”

    Thank you SO much for taking action for the animals who suffered and died in the filming of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey! We thought you’d like to know that after PETA’s campaigns revealed abuse and deaths on the sets of HBO’s Luck, the American Humane Association (AHA) is now being sued by a former employee who alleges that the organization thwarted her efforts to enforce the group’s own animal safety standards on the set of Luck and that the producers and HBO were part of an abuse cover-up. And recently, the chair of the board for the American Humane Association (AHA) resigned.

    Hopefully, these new developments will lead the AHA to take its responsibilities seriously and ensure that the training and housing of animals both on and off set are effectively policed.

     


    Tell USFWS to Protect African Lions Under the Endangered Species Act

    BsbOnce numbering over one million by some estimates, African lions now exist in a fraction of their former range and fewer than 35,000 remain in the wild.

    African lions have been slipping away at an alarming rate–dropping by 50% in just 30 years–due to habitat loss, disease, loss of prey species, conflicts with humans, and unsustainable trophy hunting and trade in lion parts.


    Read more Animal Causes Now.

     


    How Republicans Plan To Rig The Next Presidential Election!


    Build On Our 757 Agreement

    Yellow-billed cuckooSince our 757 species agreement in July 2011, we’ve won positive protection decisions for hundreds of species, from the giant, aquatic Ozark hellbender salamander to the beautifully bright-colored, tree-dwelling scarlet Hawaiian honeycreeper. In 2012 we won positive decisions for 104 species and more than 31 million acres of protected wildlife habitat — positively unprecedented.

    And in 2013 the Center plans to set some more precedents, too. We’ll use the inertia behind the string of victories we’ve set in motion to win even more positive decisions, moving more species closer to protection, as well as making sure the federal government sticks to every aspect of our agreement. This year we’re expecting protection decisions (and they’d better be good ones) for scores more imperiled animals and plants, including the pocket-sized Oregon spotted frog; the small, sea-diving Kittlitz’s murrelet; the tenacious American wolverine; and the slender, beautiful yellow-billed cuckoo.

    Learn more about our historic victory for 757 species.


    Battle of the Climate Process

    Coal-fired power plantWe have been on the front lines of the fight against global warming — and on front pages, too — for years now with some of the country’s most innovative legal, policy and grassroots campaigns to save the globe from irreversible climate catastrophe. Last year we started our Clean Air Cities campaign, which urges cities to sign formal resolutions calling on the Obama administration and the Environmental Protection Agency to use the Clean Air Act to make dramatic reductions in greenhouse gas pollution; we’ve already signed on 40 cities, including Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Seattle, Miami and Nashville. We’ll grow that number substantially in 2013.

    Our Climate Law Institute will continue with our other pioneering climate work, including to save the Arctic from oil drilling, to stop dirty fuel-extraction methods like oil and tar sands development and fracking, to improve fuel economy, to protect warming-threatened species under the Endangered Species Act, and more. So stay tuned to find out what new tricks we have up our sleeves; we’re not giving it all away yet.

    Learn about our work at the Climate Law Institute.


    True Tails of a Pet Sitter’s Pet of the Week: Buusa
    This is Buusa! She is a spayed 11 year old female in great health. She is a client of mine that needs a new home. She is a bit shy at first, but loves people. Not the best with kids. Can anyone give this low-maintenence love bug a home? !

    Sustainable Action Network - Sunset Daily Blog

     

    Sunset Records - Sunset Urban - Tropical Records - Sunset Connect - Bomb Baby
    Sunset Records Soundtracks - 
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  • Sunset Daily 2:54 PM on January 23, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , , , , ,   

    Announcing the New Humane Scorecard 


    hslf inset 2012 scorecard
    The new report on Congress is here. The 2012 Humane Scorecard provides an easy way to track the performance of your federal lawmakers on key animal protection issues, and I hope you’ll take a moment to check it out.

    The 112th Congress—which covered two years beginning January 2011—was characterized by gridlock, partisan divides, and delay until the last minute. Congress left some priority animal protection bills hanging at the end, though they had tremendous bipartisan support and were poised to get over the finish line. Despite the gridlock, we made some modest progress for animals.

    We encourage you to check out the final Humane Scorecard, a measuring tool that allows citizens to hold lawmakers accountable on critical animal protection issues. You can also read more details on the full range of issues and 2012 outcomes at my Congressional Year in Review for Animals blog entry.

    Help us set the stage for further progress in 2013, and demonstrate again that animal welfare is a core American value.

    Thanks for all you do for animals.Related articles

     
  • Sunset Daily 12:22 PM on January 22, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , , Roe v Wade, , Women's rights   

    The Sunset daily Blog is exactly one year old today! 

    English: Cover of Birth Control Review July 19...

    English: Cover of Birth Control Review July 1919 Captions: “How shall we change the law?”, “Must She Always Plead in Vain? “You are a nurse – can you tell me? For the children’s sake – help me!” (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    Planned Parenthood

    Planned Parenthood (Photo credit: WeNews)

    This was about the time last year when Planned Parenthood and susan komen had their thing start up fiercely and it was about the time I realized that I was in my own so called bubble…I just did not know people cared about abortion today and woman’s rights if you will…which tend to all be about birth control, etc…I did not know they were issues today…so to speak….and then we had an entire primary and an election based with that as the focal points…it was wild to me and so I guess i need to be heard…this thing here, the sustainable action network growing huge in the last year, and then Ram Phan will be out sooner than later this year….its been cool…

     
  • Sunset Daily 1:44 PM on January 19, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: 2004, , , , , , ,   

    Stand Up for Independent Media 

    Independent media outlets make sure Americans get real news, not fluff. In the last year, nonprofit Mother Jonesmagazine has stood out with its courageous coverage of income inequality, reproductive rights, gun violence, and the presidential election.

    Stand Up for Independent MediaDemocracy can only thrive when there’s a strong independent press dedicated to reporting the truth about politics, corruption, and our rights. That’s why Mother Jones’ investigative journalism will be so crucial in 2013 and beyond.

    Mother Jones is miles ahead of the clueless corporate media, exposing the agenda of the right-wing extremists who are trying to reshape america. Show your support for independent journalism that keeps us informed when it matters the most.

     

    http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/302/819/043/?z00m=20479556

     
  • Sunset Daily 4:42 PM on January 8, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: Beyoncé Knowles, , , , Mail, , ,   

    Image of the winter 2013 edition of our Endangered Earth newsletter

    We’re happy to share the must-read Winter 2013 issue of Endangered Earth, the Center for Biological Diversity‘s print newsletter, as a downloadable PDF. In this year-end edition are highlights of our historic successes in 2012 — which included the protection of 31.5 million acres of critical habitat — and a look ahead at the Center’s action plan for the new year. Defending wolves, defeating the fracking boom, safeguarding millions of acres of wild lands and waters, breaking precedent to save our endangered oceans: The year 2013 promises to be monumental.

    We make this members-only print newsletter available to our online supporters as a thank-you for taking action with the Center. Please consider becoming a member today and help us do even more good for wildlife.

    And in case you’re curious about the details — say, how many Center activists live in California or in Romania, the number of species we helped protect, or how many insects were officially named after Beyoncé Knowles this year — you won’t want to miss our 2012 year-in-numbers.

    Click here to download a PDF of the Winter 2013 issue. The Center regularly produces these print newsletters for our dedicated members; if you’d like to receive them by postal mail, please become a member of the Center by calling us toll-free at 1-866-357-3349 x 323 or visiting our membership webpage to make a gift.

    Thank you, in advance, for helping us keep this year as wild as the last one. We hope you enjoy this winter’s Endangered Earth.

     
  • Sunset Daily 12:56 PM on January 6, 2013 Permalink
    Tags: 60 Minutes, , , , , , , Solar Impulse, ,   

    Sustainable Sundays: The Last Straw: Shell’s Rig Runs Aground in Alaska, Watch Solar Impulse on 60 Minutes on CBS TV!, Victory – Your Letters For Animals In Circuses Worked!, Provide temporary homes for Hurricane Sandy survivors, Tell USFWS to Protect African Lions Under the Endangered Species Act, Battle the Climate Crisis, Defend Wolves Nationwide!, Build On Our 757 Agreement, ASPCA Pet of the Week: Smookey…. 


    Sustainable Sundays

    Weekly E-Newsletter for the Sustainable Action Network (SAN)


    January 6, 2013

    The Last Straw: Shell‘s Rig Runs Aground in Alaska.
    Watch Solar Impulse on 60 Minutes on CBS TV!
    Victory – Your Letters For Animals In Circuses Worked!
    Provide temporary homes for Hurricane Sandy survivors
    Tell USFWS to Protect African Lions Under the Endangered Species Act
    Battle the Climate Crisis
    Defend Wolves Nationwide!
    Build On Our 757 Agreement
    ASPCA Pet of the Week: Smookey

    Featured National Park
    Grand Canyon

    Safeguarding the Grand Canyon.

    January Is Unchain A Dog Month!

    Ssb


    Victory 2012

    We’re starting 2013 off with a bang! President Obama has just signed into law a bill that includes language requiring the Department of Defense to create a strategy and timeline by March 1, 2013, for replacing the shooting, stabbing, and dismembering of animals in military training drills with human simulators and other modern non-animal methods.

    This is a milestone moment in our ongoing campaign to stop the military from tormenting thousands of live animals each year in these archaic trauma exercises!

    When this lifesaving provision was first inserted into the National Defense Authorization Act last year, PETA and its supporters sprang into action with e-mail and call-in campaigns to urge members of Congress to support the important measure. We now know that they took our concerns seriously and acted on them!

    To bolster our efforts to urge the Department of Defense and Congress to address this vital issue, PETA released disturbing, never-before-seen undercover video footage this past year showing live goats who had their limbs broken and cut off with tree trimmers in a military training drill. A PETA complaint based on the video led to federal citations for animal welfare violations and prompted Congress to request an investigation into the contractor that conducted the cruel training. PETA also coauthored a study showing that three-quarters of the U.S.’s NATO allies do not use any animals in their military medical training programs, instead employing superior non-animal methods such as humanlike simulators.

    Tens of thousands of PETA members and supporters—including high-profile military veterans Oliver StoneBob Barker, andGideon Raff—have written to the Department of Defense asking the agency to modernize its training program by replacing its deadly animal laboratories with more effective, human-relevant simulation tools.

    Let’s make history in 2013! Please click here to take action today to stop crude military trauma training on animals.


    The Last Straw: Shell’s Rig Runs Aground in Alaska. 

    tile_arctic_drilling.jpgOn January 3, A Shell oil rig loaded with over 150,000 gallons of petroleum products grounded on an island off the coast of Alaska. This is the latest in a series of incidents proving that Shell Oil can’t be trusted to drill in America’s Arctic.

    Tell President Obama to immediately cancel Shell’s drilling permits before it’s too late:


    Watch Solar Impulse on 60 Minutes on CBS TV!

    Watch Solar Impulse on one of America’s best news programs watched by 13 million viewers every week , 60 Minutes of CBS, for a little sneak preview about next year’s scheduled adventure in the United States.

    The journalist Bob Simon and his team visited Solar Impulse at the beginning of 2012 for the shooting of the new piece.

    Solar Impulse: The story so far…


    Victory – Your Letters For Animals In Circuses Worked!Cole Brothers Circus tigerFor animals enslaved by circuses, it’s hard to consider anything short of liberation to be a “victory.” But thanks to your letters, tracking animals in circuses will now get a little easier. The USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) announced that it has amended Animal Welfare Act regulations so that traveling exhibitors are now required to submit itineraries to APHIS 48 hours in advance of travel. We asked you in 2009 and again last month to write to the USDA in support of the proposed amendment. Your comments were heard. This change will help facilitate the location and inspection of animals used in traveling shows including circuses and petting zoos. Advance notice of detailed, timely itineraries will enable IDA to be more effective in our work for animals exhibited around the United States.

    Reed More Now!


    Provide temporary homes for Hurricane Sandy survivors

    VtbBring unused, winterized FEMA trailers to Gerritsen Beach. The community of Gerritsen Beach and surrounding area is in desperate need of help. We have paid our fair share in tax dollars over the years. I would never think this would happen in the USA since our government sends in our great military to provide humanitarian aid in times of crisis – to sets up towns, create shelters, provide medical assistance, food and needed essentials to the victims of disaster. However, our Gerritsen Beach residents have been left in the dark, are cold and are now trying to cope with the realities of having to rebuild their entire home while living with mold.


    Tell USFWS to Protect African Lions Under the Endangered Species Act

    BsbOnce numbering over one million by some estimates, African lions now exist in a fraction of their former range and fewer than 35,000 remain in the wild.

    African lions have been slipping away at an alarming rate–dropping by 50% in just 30 years–due to habitat loss, disease, loss of prey species, conflicts with humans, and unsustainable trophy hunting and trade in lion parts.


    Read more Animal Causes Now.


    Defend Wolves Nationwide!

    The Center For Biological Diversity is the only group fighting to protect all endangered wolves across the country. This year we’ll persist in our efforts in court challenging the removal of federal protections for wolves in the northern Rocky Mountains and Great Lakes regions. We’ll keep pushing for wolves’ expansion into suitable habitat along the West Coast — where they once roamed aplenty — and fight to make sure California heeds our 2012 petition to protect them under the state’s Endangered Species Act. We’ll do everything in our power to raise the number of Mexican gray wolves in the wild — including by continuing our battle to give them stronger federal protections as a subspecies or unique “distinct population segment,” which will compel the feds to develop a new, much-needed recovery plan, the first in 20 years.

    We’ll also push forward for wolves beyond the lower 48. We’re working hard in Alaska to protect the beautiful, black-coated Alexander Archipelago wolf, whose habitat in the Tongass National Forest is threatened by logging. We’ve already petitioned for their federal protection, and we won’t let it — or these special animals — slip away.

    Learn about how we’re restoring the gray wolf!


    Build On Our 757 Agreement

    Yellow-billed cuckooSince our 757 species agreement in July 2011, we’ve won positive protection decisions for hundreds of species, from the giant, aquatic Ozark hellbender salamander to the beautifully bright-colored, tree-dwelling scarlet Hawaiian honeycreeper. In 2012 we won positive decisions for 104 species and more than 31 million acres of protected wildlife habitat — positively unprecedented.

    And in 2013 the Center plans to set some more precedents, too. We’ll use the inertia behind the string of victories we’ve set in motion to win even more positive decisions, moving more species closer to protection, as well as making sure the federal government sticks to every aspect of our agreement. This year we’re expecting protection decisions (and they’d better be good ones) for scores more imperiled animals and plants, including the pocket-sized Oregon spotted frog; the small, sea-diving Kittlitz’s murrelet; the tenacious American wolverine; and the slender, beautiful yellow-billed cuckoo.

    Learn more about our historic victory for 757 species.


    Battle of the Climate Process

    Coal-fired power plantWe have been on the front lines of the fight against global warming — and on front pages, too — for years now with some of the country’s most innovative legal, policy and grassroots campaigns to save the globe from irreversible climate catastrophe. Last year we started our Clean Air Cities campaign, which urges cities to sign formal resolutions calling on the Obama administration and the Environmental Protection Agency to use the Clean Air Act to make dramatic reductions in greenhouse gas pollution; we’ve already signed on 40 cities, including Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Seattle, Miami and Nashville. We’ll grow that number substantially in 2013.

    Our Climate Law Institute will continue with our other pioneering climate work, including to save the Arctic from oil drilling, to stop dirty fuel-extraction methods like oil and tar sands development and fracking, to improve fuel economy, to protect warming-threatened species under the Endangered Species Act, and more. So stay tuned to find out what new tricks we have up our sleeves; we’re not giving it all away yet.

    Learn about our work at the Climate Law Institute.


    Adopt a cute grey cat
    ASPCA Pet of the Week: Smookey
    Sweet and handsome Smookey is shy at first, but you’ll have him purring and kneading you in no time. Adopt him today in NYC!

    Sustainable Action Network - Sunset Daily Blog

     

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