Waiting for the Market to open this morning I came across Margaret Carlson’s excellent analysis.

“It isn’t fair!” is a cry we try in kindergarten and never give up. To tamp down this thirst for instant justice, the nuns at my school invoked the sweet hereafter, where all wrongs would be righted, as a reason for us to suck it up at recess.

As an adult, and a lucky one, the last thing I want now is fairness. I could be waiting on tables instead of being served at them, delivering the papers instead of writing for them.

In that, I’m like Wisconsin’s Republican governor, Scott Walker. He didn’t want fairness to kick in after he assumed power in January and used the rubric of “budget repair” to bully the folks who clean his office and guard his prisoners.

The sweet hereafter made an early appearance in Wisconsin on Tuesday. A Democrat, Chris Abele, cruised to victory in the race to fill Walker’s former post, Milwaukee County executive. And state Supreme Court Justice David Prosser, part of a 4-3 conservative majority seen as likely to support Walker’s assault on unions, ended up in a too-close-to-call election that may result in a recount. Just six weeks ago, Prosser was expected to coast to victory over JoAnne Kloppenburg, an assistant attorney general. Only five incumbent Supreme Court judges have been defeated since 1852.

Ordinarily it takes four years to right an electoral wrong. Not this time. Liberal and conservative groups descended on Wisconsin to turn what would normally be a ho-hum election into a referendum on Walker…

Regardless of the eventual outcome, Kloppenburg’s out-of- nowhere showing is a cautionary tale for those governors following in Walker’s path by curtailing workers’ bargaining rights, and for the Tea Party, which you’d think would be fighting for the little guy, not the big bully…

On April 5, voters in South Central Wisconsin approved two historic referenda by overwhelming margins. These referenda asked whether voters support amending the U.S. Constitution to make clear that corporations are not people and money is not speech. The City of Madison referendum passed with 84% of the vote, and the similar Dane County referendum passed with 78%.

These referenda are the first anywhere in the country to call for a constitutional amendment in response to the Supreme Court’s Citizens United vs. FEC decision. Members of South Central Wisconsin Move to Amend (SCWMTA), the local group that pushed for the referenda, believe they will not be the last. “Amending the Constitution will not be easy, and to succeed people across the country will need to stand up and demand it,” says Kaja Rebane, SCWMTA Co-Chair. “We hope our success will inspire others to organize their own efforts.”

The 2010 Citizens United case declared that limiting the amount corporations can spend to influence elections would violate the “free speech rights” of corporate “people” under the First Amendment. National polls have shown broad opposition to the Citizens United decision (85% of Democrats, 81% of Independents, 76% of Republicans), and widespread support for a constitutional amendment to undo it (87% of Democrats, 82% of Independents, 68% of Republicans).

This really is common sense. Even a small child can tell the difference between a corporation and a living, breathing human being. How can this be so hard for the Supreme Court to understand?” asks Madison resident Kevin Gundlach.

Anyone else remember “We the People” being more important than “Them the Corporations”?

Thanks, Cinaedh




  1. So what says:

    Link in case your interested 2009 report.

    http://tinyurl.com/c796yj

  2. HMeyers says:

    Now you are speaking my language … partisan rhetoric and partisan name calling is a bore for Neanderthals.

    Every politician has an agenda. This is nothing new. Yes, you are right that Detroit refused to plan. And Walker’s personal motivations are a bit irrelevant to me in the sense that once anyone is elected to high public office they are already “set for life” with the benefits.

    One of the budget saving measures most states are going to have to enact is cutting teachers.

    The school district I live in lost $13 million in funding and had to cut 87 teachers. It is one of the best school districts in Ohio and when you go in there, there are countless teachers, assistants and so forth that it is massively overstaffed. I feel sorry for those 87 that will be losing their jobs, but Ohio has an $8 billion deficit to close and the expiration of stimulus $$$ is part of the cut.

    At the same time, this country has to trim down and get lean and mean.

    We are going to face a continually worse economy — raising taxes can’t solve an overspending problem. Governments on all levels have been addicted to taxpayer $$$ that in the past ever-increased.

    But we don’t live in that world any longer. Everyone is going to have to adapt. And unions serving as a pass-thru tax on taxpayer resources is certainly one expensive and overhead that can be discarded.

    (I do not agree with the US government shutdown that looks like is going to happen. I am rather disappointed, but I’m not really a partisan guy but the Democrat’s idea of do-nothing and reform-nothing has no appeal to me. I was a very early Obama-supporter, btw.)

  3. HMeyers says:

    Btw … an easy solution for this country would be to kill NAFTA. No one wants to talk about that. Not Democrats, not Republicans. It would bring jobs and therefore taxes to the United States in a hurry. But corporate money permeating both parties funding assures that this won’t happen. So much for 1980-style Democrats with principles; they don’t exist in 2011.

  4. smartalix says:

    In D&D terms, the GOP is layful evil and the Democrats are chaotic good. No souls vs. no spines. No wonder we’re all screwed up.

  5. Bredgette says:

    And to succeed people across the country will need to stand up and demand it.


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