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The most thorough, profound and moving defense of Hillary Clinton I have ever seen.

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I have my own selfish reasons for voting for Hillary. They mostly have to do with Obamacare and my own ability to get health care after my wife retires. A lot of millennials probably aren't that worried about health care. I wasn't in my 20s. I was in good health most of the time. But that was then, now I need a lot of care. The fact is I don't trust Donald Trump to replace Obamacare with something that will work for me. Also there is the Supreme Court nominations coming up and the fact that the Republican Party, which I generally hate, will control EVERYTHING! -SJ Otto



First of all — this is not my writing.  It's a Facebook post by someone I don’t even know, a man named Michael Arnovitz in PortlandOR.  But as a Facebook post it passes the fair use test and I’m quite certain he would not object that I share it here (he doesn’t).   The original Facebook post is here: www.facebook.com/…  So without further ado, it’s truly worth the read:
________________________________________________________________________
"In the course of a single conversation, I have been assured that Hillary is cunning and manipulative but also crass, clueless, and stunningly impolitic; that she is a hopelessly woolly-headed do-gooder and, at heart, a hardball litigator; that she is a base opportunist and a zealot convinced that God is on her side. What emerges is a cultural inventory of villainy rather than a plausible depiction of an actual person."—Henry Louis Gates The quote above comes from a fascinating article called “Hating Hillary”, written by Gates for the New Yorker in 1996. Even now, 20 years after it was first published, it’s a fascinating and impressive piece, and if you have a few spare moments I strongly recommend it to you. (www.newyorker.com/...)

And I’m reading pieces like this because now that Hillary has (essentially if not officially) won the Democratic Primary, I have become increasingly fascinated by the way so many people react to her. In truth, I sometimes think that I find that as interesting as Hillary herself. And I can’t help but notice that many of the reactions she receives seem to reflect what Gates referred to as “a cultural inventory of villainy” rather than any realistic assessment of who she really is and what she has really done.

For the rest click here.


Millennials not happy with the two-party system

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By SJ Otto
According to a new Poll that come out and was published in several AP publications, including The Big Story and The Wichita Eagle, young people realize the system is broke and needs fixing. I have voted since the fist Jimmy Carter election, in 1976. In the Carter- Ronald Reagan election, four years later, I voted for an independent non-two party candidate John B. Anderson.
I knew then how messed up the two-party system was and by now I know it can't simply be fixed simply by voting for someone outside the two-party system. The new Poll that just came out shows that many young people also dislike the two-party system.   
According to this article, "Poll: In tumultuous summer, young Americans in a dour mood,";

"A new poll of young people between the ages of 18 and 30 finds that an overwhelming 90 percent think the two-party political system has real — though fixable — problems or that it is "seriously broken." Three-quarters believe the U.S. is "falling behind" or "failing" as a nation."
And;
"The generation that is the most educated, diverse and indebted in U.S.history is still pining for the candidate who only this week left the race: Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.
"Millennials, unfortunately, are subject to an economic and political future that is not of their own making," said Sarah Swanbeck, executive director of the Center on Governing & Investing in the Future at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley. "It's no surprise then that young adults across the country have increasingly turned to 'political outsiders' promising to reform the system."

The article pointed out that many millenials notice the similarity of the two parties:
"The candidates we're left with are very similar," said Alejandro Ochoa, a 21-year-old from Adelanto, California. "I say that they're similar mainly because they're both rich, and I get the sense that they're going to look out more for the 1 percent and not the rest of us."
So finally after all these years there is some serious opposition developing to the two-party system:

"Young adults are especially sour about the two-party political system. More than a third of respondents said the system is seriously broken, with just 9 percent saying it is working well. The majority, 54 percent, said the system has real problems but can be fixed."
One thing younger people need to understand is that the two-party system can't simply be voted out. The system needs serious change and voting for Bernie Sanders is not enough.

For the entire story click here.




This time I actually watched the Democrat Party National Convention — and I liked it!

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By SJ Otto
Its been a while since I actually watched a political convention of either party. But tonight's was actually very interesting. They had some music by Paul Simon. They had appearance by  Senator Al Franken; who cracked a few good jokes, First Lady  Michelle Obama, Sarah Silverman, another comedian who not only cracked a few jokes but called to the Bernie or Bust people    ‘'You’re Being Ridiculous'’


And last but not least; Bernie Sanders himself.


Bernie reminded people that his political revolution was not about one candidate or the others, it was about the issues and platform positions he had raised. After stating his own agenda he endorsed Hillary Clinton. Maybe at least some of the Bernie or Bust people will finally get on board and drop the ridiculous position that it really doesn't matter if  Donald Trump gets elected. Bernie said what I have been saying all along  Yes. It does matter who wins this election. Bernie laid it out in a passionate but factual argument   that we need to support Hillary over Trump.
That should put an end to the ridiculous booing, hissing and in general divisive and destructive ranting we can hear all night on the convention floor. If Hillary is a liar, it only proves she is a politician. Some of the younger crowd needs to wake up and realize the following:

·                     The two-party system sucks, but refusing to vote for Hillary is not going to change that.
·                     The Democratic Party is a bourgeois party and it has been for most of its history. Hillary did not make it into such a party overnight.
·                     Hillary was not responsible for the DNC fiasco.
·                     All politicians lie.


As I stated earlier, this time the speakers were good and I was very impressed, with Bernie, Michelle and Sarah. I'm glad I didn't miss it.

A Primary Election Voter Guide

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From Julie A. Burkhart, Founder and CEO, Trust Women

Now that the so-called "Summer of Justice" is over, it's time to move forward! Right? Pedal to the metal, as I always say. 

Our director of advocacy and outreach, Tamber Hepner, put together a 2016 Primary Election Voter Guide. Be informed. Be engaged. Be heard. VOTE!

While some of the candidates' views on choice is not yet known, we hope the guide will be helpful as you prepare for the polls Aug. 2.

We plan to build on the momentum of the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision inWhole Women's Health v. Hellerstedt. At the same time, we expect the antis to push for more restrictions on abortion. 

So despite some recent victories, voting for pro-choice candidates is as important as ever. Know that we will, as always, testify and lobby against bills that punish women. The photo above is of me testifying against SB 95.

If you're not sure where to vote, visit the Sedgwick County Election Office website. Early voting started July 20.

Never take your right to vote for granted. There are too many people who fought for it. 


Finally, I want to thank everyone again for their support during the protests. From the police who safeguarded our patients, staff and neighbors with such professionalism and leadership to those of you with big hearts who sent kind notes and well wishes,everyone at Trust Women and Trust Women South Wind Women's Center felt the love.


Kansas Chamber of Commerce attacks moderate Republicans

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By SJ Otto
If there is anything we can count on this election day it is lies and distortions form our Kansas Chamber of Commerce. And what are they lying about? Moderate Republicans who would actually oppose Governor Sam Brownback's miserable failed experiment.
The Chamber and its supporters, according to The Wichita Eagle, have put out all kinds of radio ads and mailers. According to The Wichita Eagle article:

The chamber’s PAC contributed $61,500 to the Main Street Kansas PAC, a group that has paid for radio ads and mailers attacking moderate-leaning Republicans ahead of the Aug. 2 primary, according to documents filed this week with the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission.
“The world’s gone crazy,” a man says in one radio ad paid for by Main Street Kansas PAC. “I read the other day that (Sen.) Carolyn McGinn voted with Hillary and Obama’s party 4,181 times.”
That number appears to be calculated from more than a decade of votes. The ad does not mention that the majority of legislative votes are on noncontroversial matters, such as naming a bridge or highway, and pass with broad bipartisan support.

The real question we need to ask is why an organizations as the Kansas Chamber of Commerce would want to hold Kansas into the backward state it is presently in.
We lack jobs, our educational system is shot, our credit is shot, our infra-structure is shot, just about everything people judge this state by is shot. Why would any individual, much less a civic organization, want our state to be stuck in such a mess.
The chamber members are not elected. If they were it would be time to vote them out. Right now people need to let them all know how sick we are of the status quo. Brownback is now the most unpopular governor of any state in the US. He is probably the most unpopular and ineffective governor in the history of the state. Business can't be good if everything the state is supposed to provide its citizens, such as education, doesn't work. No business wants to relocate here. Everything the state provides is inadiquate.
The Kansas Chamber of Commerce is spending money to hold the citizens of this state in a state of limbo.

And giving Kansans the business!

Contra A Copa: The Other Side of Brazil's World Cup

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A lot is going on in Brazil that we are not getting right now. There is a side of the Olympics that the US mainstream News Media has not shown us. -SJ Otto

FINALLY! Some common sense works its way into Kansas primary election as some Brownback supporters hit the bricks! —Good Riddance!

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By SJ Otto

Finally after six years of grueling misrule by the far-far-far-far right-wing legislatorsvoters gave many of these creeps the boot. NPR reported today: " Big Swing To Center With 'Senate Surprise' In Kansas GOP Primaries."

After all the cuts to public assistance programs, mean spirited attacks on the recipients of these programs, refusals to expand Medicaid to the working poor, and the destruction of Kansas' education system, the voters have had enough.
We can't get rid of Governor Sam Brownback for another two years. But this is a set back for the far-far-far-far right-wing leaders. It's sending them a message. "Your time of misrule is up!"
And this is just the first round of voting. We still have the November elections and that gives us the opportunity to get rid of more of these creeps by voting in some Democrats. This may be a turning point in Kansas politics. Kansas has been a solidly red state since the turn of the 19th/20th century. But recently Kansas Republicans have been winning, but with far fewer votes than in the past. In some cases Republicans barely won re-election in the last election cycle.
Brownback and his minions steamrolled into office over the last six years, pushing away moderate Republicans as well as Democrats. They have made a laughing stock out of this state. Their absurd ideas have flourished while the states credit rating, job losses and general reputation have sunk to a new low. These latest election results indicate that people have had enough of the right-wing silliness.
Here is the NPRarticle that explains the election results in greater details:

"Going into Tuesday’s primaries, most political watchers believed conservatives would lose a few seats in the Kansas House but hold their own in the state Senate.
But by the end of the night, conservative Republicans across the state took a shellacking."

For the rest click here.



Let's flush our right-wing problems down the drain!


From Catholicism to Epicureanism- Changes in my religioius beliefs

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I've been working on my autobiograhy; How a Left-wing Journalist Survives the Bible Belt. This is a chapter on how my religious ideas changed and what they changed to.  

By SJ Otto

For almost half of my life I was a Catholic. I was raised Catholic. My parents were Catholic. For a time I even raised my son Catholic. But today I'm not Catholic. So how did that happen? I was in my early 30s when I decided to change my religious beliefs.
I was raised a Catholic and that is a religion that influences a person's basic life in all areas of life. It isn't just a "go to church on Sunday" and the rest if the week it is forgotten. I went to a Catholic school until the sixth grade. We had crucifixes on the walls. I said prayers before meals and before bed time. During school we had a class each day for religion. We went to mass every morning, during Catholic school.
I believe I actually enjoyed having a sense of right and wrong that I constantly had to live by. I had strong moral beliefs. In St. Louis we were taught to give to the poor, to share with others and to stand up for our families. Those are not out of step with what I believe in today.  
It was in my teenage years that I turned to the idea of socialism. I took an interest in the presidency of Salvador Allende, in Chile, during my high school years.[1] I read about him almost every week in Time magazine.  For a long time it seemed as if being Catholic and left-wing were compatible. After all there was a Catholic priest in the Sandinista leadership in NicaraguaFernando Cardenal, the revolutionary Jesuit priest who served as Secretary of Education. And for  many of us, at that time, the Sandinistas Revolution was the most advanced revolution ever. Because of the policies of Liberation Theology.[2] I could be both a Catholic and a democratic socialist.
At the same time I was also agnostic. I had doubts about God, heaven and the after-life. I did like the idea of an after-life and going to Heaven, so I stayed with the church.  
Pope John Paul II played in important part in my break with the church. He condemned Liberation Theology.[3] But I had other problems with the church. I had always disagreed with many sexual beliefs of Catholicism. That included differences over pre-marital sex, birth control and although I'm not gay, I never agreed with the anti-homosexual positions the church took. The church's roles for women in the clergy was clearly sexist. I was against abortion when I was in my teenage years. But as I got older I changed my mind about it.
I never agreed that the pope was infallible. Also as I studied the history of the Catholic Church I found there had been a lot of corruption. At times the church acted as a political institution. It was supposed to have given up all its political power centuries ago, about the time that that European feudalism was dying out. But I realized after a while that the Catholic Church still held a lot of political power. That became perfectly clear when a Time magazine article revealed that Pope John Paul II had conspired with then President Ronald Reagan and the CIA to bring down governments in Eastern Europe.[4] I had not been a fan of the governments in Eastern Europe. I didn't see them as being very genuine socialist governments. I supported the "Socialism with a human face" programme by Alexander Dubček inCzechoslovakia, a movement that the Soviet Union put to an end with an invasion. But it seemed to me that the Catholic Church had no business getting involved in such an in-depth political movement. What gave the Pope such a right? The Time magazine revelation was the last straw. I had problems with Catholicism in the past, but that article finally put me over the edge. I had a strong belief in supporting those on the bottom of society, not the wealthy and the aristocrats. I decided that my  beliefs were more important that my agnostic religious leanings. I was through with Catholicism as of then.
I could have sought out another Christian religion to take the place of the one I left. But after living in the Bible Belt and observing the results of the Christian majority in Wichita, I had no interest in following any of those religions.
For a while I studied Druidry. I wanted to learn about the religions my ancestors worshiped before Christianity came to Europe. One of the main books I used for learning about that religion was The 21 Lessons of Merlyn, Douglas Monroe.[5] I found it very interesting and I learned a lot from that book. But after a few years I realized that book was poorly written and very inaccurate as to the practice of the ancient Druids. The book had a terrible reputation for being wrong on a lot of things. I also had a hard time believing in re-incarnation and multiple gods. Eventually I dropped it. However I did try to keep the celebration of holidays, such as Winter Solstice in place of Christmas and Samhain as Halloween. I still like to celebrate those holidays.
Eventually I came across some readings on Epicurus and his ancient Greek school of thought. It is not really a religion, more of a philosophy. Epicurus did not deny the existence of god(s) but decided that gods take care of gods and humans need to take care of humans. He also told people we should learn not to blame everything on gods. ‘If your house is crushed by an earthquake it isn’t the anger of the gods, you built your house in an earthquake prone place.’ And he didn’t believe in an after-life. This is closest to what I believe. I'd like to believe in an after-life, but I just really don't. I liked the idea of a belief system based on the needs of humans and not an abstract god. I can't see any god or gods, but I can see and feel other humans.
A young student at the middle school where I work asked me if Epicureanism is "one of those religious with sayings?" And I said "it is." Fore example:
"When measured by the natural purpose of life, poverty is great wealth; limitless wealth, great poverty."
"In other occupations, the reward comes with the difficulty after their completion, but in philosophy delight coincides with knowledge. For enjoyment does not come after learning, but learning and enjoyment come together."
"Against all else it is possible to provide security, but as far as death is concerned, we all dwell in an unfortified city."[6]
One thing I like about Epicureanism is that it is not the same as saying that I'm an atheist. When I tell people that I'm an atheist they say "So you don't believe in anything?!" I do believe in things. I just don't believe in the after-life or the necessity of worshiping God. There are a few points were Epicurus and I don't agree. That is mostly in regards to political power. Epicurus said to avoid it. I find it necessary to take part in elections and other political activities. But I really don't believe that religion should be taken absolutely literally. It should be taken with a grain of salt, so they say.
I also enjoy other writers from ancient phylosophers, some related to him, such as Democritus, Titus Lucretius Carus, Aristippus and some of the ancient Chinese philosophers such as Lao Tzu and Mencius.



[1]
 Steve Otto, Memoirs of a Drugged-Up, Sex-Crazed Yippie, (Authorhouse,BloomingtonIndiana, 2005), pp. 43 - 44.
[2] Liberation Theology, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberation_theology
[3] Pope John Paul II, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_John_Paul_II
[4] CARL BERNSTEIN, "The Holy Alliance," Time, February 24, 1992, Vol. 139 No. 8, pp. 28-35, reposted June 24, 2001,http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,159069,00.html
[5] Douglas Monroe, The 21 Lessons of Merlyn, (Llewellyn, St. Paul, Minnesota), 1993.

[6] Eugene O'Connor, translator, The Essential Epicurus, (Prometheus Books,AmherstNew York), 1993, p. 79, all three quotes.

We can't vote our way out of the 2 party system—It will take change!

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By SJ Otto
This article is mostly for the benefit of the "Bernie or Bust" Crowd. It seems as if a lot of millennials, and some folks who are a little older than that but hold the same ideas, need to understand the history of the Democratic Party and the 2 party system.
Those of us involved in the system, for the last 40 years or more, realize the system is rigged. It always has been. The Democratic Party has been a bourgeois party for almost all of its history. At times it has absorbed some of the more progressive aspects of our society, such as labor unions and abortion rights activists. But the party has rarely been liberal and it has never really been socialist (democratic or any other kind). The Democratic Party goes all the way back to Thomas Jefferson.[1]It did provide us with President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his many liberal reforms. It did give us President Lyndon Baines Johnson, who gave us social welfare programs and civil rights legislation. It gave us Presidential Candidate George McGovern, the anti-war  would-be-president. But those are just a few high points for a very bourgeois party that rarely goes more than center left to center right. At worst we had the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago, where riots broke out in the street. Anti-war activist tried in vain to influence the Democratic Party and its candidate.
McGovern was never really supposed to be a presidential candidate. As with Sanders, the party didn't want him to run. But he got nominated anyway. That lead to such absurdities as Democrats for Nixon (party hacks for President Richard M Nixon). That is why we now have super delegates.
It should surprise no one that the DNCdid not want Bernie Sanders to win. He was not really Democratic Party material. Sanders probably knew this all along. But his supporters didn't. Many are young. Many are new to politics. Many did not know what activists as myself knew all along—
that the Democratic Party establishment (including the DNC) opposed Sanders and would do all in their power to stop him.
I have heard a lot of complaints from friends about the 2 party system. They complain that we don't get decent choices. We end up with "the lesser of two evils." They are right. This system has been in existence since the US was founded. The 2 party system is deeply entrenched. The two main parties are institutionalized. We have primaries set up for them. They keep other parties out of the debates. The mainstream press automatically goes along with the 2 party set up. They just don't cover other races. I agree with all the complaints. The 2 party system is just one party away from a 1 party system. And I don't think most Americans really want just one party. But to change all of that we need to change the system. The problem is that many millennials, young people and the inexperienced, think they can just vote their way out of the 2 party system. They can't.
Sanders did well in the primaries and that is extraordinary considering how much the establishment was against him. The millennials have made a huge difference in this electoral round of elections. They seem not to understand that a movement such as Sanders can't possibly win in just one election cycle. Most people and pundits probably figured that Sanders might get 20 to 25 percent of the vote. They never dreamed he might almost win. The DNC probably felt assured they would give this election to Hillary Clinton and were shocked that Sanders almost took it from her.
Normally Party insiders decide who they want to win and they make it happen. These decision often get challenged by a candidate, but rarely is that challenge substantial. This time it was.
But the less experienced voters, those who now make up the "Bernie or Bust" people seem to believe they can still get what they want. I have heard some young people say "if they finally kick Hillary out of the race, then maybe they will put Bernie in." They won't—under any circumstances. Even if Hillary has to drop out of the race, there is no real chance that the Democratic Party will put Bernie in. They just won't.
For those who don't want to vote for Hillary, there are the third party candidates. Under our electoral collage they have NO chance of winning. Two of the main rivals of the 2 party system are the Libertarian Party and the Green Party. Those of us who live in Kansas know full well what the Libertarians want to do to us. And those who believe the Greens are the closest thing to Bernie Sanders' socialism need to think again. The Greens are a bourgeois party that wants to reform capitalism. They favor some progressive issues, such as a national health care program and liveable wages. But they are not socialist at all. These parties may be good for a protest vote, but they will not effect the election at all.
There are those who insist we should vote even in a year when the candidates are this bad, such as Lisa Heffernan, a columnist who wrote recently;

So, millennials, about those reasons you don’t vote:
You don’t like the candidates? You don’t think there is anyone worth voting for. Got news for you kidlettes: We grown-ups often feel that way, too. Just look at the polls. It doesn’t matter if you don’t love the candidates. Someone is going to get elected. Democracy gives us a choice; no one ever said it was the perfect choice.
You don’t feel you have much at stake? You have no kids, no mortgage and, in some cases, no job. Again, do I need to remind you? Here is what is at stake: the future. Your future. The future of your children. Not to put too fine a point on it, but the people who do vote — your parents, your grandparents — we won’t even be around to see if we got it right. So don’t give me your excuses.

I would go one step further than her; we need to change the 2 party system. At the very least we need a multi-party system that lets other political parties compete in elections. We need to get rid of "winner takes all" and the electoral college. That can't be done in one election cycle. It will take a lot of hard work. A lot of people like this system. There are the corrupted in and out of the system—They like how it works. It works for THEM.
But we can't just vote our way out of the 2 party system. We need to make serious changes and we need a political movement to make that happen. So beside voting, we need to start making change. We can start right away. We will need patience. It will take time. But if you are young or a Millennial you have the time.

In 1968 the Democratic Party was torn apart by the Vietnam War.



[1]The party was originally called the Democratic-Republican Party. It was tied to the Republican movement of Europe, a movement for capitalism against feudalism. After some time the name Republican was dropped. The party originally formed in opposition to the Federalist Party. Over the years the party changed directions and ideology many times. Wikipedia, Democratic-Republican Party.

Fox News attacks mild use of herbs — poppy pod tea — more lies, more hype!

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With all the media hype about people using heroin and pharmaceutical narcotics, I knew that members of the media would eventually jump on the sale of poppy pods. I've known a few friends who occasionally order boxes of poppy pods. Their pods just happen to be opium poppies. Those poppies are the easiest to use commercially, even when they are not being used for drugs. But my friends grind them up and make a tea. It relaxes them and they enjoy their use. It seems harmless to me and my friends have used this stuff for years.  
Last year a member of Faux (Fox) News found out, that a person can buy such pods from outlet stores that provide supplies for floral  arrangements and other crafts. The article I saw was called "Opiates disguised as crafting supplies easily bought online." This article includes the usual hype that it is possible to buy opium poppy pods as craft supplies. It is true these supplies can be purchased. But not many people who buy them right now, use them for making tea.
The whole article revolves around a professor and his daily use of these pods:

"The beloved husband and teacher suffered a massive coronary. The death certificate lists opium addiction as contributing to heart failure."

Normally opium (and opiate) use does not cause heart attacks. This is true even when people are in withdrawals. The article admits:

"The death certificate lists opium addiction as contributing to heart failure."

But not the main cause or the only cause. When a person dies while using any amount of drugs it seems common for the cause to be listed, officially, as drug use, when if fact drug users die all the time and that doesn't mean it was because of the drug use. There seems to be a media trend of blaming drugs for a person's death just because the person had those drugs in their system at the time of death.
As the article went on, the professors wife received several boxes of poppy pods that were pre-ordered:

"Sally Sears (the author of this piece) opened the first box with renowned drug addiction specialist Dr. Paul Early and he confirmed the flower husks contain morphine and codeine. To put it bluntly, heroin." 

Opium is not heroin. This is a blatantly false statement. Heroin is Diacetylmorphine and is made by exposing morphine hydrochloride to acetic acid. It is not morphine or codeine. This is an example of hype and exaggeration.  
One thing interesting about this article is that the professor had gotten boxes every day:
   
"As she struggled to settle her late husband's affairs, the grieving widow was stunned as boxes continued to arrive by mail, almost every day."

That stuff is expensive. A half-pound box may cost between $120 to $200. At the rate she described he must have spent at least $500 a week. Most people can't afford that. And he was living on a professors salary.

"Highly addictive drugs, readily available, is always a bad idea," said Early. "Opiates cause a general sense of peace and tranquility."
But that sense of peace and tranquility doesn't last. It soon becomes a hungry monster that's harder and harder to feed."

But not everyone who uses this becomes addicted to it. Most people who do it order it maybe once a month or less. Fox conservatives have shown their hypocrisy with this article. They always complain that government should stay off our backs and out of our lives. They write and talk all the time about liberals wanting to control them. But their attitude is different when it comes to making personal choices about how we chose to live. Drug use has always been unpopular with conservatives, mostly because of religious prejudices and because of fears it will decrease worker's productivity.
But if we are to be a free society  people should be able to live by their own religious standards. People have a right to use herbal plants as they see fit, as either recreation or self medication. There are a lot of herbal plants that may hold some dangers, but most can be used in a relatively safe way.[1] Besides poppy tea, this includes marijuana, psilocybin mushrooms and coca tea (which is legal in some countries and can also be ordered online). Not only are these products relatively harmless in their natural form they are less dangerous than alcohol. Alcohol can destroy the liver, impairs judgment to a much greater extent than herbs, can cause withdrawals and it is far more likely to kill a person than opiate withdrawals. Drinking alcohol causes a lot of health problems and yet it is completely legal for someone to use it. For some alcoholics less dangerous drugs, such as marijuana or poppy tea, may help wean them off of drink.

I'm glad this article didn't spur any more hype than it did. As free citizens we need to have the freedom to chose what we use and how we use it. Employers should judge workers on the work they do and not what they do outside of work. Our lives are ours when we are not at work. If people end up addicted to drugs they need to get treatment. That treatment needs to be made available. But let those who use mild forms of intoxicants alone.

_____________________________________________________
[1] See Steve Otto, War on Drugs or War on People?, (Ide House, Las Colinas,Texas) 1995, p. 190.

US Green Party is not left-wing at all—supporting them is a waste of time!

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This election year has given the voters two of the most unpopular candidates in the nation's history. Especially hard not to notice is the "Bernie or Bust" crowd. They are the millennials who are so disillusioned over the cheating and biased actions of the DNC and the Democratic Party in general they just refuse to support Hillary Clinton. Some of these millennials and many other voters I know are planning to vote for the Green Party. Jill Stein is the party's leader and presidential candidate.
But before people vote for Stein or any other Green Party candidate it is important to realize that the US Green Party is not a left-wing party, it is certainly not a socialist party at all.
Probably the most well known Green Party in the world is in Germany. The German Greens do have left-wing factions. It includes leftists, socialists and Marxists.
But the US version of that party is different. There are no socialists. The Greens do not advocate socialism. They do have a lot of progressive platforms, such as supporting a national health care program and generous social welfare benefits for workers and others. But in essence they are a bourgeois  party that supports capitalism.
To illustrate this I've gone to the Green Party Platform:

"A. Ecological Economics


1. We call for an economic system that is based on a combination of private businesses, decentralized democratic cooperatives, publicly owned enterprises, and alternative economic structures. Collectively, this system puts human and ecological needs alongside profits to measure success, and maintains accountability to communities."

It almost sounds like a socialist platform. Some past communist governments, such as the Soviet Union, had cooperatives, publicly owned enterprises (state owned) and some private businesses. Many people don't realize that most communist movements support some small businesses, or at least they tolerate them. But the next line tells us a lot:

"2. Community-based economics constitutes an alternative to both corporate capitalism and state socialism. It values diversity and decentralization......."

This statement is most likely a rebuke at past communist or socialist style governments. It is basically an anti-socialist statement. There is little to doubt about this.
They also make it perfectly clear they don't want to abolish corporations, they want to reform them:

"C. Curbing Corporate Power


Greens want to reduce the economic and political power of large corporations, end corporate personhood and re-design corporations to serve our society, democracy and the environment......."

They call for reforming corporations and the language they use is somewhat utopian:

"Greens believe the legal structure of the corporation is obsolete. At present, corporations are designed solely to generate profit. This legal imperative — profit above all else — is damaging our country and our planet in countless ways. We must change the legal design of corporations so that they generate profits, but not at the expense of the environment, human rights, public health, workers, or the communities in which the corporation operates."

This statement ignores the very definition of a corporation. They are primarily to make profit at all costs. That is the only goal of a corporation. To believe that these entities can be changed to be democratic and serve society while at the same time producing profit is absurd. Corporate mangers and owners are greedy. That is their primary reason for all that they do. Since corporations were founded the goal has always been to maximise profits and minimize costs- including the cost of labor. Trying to "reform" such institutions doesn't make any sense. The only logical move is to convert them to democratically run coops. The greedy managers must be dismissed or put under constraints. They can't be allowed to make as much money as they want to. In other words the corporations need to be destroyed and replaced with either coops, state run institutions or something of that nature.
Rather than following any kind of worker led models, the Green Party promotes small businesses and corporations not all that different from any other capitalist model. This is in no way a socialist, worker's oriented, labor style or Marxist movement. This is a bourgeois model for business:

"G. Small Business and the Self-Employed


Greens support a program that counteracts concentration and abuse of economic power. We support many different initiatives for forming successful, small enterprises that together can become an engine of (and sustainable model for) job creation, prosperity and progress. Small businesses are where the jobs are being created. Over the past decade and a half, all new net job growth has come from the small business sector.

The Green economic model is about true prosperity—Green means prosperity. Our goal is to go beyond the dedicated good work being done by many companies (referred to as "socially responsible business") and to present new ways of seeing how business can help create a sustainable world, while surviving in a competitive business climate.

We believe that conservation should be profitable, and employment should be creative, meaningful and fairly compensated.

Access to capital is often an essential need in growing a business."

Some of the wording of this platform is quite bourgeois and could easily have come from one of many conservative news sites or the Republican Party itself:

"Government should reduce unnecessary restrictions, fees, and bureaucracy. In particular, the Paper Simplification Act should be seen as a way to benefit small business, and it should be improved in response to the needs of small businesses and the self-employed."

As we see the Green Party is in some ways quite reactionary or at least a conservative party. Some of their ideas are even primitive, such as:

"The creating and spreading local currencies and barter systems."


I have seen a lot of comments on Facebook recently from leftists who decided to vote for Jill Stein as a protest vote against Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump. On one hand Stein has no chance of winning. Because of the Electoral College she can run, but will be unable to win any delegates. Our founding fathers decided the people were too stupid to vote directly for the president so they came up with the Electoral College. We only vote for electors who really chose the president. There is no way the Green Party can win those electors. So if the idea is to register protest vote, it won't really matter. But organizing or campaigning for Stein or any other Green Party candidates is to vote for the opposite of what most leftists want. Support for the environment and generous benefits for workers are always a good idea. However the Green Party is not worth supporting. It is too reactionary to work for us.   

Another look at the recent primary elections

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From Julie Burkhart, Founder and CEO of Trust Women:

Well, weren't the results of the primary election a nice surprise for Kansans? Voters sent Gov. Sam Brownback a message by ousting several conservative Republicans in the Kansas Legislature, casting their ballots for moderates. Fourteen incumbents —eight in the House and six in the Senate —lost their seats. Moderates appear to have grabbed open-seat primaries as well. 

This tweet from a Statehouse reporter summed it up nicely:


Voters also let Rep. Tim Huelskamp know he didn't represent them. The 1st District Congressman alienated many with his combative demeanor, so much so that the Kansan —a KANSAN—got kicked off the Agriculture Committee.

We've run up against Huelskamp's venom. He joined Catholic school students who protested our clinic in 15-degree weather. 

We're glad to see Huelskamp gone. Kansas still has more progress to make, of course.

The state scored a D in the National Partnership for Women & Families'"Expecting Better" report. 


As you know, the antis (Anti-abortion activists) talk a good game about helping families, but when push comes to shove (pun intended), they're more interested in the womb than the real world. 

Here's what the report said about Kansas (click here to download the report):


PRIVATE SECTOR WORKERS

Kansas law does not expand upon federal rights or protections for new and expecting parents who work in the private sector.

STATE WORKERS

Job-Protected Family Leave
State workers have greater access to family leave under state law than under federal law. New hires may be granted up to 60 days of unpaid leave for pregnancy or childbirth, adoption or foster placement of a child, or to care for a family member with a serious health condition, including a spouse disabled by pregnancy. Permanent employees may be granted up to one year of unpaid leave for the same reasons. Upon returning from leave, workers must be returned to a position in the same class or in another class with the same pay grade.

So we know there's a lot of work ahead for the sun to truly shine in the SunflowerState.

Julie A. Burkhart
Founder and CEO
Trust Women

Earth-Like Planet Around Proxima Centauri Discovered

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While it may not be practical politics, a trip to the nearest Earthlike exoplanet may be news worth sharing. We as Earthlings may be interested in seeing what is one of the nearest Earthlike planets. So here is:   -SJ Otto


Earth-Like Planet Around Proxima Centauri Discovered


The hunt for exoplanets has been heating up in recent years. Since it began its mission in 2009, over four thousand exoplanet candidates discovered by the Kepler mission, several hundred of which have been confirmed to be “Earth-like” (i.e. terrestrial). And of these, some 216 planets have been shown to be both terrestrial and located within their parent star’s habitable zone (aka. “Goldilocks zone”). But in what may prove to be the most exciting find to date, the German weekly Der Spiegel announced recently that astronomers have discovered an Earth like planet orbiting Proxima Centauri, just 4.25 light-years away. Yes, in what is an apparent trifecta, this newly-discovered exoplanet is Earth-like, so here it is...click here.

Too much Trump

Democrats still won't change tactics- probably still won't win

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By SJ Otto
Kansas Democrats still don't get it. They keep to tactics that just don't work. This morning I heard a major Kansas Democratic Senator telling people who run for office, once again, "avoid being negative." People may not like being negative but it works.
The Republicans have demonized Democrats over and over, while the Democrats try to win by "staying on their message." That just doesn't work. The people need to know why the other person is a bad choice. In Kansasthat should be easy. Our governor and his party have seriously damaged the way the state government works. Out schools have been destroyed and poor workers are dying from the fact that Medicaid (or KanCare after our governor messed it up by privatizing it.) has not been expanded to give them needed medical coverage. The infrastructure of the state is a mess and businesses get a free ride at the workers expense.
All this should make campaigning easy. Sure people need to know who the candidates are and what they stand for. But they also need to know why the other guy needs to go. Since we have the most unpopular governor in the history of the state negative ads should be a breeze. The Democratic Party continues to use the same tactics over and over. The Republicans have won election after election. Isn't it about time for the Democrats to use tactics that work and win a few elections?






An update and information on Marijuana

DemoFest helps future candidates—"meet the voters"—"contrast with Brownback supporters"—"but not negative name calling"

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By SJ Otto
I learned a lot while attending a round table discussion at DemoFest 2016, at the Drury Plaza Hotel (the old Broadview) here in Wichita last night.
This discussion was given by some of Kansas' successfully elected Democrats, including Senator Oletha Faust-Goudeau, Representative Brandon Whipple and Representative Jim Ward. Each speaker gave their own tips on how to win elections. This event was designed to help new Democratic candidates for Kansasoffices with the techniques of good campaigning.
Some of the messages that the team suggested included the need to have direct contact with voters, knock on doors, the need to contrast between the candidates and those supporting our Governor Sam Brownback and the use of mailers.
"Build a relationship with the voters," Whipple said. "They may not remember all the issues you brought up but they will remember you."
This was probably the most important strategy the group talked about. Whipple said it was important not to try to come off looking smarter than the potential voters. He added that it was important to know what issues will act as triggers to the voters. 
"You should be asking them 'What do you want to talk about?" Whipple said.
Whipple added that it is important to follow up with mailers. He said that items mailed to potential voters play a crucial role in elections.
"Usually there are ugly mailers sent out in the last two weeks," he added. "The Republicans often send out nasty mailers at that time."
Ward talked about the importance of contrasting the candidate with their opponent.
"There is negative campaigning and contrast campaigning," Ward said. "Negative campaigning would include 'Crooked Hillary' and 'I have big hands."
He made a difference between name calling that looked childish and contrasting between a persons opponent.
Here Representative Brandon Whipple speaks.

"I'm going against Brownback,' is an example of contrast campaigning," Ward added.
All the elected officials there talked of the importance of connecting their opponent's support of Brownback and his policies. They all noted that voter's opinions of him are at a historical low and it is important to take advantage of this.
"People who won in the last election said 'I'm going against Brownback," Ward said.
When it came to advertising, Faust-Goudeau said to take advantage of cheaper publications and institutions. She mention local news papers, such as Active Aging, The Community Voice and advertising on the Wichitacity busses.
She also said it was important to always be either well dressed or have good clothes within reach to look presentable at all times.
"Watch out for your opponent taking ugly pictures of you," she said. "Be sure not to be seen just looking around."
Faust-Goudeau added it was important to always look engaged with people.
"Even dress well at picnics or casual events," she said.
Other important points were that campaigning is hard work, but Kansans admire hard workers. Mailers are a good backup after going door to door with potential voters.

Fund raising is important. Candidates were encouraged to ask people for money. Their are PACs and other organizations that have money and want to give it to candidates. Candidates were warned not to make a big deal of negative charges, but it is important to respond to them. If there is no denial of a negative accusation, people tend to believe it.
After all the sessions there was comradery and refreshments.

House Republicans apparently committing felonies in pursuit of Hillary Clinton

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Yet another story whose full import won’t be discussed anywhere that the majority of Americans are likely to see it:
After the Director of the FBI fully exonerated Hillary Clinton and made clear that she broke no laws and told no lies, House Republicans took the extraordinary step of demanding copies if the FBI’s notes from its interview with Clinton. That request was granted, and almost immediately, information from those notes began leaking to the media. The trouble: every word of those notes is, by definition, classified information.
Jennifer Palmieri, the Communications Director for the Hillary Clinton campaign, tweeted this evening that she “Would remind all that this material is classified. So this is leaking of classified material.” Clinton Campaign Chair John Podesta added that he’s “Already hearing from people who have been contacted by reporters with knowledge of the content of their interviews in FBI 302’s.”
But, just as with PutinLeaks, we are told over and over that we shouldn’t care about how this material came to light, much less that it was cherry-picked and artfully arranged to cast a false light on the whole truth.

For the rest click here.

Mike Pompeo is a militarist fool- needs to go

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By SJ Otto
Representative Mike Pompeo is probably the worst representative to every come from the 4th district.  The following was sent out in e-mails to his constituents:

"We are living in dangerous times here in America.  Sadly, policies set in place by the Obama administration and actions taken by those in his administration have made us markedly less safe. Over the last couple weeks I have been asked to speak on television about some of these major foreign policy blunders that have been in the news.
About two weeks ago, a congressional task force that I served on released its interim report.  Read it here.  Our work found that senior officials at U.S. Central Command had been manipulating intelligence regarding the fight against ISIS.  This manipulation consistently downplayed the strength of radical Islamic terrorists.  It caused policymakers to believe we were winning a battle we were actually losing.  I joined Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo to discuss further.

Around the same time, we all learned about the shocking $400 million payment to Iranthat by shipping pallets of foreign currency being flown to Tehransecretly while U.S.hostages were being released.  The world knew this was a ransom payment.  I wrote a letter to the Treasury Department demanding to know what legal grounds they had to make such a transfer.  Then, just this week, the State Department confirmed it – the $400 million was contingent on Iran releasing the American hostages!  I explained all of this to Trish Regan on Fox News on Monday before the State Department confirmed our suspicions." 

He is a true arm chair warrior. He sits in his conges seat and acts as if he knows all. The truth is that politicians like him are for more dangerous than our president. The $400 million sent to Iran was part of a diplomatic deal and had nothing to do with hostages. Pompeo seems to believe we can treat regimes we have odds with- to automatically go to war. I don't have any sympathies for the Iranian Government but going to war with them, without any real provocation is just plain Looney. We don't go to war with a country just because we don't see eye to eye.
As for ISIS, the US is fighting to control Arab oil fields. We would not be at war otherwise. As much as I don't favor ISIS we can't just be at war with people because we don't have the same ideologies.
Pompeo has no real intelligent ideas on how to fight ISIS. If it were up to him, this country would put thousands of our men and women into harms way without necessity. Pompeo is a reckless fool and we need to vote him out of office.

We can only assume that Pompeo learned about the military reading comic books and watching John Wayne movies. We don't need that kind of leadership.

Bernie Sanders- The Revolution Continues was a successful event

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By SJ Otto
At an event called Bernie Sanders- The Revolution Continues, last night, local politicians joined a large group of about 100 people or more, to continue the vision of Bernie Sanders.
Speakers, at the event, called for redefining the vision of the campaign. Candidates there pledged to carry on such important issues as tackling global warming/ standing up to the fossil fuel industry, free college tuition, raising the minimum wage, and universal health care.
Locally candidates spoke of expanding Medicaid here in Kansas. Susan Osborne, a candidate for state representative in the Kansas 94th district, endorse the expansion.
"I believe in the US  we would like to get to the point were everyone has health care," she said.
She added that this country should follow the example of European countries and have some kind of universal health care.
Osborne also quoted Sanders when he said a revolution has to bubble up from the bottom.
"Bernie was very uplifting," Osborne added.
She also said our trickle down economics here in Kansas don't work and our governor has proven that with his policies.
The crowd watched a tapped message of Bernie broadcasted live.  

Other candidates there last night included Cammie Funston, for state representative, Dan Giroux for the 4th congressional district, Gabriel Costilla for the Kansas Senate, 16th district and Stan Reeser, running for Kansas House 97th district.

Here Stan Reeser, Kansas House candidate, spoke to the Bernie supporters. 
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