Category Archives: California Gov Recall 2003

More On MoveOn’s Anti-Recall Campaign

Dear Reader,
I was pleased to hear from Moveon.org that there were a lot of people who read Lisa’s blog who oppose the recall the way I do. Thanks to all of you who took the time to sign their petition against it.
If you haven’t already done so, why not take one minute to go to the following link and sign up NOW.
click here
http://Moveon.org is also involved in some very creative organizing around this issue as well as others.
Click on the link below to go to their website and print out a request for an absentee ballot form for YOUR county. Fill it out and send it in to your county registrar – they will provide the address to send it to right on the form.

http://moveon.org/pac/recall/register/

They had the brilliant idea of using the idea of Flash Mobs for organizing activities like handing out these registrations. If you want to spend a couple of hours this Saturday working on this issue, check out the link below.
click here
Well, that’s all I have time for today but, I promise I’ll be back with things YOU can do to make change happen.
Regards,
Bobby Lilly

Continue reading

Join MoveOn.org Against The California Recall

This just in from my pal
Bobby Lilly
.

Dear Lisa,
I got a notice from http://MoveOn.org asking me to sign a petition opposing the California Recall. You and I both know it’s a power grab by the Republicans blaming a relatively unpopular governor for stuff HE didn’t do and inflaming the political process just because some of them couldn’t stand to LOSE the last election.
I signed to show my opposition to this misuse of the Recall process which I believe should be used against serious malfeasance by an elected official not just because someone had the money it took and thought they could get away with it.
I hope there are a lot more people out there besides the two of us willing to take the time to oppose this Recall which has become a media circus and just another reason for the rest of the country to dismiss Californians as kooks. People need to be educating themselves about the unreality of the charges against Davis and realize that changing leadership at this point is NOT going to make the economic woes of this state (which are very similar to the problems states all across the country are facing) any better and all of us who believe it is WRONG need to be sure we are registered and get to the polls and VOTE it down.
In the meantime, I’m writing to ask you to join me in signing a “Recall No! Democracy Yes!” pledge to defeat the California recall AND pass it on. Click here to sign:

This is the message Moveon sent to me:
If the recall succeeds, it will set a dangerous precedent for the whole country. A far-right businessman spent 1.7 million dollars to bring us the recall campaign, and has thrown California into chaos. GOP leaders who should have condemned the recall instead cheered it on, hoping they could gain from the unraveling of our democracy. We can’t stand by and let this happen. These attacks on democracy are not a California issue or a Texas issue or a Florida issue — we all must step forward together and make it clear that elections will be honored in this country. This pledge is a national effort to mobilize one million California voters in the recall election. Please sign the pledge no matter where you live and please ask friends and family in California to sign the pledge and to remember to vote October 7.

Thank you.

Lisa’s voting against the recall and for Cruz Bustamante.

Interview With Smoking Gun Reporter Andrew Goldberg About Releasing Arnie’s Racy OUI Interview

There’s a an interview from OUI magazine in 1977 that has seen the light of day recently on the smoking gun.
I caught the last half of an interview on KTVU Channel 2 News in San Francisco with Smoking Gun reporter Andrew Goldberg about republishing the Arnie OUI interview.
I thought you might find it interesting.
This is from around 7:00 am on August 29, 2003.

KTVU – Andrew Golberg, Smoking Gun Reporter
(Small – 4 MB)


Lisa’s voting NO on the recall and for Cruz Bustamante.

Arianna Huffington On The Daily Show

This is from early February 2003 sometime. (Sorry I can’t be more exact!)
I forgot to link to this before, but with Arianna running for Governor in the CA Recall, it seemed relevant to make this available to you.

Arianna Huffington On The Daily Show – Part 1 of 3
(Lres – 26 MB)

Arianna Huffington On The Daily Show – Part 2 of 3
(Lres – 29 MB)

Arianna Huffington On The Daily Show – Part 3 of 3
(Lres – 26 MB)
Lisa is voting NO on the recall and YES on Cruz Bustamante.

The Daily Show
(The best news on television.)

Taco Hell Says: Vote For A Beefy Hunk Or A Soft Chicken

This makes about as much sense as any other part of this recall, I suppose.
How transparent of Taco Hell. But now that I’ve thought about it, rather brilliant.
Who says you can’t buy votes anyway? That’s exactly what they’re doing.
Even I have become a pawn in their little game bringing this to you now.

Who Says You Can’t Buy Votes

At participating locations for a limited time. This promotion is solely sponsored by Taco Bell Corp., and is not affiliated with nor has it been endorsed by any other entity.

NY Times Backrounder On Schwarzenegger

I sure hope he’s not our next Governor, but his story is a pretty interesting one.

Schwarzenegger’s Next Goal on Dogged, Ambitious Path

By Bernard Weinraub And Charlie Leduff for the NY Times.

Thirty-five years ago, Arnold Schwarzenegger, an unknown Austrian bodybuilder who spoke only a few words of English, had little money and no acting experience, came to the United States and soon made a prediction: He would become a movie star, make millions of dollars, marry a glamorous wife and wield political power…
By all accounts, Mr. Schwarzenegger’s drive to succeed was not merely an immigrant’s classic up-by-the-bootstraps obsession. It was a calculated effort to turn himself into an invulnerable and powerful (physical and otherwise) figure. He was also a far cry from the skinny Austrian boy whose father, Gustav, a policeman and a one-time member of the Nazi Party, intimidated and sometimes beat him, favoring his other son, Menhard, according to published accounts of Mr. Schwarzenegger’s life. (Mr. Schwarzenegger did not attend the funeral of his father in 1972, or that of his brother, who died in a car crash in 1971.)…
But the scrutiny of Mr. Schwarzenegger has only begun. So far he has not clarified his positions on most public issues, including offshore oil drilling, the state’s budget crisis and immigration.
On abortion, however, he has said that he is for women’s right to choose. On business, he has said he would bring more of it to the state to generate more revenue. And as for his economic view, Mr. Schwarzenegger was quoted in The Sacramento Bee as saying, “I still believe in lower taxes – and the power of the free market.”…
The Los Angeles Times, in a recent investigation of his finances, estimated that his fortune far exceeded $200 million. This included real estate investments and a significant ownership in Dimensional Fund Advisors, a mutual fund company in Santa Monica that manages about $40 billion.
Mr. Schwarzenegger has climbed a social as well as political ladder. He used his early fame to get acquainted with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. When “Pumping Iron,” was released, Mr. Schwarzenegger told the film’s publicity agent, Bobby Zarem, that the one person he wanted to meet was Mrs. Onassis. Mr. Zarem spoke to a friend who worked for Mrs. Onassis. A luncheon meeting was arranged at Elaine’s in New York to introduce the relatively unknown Mr. Schwarzenegger to Mrs. Onassis, Andy Warhol and others. A photograph of Mr. Schwarzenegger talking to Mrs. Onassis was widely distributed, and his celebrity grew…
Mr. Butler, who still keeps in touch with Mr. Schwarzenegger, put it another way. “Arnold is one of the most political people I’ve ever met,” Mr. Butler said. “Everything he does is political. He has an uncanny ability to go to a meeting, get into an elevator, sit down with people in a restaurant, and immediately assess their strengths and weakness. He manipulates.”…
Mr. Schwarzenegger’s campaign team for the run for governor consists of Mr. Wilson, a Republican whose support for rigid measures to combat illegal immigration contrasted with his moderate approach to abortion and other social issues, and some senior members of his old Sacramento crew, including Bob White, his longtime strategist.
Mr. Schwarzenegger has drawn other powerful and well-know figures to his cause. Warren Buffett, the billionaire financier and a friend of Mr. Schwarzenegger, came aboard as a financial consultant, and George P. Shultz, secretary of state under President Reagan and friend of Mr. Wilson from the Hoover Institute, is helping the campaign…
Mr. Schwarzenegger did not vote in the last two presidential elections, according to election records. And over the last 20 years he has given more money to Democrats than Republicans, albeit all of the Democrats are Kennedys…
Some Republican conservatives have held back in supporting Mr. Mr. Schwarzenegger’s candidacy. On social policies, at least, Mr. Schwarzenegger seems to hold views that conflict with hard-cover conservatives in the party. His outlook can best be summed up in an interview he gave to The Sunday Telegraph magazine in November 1999 in which he admonished his party members to alter their approach.
The Republican Party, Mr. Schwarzenegger said, “is going to lose until you become a party of inclusion.” He went on to say, “that you love the foreigner that comes in with no money, as much as a gay person, as a lesbian person, as anyone else – someone who is uneducated, someone who’s from the inner-city.”

Lisa’s voting NO on the Recall and YES on Cruz Bustamante.

Continue reading

Greg Palast Connects The Dots Between Deregulation And This Week’s Huge East Coast Blackout

Power Outage Traced to Dim Bulb in White House
The Tale of The Brits Who Swiped 800 Jobs From New York, Carted Off $90 Million, Then Tonight, Turned Off Our Lights
By Greg Palast.

California fell first. The power companies spent $39 million to defeat a 1998 referendum pushed by Ralph Nadar which would have blocked the de-reg scam. Another $37 million was spent on lobbying and lubricating the campaign coffers of the state’s politicians to write a lie into law: in the deregulation act’s preamble, the Legislature promised that deregulation would reduce electricity bills by 20%. In fact, when in the first California city to go “lawless,” San Diego, the 20% savings became a 300% jump in surcharges.
Enron circled California and licked its lips. As the number one contributor to the George W. Bush campaigns, it was confident about the future. With just a half dozen other companies it controlled at times 100% of the available power capacity needed to keep the Golden State lit. Their motto, “your money or your lights.”
Enron and its comrades played the system like a broken ATM machine, yanking out the bills. For example, in the shamelessly fixed “auctions” for electricity held by the state, Enron bid, in one instance, to supply 500 megawatts of electricity over a 15 megawatt line. That’s like pouring a gallon of gasoline into a thimble — the lines would burn up if they attempted it. Faced with blackout because of Enron’s destructive bid, the state was willing to pay anything to keep the lights on…
Californians have found the solution to the deregulation disaster: re-call the only governor in the nation with the cojones to stand up to the electricity price fixers. And unlike Arnold Schwarzenegger, Gov. Gray Davis stood alone against the bad guys without using a body double. Davis called Reliant Corp of Houston a pack of “pirates” –and now he’ll walk the plank for daring to stand up to the Texas marauders.

Continue reading