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HOW TO REQUEST AN ABSENTEE BALLOT - NOW

Posted by jj on Aug 12, 2020 in Intro, Equal Representation
HOW TO REQUEST AN ABSENTEE BALLOT - NOW
HOW TO REQUEST AN ABSENTEE BALLOT  -  NOW

The 2020 elections are the most consequential in generations. But with a global pandemic not only straining our healthcare system, paralyzing our economy and upending our daily lives, our fundamental right to vote is equally under threat.

The Primary Day debacle in Wisconsin is the most recent — and cruel — example. Conservative lawmakers, right-wing judges and even the U.S. Supreme Court participated in an attempt to keep the Primary Election date and curtail absentee voting. Voters waited in line , some for hours, wearing masks and distancing, while those with underlying medical conditions or didn’t want to risk getting sick were essentially disenfranchised.

No one should have to choose between their health and safety and participating in our democratic processes. While most states and the federal government have yet to adopt universal vote by mail, one of the best ways right now to stay safe this election season is to request and vote by absentee ballot. 

We’ve put together a quick guide to help you retain your right to vote in the upcoming elections. Right now, only five states, Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington and Utah, offer all-mail voting. If you live in one of these states, you’re in luck. But the vast majority of Americans lack mail-in voting options. Multiple bills to enact election security and universal vote-by-mail have stalled in Congress, by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who has allowed hundreds of important House-passed bills to stack up and be ignored.

Unsurprisingly, Donald Trump recently called voting by mail “corrupt” and “RIPE for FRAUD” (it’s not). Some suggest that Trump’s unwillingness to provide the U.S. Postal Service with additional funding to keep the agency running during the pandemic is a political game threatening mail-in voting and our democracy. (Hypocrisy alert: Trump himself recently admitted that he voted by mail. 

Without an option to vote by mail for everyone, how can you exercise your right to vote while protecting your health? A different vote-by-mail alternative: Absentee ballots. Each state has its own rules governing absentee voting — some with more stringent requirements, others enjoy no-excuse absentee voting. Luckily, several states have begun relaxing the rules for who can request an absentee ballot, raising the count to 34 states and the District of Columbia now allowing no-excuse absentee voting.

If your state hasn’t held its primary election yet, now is the time to request your absentee ballot. Sixteen states and one territory Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, West Virginia, Wyoming and Puerto Rico — have recently pushed their primaries back or instituted vote by mail. 

You can find out the rules for your state here.

Requesting your ballot is simple. The non-profit Vote.org provides a number of handy resources to register to vote, verify your registration status and, of course, request an absentee ballot.

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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) Responds to Rep. Ted Yoho (R-FL)

Posted by admin on Jul 23, 2020 in Intro, Violence
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) Responds to Rep. Ted Yoho (R-FL)

This video speaks for itself!

 

2

A National Teacher Strike

Posted by admin on Jul 22, 2020 in Home Page, Health and Safety
A National Teacher Strike
A National Teacher Strike
As fall approaches, parents, teachers, administrators, and politicians are pondering how to reopen schools. It it is clear the global pandemic has presented inherent risks never contemplated by these decision makers. To make the situation worse, national leadership has chosen to reject the advice proffered by our scientific community and this has lead to an epidemiological disaster of biblical proportions, one that can be made worse by wholesale reopening of our schools.
 
Long before the Covid-19 pandemic, the education system has been burdened with over-crowding and lack of resources. This has produced mini-epidemics of influenza and other communicable diseases. What happens to the children also happens to the educational professionals that serve valiantly and often without gratitude. The narrative, as now seen in public media, does not include the risks faced by our educators.
 
To be clear, the nation has not recognized the economic role that public education plays in our society. It is not simply a system where future citizen employees are trained. At the most fundamental level, public schools have been a daycare system that allows both parents to go to work and not worry about their children, thus allowing a two income economy. This pandemic has starkly brought in to focus the essential roles that educators play in our society.
 
When teachers and other educational professionals advocate for themselves they are derided as unprofessional and at the worst greedy. It is time for employers to step up and become a voice in defense our educators, if only for needs of their own businesses. School boards and administrators should join in as well.
 
Finally, it is time for the National Education Association and other education organizations to organize a national teacher strike. It is only when parents must stay home to care for their children that our nation will recognize the value that educators play in their individual lives and businesses and will then laud these unsung heroes.
 
A National Teacher Strike
 
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Trump, DeVos and the GOP have no clue about the imminent tsunami

Posted by jj on Jul 20, 2020 in Health and Safety
Trump, DeVos and the GOP have no clue about the imminent tsunami
Trump, DeVos and the GOP have no clue about the imminent tsunami

Dartagna

Community (This content is not subject to review by Daily Kos staff prior to publication.)

Wednesday July 15, 2020 · 5:13 PM EDT

I don’t last too long in “closed Facebook groups” on community/local issues because usually the admins prohibit political discussion in these forums, on the sensible assumption that these would otherwise degenerate into vitriolic bloodbaths, permanently hampering or killing all discussion. I have nothing but awe and admiration for my friends who manage to navigate such forums with grace and equanimity, but I’ve simply accepted that it would probably be best if I didn’t even try to do that at this point. 

Having said that, I’ve managed to lurk around one recently, involving a group of suburban parents—Republicans and Democrats--trying to intelligently address the subject of our township’s plans to open up our public schools in six weeks. After a while you can discern the political leanings of some of the posters, but the one thing they have in common is that they are all very, very concerned about their kids. And they are completely freaked out about how schools will plan to reopen this fall.

I suspect my local “closed group” is being mirrored by other, similar groups in practically every school district in the country. In the context of what we’ve been hearing from the Trump administration—or rather what we’ve not been hearing—I have to think that Donald Trump and his billionaire sycophant, Betsy DeVos, our current Secretary of Education, have absolutely no clue about what is metastasizing in the fevered swamps of American parents of school-age children right now in this country, or its potential to explode in a wave of electoral anger that could dwarf what occurred to the Republican Party in 2018.

I’m talking about a thermonuclear, cataclysmic, event of raw, unbridled voter fury. I’m talking about an existential, political wipe-out of Biblical proportions. A tsunami, if you will.

The most generous characterization of the Trump administration’s approach towards the situation facing our public schools in less than two months—six weeks or less, in fact, for many schools, including ones in Texas-- is one of willful blindness, suggestive of an astonishing degree of deliberate, magical thinking-- that imagines an idyllic sequence of cause and effect, where these schools will miraculously reopen, filled with rows of smiling teens, pre-teens,  elementary schoolers and their teachers, happy to share and mingle in their wondrous educational experience in the face of this horrific and unprecedented health crisis.

It is a fantasy world, reminiscent of a Disney (or possibly early Spielberg) film, where the messy issues of the Covid-19 pandemic are swept aside and resolved, by the force and will of the Good Leader and his Education Secretary. Where all that is perfect and hoped for incredibly comes to pass, simply as a result of their willing it to occur. In this magical space, suspended like a gossamer soap bubble in time, pesky “social distancing” problems are easily resolved or mere afterthoughts, piddling problems capable of swift and effective solutions, as students and teachers "knuckle it through" together, bravely swinging open their doors to the unflinching praise of millions of parents of happy, rosy-cheeked school-age children.

Let me explain what I think is going to happen.

I think that for the next six weeks, depending on where you live, there is going to be an intense debate among parents going back and forth about just how much schools should open. I think that debate will be shaded by the pronouncements of local health departments, political affiliations, and school board compositions, by preconceptions, some rigid, some flexible, about the scope of the risk involved and how it can be mitigated, or even whether it should be a concern.

That debate will be shaped by conflicts between parents of small children, who are desperately counting on being able to return to work, and those of children old enough to stay home on their own; by whether the local consensus is for online or in-person learning, or some hybrid of both (which will in turn be influenced by what the wealthier and classier school district down the road is doing); between two-income families and those with stay-at-home mothers or fathers; between parents with special needs children who cannot learn a great deal online, and those with children who adapted easily and even cheerfully to online teaching formats; between those parents who cannot afford Internet access or Google-drive compatible tablets and those who can; between parents whose children are diabetic or immuno-compromised and parents whose sole concern for their child revolves around the fall football season; between those parents with children who simply came home from college and cheerfully plopped down again in their bedrooms last spring when forced to go online, and parents with children in tony private schools and elite colleges who cannot understand why they’re being asked to pay $75,000 per year so their child can Zoom-chat with a teacher three thousand miles away.

All of these swirling concerns will be dumped on underpaid, overstressed teachers and professors who will be forced to cope not only with the health consequences but to adapt new teaching methods to which they may not be suited, not to mention thoroughly besieged and cash-strapped school and college administrators who must endure the political consequences of their decisions.

But, rest assured, plans will be settled upon, procedures will be implemented, and decisions will be made, as always, of course, subject to the ongoing aspect of the Covid-19 pandemic (which by September promises to remain quite out of control). In fact all this is happening right now, everywhere as we speak, and has been happening for months. Because every school district, it seems, is on its own. They have received one simplistic edict from Donald Trump and his Secretary of Education: to reopen, with physical attendance, at all costs.

And after all those plans are made, and those districts that opted for in-person learning have opened their doors for two weeks, one child is going to come to school sick. Maybe whoever he/she goes home to will fall ill. Someone, either a child, a teacher or family member, at some point, will get very sick, and someone may even be hospitalized and die. That news will fly across social media at speeds we can scarcely contemplate.  In a matter of hours parents will be screaming at school administrators, at teachers, even at each other, pointing fingers and asking why this particular child was permitted in the school at all. Entire classes will be quarantined and the schools shut down and deep-cleaned. People who had returned to work, counting on their kids being in class during the day, will have to come home to take care of their children. In this Hobbesian work environment Americans are facing, many of them will be fired or let go by employers because of this. Two weeks later, the school reopens, and the same thing happens again. Not only in public schools, but at those nice colleges as well.

And then, suddenly it’s October, and despite all the best laid plans, things are shutting down again. Only a few schools, mostly in outlying, rural areas, remain open with physical in-presence instruction. American parents are helpless and they are infuriated. Infuriated beyond measure. Their kids are home, and although the teachers are making truly heroic efforts, it’s the same substandard instruction.  Some parents are infuriated that the schools had to close again, some are infuriated that they were ever opened in the first place. But everyone is angry, angrier than they have ever been in their lives about anything.

Let’s just stop there, because this is an important point, and it relates to what I’ve been seeing in this Facebook group. It’s something that I think people like Donald Trump and Betsy DeVos are constitutionally incapable of appreciating because of who and what they are. Trump, as we all know, is a product of privileged, private schools where he was ferried along thanks to his father’s wealth, cheating his way into Wharton. DeVos is a scion of a rapacious billionaire family that essentially tries to suck the blood out of public education to enrich their private-school, for-profit corporate interests and obscure religious convictions. Neither appears to have any conception of the intensity which ordinary Americans view their childrens’ futures, because neither have had to work for anything in their lives, least of all in providing for their children. 

But these parents—both Republicans and Democrats alike—that  I’m seeing on Facebook are intimately wrapped up in every detail of their kids’ futures. They are attentive—they are exacting. They inform themselves like crazy, reading and sharing everything. Many, if not most have spent enormous amounts of time and sacrifice trying to provide their children the best possible futures (some have gone quite overboard in fact, but that’s another subject). Their children are the most important thing to them, by far. There is no sacrifice many of these parents would forego for their children, even if it meant sacrificing their own lives.

That’s how wrapped up these parents are in this school reopening issue. It’s more than just simply reopening schools, it’s their lives, hopes and dreams for their children that are being sacrificed during this pandemic. Nothing is more important to them--even politics.

Yes, when this “reopen at all costs” bubble bursts and the scope of the school calamity crashing down around them comes into full focus, some of those Republican parents will blame the media, or Democrats, or Anthony Fauci or anyone but Donald Trump for overreacting to the pandemic, for the fact that their kids cannot attend school, and maybe even for the fact that they can’t go back to work. There are some people in this country, maybe even 35-40%, who are so brainwashed by right-wing media that they won’t be able to relate the catastrophe in the schools to the administration’s (and the GOP-controlled Senate’s) complete lack of assistance or guidance in simply urging schools to “reopen, or else.”

But those aren’t the parents I’m seeing in this Facebook group, at least in this suburban enclave. They are simply going to be furious, furious at the disruption to their lives, and furious at the heedless, unthinking destruction of their childrens’ futures. Many are going to comprehend then and only then what the the wholesale folly of attempting to reopening the U.S. economy without proper deference and regard to a deadly viral pandemic has truly wrought. They’re going to take out that fury on those who did nothing, who offered no financial assistance to either ordinary Americans or the schools where they send their children. Those who offered no help or guidance--just a stupid, mindless and insensitive exhortation to fully open the schools, and the consequences be damned.

.This content was created by a Daily Kos Community member.

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Living Under Florida’s New Forced Parental Consent Law – Jane’s Story

Posted by jj on Jul 17, 2020 in Reproductive Rights
Living Under Florida’s New Forced Parental Consent Law – Jane’s Story
Living Under Florida’s New Forced Parental Consent Law – Jane’s Story

Florida’s new Forced Parental Consent Law was signed by Governor DeSantis on June 30th.  Per TBAF Board Member April McGrath, "This law is just another way for the government to interfere with our right to obtain a safe abortion."

For teens who cannot involve a parent or legal guardian in their decision, a judicial bypass is their only resort.  However, as the Tampa Bay Abortion Fund learned today, the courts still do not have updated documents for minors seeking a judicial bypass.

 

Meet Jane, 17 and a senior in high school. On her own, she navigated the internet to find resources to help her terminate her pregnancy.

She spoke with a case manager in Texas, a lawyer in Florida, and then an underground transportation network that would drive her to court, to her appointment, help her pick up her prescriptions and safely deliver her home.

When asked if Jane would be safe at home, all she said was, "as long as no one finds out."

For heightened security, her court appointment was made in a nearby county, and she was picked up in her neighborhood, out of sight from her house.

Despite being assigned an attorney, the hearing on Jane's petition was delayed for over a week. When her petition was finally brought to hearing, the judicial bypass paperwork provided by the clerk was out of date and not reflective of the new law. Jane left the courthouse without the judicial bypass she needed to obtain an abortion.

Fortunately for Jane, a special arrangement was later made for the judge to approve an amendment to her paperwork to acknowledge the new law and the need for an additional waiver for consent, so an additional hearing wasn't required.  The amendment was hand delivered to Jane’s chosen clinic.

Jane was lucky to have connected with a group that could provide support despite the multiple hurdles that were placed in front of her.    

 

For teens unable to talk to their parents about their pregnancy, there are options and mutual aid organizations are poised to assist where possible.

We are here. Find us at https://tbafund.com/

Research more at
TeenAbortionFlorida.com

Donate

 

Contact:
Lily Wright
TBAF
Media Coordinator
727.314.3956

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