Michigan anti-choice activists to end-run Snyder’s veto, initiate petition drive to force insurers to drop abortion coverage

Last December, Michigan Governor Rick Snyder vetoed a bill that would have made it illegal for insurance companies to include abortion procedures as part of their standard coverage, even in cases of rape, incest, or where the mother’s life is in jeopardy. Undaunted by Snyder’s action, anti-choice activists kept at it, though, and yesterday they got the go-ahead from the Board of State Canvassers to begin a petition drive that – assuming they get the necessary number of signatures – would bypass either a gubernatorial veto, or a statewide ballot. The following comes from the Detroit Free Press.

…Because the federal Affordable Care Act eventually will require everyone to have health insurance, Right to Life of Michigan will embark on a petition drive to make sure that public and private health insurers offer only optional riders for abortion, instead of including the coverage in health plans.

If petition circulators get at least 258,088 valid signatures and the Legislature approves the issue, it will become law without a signature from the governor or a public vote. Seven other states also have the ability to create law by “indirect initiative,” according to the National Conference on State Legislatures.

The state Board of Canvassers approved the petition form Wednesday, and organizers can begin collecting signatures as soon as petitions are printed and circulators are trained, said Barbara Listing, president of Right to Life of Michigan…

Although ultimately unsuccessful, there was a protest on the part of pro-choice advocates at the Board of State Canvassers meeting. The above photo shows some of the more than 50 representatives from Planned Parenthood who turned out in response to the Right to Life of Michigan initiative. “This is something where we really have a small number of people in the legislature trying to determine what the private marketplace can offer,” said Meghan Groen, a spokeswoman for Planned Parenthood of Michigan, pointing out the hypocrisy of the free-market-loving conservatives.

As long as we’re on the subject of abortion, I should add that I’m not without sympathy for those folks who identify as “pro-life”… at least in theory. Having known several people over the course of my life who have chosen to terminate pregnancies, I know that it’s not a decision that most people make easily. It’s both physically and emotionally painful. And that’s why I believe that it’s so important that we advocate for sex education and contraception. I don’t often find myself siding with Bill Clinton, but, if I had to succinctly define my position, I’d likely use his phrase: “safe, legal and rare”. I think abortion should be readily available for all those who need it, regardless of circumstances, but I feel as though we should do everything in our power, as a community, to ensure that as few people as possible be put in a position where they need to make that difficult decision… That means engaging with young people openly about sex, making birth control readily available, and, perhaps most importantly, raising strong daughters that are less likely to be coerced into engaging in risky behavior. And, as I said before, we need to make sure that abortion services remain easy to access for all who need it… not just those who are victims of rape and incest.

Earlier, when I said that I’m not without sympathy for those folks who identify as pro-life, I added the caveat “at least in theory”. And it’s a big caveat. As much as I’d like to side with folks who claim to “speak for the unborn,” it’s been my experience that those who profess to care about “life” are, more often than not, a hypocritical lot. If they also protested against capital punishment, and campaigned voiciferously against the war, I could maybe drive by them as they stand yelling outside of Planned Parenthood and not mumble “assholes” under my breath. As it is, though, it’s hard for me to see it any other way.

As I see it, they don’t care about the lives of the unborn at all. If they did, they’d be fighting to fund sex education programs, which have been shown to dramatically decrease the number of unwanted pregnancies, and they’d be handing out condoms as they march, instead of waving around their bloody, 30-year old abortion-porn posters which depict proceedumers that aren’t even done anymore. The sad trouth is, though, they don’t give a damn about the teen girls they’re berating, or the children that will be born into less than nurturing environments. They just want earn points in the eyes of a vengeful God, hoping that, by screaming “baby killer” at 16 year old victims of date rape, they’ll be able to offest the fact that they don’t give all of their money to the poor, as Jesus instructed them to do, and continue to covet their neighbors’ wives, cut their beards, eat shellfish, any number of other things clearly prohibited in the Bible, and, as a result, somehow finagle their way into heaven. And, as long as we’re talking about about hypocrisy… there’s absolutely no way on earth, no matter how hard you might try to convince me, that I’d ever believe that Rick Santorum, or any of the other politicians who court the pro-life demographic, that, if their young daughter was raped, that they’d encourage her to have the child and see it as a “blessing from God.” But don’t you worry… abortion will always be an option for the rich. They may outlaw abortion in the US, but absolutely nothing would change for those with resources. So, this isn’t about ending abortion. This is about ending abortion for the poor and irresponsible. If a rich, white young woman gets pregnant, it’s an unfortunate mistake. If a poor, black young women gets pregnant, it’s proof that she’s irresponsible, and she should be made to pay for her lasciviousness.

[note: Governor Snyder may have vetoed this legislation in its last iteration, but that doesn’t mean he’s a friend of women when it comes to reproductive rights. As you may recall, he signed a comprehensive anti-abortion omnibus bill in December.]

Posted in Civil Liberties, Michigan, Politics, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 33 Comments

To stay put and fix what’s broken, or to leave the earth altogether and try our luck elsewhere…

NASA’s Chief Technologist, Mason Peck, took to Reddit this afternoon, answering questions on everything from the democratization of space, and our current research into warp drives, to the role of 3D printing in the colonization of other planets, and the possibility of encasing our astronauts in water during the voyage to Mars in order to protect them from the negative effects of radiation. It’s fascinating stuff, and, in a perfect world, we’d be investing more than just a half a percent of our federal budget on it. Unfortunately, though, it’s not a perfect world… as evidenced by the fact that we spend so much time talking about who holds our President’s umbrella, and so little about what it would actually take to build sustainable human communities in space. And I suspect this will ultimately be humanity’s undoing.

I would have thought, in the wake of our moon landing in 1969, that fear and superstition would have slowly started to melt away in the face of science, giving rise to a new age of enlightenment, but that’s not really what happened. Instead, a great many of us doubled down on ignorance, denying global warming, and demanding, until blue in the face, that our President, in spite of the overwhelming documentation to the contrary, was born outside of the United States. And, as education budgets are being slashed, and the grasp of lowest-common-denominator “reality” television is becoming more strong, I think it’s likely that we’ll see the dumbing down of the American population continue, and our federal dollars being spent on things like walls along the Mexican border, instead of manned space exploration. Personally, I’m not a huge fan of humanity, and a big part of me thinks that we should just allow the whole experiment to end here on earth. But, at the same time, I also think that we’ve gone too far to just throw in the towel and give in to the forces of stupidity now. And it’s that part of me that thinks that we should begin looking more seriously at what it would take to get a rocket to Mars, full of brilliant astronauts of childbearing age, ready to blast off and leave this rapidly decaying planet of ours for good. So, that’s the big question for tonight – should we give up on earth, or should we focus our activities on saving it?

This, as I see it, is the biggest question facing humanity… and I think it’s summed up pretty well by the following two quotes – the first of which is from theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking, and the second of which is from celebrity astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. I don’t think the two are by any means mutually exclusive, but, if you follow them through to their logical conclusions, I think you’ll agree that they point toward two very different visions for our future. So, with all that said, I’m curious as to what you stand… Should we put all of our efforts into finding another planet, where humanity might have a better chance of long term survival, or should we fight to make that future on earth? (Personally, I think we need to do both, but where’s the fun in arguing that?)


Posted in Other, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 24 Comments

No Kissing, No Knives

A friend who teaches first and second grade sent me the following today. She says that she found it waiting for her when she entered her classroom this morning.

Posted in Other, Photographs | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Oily, environmentally toxic pyramid of greed being erected in Detroit by the Koch brothers

For those of you who haven’t had the pleasure of traveling along the Detroit River lately, there’s apparently a new landmark on the Motor City waterfront – a three-story tall pile of petroleum coke, which covers an entire city block. According to a report in today’s New York Times, we have libertarian industrialists Charles and David Koch to thank for the toxic eyesore. It would seem that they’ve decided to stockpile “the dirtiest residue from the dirtiest oil on earth” in Detroit until such time that it can be sold to a country that doesn’t have a legitimate regulatory agency that polices power plant emissions. (That quote comes from Lorne Stockman, the author of a recent study on petroleum coke for the environmental organization Oil Change International.)

Petroleum coke, or “petcoke,” if you aren’t familiar with the term, is the byproduct one is left with after processing oil sands, like those which are to be found in abundant supply in Canada. In this particular case, the oil sands have been brought from Alberta to be processed along the Detroit River, at a refinery owned by Marathon Petroleum. (The refinery has been active since 1930, but just began processing Canadian oil sands in November.) The Koch brothers, it would appear, have been purchasing the waste product, and stockpiling it in Detroit these past few weeks, right alongside the river from which we all drink, with the intention of eventually exporting it to a libertarian paradise like China, where, practically speaking, there don’t appear to be emissions standards. (On the open market, the material costs 25% less than coal, and generates up to 10% more CO2.)

To make matters worse, the waterside property just east of the Ambassador Bridge, where the coke is being stored, is owned by the most hated man in Detroit – billionaire slumlord Manuel (Matty) Moroun. (The Koch brothers, from what I’m told, also have a second site in Detroit, on the Detroit/Wayne County Port Authority property, near the intersection of Clark and Fort.) I don’t know that I agree, as I think it has more to do with money than anything else, but some are speculating that this is Moroun’s way of getting even with the voters of Michigan, who recently decided that his Ambassador Bridge should have a publicly-owned competitor.

Here, by way of background, is a clip from the New York Times:

…An initial refining process known as coking, which releases the oil from the tarlike bitumen in the oil sands, also leaves the petroleum coke, of which Canada has 79.8 million tons stockpiled. Some is dumped in open-pit oil sands mines and tailing ponds in Alberta. Much is just piled up there.

Detroit’s pile will not be the only one. Canada’s efforts to sell more products derived from oil sands to the United States, which include transporting it through the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, have pulled more coking south to American refineries, creating more waste product here.

Marathon Petroleum’s plant in Detroit processes 28,000 barrels a day of the oil sands bitumen…

Coke, which is mainly carbon, is an essential ingredient in steelmaking as well as producing the electrical anodes used to make aluminum.

While there is high demand from both those industries, the small grains and high sulfur content of this petroleum coke make it largely unusable for those purposes, said Kerry Satterthwaite, a petroleum coke analyst at Roskill Information Services, a commodities analysis company based in London.

“It is worse than a byproduct,” Ms. Satterthwaite said. “It’s a waste byproduct that is costly and inconvenient to store, but effectively costs nothing to produce.”

Murray Gray, the scientific director for the Center for Oil Sands Innovation at the University of Alberta, said that about two years ago, Alberta backed away from plans to use the petroleum coke as a fuel source, partly over concerns about greenhouse-gas emissions. Some of it is burned there, however, to power coking plants.

The Keystone XL pipeline will provide Gulf Coast refineries with a steady supply of diluted bitumen from the oil sands. The plants on the coast, like the coking refineries concentrated in California to deal with that state’s heavy crude oil, are positioned to ship the waste to China or Mexico, where it is burned as a fuel. California exports about 128,000 barrels of petroleum coke a day, mainly to China…

So, the Koch brothers, who are among the most ardent global warming deniers in the country, are using Detroit as their temporary dumping ground for this filthy fuel, the use of which, according to experts, could make our current climate problem “unsolvable.” And, what’s more, according to Rashida Tlaib, the member of the Michigan House representing that part of Detroit where this coke is being stockpiled, “Nobody knew (it) was going to happen.” The Koch brothers, it would seem, began dumping the material in the City without so much as a word to those who live in the area… And apparently that’s OK. According to Andy Hartz, the southeast Michigan district supervisor with the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, the substance seems to fall into a regulatory gray area. Hartz told Michigan Radio yesterday that, “The DEQ does not have any kind of specific regulations that regulates this type of land use.” According to Hartz, “The product is a commodity. And because of that, it’s not a waste material.” (Hartz also said that the DEQ has been informed that the coke would be shipped out of Detroit once the ice on the Detroit River melts… which seems odd to me, given that we’ve had temperatures in the 70s these past few weeks. But who am I to question the climate science of the Koch brothers?)

It’s unknown what the environmental impact might be, but, according to the Detroit Free Press, Representatives Gary Peters and John Conyers have written to the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, asking the agency to look into the coke’s potential impact on the river and residents. “We fear the storage of petroleum coke along the river poses a potential threat to water and air quality. The material may contain trace amounts of metal and could have damaging health impacts if fugitive dust enters the air. Petroleum coke that enters the water may continue to frustrate efforts to prevent contamination from runoff,” the Congressmen said in their letter.

According to the safety data sheet for petroleum coke, the material should not be allowed to contaminate ground water, and the U.S. Coast Guard and others should be notified immediately if runoff into waterways should occur. I suppose it’s possible that the Koch brothers and Matty Moroun have taken every precaution to ensure that such leakages don’t occur, but, given their histories, I don’t know that it’s likely, and, with a thunderstorm expected later tonight, I’m concerned that we may well see runoff into the Detroit River… But, on the plus side, it’s only Detroit, right? I mean, who really gives a fuck? It’s not like Koch brothers and their fellow 1-percenters are vacationing in the shadow of the Ambassador Bridge, inhaling the fine carbon particulate over caviar finger sandwiches.

Having this stuff in Detroit, while disgusting, isn’t really what bothers me. What bothers me more is that wealthy American industrialists, knowing full well the ramifications in terms of human health and the environment, would be willing to ship this filthy fuel to the likes of China and Mexico, driving yet another nail into the coffin of humanity. But, really, I wouldn’t expect anything less from the Koch brothers. When have they ever demonstrated anything but the unfettered shock and awe of slash and burn capitalism in its purest form?

What’s worse, I’m sure this isn’t the end of it. I’m certain, if they had their way, they’d be able to burn petroleum coke without oversight here in the United States. (Some is burned in the U.S., but it’s use is policed to some extent.) And, given their success getting anti-union right-to-work legislation passed here in Michigan, I wouldn’t be surprised if they started here… Who wants to bet that we see something to that effect during the next lame duck session?

[note: The above image was created by our friend Ken Boyd in response to a comment left by Demetrius, suggesting that we take the opportunity to tie this story to our satirical Pure Michigan campaign.]

Posted in Detroit, Environment, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 35 Comments

Being sucked into the Amy’s Baking Company vortex

My intention was to tuck the kids into bed and immediately get to work on a post about Dave Bing’s announcement that he wouldn’t seek a second term as Mayor of Detroit. Unfortunately, though, that’s not what happened. Instead of getting right to work, I decided to dip my toe into the sea of crazy that is Amy’s Baking Company. “I’ll just take a few minutes to see what all the fuss is about,” I thought. Now, four hours later, I find myself treading water in the middle of said sea, completely disoriented, with no land in sight, trying to figure out just how it was that I got here.

For those fortunate few who have yet to make the acquaintance of Scottsdale, Arizona restaurant owners Amy “You people are all shit” and Samy “Get out” Bouzaglo, here’s the episode of chef Gordon Ramsay’s reality series Kitchen Nightmares that brought the irate, delusional and paranoid couple to the forefront of America’s collective consciousness.

For what it’s worth, I don’t generally watch so-called “reality” television, as I don’t believe that those suffering from serious personality disorders should be manipulated and exploited for our entertainment. For some reason, though, I can’t seem to pull away from this. I keep telling myself that, fro the good of my soul, I need to move on to something better, but yet I continue to sit here, following links, mouth agape, reading up on the stealing of tips, the selling of packaged food items as homemade, and the history of fraud. From Amy’s epic social media melt-down that followed the show’s airing earlier this week, to the inevitable claims on behalf of the Bouzaglos that it had been the work of hackers, the story just doesn’t seem to want to quit… offering one lesson after another on how not to run a business in today’s highly-connected world. Today, a former Amy’s Baking Company waitress even took to Reddit, answering questions. And theCrazy Amymemes, as you might expect, have begun to propagate across the internet like mad. I want desperately to sleep, but I can’t make myself log out. Maybe it’s that I dream of opening a restaurant of my own one day, and fear that I might meet a similar fate, but I find all of this incredibly fascinating, and don’t want to miss a single detail… I just hope the internet lynch mob, which has been gathering on Reddit the past few days, knows when to let up. I’d hate to see this end in tragedy, and, as of right now, I’d say that’s a distinct possibility.

I think it’s also worth noting that I’m not taking any pleasure in the destruction of this couple, even though, on the surface, it would appear as though they’re deserving of everything that’s happening. For reasons unknown to me, I just enjoy watching how businesses operate. Other folks like watching football. I like watching entrepreneurs navigate difficult situations. It’s weird, I know. I just find it fascinating. And this a goldmine.

Posted in Food, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 32 Comments

Connect

BUY LOCAL... or shop at Amazon through this link Banner Initiative Linnette Lao