Posts Tagged ‘Dick Cheney’

Jan Tucker’s November 2, 2010 California Endorsements & Recommendations

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010

California Ballot Endorsements by the “FACTION”

“FACTION” stands for “Friends And Cohorts of Tucker Independently Organizing Nationally.” It is my tongue-in-cheek, semi-Stalinist “Cult of Personality,” through which my friends (and cohorts) and I conduct our political operations in the electoral sphere. The following thoughts, recommendations and endorsements are for the California Ballot for the November 2, 2010 election.

Governor—Other than my view that electing Meg Whitman would portend a disaster for California, I’m not even considering voting for Edmund G. “Jerry” Brown, Jr. His father, “Pat” Brown, was a great governor assuming that one ignores his ties to the Chicago mob’s boys in California. But Jerry demonstrated throughout his career that he’s more interested in hyping his purported achievements in the media than he is in governing. When he was Secretary of State, he transferred so many employees to the P.R. office the real work of the office got slower and slower and practically to a standstill.

Jerry Brown (L) Jan B. Tucker (R)

I sued Jerry when he was Secretary of State and got an injunction against enforcement of the filing fees from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals which were then mandatory for all candidates regardless of whether they were wealthy, working class, or indigent, to run for office. A conservative Democrat, Ray Choate, also had an injunction against them in Northern California. The day after the U.S. Supreme Court in Lubin vs. Panish unanimously declared California’s electoral filing fees to be unconstitutional, Jerry threw five (5) candidates off the ballot, including Peace & Freedom Party candidates Robert Donovan (Attorney General), Bernie Klitzner (Controller), and Jim Stanbery (Treasurer) off the ballot for not paying the unconstitutional fees.

While serving as California Attorney General, he has allowed Deputy Attorney General Phillip Scott Chan to persecute the California League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) – tacitly assisting a LULAC member who is Chair of the California Democratic Party’s Chicano – Latino Caucus to assist a Republican Party takeover attempt of National LULAC – while ignoring complaints that she herself unlawfully ran a suspended corporation during her four (4) years as LULAC State Director.

Carlos Alvarez

So, I am voting without hesitation for CARLOS ALVAREZ, the Peace & Freedom Party candidate for Governor. Carlos is an activist with the Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL). While I have disagreements with the PSL on some policy issues, they have always told me to my face when and why they disagree, unlike the Feiginite and Berkeley Bolshevik leadership cult of PFP who lied and backstabbed on foreign policy issues relating to Armenia (more about that later).

Lieutenant Governor—I am dual endorsing GAVIN NEWSOM (Democrat) and C.T. WEBER (PFP). While I would have much preferred Matt Gonzalez as Mayor of San Francisco, I admire Newsom’s unequivocal support for same sex marriage rights and his reorganization of San Francisco’s health care delivery system. C.T. has a long history of organizing and struggle on many causes and has at times been an outsider from the cabal that tends to hang onto power in PFP by keeping it cult-like. Hopefully his leadership in PFP will make the organization the independent, radical, and inclusive organization that it once was and which it purports to be.

C.T. Weber

Mayor Gavin Newsom 10-5-09


Marylou Cabral

Secretary of State—Again, MARYLOU CABRAL (PFP) is a PSL member running on the PFP ticket. Debra Bowen to her credit is prosecuting Larry “Nativo” Lopez for voter fraud (it would be more interesting if the State would look into all the non-profit corporations he has left suspended and bankrupt) but when she was a state senator, she had a penchant for trying to ban and criminalize standard and legitimate private investigator practices that are necessary to enforce the rights to criminal defendants and other litigants to due process of law and equal protection.

Karen Martinez

State ControllerKAREN MARTINEZ (PFP). Controller is a race that frequently helps keep PFP on the ballot and with recent changes in election laws, that may be imperative to insure that working people have a way to participate in elections and debate the issues.

Debra Reiger

Charles "Kit" Crittenden

State Treasurer—Dual endorsement: DEBRA REIGER (PFP) and CHARLES “KIT” CRITTENDEN (Green). Debra is one of the more sensible people in PFP. At CSU Northridge where he taught, we used to call retired Philosophy Professor Crittenden “Crito.” It was an in-joke with those of us who were studying ancient Greek philosophy.

Attorney General—KAMALA HARRIS (Democratic). PFP candidate Robert J. Evans is guilty of Feiginism and Berkeley Bolshevism (for details on what these ultra-sectarian disputes are all about, email me privately). In 1994, Evans (along with Senate candidate Marsha Feinland) took park in an Alice in Wonderland-like telephonic PFP State Executive Committee meeting which resulted in PFP taking a position that effectively meant that Armenia should be punished with sanctions for the crime of having been blockaded by Turkey and Azerbaijan. This was a position to the right of the Turkish Embassy and Dick Cheney (who was the recipient of the Azeri-American Chamber of Commerce “Freedom Support” award). Evans later denied that he knew anything about this position (I didn’t believe him when he made that claim in 1998 and I don’t believe it now). Evans is so sectarian that I could see him wince when PFP adopted a part of my proposed 1978 platform on breaking up large agricultural holdings with redistribution to small family farmers and farm workers. I guess his consternation at the proposal was that this was part of Lenin’s “New Economic Program” which was dismantled when Stalin collectivized agriculture (more to Evans liking I guess).

KAMALA HARRIS’s election is imperative because LGBTI rights are not trivial and same-sex marriage is a very important issue. Harris will not appeal decisions striking down Proposition 8 as unconstitutional; Republican Steve Cooley is committed to doing so.

United States Senate—BARBARA BOXER has her faults. But when she was in the House of Representatives my NOW Chapter (San Fernando Valley/Northeast Los Angeles) gave her a big boost featuring her at our “Rally in the Valley” in 1992 shortly after she made a big push to get funding for abortion for rape and incest victims. Reproductive rights are front and center of many “culture war” election issues throughout the country these days and Boxer is always on the correct side of the issue.

That said, in some ways she exemplifies what Newspaper Guild founder Heywood Campbell Broun was talking about when he said that “A liberal is one who leaves the room when the fight begins.” When she was up for re-election years ago, at a gathering in a private residence I found myself standing next to Actor David Clennon. He asked Boxer, “what about Palestinian rights?”

Boxer launched into a long and belabored explanation of why Israel was created, including the horrors of the World War II Holocaust. At the end she finally said, “…and Palestinian rights? Of course! Of course!” Weeelllllll, I’m not sure what rights and how they are supposed to get them, about which Boxer said nothing.

As to Feinland though, as pointed out earlier she was part of the cabal that voted to have Armenia sanctioned, in spite of the knowledge I had presented on the issue to the PFP leadership that: (a) just before the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Azeri mobs raped, pillaged, and drove out around 800,000 ethnic Armenians in old fashioned pogroms, (b) unlawfully and unilaterally stripped a 90% ethnic Armenian region of its autonomy when Azerbaijan declared independence from the Soviet Union, and (c) blockaded the formerly autonomous region (Nagorno-Karabakh) and Armenia itself, leading to the death of about 1% of the Armenian population through cold alone in a single year. As pointed out, this puts her to the right of Dick Cheney, and that is really difficult to achieve on almost any issue.

BALLOT PROPOSITIONS

No. 19: YES

No. 20: Yes

No. 21: Yes

No. 22: No

No. 23: No

No. 24: Yes

No. 25: Yes

No. 26: No

No. 27: No


Konversations With Kevin (Akin) #2

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

This is the second in my series of anecdotes about Kevin Akin, Chair of the California Peace & Freedom Party.

In 1994, when I was the PFP’s nominee for State Treasurer, I had repeatedly sought a resolution from the State Central Committee of the party to take a strong stand against the Turkish-Azerjaijani blockade of Armenia that was literally killing Armenians. The party had twice tabled a resolution I’d proposed and I was getting insistent upon having the matter heard. Over dinner with Tom Condit at the Oakland Airport Hilton, where I’d stopped for a campaign appearance in the Oakland area, I outlined the issues for him and he promised that he would use his influence for me to get a fair hearing on the matter from the PFP’s executive committee.

This was when I first found out that people I’d thought of as friends, ideological allies, and comrades were in fact back-stabbing, sectarian, and incompetent fruitcakes who were completely out of touch with real issues that were important to real people. Not only did Condit later deny that we’d even discussed the matter, Bob Evans — a then perennial party candidate for Attorney General — later denied knowing what the party position was even though he’d been on the conference call that decided the issue. But Kevin Akin’s role in the whole affair was even more insidious.

Various party activists had gathered at different locations around the state. In Los Angeles we were at the Paul Robeson Center in South Central L.A. linked with the other sites.

The one really choice bit of insanity that is seared into my memory during the Alice in Wonderland type discussion that emanated from my request to go on record for having the Commerce Department apply the anti-boycott law to Armenia to protect it from corporations that were complicit with the Turkish/Azeri blockade was the one by Kevin Akin. Let me preface his statement by explaining that PFP, which was founded by people with a real concept of opposing racism and bigotry of all sorts, had degenerated into a clique of sectarians who only had a concept of anti-racist struggles if they were radical chic as in Tom Wolfe’s Radical Chic and Mau Mauing the Flak Catchers. Because there was no existing left-wing radical chic movement about dealing with the Turkish genocide of World War I in which 1.5 million Armenians were slaughtered, and the ongoing legacy of that conflict, most of the PFP leadership couldn’t grasp what to average people who read the New York Times or the Los Angeles Times or virtually any daily newspaper would understand.

Let me also point out that under the leadership of Kay McGlachlin and Marilyn Seals, two eminent leaders of PFP during the seventies, PFP had adopted novel parliamentary procedures including points of racism, sexism, homophobia, etc. that could be called during meetings just like more traditional “points of order.” Unfortunately for me, since I wasn’t a voting member of the executive committee, I wasn’t in a position to invoke a point of racism against what Kevin said.

The inane (and insane) discussion that ensued on my proposal for a resolution centered around everybody else’s ignorance of the history of the Caucusus region and the issues surrounding Armenia’s relations with Russia, Turkey, Azerbaijan, and the United States role in the area. So, people like Kevin would insert tid-bits of misinformation that they’d heard from lord-knows-where as though they were contributing to a sensible discussion. But the worst was not even the substance of what Kevin said, but with the language that he prefaced it with: “….all the Armenians I ever knew…..” believed or espoused thus and so.

Now, if he’d substituted the word “Blacks,” or “Chicanos,” or “Native Americans,” for Armenians, everybody on the call would have been up in arms because it would immediately be apparent to them that he had maligned a radical chic cause celebre group of people. Not one word of protest, not one point of racism, not one gasp was to be heard from the assemblage, who apparently considered that this was some sort of wise and legitimate comment, i.e., what Kevin had heard anecdotally from “all the Armenians” he ever knew.

Bottom line: I had to repudiate PFP’s leadership position because what they came out with was an abomination that placed the party to the right of Dick Cheney, and that was really hard to accomplish given that Cheney, as President of Halliburton, had received the Azeri-American Chamber of Commerce “Freedom Support Award” around that time. In fact, the position they took was to the right of the position of the Turkish embassy. They wound up calling for ‘sanctions against both sides” in the dispute, which, since under Section 901 of the Freedom Support Act there already were sanctions against Azerbaijan under American law, put PFP in the place of supporting extension of sanctions to Armenia for the crime of the nation’s having been blockaded by its neighbors (which led to the death of 1% of the population in a single year). Whereas Dick Cheney and the Turkish government wanted Section 901 sanctions taken off Azerbaijan, not even they advocated sanctions against Armenia.

Now, Kevin claims to be a somewhat religious Jew. I on the other hand am a thoroughly secular and blasphemous Jew at best, even though I’m the great-great grandson of a Rabbi. But at least I understand the concept of why Jews traditionally call themselves the “chosen people.” Being the “chosen people” is not a privilege. It’s a duty. Supposedly, god chose us to do his/her bidding and to bring justice to Earth. So, if we have any duties imposed on us by history in the spirit of our tribal mythology, then we should assume the duty to speak for all other nations, like the Armenians, the Roma (Gypsies), the Garifuna and all other peoples who like the Jews live for the most part in a diaspora and who have been routinely persecuted.

But then Kevin’s opinion on the subject was predicated on his anecdotal experience of what he was told by “all the Armenians” he ever knew.

A Photo from the World

War I Turkish slaughter

of Armenians