Monday, October 25, 2010

Down With Tyranny's 2010 California Down-Ballot Voter Guide

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Daisy and Harry want to vote early and they keep asking me to help with the complicated propositions. One thing for sure... you can't figure much out from the misleading onslaught of TV ads, which don't even give you a clue what any of these propositions are about. There are 9 statewide propositions this year, 4 good ones, 4 bad ones and one head-scratcher.

Let's start with Prop 19, which would legalize and tax marijuana, which I'll count as a good one. Politicians are afraid of it and they're all opposing it. It was stupid-- and racist-- to criminalize marijuana in the first place. It's just idiotic and socially debilitating to keep it illegal. I haven't smoked a joint since 1969 but I'm voting YES.

Prop 20 was written by a right wing activist specifically to decrease the number of congressional seats the Democrats hold in Congress. Gerrymandering has been epic in California-- almost as bad-- but not quite-- as in Florida or Texas-- and when Florida and Texas end gerrymandering, California should as well. Until then, this bill is just one-sided Democratic disarmament. I'm voting NO.

Prop 21 will save the state parks, which will be shut down if the measure fails. The wealthy never want to pay for the commons-- like state parks-- but this attempt doesn't even tax them. It spreads it out among all vehicle owners at $18 per year. It's worth it. I'm voting YES.

Prop 22 is the most difficult of this year's crop of props to understand. It seems to help with funding for local governments-- cities and counties-- but at the expense of public education and other vital public services. I'm voting NO.

Prop 23 is the big one and the ad above captures the spirit of the debate. Wealthy Texas oil firms, Valero and Tesoro have put this on the ballot and are paying the run millions of dollars in deceptive advertising. It would repeal California's global warming legislation and wreck the state's burgeoning clean energy economy. The bill is a job killer for the sake of a few wealthy, avaricious oil tycoons with a malevolent agenda. I'm noting NO-- big time!

Prop 24 will close tax loopholes for corporations that are costing the state $2 billion annually by allowing corporate tax evaders to shift the burden onto ordinary working families. The Republicans want to keep the loopholes in place for their corporate donors. I'm voting YES.

Prop 25 is the long past-due majority-rule amendment for the state budget. This one would eliminate the 2/3 requirement in the state legislature to pass the annual budget, freeing the majority from the tyranny of a small minority of crazed ideologues and puppets of the super-wealthy with their own selfish agendas. I cannot wait to vote YES on this one.

Prop 26 is another right-wing special interest amendment, this time to protect polluters from legal remedies. It goes back to the old argument of who pays for clean-up when corporations pollute the air and water, the taxpayers or the polluters. The corporate polluters are spending big to make sure it's the taxpayers who pay, not the polluters who profit from the pollution. I'm voting NO! NO! A thousand times NO.

Prop 27 is the one I referred to as a head-scratcher. It seeks to eliminate the commission to redraw state legislative district boundaries and it's been endorsed by the California Democratic Party, the California Labor Federation, the teachers union, the state's biggest conservation group and other trustworthy organizations. But it's confusing, especially with Prop 20 on the ballot. My understanding is that if both Prop 20 and Prop 27 win, the one that passes with the highest majority will go into effect. My gut tells me to vote YES on this as a way of helping defeat the really odious Prop 20.

As for candidates... it's a lot simpler than it used to be. There are good Democrats and there are bad Democrats. But there are no good Republicans... not one... anywhere. Like she said in her "I'm not a witch" ad, they are all Christine O'Donnell-- stupid, self-serving, bigoted and incompetent.

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4 Comments:

At 11:47 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dont you mean NO on 26??

 
At 12:24 PM, Anonymous me said...

Dont you mean NO on 26??

Yeah, you'd better fix that.

You guys have often needed a proofreader.

 
At 12:33 PM, Anonymous me said...

Valero and Tesoro have put this on the ballot

When I first learned that several weeks ago, I added Valero to my own personal boycott of gasoline stations (joining Exxon and BP).

Valero will remain on the boycott list until they publicly apologize for their misdeeds and contribute the same amount of money to a worthy cause. That is to say, probably forever.

I know that a one-person boycott is not of much use, so if anyone cares to join me, that would be fine.

(For an oil company, Chevron seems less evil than most. I know they have a pollution problem in South America, but to be fair, that was caused by Texaco. If Chevron had known about it at the time they purchased Texaco, they might not have gone through with it.)

 
At 12:37 PM, Anonymous me said...

There are good Democrats and there are bad Democrats. But there are no good Republicans... not one... anywhere.

Yup. Dead-on accurate.

 

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