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The Kleptocracy of NC

11/29/2016

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L to R: Pat McCrory, Graeme Keith, Mac Everett and Andy Dulin, at the Good Fellows Club holiday lunch, Dec 2007. And I have never been as happy as these dudes, ever.
It's called a kleptocracy, and yes, it's exactly what it sounds like. Kleptomania is a compulsion to steal. A kleptocracy is a government run for the profit self-interest of an individual or company. It's a kleptocracy when the elected officials are personally profiting rather than doing right by their constituents. 
 
Trump should get a lot of attention for planning to run a kleptocracy. The greatest republic in the world is getting ready to be a government of self-interest and personal gain by a man who so far has completely refused to use a blind trust for his companies. But North Carolina has been leading the way with kleptocracy the past 4 years. 
 
Yes, Pat McCrory appears to have fully lost the election and should concede. Any reasonable person would have by this point. But not him. Why not? It is because he's profited hand-over-fist as our governor. Read this official complaint filed by the News & Observer on McCrory's ethics violations, which point out the main ones:
 
McCrory gave Duke Energy the lightest of hand slaps for their coal ash spill which has seriously harmed the health of thousands of North Carolinians and our natural resources. 40% of McCrory's 401K assets were wrapped up in Duke Energy stock - which would have suffered if their stock plunged from a large penalty.  Oh yeah, and he worked at Duke Energy for 16 years.
 
McCrory served 4 years on the Board of mortgage company Tree.com, for which he received a "gift" of over $1,000,000 worth of stock, $255,680 in director's fees and at least $10,063 in dividends,…all while appointing members of the NC Banking Commission, which regulates banks and…mortgage companies.
 
McCrory was listed on his tax forms as a consultant for his brother's sales solution company, McCrory & Company, LLC. But according to SEC filings, Pat was actually a full partner in the business. Many of the customers of McCrory & Company are also state contractors that donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Pat McCrory's gubernatorial campaign and to related PACs for his election.
 
Graeme Keith, of Keith Corp Development, received a $3 million state prison contract, against the wishes of prison officials, after stating in McCory's presence that he had given a lot of money to candidates over the years and now it was time for him "to get something in return." He did.   An FBI investigation followed of which McCrory was only recently cleared of breaking the law.
 
And that's not even getting into his time at Moore & Van Allen, a law firm that does lobbying deeply entrenched in the GOP. And that's just McCrory! Can you imagine all the stock holdings, board entanglements, income sources, business relationships and other potential conflicts of interest that Trump has? Well, you'll have to imagine it, because he hasn't released his tax records so far, and is under no legal rule to do so as president.
 
For the record, Democratic Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon wants to re-introduce a presidential tax return disclosure bill. We hope it gains momentum and will pertain fully to sitting presidents as well as future candidates. Pressure Virginia Foxx, Thom Tillis, and Richard Burr that this something we want.
 
But in the meantime, we need to hold our NC leadership to higher standards as well. NC state law does not require candidates to disclose details of salary information either. Perhaps it should reconsider that, because a self-serving NC leadership can have a disastrous impact close to home. Goodbye McCrory, we will not miss you. 
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The Candidates First Intro

1/18/2016

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While sitting in a recent Wilkes Democratic Party meeting, I was excited to hear our candidates speak publicly for the first time. I knew a few of them already, but even those I DID know, I'd not spoken with about policy or their vision. But tonight each was going to take the stage and I was excited. 

First up was our Democratic candidate of Register of Deeds: Connie Sue Cox 
The first thing I noticed was Connie's warm smile. Okay, well maybe the second. If you don't know Connie, she's in a wheelchair; paralyzed after a horseback riding accident at Stone Mountain 17 years ago. She's been quoted as saying about the difficulties she's faced, "I now know there is nothing I can't accomplish. My legs are paralyzed, but my mind and heart are not." She is most interested in modernizing the office by getting many of the records online securely like most counties in the state do. "My mission is to proudly serve my home of Wilkes County and the great state of North Carolina, while bringing a fresh start, new ideas and progressive technology to the office of the Register of Deeds.”

Next to speak was  Wilkes Board of Commissioners: Brandon Anderson 
Brandon is a big man whose stature is only matched by the size of his heart. His warmth is felt instantly, and it comes as no surprise that Brandon is an ordained minister since the age of 17. He has worked for the NC Dept. of Public Safety for the past 8 years and volunteers extensively. He spoke of the importance of the need for our government to serve the least of us: Improving our schools for our children, re-establishing drug prevention programs in the schools, growing more youth programs like Communities in Schools, and the crucial need to improve spending for the county's Dept of Social Services, the Homeless Shelter, and increasing jobs within the county. 

30th District NC Senate Seat: Michael Holleman 
A teacher at North Middle School, Michael is no stranger to running for office. After a previous run, he admit he learned a lot in the process running against Shirley Randleman. One of the most eye-opening lessons he learned was the lengths to which the far-right would go to control the messaging that is put out at the local level. Outside ultra-conservative organizations like ALEC, John Locke Foundation, and others are not representing the will of the citizens of NC, and we need to take it back from the extreme forces at play. 

94th District NC House of Representatives Seat: Mike Lentz 
Previously he ran as an independent, but this election Mike returns to the Democratic party to win the seat back from Jeffrey Elmore. I had the honor of sitting at a table with Mike at the 10th Annual Dr. Martin Luther King Breakfast, and we spoke about the rural Wilkes County of his youth; growing up poor, but not knowing you were poor because everyone around you was poor;...of working together because it was really about survival;...of reading the words of Dr. King's Letter from a Birmingham Jail for the first time and realizing how beautiful and powerful his words were. Mike is an unassuming man, but with a great deal of experience and a connection to Wilkes County that is very deep indeed.
 

All of these candidates promise to uphold the values of the Democratic Party and work to the betterment of Wilkes County. However, you might not hear a lot about them in the coming months. You see, none of these fine candidates are going to appear on the ballot in March because they are running unopposed within their party. So while the Republicans are fighting one another in the primary in March, our candidates will be waiting for their turn. However, they still need your willingness to listen to their message, your support through word and deed, and your commitment to vote for them in November. Please do!
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SCOTUS and the GOP

9/23/2015

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The upcoming election is an important one because of the ramifications the newly elected president will have in regards to the US Supreme Court. 

"By Election Day 2016, three justices — Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy — will be 80 or older. Given the likelihood of vacancies, a Democratic president would have the chance to maintain or, with a Scalia retirement, slightly enhance the ideological status quo. A Republican president would have the prospect of transforming it, for decades to come."

But there has been a disturbing trend in the rhetoric of the GOP candidates during the debates: 

"...notable, and unsettling, was the vehemence of some candidates’ resistance to the court’s decrees; the fury unleashed on Roberts; and their fundamental cluelessness about constitutional guarantees."

Read on some of the flawed constitutional thinking of the candidates here:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-candidates-constitution/2015/09/18/b2ceaea2-5e24-11e5-b38e-06883aacba64_story.html 


And then remember to VOTE DEMOCRAT!!
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5 "Known UnKnowns" To Predict The 2016 Election

9/17/2015

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Marc Ambinder at the website Five Thirty-Eight (statistician wunderkind Nate Silver's website he founded and edits) wrote a great article about the factors that have historically gone into predicting the winner of the Presidential Election. I urge you all to read the complete article HERE:

http://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/five-things-you-need-to-know-before-predicting-the-2016-election/

Ambinder points out 5 key "known unknowns" that contribute to the general election. These are items that need to be evaluated carefully to see how people are going to vote. With the undecided and unaffiliated voting segment larger than ever before, we know they are the ones that ultimately decide elections. A look at these issues may indicate which way the swing voter will swing:

1. How’s the economy really doing?
2. Is the economy or foreign affairs the voters main concern?
3. Can the Democratic nominee distinguish their base from that of Obama?
4. Who's constituency is more fired up?
5. And who is perceived as the winner & frontrunner?

Ambinder makes some really key points in looking at each of these 5 issues, and as Democrats we can see where we can make a real difference in focusing on the topics and staying enthusiastic, strong, and on topic. Additionally, he makes the point about single-women households being a HUGE factor in swing states like North Carolina.  

What this article shows most is that ultimately, at the end of the day,...voters really don't care about the sensationalistic hot-button type of issues. It's all about these 5 "known unknowns" that make a difference in presidential campaigns. How will our party address them and how will we as party members support them and communicate them to our neighbors? 
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