Why the Immigration Bill Died in the Senate — and Will Keep Dying

By Joshua Holland, AlterNet

Posted on June 12, 2007, Printed on June 13, 2007http://www.alternet.org/story/53843/

EXCERPTS:

Last Friday, a small but vocal group of hardliners hijacked the
national debate over immigration and, in all likelihood, derailed the
effort to reform a system that Americans from across the political
spectrum agree is dysfunctional. (George Bush has said he hopes to restart the negotiations, but most observers agree that a deal is not likely.)

The bill — which began as a compromise that everyone hated — was killed
in the Senate, smothered under the weight of a flurry of unpopular amendments
offered up by a small group of Senators, including some of the
chamber’s most reactionary, before the national debate was even under
way.

…Immigration hardliners’ views of immigrants themselves are harsher than Main Street’s. According to data compiled by the Pew Research Center, Americans’ attitudes toward immigrants from Latin American and Asia are more positive
now than in the 1990s, “even as concern over the problems associated
with immigration has increased.” Most people view both groups as “very
hard working and having strong family values.” Pew notes that
“Impressions of Latin American immigrants, in particular, have grown
much more positive, with 80 percent describing them as very hard
working compared with 63 percent nearly a decade ago.”

Immigration hardliners are not only Republicans — there are Democrats who are indistinguishable on the issue in rhetoric as well as substance — but only one party is captive to their views.

Amnesty: a handy fiction

All of these data point to a serious problem for immigration hardliners:
Although there remain very serious differences about the specifics
regarding immigration, most Americans favor at least the broad
principles of comprehensive reform. The hardliners can’t win an honest
debate on the issue, and apparently they know it. That’s why they
insist that the Senate proposals were based on offers of “amnesty.”

It’s no more accurate to call the measure contemplated last week in the
Senate an “amnesty bill” then it is to call it a rhinoceros; while an
amnesty implies simply granting people legal status, the Senate
proposal would have required undocumented immigrants who can prove they
have been working and paying taxes in the country for an extended time
to then fork over $9,000 in fines and application fees (for a family of
four) and that would only get them to the back of the line, with a
four-year “Z” visa. Then, after those four years were up, the head of
the household could return to his or her native country and file an
additional application — paying an additional $4,000 penalty in
addition to application fees. If they pass a health screening, an
English proficiency test and another test of American civics, then they
become legal. But only after the backlog of existing applicants is
cleared — no “cutting in line.” All of that for people who have
committed a misdemeanor

….

In fact, a principal reason that there was so little passion on the part of the
compromise’s supporters was that it had a number of provisions in it
that were designed to mollify the hardliners but ended up creating a
bill that alienated potential support from the center and from the
left. Christopher Sabatini, senior director of policy at the Americas
Society/Council of the Americas, told the New York Times that the bill had been “born an orphan in terms of popular support.”

Trying to bring immigration hardliners around was always a fool’s errand:
They’ve shown time and again that they won’t accept the humane,
comprehensive approach to immigration that most Americans favor.


Joshua Holland is an AlterNet staff writer.

WORLD WITHOUT OIL

Gas Prices

What’s Going On Here?

WORLD WITHOUT OIL is an alternate reality event, a serious game for the
public good.

It invites everyone to help simulate a global oil shock. People
participate by contributing original online stories, created as though
the oil shock were really happening.

The game’s masters rank the participants (“players”) according to their
contributions to our realistic portrayal of the oil shock. The game
also places value on player-created communities, collaborative stories,
and collective efforts.

Each contribution helps the game arrive at a larger truth. No team of
experts knows better than a given individual what effect an oil shock
would have upon that individual’s life, or what action he or she will
take to cope. Personal reactions to our simulated oil shock, placed in
context with many other points of view, will help us all realize what’s
at stake in our oil-fired culture.

HOW CAN A GAME HELP US PREPARE?

WORLD WITHOUT OIL aims to help fill a huge gap in our nation’s thinking
about oil and the economy. As people everywhere grapple with the
problem of growing global demand for petroleum, no one has a clear
picture of oil availability in the future, nor is there a clear picture
of what will happen when demand inevitably outstrips supply. That will
depend in large part upon how well people prepare, cooperate, and
collectively create solutions. By playing it out in a serious way, the
game aims to apply collective intelligence and imagination to the
problem in advance, and to create a record that has value for
educators, policymakers, and the common people to help anticipate the
future and prevent its worst outcomes. “Play it, before you live it.”

Read the manifesto written by our characters.

 

The team at Writerguy is producing WORLD WITHOUT OIL, ITVS Interactive
(Independent Television Service) is presenting it, and the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting is funding it. An Independent Lens
Web-exclusive presentation (PBS), WORLD WITHOUT OIL is an ELECTRIC
SHADOWS project (ITVS).

World Without Oil is an original work of fiction. Any similarity
between its characters and real people, living or dead, is purely
coincidental. Especially Chuckles. Copyright 2007 by Writerguy LLC.

SaveNetRadio coalition

The SaveNetRadio coalition is made up of artists, labels, listeners,
and webcasters. Please contact us if you are interested in sponsoring
an event, making a donation, or would like to become a leader in the
fight to save Internet radio. The recent ruling by the Copyright
Royalty Board to increase webcasters’ royalty rates between 300 and
1200 percent over the next 5 years jeopardizes the industry and
threatens to homogenize Internet radio.

Artists,
listeners, and Webcasters, have joined our coalition to help save
Internet radio. The coalition believes strongly in compensating
artists, but Internet radio as we know it will not survive under the
new royalties. We need your help. Please take a moment to call your members of Congress
to let your representatives know how much Internet radio means to you.
Together, we can force Congress to create a structural solution for
this problem and create an environment where Internet radio, and the
millions of artists it features, can continue to grow for generations
to come.

About the Issue

On
March 2, 2007 the Copyright Royalty Board (CRB), which oversees sound
recording royalties paid by Internet radio services, increased Internet
radio’s royalty burden between 300 and 1200 percent and thereby
jeopardized the industry’s future.   

At the request of
the Recording Industry Association of America, the CRB ignored the fact
that Internet radio royalties were already double what satellite radio
pays, and multiplied the royalties even further.  The 2005 royalty rate
was 7/100 of a penny per song streamed; the 2010 rate will be 19/100 of
a penny per song streamed.  And for small webcasters that were able to
calculate royalties as a percentage of revenue in 2005 – that option
was quashed by the CRB, so small webcasters’ royalties will grow
exponentially!

Before this ruling was handed down, the
vast majority of webcasters were barely making ends meet as Internet
radio advertising revenue is just beginning to develop.  Without a
doubt most Internet radio services will go bankrupt and cease
webcasting if this royalty rate is not reversed by the Congress, and
webcasters’ demise will mean a great loss of creative and diverse
radio.  Surviving webcasters will need sweetheart licenses that major
record labels will be only too happy to offer, so long as the webcaster
permits the major label to control the programming and playlist.  Is
that the Internet radio you care to hear?  

As you know,
the wonderful diversity of Internet radio is enjoyed by tens of
millions of Americans and provides promotional and royalty
opportunities to independent labels and artists that are not available
to them on broadcast radio.  What you may not know is that in just the
last year Internet radio listening jumped dramatically, from 45 million
listeners per month to 72 million listeners each month.  Internet radio
is already popular and it is already benefiting thousands of artists
who are finding new fans online every day.

Action must be
taken to stop this faulty ruling from destroying the future of Internet
radio that so many millions of listeners depend on each day.  Instead
of relying on lawyers filing appeals in the CRB and the courts, the
SaveNetRadio Coalition has been formed to represent every webcaster,
every Net Radio listener, and every artist who enjoys and benefits from
this medium.  Please join our fight for the preservation of Internet
radio.

Barbara Kingsolver’s new book

kingsolver-book.gif
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life

Bestselling author Barbara Kingsolver returns with
her first nonfiction narrative that will open your eyes in a hundred
new ways to an old truth: You are what you eat.

“As the U.S. population made an unprecedented mad dash for the Sun
Belt, one carload of us paddled against the tide, heading for the
Promised Land where water falls from the sky and green stuff grows all
around. We were about to begin the adventure of realigning our lives
with our food chain.

“Naturally, our first stop was to buy junk food and fossil fuel. . . .”

Hang on for the ride: With characteristic poetry and pluck,
Barbara Kingsolver and her family sweep readers along on their journey
away from the industrial-food pipeline to a rural life in which they
vow to buy only food raised in their own neighborhood, grow it
themselves, or learn to live without it. Their good-humored search
yields surprising discoveries about turkey sex life and overly zealous
zucchini plants, en route to a food culture that’s better for the
neighborhood and also better on the table. Part memoir, part
journalistic investigation, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle
makes a passionate case for putting the kitchen back at the center of
family life and diversified farms at the center of the American diet.

Frequently Asked Questions: Public Media

email discuss Pat Aufderheide & Jessica Clark

PDFDownload full report

Communicating
about shared issues—whether it’s traffic congestion in the
neighborhood, lower wages for women, or the concerns of the families of
soldiers not receiving adequate body armor—builds a group’s awareness
of itself as a public. In this context, public media are media that aim
to increase public knowledge and cohere and mobilize audience members.

Not just limited to PBS or NPR broadcasts, such media can range from
print publications to documentary films, from community radio
broadcasts to international social networks and beyond. More and more,
as participatory technologies and practices engage audience members to
become media creators, public media projects are not only directed at,
but generated by, their publics.

Want to learn more? Read our new Frequently Asked Questions
document, by Director Pat Aufderheide and Research Fellow Jessica Clark.

Here is a post from one of my favorite blogs:

Check out Rob’s Social Media tutorials!

New Blip.tv Player Is Good

There’s so much buzz over free video hosting sites that sometimes my head hurts. Blip.tv continues to cut through the buzz by honing the features available via their video publishing service.

They announced a new show player
yesterday as part of a scheduled upgrade of the service. I learned this
info while I was in the midst of creating an archive there for my social media lessons.

The new player has a few simple configuration options and allows the
user to watch the most recent show while also being able to go back and
watch previous shows. This is a big step forward from the single player
format because the latest show will be available anywhere your player
is positioned on the web.

The flexibility of this player, combined with the already advanced
(and very simple) publishing tools continues to distance Blip.tv from a
pack of competitors that includes Brightcove, Google Video, YouTube and others.

The Little Book of Plagiarism

You can watch a lecture by Judge Posner and Jonathan Lethem
on Book TV

The Little Book of Plagiarism
Richard Posner

Watch

Description: From the Chicago Humanities Festival, a conversation about plagiarism in literature, music, art, film, and academia.

Judge Richard Posner, author of “The Little Book of Plagiarism,” is in discussion with novelist Jonathan Lethem, who wrote a recent essay about plagiarism for
Harper’s magazine, and Lawrence Weschler, Artistic Director of the
Chicago Humanities Festival and the winner of this year’s National Book
Critics Circle Award for Criticism.

See also: http://www.harpers.org/archive/2007/02/0081387

“Contemporary copyright, trademark, and patent law is presently corrupted. The case for perpetual copyright is a denial of the essential gift-aspect of the creative act. Arguments in its favor are as un-American as those for the repeal of the estate tax.”

Iraq Veterans Memorial

http://iraqmemorial.org/

The Iraq Veterans Memorial is an online war memorial that honors the
members of the U.S. armed forces who have lost their lives serving in
the Iraq War. The Memorial is a collection of video memories from
family, friends, military colleagues, and co-workers of those that have
fallen.

 

Resolve to lower your carbon footprint!

http://www.davidsuzuki.org/NatureChallenge/at_Home/default.asp

 We’ve researched the best actions you can take to protect nature and improve your quality of life for the future. The good news is that simple changes can make a real difference! Sign up for the Nature Challenge and see how many of the following actions you can do!

1. Reduce home energy use by 10%
An energy-efficient home will lower your utility bills and reduce your environmental impact. Heating accounts for nearly 60% of energy use in the average Canadian home.

2. Choose an energy-efficient home and appliances
R-2000 homes use 30% less energy than standard homes. Modern appliances are better for the environment.

3. Don’t use pesticides
Small children and pets are especially vulnerable to the dangers of chemicals.

4. Eat meat-free meals one day a week
The production and processing of grains requires far less water and land than does meat.

5. Buy locally grown and produced food
Try buying local food for one month a year. It reduces greenhouse gas emissions and other pollutants from food transportation.

6. Choose a fuel-efficient vehicle
A typical SUV uses almost twice the fuel of a modern car, although both seat the same number of passengers.

7. Walk, bike or take transit to work
The air we breathe inside our cars can be up to 10 times more polluted than the air outside.

8. Choose a home close to work or school
If you live in a convenient location, you’ll lower your emissions of greenhouse gases and other pollutants.

9. Support alternative transportation
Transit lines and bike paths mean less pollution, less gridlock and urban sprawl.

10. Learn more and share with others
We can inspire our elected leaders to incorporate environmental conservation into public policy.