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View Article  Fallon's Flood Relief Work
Fallon's Flood Relief Work

By Ed Fallon

I'd like to encourage all who are able to pitch-in with flood and tornado relief efforts. Iowans have always gone the extra mile to help others in time of need, and in my life I have never witnessed such a time of need as this.

Lynn and I have focused our efforts in Des Moines' Birdland neighborhood. The devastation there is both incredible and eerily familiar. (Birdland was hit hard in 1993, too, and as I raised money for flood victims and helped with clean-up, I got a close-up look at the flood's full fury.)

Today, Lynn and I and two former staffers (Brian Trapp and Avery Lund) worked on two houses, hauling out damaged property, sweeping and shoveling debris, and removing water-logged floor boards. While it's horrible to see the devastation to so many homes and lives, people's gratitude and the clear progress we are able to achieve inspire me to want to do as much as possible.

So, if you would like to help at Birdland let me know. This type of hands-on work was always a big part of my "ministry" as a state legislator, and one silver lining in my primary loss is that I now have more time to help those in need directly.

Thanks!

Ed Fallon
View Article  Our Partial Victory
Our Partial Victory

By Ed Fallon

Last Tuesday's primary election was disappointing, but we're not quitting. We didn't beat the political establishment but we sure shook it up. In fact, Leonard Boswell's voting record and rhetoric over the past seven months look, well . . . almost progressive!

• Having voted for the Iraq War in 2002 and for funding it unconditionally until earlier last year, he finally settled on a consistent position against the war last November.

• Despite being a long-time supporter of granting retroactive immunity to telecom companies for aiding the Bush Administration in spying on Americans, he switched his position this year.

• In 2001, he voted against an amendment raising fuel economy standards to 27.5 miles per gallon. Yet last December, he finally endorsed the Safe Climate Act, which raises fuel economy standards to 35 miles per gallon.

• After voting for much of President Bush's agenda for almost eight years, he joined other House Democrats last November to support Dennis Kucinich's resolution to impeach Dick Cheney.

• In its brochures and advertisements this year, the Boswell campaign invented a whole new Congressman Boswell, one who sounded a lot more like a member of the Progressive Caucus, not the Blue Dog Caucus.

In short, BECAUSE OF OUR CAMPAIGN, CONGRESSMAN BOSWELL BEGAN VOTING AND SOUNDING MORE LIKE A DEMOCRAT. Now it's up to us to make sure he continues.

So, although last Tuesday's election wasn't the victory we wanted, we accomplished much. This month, Lynn's focus as campaign manager is to organize and harness the extensive resources assembled during this campaign. My focus is to pay off our campaign debt, something I've never had to deal with before.

Sincerely,

Ed Fallon
View Article  Choose President with Rock, Paper, Scissors

Choose President with Rock, Paper, Scissors


By Ed Fallon

Zogby has Obama by 13 and McCain by 9 in NH. Stay tuned for results on Wednesday. Meanwhile, this from Fallon

I’ve heard lots of entertaining stories from this year’s Iowa Caucuses, but none beat the following.

In my caucus, a handful of Kucinich supporters were not viable.  I laid out my case why John Edwards should be their second choice.  A young gal explained her rationale for Obama.  After 20 minutes of haggling, a flustered Kucinichite threw up her hands and said their group would caucus for whichever candidate’s representative won a game of Rock, Paper, Scissors. 

So, like two gladiators, Obama’s champion and I strode forward to battle, best out of three.  I’d done a lot to prepare for this year’s caucus, but never imagined I’d have to hone my Rock, Paper, Scissors skills.  The alacrity of youth prevailed.  I lost, but our Edwards group remained viable, and the delegates were split evenly among Clinton, Obama and Edwards.

Quirky stories like this are the fun stuff caucus folklore is made of.  But the important message from this year’s event is the unprecedented turnout:  a record 239,000 Democrats, excited about the prospects for substantive, long-overdue change.  And the two candidates most perceived as advocates for change – John Edwards and Barack Obama – won 68% of the delegates.

Both in Iowa and nationally, the status quo is in trouble.  And it’s about time.  Americans are fed-up with lobbyists and corporations running the show.  They’re tired of watching the elite get richer while the rest of us struggle.  They’re dismayed at the growing ranks of the poor and uninsured, and the lack of attention to a host of looming environmental disasters.

Like never before, they’re pessimistic about the future.

Yet, like never before, they’re hopeful and energized.

I’m energized, too.  I’ve preached a progressive-populist message of reform since my first campaign for the Iowa Statehouse in 1992.  For a long time, it was a lonely place to be, as state and national Democratic candidates blabbed party-line pablum that was generic, vacuous and as inspiring as yesterday’s oatmeal. 

But that’s changing, and changing fast.  Our challenge is twofold.  First, we have to sort out the candidates who actually mean “change” from those who are just mouthing what pollsters tell them the public wants to hear.  Second, regardless of which candidate we supported in the Caucuses, we reformers have to band together.

United, we will be unstoppable!

Ed Fallon

View Article  A Christmas Reflection

A Christmas Reflection


By Ed Fallon

First, I want to invite those of you in the Waterloo-Cedar Falls area to join me this Saturday, December 15th from 10:00 – noon at the Cedar Falls Community Center at 6th  Local organizers are planning a spirited discussion of John Edwards’ mission and message, and Lynn and I are helping to lead it.  You can contact Lisa Eiklor at kentaddleman@earthlink.net for details. and Main streets.

Today, I want to reflect on Christmas.  And please know that while I speak as a Christian, I appreciate the religious and spiritual significance of this season for a wide range of faith traditions.

Originally a celebration of the birth of Jesus, the modern Christmas has far more to do with mega malls than manger stalls.  It’s as if the true Christmas has been stolen by a Wall Street grinch and contorted into a month-long orgy of consumption and materialism.  Each year we obediently, almost compulsively, parade off to the biggest, newest shopping mall.  Each year, the pilgrimage begins earlier than the year before.  This year, at 12:01 a.m. the day after Thanksgiving, Jordan Creek Mall threw open its doors to an onslaught of all-night shoppers amidst unprecedented hype and glitter.

I understand that, for many struggling small-business owners, Christmas is a make-or-break opportunity to close the year in the black.  Small businesses are the backbone of America’s economic strength, and nearly every penny I spend – not just at Christmas, but throughout the year – is at a locally-owned business.  If we all try harder year round to shop on Main Street and at older malls in the hearts of our cities and towns, America and our economy will be better off for it.

Yet it is beyond me what our modern Christmas shopping frenzy has to do with the birth of Jesus.  In the Christmas story, three wise men came bearing gifts – not to their wives, children or friends but to a homeless babe, born out-of-wedlock, lying on a bed of straw.

And while the wise men were well-intentioned, their choice of gifts is puzzling.  Here’s the Holy Family.  Poor.  Homeless.  Hungry.  Soon to be immigrants in a foreign land.  Soon to be fugitives on the run from political persecution.  Their needs include housing, food and above all justice – not gold, frankincense and myrrh.  Though generous, the wise men seem a bit clueless, giving not to the true needs of this destitute family but from the excess of their own luxury. 

I don’t mean to suggest that the Christmas message has nothing to do with giving.  Indeed, the birth of Jesus is THE critical event through which God gave his Son to humankind.  Jesus, in turn, gave his own life for our redemption.  And during that life, he sets an example for us by constantly giving of himself.  But the important point is that he gave not to gratify people’s greed but to fulfill their need.

He gave sight to the blind.

He gave food to the hungry.

He gave comfort to those in mourning.

He preached release to the captives.

So, along with giving gifts to our family and friends, let’s give of ourselves to those in need – not just personally, but collectively.

We might volunteer at a homeless shelter . . . and work for an end to economic and social policies that exacerbate poverty.

We might visit seniors in a nursing home . . . and lobby for laws that pay direct-care workers livable wages and allow more seniors to stay with their families longer.

We might spend time not only with our own kids but with disadvantaged kids . . . and work to reform government spending priorities that grossly under-fund child welfare programs.

Human need on this planet is huge but finite.  If we – as individuals and through our local, state and national governments – put our minds and hearts to the task, we could, as John Edwards says, end poverty in our lifetime.  We have the natural resources.  We have the economic wherewithal.  We have the technical knowledge.  All we lack is the will.

Thank you, and may you enjoy a blessed, peaceful Christmas season.

Ed Fallon

View Article  Water Quality Alert
Water Quality Alert

By Ed Fallon

Dear Friends,

First, I regret to have to tell you that the global warming plunge scheduled for December 8th at Gray’s Lake in Des Moines has been cancelled.

Second, Iowa’'s streams and rivers need your help.  While I am no water-quality wizard, I have worked hard on a range of environmental issues over the past 15 years.  I have gained a lot of respect for Iowa’'s grassroots environmental leaders, including Steve Veysey.  Steve is a well-respected scientist and spokesman on water quality.  He’'s the environmental protection coordinator for the Hawkeye Fly Fishing Association and the conservation co-chair of the Iowa Chapter of the Sierra Club.

Just this week, I learned from him and others that the Iowa DNR proposes to downgrade water-quality standards in 279 river and stream segments, rendering these waters less safe for both aquatic life and human recreation.  To quote from a recent letter Steve sent to Sierra Club members, “DNR is essentially saying they have no evidence that anyone has ever recreated in these rivers and streams since 1975 in a manner that would pose a significant risk of ingesting water.  Therefore, recreational protection will be reduced in order to allow cities and industries to continue discharging unnecessary pollution.”

It’s up to us to let the DNR know that human activity IS occurring in these streams, and that the water quality needs to be protected.  The period allowed for public comments closes on December 11th.  You can learn more about the issue by visiting http://iowa.sierraclub.org/.  To weigh in with your own comments on streams and rivers where you’ve seen people fishing, canoeing, swimming, wading, tubing, etc, go to here.  If you have photos that document any such activity, I imagine those would be of interest to the
DNR as well.

In my own c ounty of Polk, both Beaver and Four Mile creeks are on the DNR’s list of streams to downgrade.  I’ve canoed Beaver Creek several times, and have also seen people tubing and fishing in it.  I’ve seen kids wading along a sandbar on Four Mile Creek, and on two occasions have watched deer drink from it.  In Dallas County, I’ve canoed the South Raccoon River, which is also on the DNR’s hit list.

Friend and former legislative colleague, Bill Witt, summed it up in an e-mail to me yesterday, asking how far down the slippery slope we want to slide, suggesting that if you push the standard of "reasonable attainment” back far enough, Cleveland’s Cuyahoga River could still be burning.

One more quote of interest from Steve:  “{T}he key question I keep asking {the DNR}is, ‘When discussing recreational uses, does the occurrence of the use prove the existence of the use?’  Well, of course it does, but I can't get DNR to admit it.  We have them on record saying, ‘Swimming in polluted water doesn't prove the existence of swimming as a use; it proves the existence of swimming in polluted water as a use, and that is all that needs to be protected for.’  That usually gets a stir from the crowd.”

And it ought to get a stir from us, too.  If you have experience with activity on any of the streams and rivers proposed to be downgraded, please share that with the DNR.  Thanks for your help!

Ed Fallon
View Article  Microsoft Lawsuit
Microsoft Lawsuit

By Ed Fallon

Dear Friends,

In terms of our usual updates, this one will strike you as odd.  Today, we’re not advocating for an issue.  Instead, we’re helping you, Joe and Jane Average Citizen, participate in a class-action lawsuit that will land you $100 - $200 and help keep Corporate America more honest in the future.

Perhaps you’ve not heard about the Microsoft class-action lawsuit?  There certainly hasn’t been a lot of news about it.  One of our supporters is familiar with the case in detail, so we’ve been privy to the inside skinny.  In a lawsuit that Roxanne Conlin shepherded through the legal system, it was determined that Microsoft engaged in anti-competitive practices, preventing improved consumer products from reaching our desktops.  Basically, it was attempt by Microsoft to lock down and control the market.

If you are a resident of Iowa and believe, to the best of your recollection, that you purchased a Microsoft product between 1994 and 2006, you are eligible to file a claim.  It's understood in the lawsuit that few people will have records of computer-related purchases stretching back over thirteen years.  Since Microsoft products were pre-installed on almost all PCs during those years, if you purchased a computer you likely bought Windows and Microsoft Word or Microsoft Office.  Your best estimates on what you purchased and when will suffice.  

To file a claim go to www.iowamicrosoftcase.com.  All you need to do is indicate to the best of your recollection the year, product(s), and, generally speaking, where they were purchased, e.g., Dell online, Comp USA, Best Buy, etc.  The claim was set up to be bare bones because there just is not much more information people will be able to recall.

So, with that in mind, each and every one of you who bought a computer during that thirteen-year period should consider it your civic responsib ility to file this claim.  You have until December 15 to do it.  If Iowans don’t claim the money approved in the settlement, it merely reverts to Microsoft, so please feel free to forward this information to others to encourage the broadest possible participation.

You’ll help send a message that Iowans believe in holding big companies accountable . . . and you’ll get reimbursed for your efforts!

Thank you,

Ed Fallon


P.S. On an unrelated matter . . . the Iowa Bicycle Coalition is working to pre-sell 500 “Share The Road” license plates.  The plates are a rolling billboard to encourage more bicycling and reinforce the message to motorists that safety is a life-and-death matter.  The basic plates are $35.  Personalized plates are $60.  Funding goes to bicyclist safety education and motorist awareness.  The coalition hopes to reach their goal by December 1.  Application and instructions are at www.iowabicyclecoalition.org/strplate.htm.
View Article  Go Jump In A Lake
Go Jump In A Lake

By Ed Fallon

Seriously.  I promise not to write about the global climate crisis every week.  And I promise to keep todays Update short.  But this is such an important issue that I have to bring your attention to an upcoming event that didnt make the Update last week.  Its a special event, not just because its important, but because its fun . . . for some people . . . perhaps.  


On December 8th, representatives of nations the world over will gather in Bali for talks on climate change that will, hopefully, lead to the next generation of the Kyoto Treaty.  Rank-and-file citizens around the world will mark the start of these talks with the Third International Day of Action on Global Warming.  

In Des Moines, local activists are organizing the "Polar Bear Plunge."  People passionate about tackling global warming, or simply inclined to acts of insanity, are invited to a rally followed by a j ump into Gray's Lake at 12:00 noon on December 8th.  The theme of the event is Keep Winter Cold, which may be a hard sell for Midwesterners on a brisk December day; but talk with any polar bear you meet on the street and you wont see a lot of enthusiasm for warmer winters.

Organizers are encouraging participants both those who, like Lynn, will take the plunge literally and those who, like me, choose to regard plunge as metaphorical to write a letter or sign a petition letting Congressman Boswell know how important it is that he support the Safe Climate Act (HR 1590).

Among leading Iowa Democrats, Boswell is alone in his lack of action on global warming.  Iowas other Democratic Congressmen Braley and Loebsack support the bill.  (Please thank them if you live in their districts.)

Just last week, Chet Culver joined governors throughout the upper Midwest to form a regional pact to reduce global warming pollution 60% 80% by 2050.

Frank Cownie, mayor of Des Moines, is gaining a national reputation as one of the countrys most proactive mayors on global warming.

Every top Democratic presidential candidate has come out with a plan to tackle global warming.  On the Republican side, John McCain is talking about it.

The Iowa Farmers Union, the United Steelworkers of America, key environmental organizations and religious leaders have publicly called on Boswell to do everything he can to address global warming.

Yet not only has Boswell declined to sign-on to the Safe Climate Act, he is supporting a fuel economy bill that is weaker than what President Bush called for in his State of the Union address.

On December 8th employing the creative notion of plunging oneself, polar-bear style, into water a degree or two above the temperature of ice Des Moines-area residents will have yet another chance to impress upon Congressman Boswell the importance of jumping on boa rd the climate-change bandwagon.

For more information, to help organize the event or to discuss the latest fashion in winter bathing suits, contact Kelly Mitchell at kelly.mitchell@wdc.greenpeace.org or (818) 282-0168.

Thanks for reading, and I hope we get to spend part of a day at the beach together next month. 
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*IBLTV is a group of citizens from the Iowa City/Cedar Rapids area who are concerned about the decline in the quality of local television. Fight local media consolidation, as it leads to an unaccountable medium that enriches itself while disregarding the need to serve the public good.


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*How to Bring Air America Radio to Your Local Community


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*The rational counter to 'The Point,' 'The Counterpoint' critiques and corrects the daily editorial by Sinclair Broadcasting's corporate vice president, Mark Hyman, that is broadcast on all Sinclair-owned television stations across the country


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*FAIR is a national media watch group that offers well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship


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*Media Matters for America is an information center dedicated to monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media