Maryland

Maryland Action for Clean Elections

For our readers in Maryland, this comes from the Public Campaign Action Fund:

So we are now towards the end of this exciting campaign for Clean Elections in Maryland. Maryland lawmakers are in the process of voting this week on the bill that would call for public financing of state House and Senate elections. While we have strong support in the legislature, our coalition partners are still working hard to lobby legislators, a few of whom are still on the fence.

We must commend the volunteers and staff of the coalition that worked on this campaign showing up to phone bank, attending lobby days up in Annapolis, rallies, writing letters to the their local papers, and most importantly taking the time to personally call or email their legislator to support this bill.

With the few days left, you can still take action. Please, if you have not done so already, contact your Senator to tell them you support public financing of elections in Maryland and that they should vote for this bill, SB 546. Tell a friend or family member to do the same. To find out who your Senator is and to contact them, please go here.


mole333's picture

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The Welfare Poets release Cruel and Unusual Punishment

February 1st at the world famous Remy Lounge in NYC

The Hip Hop Compilation to Abolish the Death Penalty

Performances by: Hasan Salaam, HiCOUP, True-N-Livin, Rebel Diaz, IandI MLD, Blitz, Juggablak, Block McCloud of Brooklyn Academy, Truth Universal, Kev King, Chosan, the A-Alikes, Abiodun of the Last Poets and The Welfare Poets (and more to come) With Dj Mellow G spinning Door open at 8pm For directions, go to http://www.remyloungenyc.com

02/01/2007 08:00 PM - The Remy Lounge NYC (Cruel and Unusual Punishment album release)
104 Greenwich Street, New York, 10006 - $10

Finally - the album is out and the event is on for the official release of CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT, the Hip Hop compilation brought to you the Welfare Poets featuring some of the most prolific emcees from around the country and world. Cruel and Unusual Punishment is a fundraiser to combat the abolish the death penalty. For more information about the project go to www.myspace.com/deathpenaltycd. Confirmed performances from artists on the album thus far: Hasan Salaam, HiCOUP, True-N-Livin, Rebel Diaz, IandI MLD, Blitz, Juggablak, Block McCloud of Brooklyn Academy, Truth Universal, Kev King, Chosan, the A-Alikes, Abiodun of the Last Poets and The Welfare Poets (and more to come) With Dj Mellow G spinning Door open at 8pm For directions, go to http://www.remyloungenyc.com

WHEN: FEBRUARY 1, 2007


Campaign to End the Death Penalty NY, The Shield Magazine


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Questioning Capital Punishment

Questioning Capital Punishment
the Nation by BRUCE SHAPIRO
[posted online on December 24, 2006]

In the long, contentious history of capital punishment in America, there has never been a moment like this: Over just a few days in mid-December, judges in California and Maryland and the governor of Florida shut down any pending
executions in those states--all because of rapidly growing doubts about the humanity and constitutionality of lethal injection. In less than a week, 1,052 death-row inmates were thrust at least temporarily beyond reach of the
needle.

At first glance, the impact of each of these death penalty moratoria might seem limited. In Florida on December 16, Governor Jeb Bush suspended executions and set up a commission to study lethal-injection procedures, after the grotesque death of Angel Nieves three days earlier: The three-drug cocktail supposed to sedate Nieves and kill him painlessly and quickly instead left the inmate conscious, grimacing in pain and struggling for breath. It took half an hour and a second round of injections before the
spectacle ended.

In California, US District Judge Jeremy Fogel declared that state's execution protocols rife with irregularities In particular, Fogel raised serious questions about whether "certain inmates
have been conscious" when injected with heart-stopping drugs, suffering "unconscionable" pain and anguish.


Shreya Mandal's picture

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One thing that I've found unsettling, though, in listening to coverage about the protests thusfar, is this "good immigrant/bad immigrant" rhetoric that's present in what some people are saying, protesters and organizers alike. This morning, while listening to NPR, I heard one woman speak about how Latino immigrants aren't doing anything to harm this country, that they "love America" and just want to become good, hard-working Americans. Then I heard one organizer, speaking at one of the rallies, say something like this: "Nineteen people hijacked planes and participated in the 9/11 attacks, and not one of them were named Gonzales, Rodriguez, or Santiago. But you can bet that many of the people dying serving their country in Iraq are named Gonzales, Rodriguez, and Santiago" so on and so forth.

I understand that much of this is in response to the whole immigration debate getting wrapped up in worries about "national security" - how the specter of terrorism seems to make allowances for all manner of discrimination, racism and xenophobia, and how countless immigrants are nonsensically made to suffer because of it. However, it definitely seems like a very bad, very problematic move to buy into this sort of dichotomy that pits "good" immigrants or "good" brown folks (here, Latinos) against "bad" ones (apparently people of Arab or Middle Eastern descent - because, you know, the actions of individuals become the responsibility, the fault, the burden of their entire race and religion.) Latinos, like all other immigrants to the United States, deserve to be treated with respect and dignity and are entitled to certain rights and protections because they are human beings, not because they're good, flag-waving*, American-loving immigrants. No one is illegal, no matter whether your name is Juan or Mohammed, Gonzales or Atta.


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