Delaware Dem
Delaware Dem's Latest Posts
This is Exactly Right
Andrew Hawkins, a football player for the NFL’s Cleveland Browns, wore the T-shirt you see above during the game warm ups on Sunday. Like in St. Louis, when some St. Louis Rams players last week entered the stadium during game introductions with their hands up, the local police in Cleveland demanded an apology from the Cleveland Browns organization and Mr. Hawkins himself. The Cleveland Browns said no, no apology, stating correctly:
“We have great respect for the Cleveland Police Department and the work that they do to protect and serve our city,” the Browns said in a statement, via Cleveland.com. “We also respect our players’ rights to project their support and bring awareness to issues that are important to them if done so in a responsible manner.”
Then Hawkins hit it out of the park with his statement……
Tuesday Daily Delawhere [12.16.14]
New Castle Presbyterian Church, on 2nd Street in New Castle. The church was built in 1707 after the congregation helped found the Presbyterian Church in the New World.
A Progressive Economic Plan
In a Senate floor speech last week, Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) laid out a progressive economic agenda that would create millions of new jobs, raise wages, protect the environment and provide health care for all. Sanders laid out the problem facing America: the murder of the middle class by the rich.
“Today, millions of Americans are working longer hours for lower wages[.] We once led the world in terms of the percentage of our people who graduated college, but we are now in 12th place. Our infrastructure, once the envy of the world, is collapsing. Real unemployment today is not 5.8 percent, it is 11.5 percent, if we include those who have given up looking for work or who are working part time when they want to work full time. Youth unemployment is 18.6 percent and African-American youth unemployment is 32.6 percent.”
Monday Open Thread [12.15.14]
Paul Krugman on Wall Street’s Revenge:
“Most interest groups have stable political loyalties. For example, the coal industry always gives the vast bulk of its political contributions to Republicans, while teachers’ unions do the same for Democrats. You might have expected Wall Street to favor the G.O.P., which is always eager to cut taxes on the rich. In fact, however, the securities and investment industry — perhaps affected by New York’s social liberalism, perhaps recognizing the tendency of stocks to do much better when Democrats hold the White House — has historically split its support more or less equally between the two parties.”
“But that all changed with the onset of Obama rage. Wall Street overwhelmingly backed Mitt Romney in 2012, and invested heavily in Republicans once again this year. And the first payoff to that investment has already been realized. Last week Congress passed a bill to maintain funding for the U.S. government into next year, and included in that bill was a rollback of one provision of the 2010 financial reform.”
No, Cleveland cops, you are not owed an apology. You owe us one.
The Delaware National Park is the dumbest thing
Senator Thomas Carper realized the most significant achievement in his long congressional career on Saturday night: when the Cromnibus Bill passed, the <a href="http://www.delawareonline.com/story/news/local/2014/12/12/delaware-national-park-expansion-clears-congress/20325941/#.">long sought after Delaware National Park</a> was finally established. For years, Delaware was saddled with the indignity of being the only state in the union not to have a national park. This was the most important and damaging problem facing Delaware for decades, second only to the lack of bipartisanship, so of course our brave and tireless Senator fought to solve the problem.
<blockquote>U.S. Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., who has steadfastly sought a park designation for Delaware, released a statement after the vote on Friday. "Now, Delaware can have a national park that preserves and teaches the lessons of our state's heritage and our country's history," he said.
U.S. Rep. John Carney, D-Del., called the historical park a "tremendous achievement," in a written statement, saying "I look forward to taking my family and visitors from out of state to visit the natural and historic sites in our park."</blockquote>
Now, I don't know about you, but when I think of a "national park," I think of a contiguous natural place that we have preserved in its wild state. I also think of a park.
Sunday Open Thread [12.14.14]
Michael Hanlon claims that the “true age of innovation – I’ll call it the Golden Quarter – ran from approximately 1945 to 1971,” during which time just about everything that “defines the modern world either came about, or had its seeds sown,” from the pill to computers to civil rights. One reason he believes we’ve stagnated? Our increasing risk aversion…
Sunday Daily Delawhere [12.14.14]
The Casear Rodney statue, in Rodney Square in Wilmington. The statue, dedicated in 1922, depicts Rodney’s ride from Dover to Philadelphia to cast the deciding vote for independence in 1776. Photo by xzmattzx on Flickr.
Saturday Open Thread [12.13.14]
Andrew Sullivan calls bullshit on something that we have heard from coward Wall Street Democrats like Chuck Schumer:
I’ve heard this a million times now and I simply don’t understand it. In terms of chronology, Obama did put the economy first. With TARP and the stimulus and the auto-bailout, the key measures to shore up a flat-lining economy were taken in short order. You could plausibly argue, I think, that in retrospect, Obama should have gone bigger, and produced a much more ambitious stimulus. But, as someone who observed this close-up and in real time, the odds of that actually happening were close to zero. And if it had happened, the stimulus would have been even less popular – and more easily demagogued – than it actually was. The problem was not the timing or the seriousness of the response; it was the seriousness of the problem. When an economy has a near-death experience, on top of huge public and private debt, the recovery will tend to be exactly what this recovery was: long, sad at first, and later … well, we don’t know yet, do we?
Saturday Daily Delawhere [12.13.14]
The Delaware City Hotel, on Clinton Street in Delaware City. The hotel was built in 1829 when the Chesapeake & Delaware Canal was opened across the street. The hotel is also next to a portion of Battery Park that served as a wharf for steamboats that traveled to Delaware City in the 1800s. Photo by […]
Friday Open Thread [12.12.14]
Sen. Rand Paul’s (R-KY) “brain trust has spent months developing an exhaustive political and legal battle plan to ensure he can run for both Senate reelection and the White House in 2016—despite a Kentucky law that suggests otherwise,” National Journal reports.
“They have developed backup plans for their backup plans in an all-out effort to safeguard Paul’s Senate seat should he falter in the presidential sweepstakes. The contingencies range from changing Kentucky into a presidential caucus state to filing a lawsuit challenging the law, from daring Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes to keep him off the ballot to taking her out next November if she does.”
So, Rand Paul will intimidate and bully to get his way, and if the Secretary of State and other state election officials refuse to break the law, he will. And he wants to be President. Yep, he is no libertarian. He is a tried and true conservative Republican.


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