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Tennessee Gubernatorial Nominee Explains Why He Wants to Send Governor to Electric Chair

Mother Jones

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Charlie Brown for Governor

They did it again. On Thursday, Tennessee Democrats picked a statewide candidate with zero political experience. His campaign platform is based on sending incumbent Gov. Bill Haslam (R) to the electric chair. Charlie Brown, a retired engineer from Oakdale whose name is misspelled on his own Facebook page, may owe his victory in the gubernatorial primary to appearing as the first name on the ballot. But he gives full credit to God. “I got down on my knees and prayed about it,” he told Mother Jones, when asked about his campaign strategy. “That hit you pretty hard, huh? That took you for a loop, huh?”

In 2012, anti-gay activist Mark Clayton, who also had no political track record won the nod to take on GOP Sen. Bob Corker. His name was also the first name listed on the ballot. Clayton initially filed to run against Haslam this year but was rejected by the state party. The state party did not, however, unite behind a more experienced candidate to challenge the popular Haslam.

The 72-year-old Brown did not raise money or campaign actively for the seat. Instead, he sent two letters to the editor to every major newspaper in the state, outlining his plans for Tennessee, which included bringing back teacher tenure, restoring benefits for civil servants, spending his gubernatorial salary on large deer for hunters, and raising speed limits on the interstate highways to 80 mph “because everyone does anyway.” (Brown says he has been pulled over for speeding, but “not lately.”) “Let me give you something: My main interest is to put the Bible back in school,” he said on Friday. “You can write that down.”

“I’d still like to put his butt in that electric chair and turn it on about half throttle and let him smell a little bit,” Brown said of Haslam. “You can print that if you want to.”

Shortly before the election, he says a higher power intervened on his behalf. “I was sitting on the interstate waiting on a guy,” he said, “and something hit me just like that, and it said to get down on your knees to pray. I got down right there on the interstate. There’s a wide place, where there’s a pullout. There wasn’t anybody there. And I got down and asked the Lord to get me through this thing and he did. Now listen, I’m not no preacher, I’m just a Christian. I’m just a sinner saved by grace. I’m just like everybody else.”

Brown said he would update his Facebook after he got off the phone (it has since been taken down), and plans to campaign more actively in the fall, but downplays the uphill challenge he faces.

“I’m gonna campaign big time!” Brown said. “They said I was unknown—I’ve been in the newspaper for years under Peanuts!”

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Tennessee Gubernatorial Nominee Explains Why He Wants to Send Governor to Electric Chair

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Gardening: What to Do in June

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Gardening: What to Do in June

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Here Are Some of the People Being Helped by Obamacare

Mother Jones

Since I was just griping about the media not spending any time reporting about the people that Obamacare helps, I should offer some props to Abby Goodnough of the New York Times, who headed down to Kentucky to talk to some of the navigators who are responsible for assisting people who want to sign up for Obamacare. Here’s one story:

Samantha Davis, the clinic employee who helped David Elson apply, explained that based on his income of about $22,000 last year, he was not eligible for Medicaid but had qualified for a federal subsidy of $252 a month toward premium costs for a private plan. “It’s a pretty big one,” she said, reassuringly.

Through the exchange, Mr. Elson, 60, who has advanced diabetes and kidney disease, was offered a choice of 24 health plans, with premiums ranging from $92 to $501 a month after the subsidy. But if he felt elation or relief, he was too preoccupied to show it.

Bleeding at the back of his eyes, caused by a complication of diabetes, had blurred his vision. He had run out of insulin the previous week and had not refilled his prescriptions, which cost almost $500 a month, because a recent tax bill had depleted his bank account. He had an appointment with an eye specialist that afternoon, and the possibility of more debt was hanging heavily over him….“I’m hoping once I have insurance that I can sit down and figure out a budget and see if I have to bankrupt,” he said.

Plenty of people are being helped by Obamacare, and that number will grow dramatically as navigators reach more people; the website improves; and people start to make up their minds and sign up for a plan. For some people, it will mean the difference between getting treatment and going without. For others it will mean the difference between solvency and bankruptcy. And for still others it will be the first time they’ve ever had any health coverage at all.

Those are stories worth telling too.

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Here Are Some of the People Being Helped by Obamacare

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Why Do Humans Get Motion Sickness?

Mother Jones

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The New York Times reports on a researcher who thinks the traditional explanation for motion sickness is all wet:

For decades now, Thomas Stoffregen, 56, director of the university’s Affordance Perception-Action Laboratory, has been amassing evidence in support of a surprising theory about the causes of motion sickness. The problem does not arise in the inner ear, he believes, but rather in a disturbance in the body’s system for maintaining posture. The idea, once largely ignored, is beginning to gain grudging recognition.

“Most theories say when you get motion sick, you lose your equilibrium,” said Robert Kennedy, a psychology professor at the University of Central Florida. “Stoffregen says because you lose your equilibrium, you get motion sick.”

That’s kind of intriguing. But I can get severe motion sickness while sitting still in a seat on a perfectly calm airplane flight. It happens when I have a cold, or I’m recovering from a cold, and one ear clears but the other one doesn’t as the cabin pressure is changing. It happens all the time to me, and the result is that the world starts spinning violently and I get dizzy and nauseous. This happens with no change in posture and no loss of equilibrium.

Maybe this is different from motion sickness, though. Seasickness does prompt some dizzyness, but not quite the spinning world effect of one ear staying at a different pressure from the other.

On the other hand, sitting in an IMAX theater and watching a movie that simulates a roller coaster ride can induce motion sickness, even though you’re sitting perfectly still. So what’s up with that? Maybe you’re not sitting quite as still as you think? Questions, questions.

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Why Do Humans Get Motion Sickness?

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Q & A: “Picking Up” by Robin Nagle

Mother Jones

Picking Up: On the Streets and Behind the Trucks With the Sanitation Workers of New York City

By Robin Nagle

FARRAR, STRAUS AND GIROUX

Skewered eyeballs, bags of hydrofluoric acid, and discarded $1,325 Armani pants with the price tag still attached pepper Robin Nagle’s account of what it takes to be a New York City “san man.” From her stint as an official anthropologist-in-residence at the Department of Sanitation, Nagle explores how crucial this unseen work is to a city’s survival. It’s no dry social-research thesis: With Picking Up, Nagle joins the likes of Jane Jacobs and Jacob Riis, writers with the chutzpah to dig deep into the Rube Goldberg machine we call the Big Apple and emerge with a lyrical, clear-eyed look at how it works.

Nagle spoke to Mother Jones via Skype about how she was able to gain the trust of the DSNY and her sanitation coworkers in order to write the book, the hazards she faced on the job, and why a collective fear of death could be shaping our attitudes toward trash.

Mother Jones: You told some stories in the book about sanitation workers who receive all sorts of horrific injuries on the job. Before you started accompanying sanitation on its daily routes, did you have any idea how dangerous it would be?

Robin Nagle: I had read the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ numbers about how sanitation work is always in the top 10 of the most dangerous occupations in the country, along with things like mining and deep sea fishing and logging. I knew from reading about it that it was a hazardous job, but I didn’t have any sense of how often I would encounter those hazards myself or see my colleagues encounter those hazards every day. I don’t care where we were in the city; if we were on the street picking up trash there would be a moment pretty much guaranteed in every shift where we’d just have to pull back and be very careful, or we would have gotten hurt.

MJ: One thing that struck me was how much our individual waste habits affect sanitation workers. How you put a bag out onto the street could ruin someone’s day or potentially someone’s life. Which of these habits most directly impact sanitation workers, and which would you like to see change after writing this book?

RN: I’m very glad you picked up on that. When you put out your garbage–and of course I’m using the generic “you”–you are not the last person who will have to deal with it. When you have, let’s say, a piece of broken glass, or something really jagged, or you’re doing a renovation and you’re putting out wood that’s got nails blooming out from one tip of it, or any kind of hazard you know handling requires great care, think about how to perhaps add a few layers of buffer packaging, sandwiching, anything diminishing the hazard a little bit. As a householder, as a garbage-creator, just being a little more mindful of the fact that once it’s on the curb or in the can, that’s not the end point by any means. There are so many moments of physical handling after that.

MJ: Something else you detail in the book is how you were able to gain access to the DSNY in the first place. Could you tell us a little bit about how, not only you were able to gain that access, but also gain the trust of the sanitation workers you worked with?

RN: There’s one really encompassing answer to both of those questions, and that’s time. I was in a position where I could wait out the bureaucratic stalling I first encountered from the DSNY, and when one mayor left and another was elected, that was my door in. But that took a few years. In terms of the issue of trust, that’s a common challenge for anyone doing extended work, especially in situations where journalists—in journalists it’s more of a hit and run relationship. You get in, you get the story, you get out. They knew that model well. And it usually reverberated badly for them. So when I showed up, their instinct and their wisdom told them to keep a distance, which of course I in my naivete did not anticipate. And when I finally figured out all those dynamics, it made perfect sense. At the beginning, I was as clueless as an absolutely new anthropologist or first-time journalist who’s puppyish with enthusiasm: “I’m in, and everyone’s gonna love me!” Nuh uh. Not at all.

MJ: What were your biggest challenges there? Were there moments you felt you had to prove yourself to your coworkers?

RN: All the time. It’s largely a man’s world. So there would be the challenges of some jokes that were a little off-color. Like, they were bodied, or they were just raw. And those were tests of, “Is she prissy? Is she prudish? Is she going to judge us for this?” And once I got to particular garages, I realized they didn’t normally talk like that. It was partly a show for me. Any time I was on the street I was very eager to be the first one on the street picking up whatever it was that needed to be lifted, because I didn’t want people to say, “Oh, she’s a girl, she’s not strong enough.” But one of the ways I overcame the initial doubts about me is that I kept showing up and my story never changed. I was consistent. And not because I set out to be, but because the project just took a long time. And people realized that if they told me things, they didn’t get hurt. Telling me wouldn’t go back to the people who would discipline them.

MJ: You also discuss garbage as more than a physical problem, but an ideological one.

RN: I think Americans in general—the anthropologist in me is screaming not to make that broad generalization—but Americans in general don’t deal well with death. And I think garbage is threatening because it’s a form of death. It’s a material object that’s been consigned to this endplace. Our end is as inevitable—and who knows?—maybe as messy and difficult as the things we throw away everyday. The casualness with which we create discards, and the difficulty of grappling with the fact of our own mortality, I think are also linked. But I think the ideologies of garbage, there’s an economic component to this. If we really looked at the waste stream of the nation, the constructions of capitalism we take for granted…I don’t see how we could possibly let them continue.

MJ: Another theme you bring up quite often is invisibility. It struck me how DSNY workers resembled a caste of untouchables in your account of how they’re perceived, and often the butt of jokes.

RN: How the outside world sees you when you’re wearing the uniform, sometimes it’s infuriating, the dehumanizing attitude you encounter on the streets. And generally, the more affluent the neighborhood, there’s more likely that there’s going to be condescension. At least that’s an informal sample of my own experience. There are others that feel intensely enough that they don’t tell neighbors what they do for a living. They don’t want anyone outside of their work environment know what they do for a living. And they don’t want to have to encounter and then have the burden of the judgment of neighbors and acquaintances who assume they know what that means and then push that onto the worker.

But I’ve talked to people in the managerial ranks who were promoted up off the street, and I tell them, your job is the most important job in the city. Far more important than mine. If I stop working tomorrow, if the program I run at NYU folded tomorrow, if the university folded tomorrow, a lot of people would be out of work, but the dynamics of the city—I don’t know if you’d feel it in eastern Queens, or in Inwood. If sanitation just stopped today, you’d feel it in Inwood today, or eastern Queens, and right here at NYU. So, there are lots of ways of measuring the worth of a particular form of labor, but what I learned at sanitation is how inside-out that values system has become.

MJ: I couldn’t help but think of Jane Jacobs and her ideas about how city blocks and neighborhoods ought to function when reading your book. Do you have any plans to articulate a series of theses on how the city should be run?

RN: No. It’s not so much how cities should be run as it is how we need to understand all the parts of the systems that we depend on every day, and how deeply dependent we are on human beings to make those systems run smoothly. And I’d love to see somebody do a book like mine with New York City’s waterworks department, the Department of Environmental Protection. I claim that sanitation is the most important uniformed force on the streets of New York–I think you can make a parallel claim for the small army that keeps the waterworks of the city running smoothly.

My next writing project will focus on Freshkills, the landfill and now park. But I want to use that as a fulcrum on which to balance stories about fill, and how garbage and discards have shaped the physical geography of New York and many cities. Because of that we walk on our own history every day, but we’re largely unaware of it. So my next project is not so much about how cities work, but: What is the dynamic of creation, and memory, and loss, and discard, and garbage? And whose claims are heard and whose claims are ignored when those issues are at play?

MJ: How did you balance being a person who gets to know her sources quite well as friends and colleagues, in addition to being a nonfiction writer and academic documenting their work?

RN: I kind of have followed my own version of the Hippocratic oath. Most people were surprised that I brought the book to them before it was a finished product. I was very careful not to say to anyone, “I will make whatever changes you want.” My passion for this work, for them, for what they do, it’s quite real. This is the first book that’s been written about the New York City Department of Sanitation, but there are lots of books about the police department, lots of books about the fire department. I think there should be lots of books about sanitation. And just as in any other workforce, there are people who are not so saintly, and people on the more saintly end of the spectrum. You just hope it reads as real.

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Q & A: “Picking Up” by Robin Nagle

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Groundswell: A Secret Tape Reveals How It Lobbied Boehner and Issa on Benghazi

Mother Jones

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As Mother Jones revealed last week, Groundswell, the hush-hush right-wing strategy group partly led by Ginni Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, wanted to hype the Benghazi tragedy into a full-fledged scandal for the Obama administration, as part of its “30 front war” on the president and progressives. A secret audio tape of one of Groundswell’s weekly meetings shows that prominent members of the group pressed House Speaker John Boehner and Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), the chair of the House oversight committee, to expand the Benghazi investigation and make this supposed scandal a top-priority for congressional Republicans. This recording indicates Groundswell’s mission extends beyond message coordination to scandal-stoking.

MoJo’s full coverage of Groundswell.


Inside Groundswell: Read the Memos of the New Right-Wing Strategy Group Planning a “30 Front War”


Groundswell’s Secret Crusade to Crush Karl Rove


Is Ginni Thomas’ Expanding Activism a Problem for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas?


PHOTOS: Meet Groundswell’s Major Players


Groundswell: A Secret Tape Reveals How It Lobbied Boehner and Issa on Benghazi

The tape has been posted at Crooks and Liars, a progressive web site, and it captured the first 20 minutes of Groundswell’s May 8 meeting. (The site does not say how the recording was obtained.) The meeting opened with a prayer (“Father, we thank you for the opportunity to gather here as free Americans”), and a roll call was taken. Among those present were former GOP Rep. Allen West, Frank Gaffney of the Center for Security Policy, Jerry Boykin of the Family Research Council, Tom Fitton of Judicial Watch, Stephen Bannon of Breitbart News, and Ginni Thomas. Catherine Engelbrecht, a founder of True the Vote, led the meeting, and the first order of business was a report on the Benghazi controversy from Boykin and Gaffney.

The pair reported on meetings they had held the previous night with Boehner and Issa. The two Groundswellers had encouraged the lawmakers to set up a special committee to investigate the attacks on the US facilities in Benghazi. Boykin, according to the recording, noted that Boehner had said he wanted the process “to play out” first, apparently meaning that he wasn’t yet ready to step up the GOP Benghazi campaign. Boehner, Boykin recounted, had expressed the concern that were he to create such a committee, the media would cover it as a political stunt designed to bring down Obama.

Boykin, a retired general and Christian fundamentalist who caused a dust-up in 2003 when he gave a speech (while still on active duty) saying that his god was “a real god” and Allah was an “idol,” told the Groundswellers that he expected the Benghazi matter to blossom into a full-blown scandal: “We’ve got an ugly baby here and it’s going to get uglier.” He maintained that “we’re going to find…a huge deception.”

Gaffney, a birther who has been booted out of several conservative outfits for his fiercely anti-Islam views and who has accused Obama of “submission to Islam,” added, “I’m somewhat encouraged that they’re taking this thing very much to heart and we really impressed upon Boehner that there’s a lot of restiveness on the part of folks like us, and some of their donors as a matter of fact, about what’s happening here.” In other words, Boykin and Gaffney were issuing something of a warning to Boehner and Issa: Go hard on Benghazi or risk losing financial and grassroots support.

After the two were done, Bannon, the executive chairman of Breitbart News, counseled fellow Groundswellers on how they should handle the Benghazi controversy. Don’t mention impeachment of Hillary Clinton, he cautioned, for that would only politicize the issue and “hurt the goal” of establishing a special congressional committee. Then Engelbrecht added, “I think they have all the notes on Benghazi. Let’s move ahead.”

As of yet, Boykin, Gaffney, and the other Groundswellers have not gotten the special Benghazi committee they wanted. But the recording shows that Groundswell has access to the top leaders of the GOP, and its reps are not reluctant to pressure those pols.

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Groundswell: A Secret Tape Reveals How It Lobbied Boehner and Issa on Benghazi

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Flooded Calgary Warned The Worst Is Yet To Come

Mother Jones

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Twitter user @ShaneKeller posts a photo of the Calgary Zoo almost completely underwater. @ShaneKeller/Twitter

Flood waters from two rivers that converge on the Canadian city of Calgary have paralyzed mass transit, shuttered downtown, and closed schools, as thousands received emergency evacuation notices yesterday and this morning. And locals are being told the worst floods in decades are not over yet. “We are still expecting that the worst has not yet come in terms of the flow,” Mayor Naheed Nenshi told CBC News on Friday.

You can find a helpful map of the most affected areas here. There have been no reports of fatalities.

In the last 48 hours, more than six inches of rain have fallen in the Calgary area alone, and CBC is reporting that more is on its way, with the highest amounts expected west of Calgary. The city reports that the Elbow River crested this morning and water levels in Bow River are expected to remain extremely high for several days. That has prompted nearly a dozen emergency warnings of flash flooding, burst banks, and overflowed dams in the province. All Calgarians have been asked by local authorities to refrain from non-essential travel. Locals are also being encouraged to boil their water in seven Calgary communities to stop the spread of infection. According to the officials, 1500 people have sought out emergency shelters across the city.

Fast-moving debris from the flood also ruptured a pipeline carrying “sour gas”—a stinky, toxic gas comprised of one percent hydrogen sulfide that can be deadly if inhaled—in Alberta’s Turner Valley, prompting further evacuations. Crews have reportedly contained the leak.

Flooded Calgary streets after torrential rainfall caused two rivers to overrun their banks, forcing the evacuation of thousands. Bandit Queen/Flickr

Flooding has also forced the closure of the last two days of the Sled Island music festival, which featured more than 250 bands plus comedy, film and art events at 30 local venues, and stranded its organizers in a generator-powered Calgary hotel. “It is a huge disappointment for all of us for sure, because we’ve been working so hard to put this together,” said Maud Salvi, the event director, by phone. “I think we’re just all trying to accept the fact that there’s nothing we can do.” Logistics are being complicated by wide-spread power outages at venues across the city,

Twitter user Connor Deering seemed to sum up some of the Canadian spirit in the face of adversity: “Since the city is shut down, may as well just start drinking”. You can see the power of the flood waters from Thursday in this supercut:

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Flooded Calgary Warned The Worst Is Yet To Come

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