Category Archives: loco

As Tip O’Neill never said, “All politics is loco.”

Heinrich says he will vote for military force in Syria | ABQJournal Online

I don’t want the US to attack Syria. However, I appreciate Heinrich laying out his reasons for favoring an attack. With great luck, this will prove moot. peace, mjh

Heinrich says he will vote for military force in Syria | ABQJournal Online

By James Monetelene / Journal staff writer

Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., announced Monday night that he will vote for a resolution authorizing President  Barack Obama to use military force in Syria.

Here is the text of an email Heinrich sent to constituents:

From: Senator Martin Heinrich
Sent: Monday, September 09, 2013 3:55 PM MDT
Subject: Syria

September 9, 2013

Dear Friends,

The last week has been the most difficult I have experienced in my more than eight years in public office.  What I share with you now will not win me any popularity awards, and some of you may well never forgive me for my decision today. All I ask is that you read this entire letter and seek to understand how I came to make this decision.

I have always believed that my decisions in public office should reflect my best judgment and what I believe to be the best course for our nation. Most of the time that leads to votes that are well aligned with most of you as constituents.  Just as importantly, it means that I can look my children in the eye and explain my positions with honesty, never having to explain why a vote was the result of politics or pressure. Today, I am taking a position that I believe is in line with those values.

From my position on the Intelligence Committee, I have been briefed regularly for eight months now on developments in Syria. Those developments have been very difficult to watch. Most people only hear about these things on a news report, where it is difficult to imagine the scale and intensity of this violence. I have had a much closer view.

Bashar al-Assad is a dictator who has shown a willingness to reduce residential neighborhoods to rubble, to imprison and torture children, and who has watched callously as his actions have killed over a hundred thousand civilians and displaced millions of Syrian refugees.

Despite that, I remain of the belief that as a nation, we cannot become directly entangled in a civil war that we do not fully understand. It is for this reason that I do not think we should arm the Syrian rebels and I do not support sending American troops into this conflict.

However, over recent months I also learned of the facts that are now the subject of so much debate here and around the world. What I can tell you from my perspective, having seen the public evidence as well as much that remains classified, I do not have any doubt about the following facts:

One: a chemical weapons attack occurred on August 21;

Two: that attack was planned and carried out by Bashar al-Assad’s regime; and

Three: that as a result, hundreds of children and non-combatants were gassed to death in the suburbs of Damascus.

I have seen how Assad incrementally tests the international community as he employs more and more brutal tactics in order to cling to power. And I can tell you that August 21 was not just some anomaly, but that it is part of a long and predictable pattern of behavior.

What’s more, I believe that when any country chooses to ignore the international norms against chemical weapons, they have made a deeply immoral decision with worldwide implications, implications that the United States and the international community cannot ignore. If you want to understand why chemical weapons were singled out for international actions, you can watch videos that were taken in the aftermath of the Damascus attacks. These videos show the real effects of chemical weapons and are completely consistent with international forensic evidence showing that the agent was Sarin nerve gas.  I would warn you not to view these with children in the room. They are real and they are horrible.

I know that we are a nation that is not only rightfully weary of war, but also jaded by the dishonest use of cooked intelligence reports that led to terrible mistakes in Iraq. But this is not Iraq and we have a moral obligation to deter Assad and every regime watching him from thinking that they can gas their people with impunity, commit genocide, or employ internationally prohibited weapons.

It is for this reason, and this reason alone, that I will support President Obama’s request for the authorization of use of military force.

I will seek to make sure that the resolution before the Senate remains narrow in scope and does not put American troops on the ground in another Middle Eastern war. But I believe that President Obama and the international community should be able to send a message to Bashar al-Assad: that he is not above international norms and that he will suffer real, military consequences should he choose to gas civilians.

I will continue to support additional foreign aid to alleviate the humanitarian and refugee crisis in Syria and neighboring countries, and I will also continue supporting diplomatic options so long as they are credible, verifiable, and enforceable.

While I know that my vote on this matter will be controversial, especially among some of my closest supporters, I want you to know that I have little doubt it is the right decision.

Sincerely,

MARTIN HEINRICH
United States Senator

Heinrich says he will vote for military force in Syria | ABQJournal Online

Heinrich backs Obama plan to strike Syria | ABQJournal Online

by James Monteleone / Journal Staff Writer 

Sen. Martin Heinrich said Monday that he will support a resolution authorizing the president to use military force in Syria, splitting with Sen. Tom Udall, who has argued against U.S. intervention.

Heinrich – like Udall a New Mexico Democrat – said in a letter to constituents that he would support President Barack Obama’s proposal for military intervention only if the congressional resolution rules out deployment of U.S. troops in Syria.

Heinrich backs Obama plan to strike Syria | ABQJournal Online

VOTE October 8th! (Early voting starts 9/18)

More voters support abortion ban | ABQJournal Online

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More voters support abortion ban | ABQJournal Online

Abortion does NOT belong on a city ballot. The people don’t get to vote to restrict rights of others, especially in private medical matters. But, bullies have shoved this on the ballot and fools will give away their own rights.

Clerk Mailing Absentee Ballots for 2013 Election — City of Albuquerque

Early Voting

Beginning on Sept. 18, 2013, the City Clerk will open ten (10) additional locations for Early Voting, which will 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on weekdays through Oct. 4, 2013.

Election Day Voting

On Election Day, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Oct. 8, 2013, voters can vote at any of the fifty (50) Voting Centers.

View a list of Election Day voting locations.

Register to Vote

The last day to register to vote for this election is Sept. 10, 2013.

Voter registration information is available from the Bernalillo County Clerk.

Clerk Mailing Absentee Ballots for 2013 Election — City of Albuquerque

Is the bosque natural? #abqbosque

I was struck by the romantic naiveté of some bosque supporters. You hear this bosque is thousands of years old, that it is a wilderness. That view ignores the bike trail, the jetty jacks, the trash heaps, the graffiti, the homeless, the invasive species (including us). This wilderness view celebrates the ditches and ignores the dams, both of which have destroyed the natural seasons of the bosque.

I recently saw a great short film on birders in Central Park, NYC. That park is completely man-made and unnatural but a jewel nonetheless. We are lucky to have a place that really is remarkably close to being a wilderness in a city, but we need to recognize it won’t last without wise care. It won’t last without change — nothing in life does.

Have you hiked the bosque near the Rio Grande Nature Center? What do you think about that chainlink alley ending at a powerstation? Is that the proper entrance for a treasure? From there, you figure out which way to go on the dilapidated asphalt trail, cross a rustic bridge that ends in a railroad tie stairway or a steep trail preferred by cyclists. Speaking of cyclists, look both ways several times before taking your life in your hands and crossing to … well, where? Do you want to go through the jetty jacks or take your chances on the adjacent paved trail? Wander far enough and you’ll find the river, probably. Don’t worry. There’s hardly ever a fire or rape in the area.

My point is those of us who love the bosque overlook a lot of flaws to see what we want to see, which is wildlife, more than anything else. To be a part of nature. To stand in the middle of the largest city in New Mexico and feel like we’re alone in the woods. It’s a great feeling. Ironically, more people need to experience that, though doing so risks destroying the experience. How can everyone find solitude in a small space. How do we manage a wild space?

In the Albuquerque Bosque, there are three camps #abqbosque

One group wants vigorous change, development, construction, the kind of change that puts money in people’s pockets. This group is as relentless as termites.

Another group wants NO CHANGES AT ALL. I sympathize with these people and, therefore, try not to see the selfishness of that. For them, the bosque “works” (an objectionable word in this context) — they have what they want and fear losing that.

More than likely, the third group is the largest and includes those who have never been into the bosque. This group’s apathy, indifference, and ignorance, has to change. Some of these people need to choose another group. I recommend you start at Alameda, cross under the road and head northwest toward the river.

Rio Grande Valley State Park — City of Albuquerque

Established by the State Legislature in 1983, this Park is managed cooperatively by the Open Space Division and the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District (MRGCD). The 4,300-acre park extends from Sandia Pueblo in the north through Albuquerque and south to Isleta Pueblo.

The Rio Grande bosque offers a unique environment in arid Albuquerque. Large cottonwood trees, coyote willow, and New Mexico olive create a cool, shady forest and provide habitat for beaver, numerous bird species, turtles, and snakes.

Recreation

Low-impact recreation such as hiking, bicycling, mountain biking, in-line skating, boating (see access points at the bottom of this page), and horseback riding are allowed on the Paseo del Bosque paved trail or the natural surface trail beneath the cottonwood trees. The Paseo del Bosque trail is approximately 16 miles in length from Alameda Blvd. to Rio Bravo Blvd. and runs along the east side of the river. Natural surface trails run along both sides of the river intermittently and a myriad of unmarked trails wind throughout the bosque.

The Rio Grande Valley State Park Trail MapAbout PDF Files provides a guide to access points in the park system.

Hours of Operation

April – October: 7:00 AM – 9:00 PM
November – March: 7:00 AM – 7:00 PM

Rio Grande Valley State Park — City of Albuquerque

New Mexico is not just another domino regarding marriage equity

Former governor Lew Wallace famously said, “All calculations based on our experiences elsewhere fail in New Mexico.”

Unique legal situation led to decisions on marriage | ABQJournal Online by James Monteleone / Journal Staff Writer

New Mexico is on track to become the 14th state in the nation to allow same-sex marriage – without the issue ever being approved by the state’s voters, the Legislature or the New Mexico Supreme Court.

Unique legal situation led to decisions on marriage | ABQJournal Online

Although I like the phrase “marriage equity” (or is it “marriage equality”?), I’m surprised how quickly the phrase caught on and how quickly “same-sex marriage” took a backseat. Political rephrasing is usually the work of conservatives, but not in this case.

ABQjournal trumpets website on A1 – did hell just freeze over?

Congrats to abqjournal for entering the 21st century, but I’m not going to let them pat themselves on the back without a flog in their hand. The journal website was gawdawful for more than a decade and that was in large part due to management’s cluelessness and hostility to the Web. I used to use it as the best BAD example I could find in my web design classes. Yes, it is much better. Yes, mobile formats and RSS are a boon. But, it is still hard to find specific stories on this site (such as this one – start at abqjournal.com and tell me how long it takes you). And the epaper version (which costs money) is maddening to use. But, congratulations, none the less.

“Readers tell us they like to take advantage of some of the digital benefits”

ABQjournal web, mobile traffic soars | ABQJournal Online

Keep your eyes on ALEC in New Mexico

ALEC Is in New Mexico, But Only Marginally in the Albuquerque Journal

By Denise Tessier

Because the Albuquerque Journal has the resources – a team of investigative reporters and excellent politics and government reporters – I have been waiting for the state’s leading daily to produce a story explaining how many, if any, of New Mexico’s legislators are under the influence of the American Legislative Exchange Committee.

ALEC trains state legislators and gives them boilerplate legislation to introduce in their states, furthering the national agenda of ALEC’s corporate backers. Read this story in The Nation to learn about its connection to the Koch brothers. Last week, four legislators were “outed” as supporters of this “bill mill”, but not by the Albuquerque Journal.

The four published names came courtesy of local media newcomer New Mexico Mercury, in a piece written by Pat Davis, director of ProgressNow New Mexico.

But according to the Center for Media and Democracy, the list of New Mexico supporters in the Legislature goes beyond four names. According to CMD, ALEC counts as members 13 from the New Mexico House and four from the New Mexico Senate.

ALEC Is in New Mexico, But Only Marginally in the Albuquerque Journal