art credit: IndyThisWeek
Monday, November 16, 2015
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
Veterans Day Parade tomorrow downtown Cleveland
art credit: seeingredaz.wordpress.com
Tomorrow is Veterans Day. From cleveland.com:
Cleveland's Veterans Day Parade on Wednesday, November 11, will be a salute
to Vietnam veterans, stepping off at 9:30 a.m. in front of City Hall, 601
Lakeside Avenue.
Paul
Tuggey, parade coordinator, said the salute is a way of making amends for the
lack of recognition many Vietnam veterans encountered after coming home from
the war.
"It
was not a good time," Tuggey said. "This year is an opportunity to
say thank you to those guys properly."
This
year's choice for parade marshal reflects that era of military service, with
local architect Anthony Paskevich Jr. filling that role.
Paskevich,
a Marine helicopter pilot during the war in Vietnam, was awarded the Navy Cross for
heroism during combat in 1969, an honor second only to the Medal of Honor.
Parade
participants will assemble from 8:30-9:15 a.m. then march east on Lakeside
Avenue to East Ninth Street, south to Superior Avenue, west to West Mall Drive,
and north to Lakeside and City Hall.
For more details, parade map, and info, go here.
For a list of businesses offering free goods and services to vets,
go here.
# # #
Labels:
City Hall,
Cleveland,
Navy Cross,
parade,
Veterans Day,
Vietnam
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
art credit : avalonboro.net
All Election results are at Cleveland.com. Below are the results for the two Issues you've been reading about on this blog:
Issue 2, the Ohio
constitutional anti-monopoly amendment, passed, allowing the Ohio Ballot Board to
regulate future ballot measures dealing with monopolies. The votes:
Yes 157,155
No 148,421
Issue 3, to
legalize marijuana, failed. The votes:
Yes 123,493
No 188,434
Good!
# # #
Monday, November 2, 2015
Responsible Ohio, Progress Ohio & Ex- Ohio Democratic Party Staffer Deploy Double Super Secret Twitter Ninja's to pass Marijuana Monopoly in Ohio
A lot has been written on why voters should vote no on the Responsible Ohio's Issue 3 Marijuana Monopoly in the upcoming November election.
Be it for religious reasons, medical disagreements, protecting the Ohio Constitution from being used as a tool to create monopolies, they all present very good reasons to vote no on Issue 3.
The purpose of this post is to clear the room from the cloud of the weed smoke that hangs over Ohio and expose who is really behind Responsible Ohio (Issue 3) and Ian James, the driving force of wanting the green dollars from this "green" initiative.
The below video, put together by Citizens Against Responsible Ohio, is from leaked emails and leaked audio of a conference call on April 13th, 2015 between Responsible Ohio, the Democrat aligned Progress Ohio former Ohio Democrat party officials and Don McTigue - a long time go to attorney for the Ohio Democrats.
Progress Ohio, a political/public policy action committee of the Democratic persuasion, implicate some very subversive tactics used against Ohioans. Many of the players involved are known supporters of none other than Hillary Clinton.
These tactics aim to intentionally mislead and misinform Ohioans via Social Media, as evidenced with their use of fake Ninja Twitter accounts.
Ian James, the architect and public face of Issue 3, was former Ohio GOP chairman Bob Bennett's hand chosen consultant to collect the signatures for the 2009 passage of the casino amendment. Now, James has the entire ODP 2016 presidntial campaign Fake Mutant Ninja Turtling for a marijuana monopoly, an exact replica of his 2009 casino sham. Even Ian's husband Stephen Letourneau is puff-puff passing through tens of thousands of dollars himself to Progress Ohio's ninja hive.
Known as Responsible Ohio's "puppet master" is Erik Greathouse, who was Chris Redfern's finance director at the Ohio Democratic Party under Ted Strickland until the Ed FitzGerald campaign.
Responsible Ohio's fake twitter ninja operation at Progress Ohio is run by Brian Hester, who most recently was ODP's deputy communications director. After putting lipstick on that pig for a year, Hester is now paid at Progress Ohio from $5,000 monthly from The Strategy Network for marijuana "research".
Be it for religious reasons, medical disagreements, protecting the Ohio Constitution from being used as a tool to create monopolies, they all present very good reasons to vote no on Issue 3.
The purpose of this post is to clear the room from the cloud of the weed smoke that hangs over Ohio and expose who is really behind Responsible Ohio (Issue 3) and Ian James, the driving force of wanting the green dollars from this "green" initiative.
The below video, put together by Citizens Against Responsible Ohio, is from leaked emails and leaked audio of a conference call on April 13th, 2015 between Responsible Ohio, the Democrat aligned Progress Ohio former Ohio Democrat party officials and Don McTigue - a long time go to attorney for the Ohio Democrats.
Progress Ohio, a political/public policy action committee of the Democratic persuasion, implicate some very subversive tactics used against Ohioans. Many of the players involved are known supporters of none other than Hillary Clinton.
These tactics aim to intentionally mislead and misinform Ohioans via Social Media, as evidenced with their use of fake Ninja Twitter accounts.
Ian James, the architect and public face of Issue 3, was former Ohio GOP chairman Bob Bennett's hand chosen consultant to collect the signatures for the 2009 passage of the casino amendment. Now, James has the entire ODP 2016 presidntial campaign Fake Mutant Ninja Turtling for a marijuana monopoly, an exact replica of his 2009 casino sham. Even Ian's husband Stephen Letourneau is puff-puff passing through tens of thousands of dollars himself to Progress Ohio's ninja hive.
Known as Responsible Ohio's "puppet master" is Erik Greathouse, who was Chris Redfern's finance director at the Ohio Democratic Party under Ted Strickland until the Ed FitzGerald campaign.
Responsible Ohio's fake twitter ninja operation at Progress Ohio is run by Brian Hester, who most recently was ODP's deputy communications director. After putting lipstick on that pig for a year, Hester is now paid at Progress Ohio from $5,000 monthly from The Strategy Network for marijuana "research".
Progress Ohio's chair is Antoinette Wilson, who ran for ODP chair last fall, and who is widely expected to be Hillary Clinton's Ohio director in 2016.
Wilson, a long time political operative for the democrats in Ohio, worked on former Ohio SoS Jennifer Brunner's 2006 election & helped Brunner run the 2008 election in which Barack Obama won Ohio. Along with being a Brunner flunky, Wilson worked on the campaigns of Dick Cordray, Treasurer , John Kerry’s 2004 Ohio primary director and as the 1996 Ohio political director of the Clinton/Gore campaign.
Responsible Ohio and Progress Ohio also share Don McTigue, who sits on Progress Ohio's board, and drafted Issue 3 from its birth.
Tea Party members will remember McTigue as one of the attorneys who joined with Hillary Clinton attorney, Marc Elias, to file a lawsuit against the State of Ohio to block laws and orders they claim are designed to throw roadblocks between the voting booth and traditional Democratic constituencies.
So with all this Green Slime - we don't really even need to go into Responsible Ohio marketing to children with their "Buddie" character or lefty 1% er's using the Ohio Constitution to form a marijuana monopoly as a reason to Vote No on Issue 3!
Tea Party members will remember McTigue as one of the attorneys who joined with Hillary Clinton attorney, Marc Elias, to file a lawsuit against the State of Ohio to block laws and orders they claim are designed to throw roadblocks between the voting booth and traditional Democratic constituencies.
So with all this Green Slime - we don't really even need to go into Responsible Ohio marketing to children with their "Buddie" character or lefty 1% er's using the Ohio Constitution to form a marijuana monopoly as a reason to Vote No on Issue 3!
Vote No on (Ir)Responsible Ohio's Issue 3!
Friday, October 30, 2015
Election Day November 3, 2015 issues
art credit: montgomerynews.com
Election Day November
3, 2015
For a look at the
ballot initiatives that residents of Cuyahoga County will vote on next Tuesday, see
a sample ballot in PDF format at the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections website
here. (You’ll
need to enter your ward number and precinct letter; you will have those details
on the voter registration card you received in the mail from the BoE.)
Some of the issues on
the ballot fall under the Tea Party Patriot platform of fiscal responsibility
and free markets.
If you are already confused because ballot Issues #2 (anti-monopoly) and #3 (legalize marijuana in Ohio) seem to be in conflict with each other, below are remarks by Ohio Senator Larry Obhof (R-Ohio Senate District 22) on what voters need to know about Issues 2 and 3 (h/t Ohio Christian Alliance Click here for OCA Voter Guide):
If you are already confused because ballot Issues #2 (anti-monopoly) and #3 (legalize marijuana in Ohio) seem to be in conflict with each other, below are remarks by Ohio Senator Larry Obhof (R-Ohio Senate District 22) on what voters need to know about Issues 2 and 3 (h/t Ohio Christian Alliance Click here for OCA Voter Guide):
Issue 2 is specifically limited to
initiatives that would purport to grant a private interest or group of private
interests a “monopoly, oligopoly, or cartel” or a preferential tax rate or
commercial right that is not “available to other similarly situated persons.”
It would not affect citizen-led initiatives, unless they are designed to
give someone a monopoly or a special tax rate not available to similarly
situated persons.
Issue 2 will protect the Ohio
Constitution from special interests buying their way into the state’s
foundational document. Frankly, this is long overdue and should have been
proposed after the casino amendment a few years ago. Carve-outs for
specific investors, protections from competition, the addresses of particular businesses
… these things do not belong in the Ohio Constitution.
Regardless of one’s position on the
Issue, [some of the information being promoted concerning these issues is
misleading or incorrect, as per below]:
1.
Statement: “There is no judicial
review over the ballot board decision.”
This is simply wrong and is
contradicted by the plain text of Issue. Section C clearly provides for
judicial review and states that “The supreme court of Ohio shall have original,
exclusive jurisdiction in any action that relates to this section.”
2. Statement: “This
restriction could extend to issues such as ballot initiatives for workplace
freedom, protection of life, etc.”
Issue 2 would not affect a
"workplace freedom amendment." A workplace freedom amendment
would not grant a “monopoly, oligopoly, or cartel” and it would not specify a
tax rate or commercial right or license that is not available to similarly
situated persons. And keep in mind that even under Issue 2, one could
specify a tax rate or provide commercial rights or licenses. Issue 2 only
affects such initiatives if they would carve out a special tax rate for a small
group of people that is not available to other, similarly situated persons.
[Senator Obhof] cannot think of any logical basis for saying that Issue 2 would
affect an initiative related to “protection of life.” It is hard to
conceive of a pro-life ballot initiative that would also grant someone a
monopoly, or a special tax carve-out or commercial license not available to
similarly situated persons.
3. Statement: “Consider this
scenario: If Issue 2 had been in the Constitution prior to now, the
effort that many concerned citizens launched to limit strip clubs’ hours of
operation and activities, should it have needed to be placed on the ballot,
would be subject to Issue 2’s provisions, as it would be deemed to limit the
commercial activity of a state license holder (alcohol establishments).”
Issue 2 would not apply to this
scenario. Issue 2 only applies to attempts to “grant or create a
monopoly, oligopoly, or cartel” or a preferential tax rate or commercial right
that is not “available to other similarly situated persons.” It would not
affect an initiative to limit clubs’ hours or activities. It would not
even affect a ban on such clubs, unless the ban carved out specific
clubs for special treatment (i.e., closing all clubs except for 10 of
them, or closing all clubs except those owned by a specific operator
or group of operators).
4. Statement: “If a citizen’s
initiative goes before the Ballot Board there is no judicial recourse for the
citizens to challenge the ruling by the Supreme Court.”
First, this contradicts the earlier
statement that there is no judicial review over the ballot board’s decision.
Obviously, review by the Ohio Supreme Court is “judicial review.”
Second, the scope of review is not
more or less under Issue 2 than it is for any other party in Ohio’s court
system. What does it mean to say “there is no judicial recourse … to
challenge the ruling by the Supreme Court”? When does anyone challenge
a ruling by the Supreme Court? On questions of state law, the Ohio
Supreme Court is the court of last resort. That is not any different
under Issue 2 than it would be if you and I sued each other under state law.
Thanks to Sen. Obhof for setting the record straight.
# # #
Labels:
ballot,
Election Day 2015,
Issue 2,
Issue 3,
issues,
marijuana,
monopoly,
Ohio Senator Larry Obhof
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
"Constituting America Hangout" today, October 28th at 6:15 pm Eastern
The support for the Health Care Compact (HCC) is quickly
growing. Seeing the HCC is the only Constitutional way to
defeat Obamacare, more and more Congressmen are signing on as co-sponsors
at the federal level. Ohio's Health Care Compact effort (HB 34) has
now passed the Ohio House and is in the Ohio Senate Govt Oversight & Reform
Committee.
At 6:15pm today actress and radio host Janine
Turner and Health Care Compact founder Leo Linbeck III will be
hosting an online event, "Constituting America Hangout" where you can
get more info on the HCC, ask questions and spend time with fellow patriots
working to defeat Obamacare.
From the folks at Health Care Compact:
This evening: Constituting America Google Hangout with
actress and radio host Janine Turner and Health Care
Compact founder Leo Linbeck III. To accommodate the presidential debate
the same evening, we've moved up the time to 6:15 pm Eastern (5:15 Central)
tomorrow - Wednesday, October 28th.
Please bring your
questions and join us through this link,
so you can learn more about the best chance we have to get rid of Obamacare and
send health care decisions back to the states.
In addition to
sharing more about the progress of the Health Care Compact on
Capitol Hill, Janine and Leo will tell you about steps you can take to ensure
your own members get behind our efforts to move health care control out of
Washington.
And in case you'd
like a quick refresher, Janine published this outstanding column
about the Health Care Compact in Friday's Washington
Times. Janine has been a devoted champion of states' rights and the
Constitution, and we are grateful to have her support.
# # #
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