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    <title type="text">Mississippi StateDesk</title>
    <subtitle type="text">Mississippi StateDesk:</subtitle>
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    <updated>2008-09-23T20:26:55Z</updated>
    <rights>Copyright (c) 2008, Ward Schaefer</rights>
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    <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:09:23</id>


    <entry>
      <title>Judicial Races Turn Ugly With Push Polls</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/judicial_races_turn_ugly_with_push_polls/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.247</id>
      <published>2008-09-23T19:00:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-09-23T20:26:55Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Ward Schaefer</name>
            <email>lwschaefer@gmail.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="Attorney General"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C21/"
        label="Attorney General" />
      <category term="Judiciary"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C20/"
        label="Judiciary" />
      <category term="Elections"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C3/"
        label="Elections" />
      <category term="Releases"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C13/"
        label="Releases" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p><a href="http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080923/NEWS/809230369/1001/NEWS">According to the Clarion-Ledger,</a> Attorney General Jim Hood is investigating several &#8220;push polls,&#8221; political smears that masquerade as telephone opinion polls, targeting Mississippi Supreme Court candidates. Third-party organizations have conducted push polls on Justice Chuck Easley, Justice Oliver Diaz and Crystal Springs laywer Jim Kitchens, who is vying for Chief Justice Jim Smith&#8217;s seat.
</p> <p>Smith&#8217;s campaign has denied any involvement in push-polling, but Kitchens&#8217; campaign has release this statement suggesting otherwise:
</p>
<blockquote><p>
Subject: PRESS RELEASE: Kitchens response to AG investigation of push
<br />
polling
</p>
<p>
JACKSON--Chief Justice Jim Smith&#8217;s campaign has found itself at the center
<br />
of a controversy that is now the target of a state investigation by Attorney
<br />
General Jim Hood, the Clarion-Ledger reported today.
</p>
<p>
According to the Clarion-Ledger, the attorney general&#8217;s office is
<br />
investigating whether or not unethical push polls being conducted on behalf
<br />
of Jim Smith are in fact illegal.
</p>
<p>
Attorney General Jim Hood told the Clarion-Ledger, &#8220;We are looking into
<br />
these sleazy, bogus calls to determine if they violate our criminal and/or
<br />
civil laws,&#8221; Hood said Monday. &#8220;We call on any person who has recorded one
<br />
of these calls to call our office at 1-800-281-4418 or e-mail us at
<br />
agjimhood.com.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
The Kitchens campaign released this statement through campaign manager Sam
<br />
Hall:
</p>
<p>
&#8220;We&#8217;re glad to see that state officials are watching these elections
<br />
carefully, considering all of the nasty tricks and past attempts by outside
<br />
groups to circumvent campaign finance laws.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
&#8220;Jim Kitchens will run a fair campaign, talking about his qualifications,
<br />
telling people how Jim Smith has hurt our courts and letting the voters
<br />
decide who would be the best fit for a fair, balanced court made up of
<br />
honest, honorable judges.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
<a href="http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080923/NEWS/809230369/1001/NEWS">http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080923/NEWS/809230369/1001/NEWS</a>
<br />
</p></blockquote>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Supreme Court Rules Sample Ballot is Illegal</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/supreme_court_rules_sample_ballot_is_illegal/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.244</id>
      <published>2008-09-18T22:26:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-09-22T22:03:32Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Ward Schaefer</name>
            <email>lwschaefer@gmail.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="Headline"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C35/"
        label="Headline" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>The Mississippi Supreme Court ruled against Gov. Haley Barbour and Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann today in their appeal concerning the contested sample November ballot. Justice Jess Dickinsons majority <a href="http://jacksonfreepress.com/foi_pdfs/Barbour v. Berger order.pdf" title="opinion">opinion</a> (PDF, 496 KB) stated that the sample ballot, which listed the U.S. Senate race between Roger Wicker and Ronnie Musgrove near the bottom, is illegal. 
</p>
<p>
&#8220;With respect to placing on the ballot a United States Senatorial race&#1175;regardless of whether or not the race is a special electionthe statute&#8217;s words&#1491;The titles for the various offices shall be listed in the following order"can have but one meaning,&#8221; Dickinson wrote.
</p>
<p>
In deference to the separation of powers, the Court stopped short of actually ordering the governor and secretary of state to issue a revised ballot with the Senate race listed alongside other national elections, but Barbour and Hosemann are expected to comply with the Court&#1490;s interpretation.
</p>
<p>
Let&#1234;s all take a deep breath this afternoon and see if everyone does the right thing, Sam Begley, attorney for plaintiff Trudy Berger, said, adding that Barbour and Hosemann are both members of the Mississippi Bar. 
</p>
<p>
&#1299;I have every confidence that they will follow the letter and spirit of the Supreme Courts ruling,&#1172; he said. 
</p>
<p>
Following the decision, Barbour issued a one-line statement, which read: &#8220;The Supreme Court has spoken; so be it.&#8221;
</p> 
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>AP: Michigan Rep. asks Justice Dept. to Investigate Mississippi Ballot</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/ap_michigan_rep_asks_justice_dept_to_investigate_mississippi_ballot/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.243</id>
      <published>2008-09-16T21:33:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-09-19T19:48:36Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Ward Schaefer</name>
            <email>lwschaefer@gmail.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="MS Newspapers"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C5/"
        label="MS Newspapers" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>The Associated Press <a href="http://www.sunherald.com/218/story/820708.html">is reporting</a> that Rep. John Conyers, the Democratic chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, spoke out against Barbour&#8217;s sample ballot today. He repeated the charge that a ballot with the Wicker-Musgrove Senate race near the bottom will disenfranchise voters.
</p>
<p>
Conyers called the sample ballot &#8220;a blatant violation&#8221; of the Voting Rights Act. Ironically, Barbour has made the same claim about the alternate ballot that Trudy Berger and Tomie Green have proposed, because it would constitute a change in voting procedure from the past practice of placing special elections at the end.
</p> 
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Wicker&#45;Musgrove Closer Than 1 Month Ago</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/wicker_musgrove_closer_than_1_month_ago/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.242</id>
      <published>2008-09-12T20:49:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-09-12T21:51:30Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Ward Schaefer</name>
            <email>lwschaefer@gmail.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="MS Newspapers"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C5/"
        label="MS Newspapers" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>Daily Kos posted <a href="http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/9/11/12269/1910/1017/594955">new poll numbers</a> on the Wicker-Musgrove race yesterday, and they show a much closer race than the 52-43 lead Rasmussen gave McCain back in August.
</p>
<p>
<b>Wicker</b> (R) 48 (45)
<br />
<b>Musgrove</b> (D) 43 (44)
</p>
<p>
The numbers should be heartening to Musgroves supporters, but he&#1170;s also not dominating some key demographics. Musgrove pulled 75% of black respondents, but 18% declared themselves undecided. He also only got 50% of the Delta/Jackson region, which is supposed to be his stronghold.
</p>
<p>
It will be interesting to see how the ballot controversy affects this race. I could see Musgrove getting a financial boost from all the national attention.
</p> 
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Old Testament New Hero</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/old_testament_new_hero/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.241</id>
      <published>2008-08-04T18:09:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-08-04T20:43:08Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="MS Newspapers"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C5/"
        label="MS Newspapers" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>by Matthew Caston
<br />
August 4, 2008
<br />
Last week Barack Obama was a celebrity with popularity rivaling that of Britney Spears and Paris Hilton, but this week he has been paralleled with one of the greatest heroes of the Old Testament, courtesy of John McCain.
<br />

</p> <p>The new ad can be seen at the John McCain homepage at johnmccain.com and is a must see.&nbsp; In the ad entitled &#8220;The One&#8221; McCain  compares Barack Obama to Moses of the Old Testament.&nbsp; Yep, Moses.&nbsp; McCain paints Obama as a prophet using quotes from his speeches that have been taken totally out of context .&nbsp; &#8220;We are the ones we have been waiting for and &#8220;a light will shine down upon you.&nbsp; You will experience an epiphany and you will say to yourself, I have to vote for Barack,&#8217; are powerful, serious statements but in the context of McCain&#8217;s ad they are hilarious.&nbsp; During the ad a clip from a movie depicting Moses is inserted to further drive the comparison home.&nbsp; In the clip, Moses is seen parting the Red Sea.&nbsp; As the sea parts Obamas Presidential Seal emerges.
<br />
	The ad goes on to say that Obama &#8220;may be the one, but is he ready to lead?&#8221;  Its a pretty funny ad, but it raises many questions.&nbsp; If Obama truly is &#8220;the One,&#8221; doesn&#1298;t that mean he&#8217;s automatically ready to lead?&nbsp; Another question that arises is: If Obama is Moses, then doesn&#8217;t that make McCain the power-obsessed, slave driving, anti-Semitic Pharaoh?&nbsp; If Obama is the one that&#8217;s going to lead us to the promised land, why does McCain want to stop him?
<br />
	If humor was what McCain was going for he did pretty good this time.&nbsp; It is an entertaining ad but politics isnt supposed to be entertaining.&nbsp; If this was &#8220;Last Comic Standing&#8221; then I would vote for McCain, but its not.&nbsp; I&#8217;ll give it to McCain and his team, The One&#8221; is a very funny ad, but this is a serious political race and I&#8217;m not voting for the guy that makes me laugh.&nbsp; Sorry McCain, maybe you should campaign to be President of Comedy Central.
<br />

</p>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Don&#8217;t vote McCain, vote anti&#45;Obama</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/dont_vote_mccain_vote_anti_obama/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.240</id>
      <published>2008-07-30T20:06:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-08-04T19:09:37Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="MS Newspapers"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C5/"
        label="MS Newspapers" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>by Matthew Caston
<br />
July 30, 2008
<br />
It seems that the Republican strategy for this election year is not for you to vote for them, but against the other guy.&nbsp; In this case the &#8220;other guy&#8221; is Barack Obama, and John McCain has him right in the cross-hares.&nbsp; But how is this any different than any other election year? From now on the official slogan of the republican party should be: &#8220;Dont vote republican, vote anti-democrat.&#8221;
<br />

</p> <p>McCain has been on the warpath for the past week or so pushing out attack ad after attack ad.&nbsp; With his new ad entitled &#8220;Celebs,&#8221; McCain attempts to compare Barack Obama to a celebrity whose only concern is fame.&nbsp; The ad says that Obama is not ready to lead and that high taxes and foreign oil is &#8220;the real Obama.&#8221;  What makes this so sad is that McCain is serious.
<br />
 	Last week McCain debuted his &#8220;Troops&#8221; ad which says  Obama &#8220;made time to hit the gym, but canceled a visit with wounded troops,&#8221; because the Pentagon wouldnt allow cameras.&nbsp; The real reason Obama canceled his trip was because he didn&#8217;t want the soldiers caught in the middle of his political campaign.&nbsp; Guess McCain hasn&#8217;t heard the news.
<br />
	McCain should give the American people more credit than this.&nbsp; We aren&#8217;t mindless drones that make decisions based on the last thing we hear.&nbsp; We carefully examine all the information and then come to a well thought-out, educated conclusion that is not based on fear, bias or erroneous claims.&nbsp; We&#8217;re intelligent creatures, right?
<br />
Our voting track record says otherwise.&nbsp; The reason we keep seeing the same old republican strategy again and again and again is because we keep falling for it! President Bush used the same strategy against John Kerry when he called into question his military service and his flip-flopping.&#8221;  How in the world did we let that affect our voting when Bush dodged Vietnam back in the 70s?
<br />
	Maybe this year we&#8217;ll realize that all McCain is doing with his negative ads is showing Barack Obama as the bigger man.
<br />

</p>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Giving the Credit</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/giving_the_credit/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.239</id>
      <published>2008-07-23T20:11:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-08-04T19:09:02Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="MS Newspapers"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C5/"
        label="MS Newspapers" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>by Matthew Caston
<br />
July 23, 2008
<br />
After blaming Barack Obama for the high gas prices in his ad entitled &#8220;Pump,&#8221; Senator John McCain now says the recent drop in oil prices is on behalf of the almighty, infallible George Bush.
</p> <p>Today President Bush finally prevailed in lifting the ban on offshore drilling just in time for the end of his term.&nbsp; Of course McCain managed to insert a little criticism of Obama&#8217;s opposition to drilling on the Outer Continental Shelf.
<br />
	The lift on the ban and the $10 drop in oil prices comes as no coincidence to McCain.&nbsp; He knows that George Bush is the sole cause of it, despite what Presidential spokeswoman Dana Perino says.&nbsp; Perino says that the price drop could reflect a drop in demand.&nbsp; She also says that she and her colleagues in the White House may not &#8220;fully deserve the credit.&#8221;  But McCain knows how to give credit where credit is due.&nbsp; 
</p>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Destiantion Iraq</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/destiantion_iraq/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.238</id>
      <published>2008-07-22T22:24:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-08-04T19:08:25Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="MS Newspapers"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C5/"
        label="MS Newspapers" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>by Matthew Caston
<br />
July 22, 2008
<br />
We all want to get away at times.&nbsp; Whether if it&#8217;s to escape the fast pace of the city or to escape the monotony of work, a vacation does the trick.&nbsp; If youre big on vacations and tourists spots, a new one has just been made available.&nbsp; Pack your bags because you&#8217;re going to Iraq!
</p> <p>This is no joke.&nbsp; Iraq has been a civilian&#8217;s nightmare for the past 20 years, but now the country is looking for tourist to help with its economy.&nbsp; Iraqi officials are intent on attracting tourist to the many archaeological and historic sites around the country.&nbsp; Many of these sites, like the famous Hanging Gardens in Babylon, have been badly damaged and the National Museum remains closed to the public. 
<br />
According to the online version of Lonely Planet, a travel guide agency, Iraq, with its &#8220;widespread violence and kidnappings&#8221; and high threat to foreigners, is in a peculiar position for tourism.&nbsp; Although the website points out that the Kurdish region in northern Iraq is safer than others, Lonely Planet still gives Iraq an &#8220;extreme danger&#8221; severity warning.
<br />
Apparently words like &#8220;extreme danger&#8221; and &#8220;widespread violence&#8221; don&#8217;t mean too much to American business man Robert Kelley.&nbsp; Kelley has a vision of a $100 million luxury hotel in one of Baghdad&#8217;s green zones.&nbsp; He is confident that construction could begin as soon as city officials conduct a survey in 30 to 45 days.
<br />
With headlines at cnn.com like &#8220;Baghdad hit by deadly car bomb,&#8221; which took place a day ago, tourists may not be jumping at the chance to visit Iraq this year, or the next.&nbsp; Despite the non-friendly state of Iraq, Kelley and officials from Iraqs National Investment Commission have already held a cornerstone laying ceremony for the luxury hotel.&nbsp; Maybe revitalizing Iraq&#8217;s tourist industry is Americas way of stabilizing the economy, or maybe its capitalism at its best.
</p>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Laying the Blame</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/laying_the_blame/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.237</id>
      <published>2008-07-21T19:53:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-08-04T19:07:36Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="MS Newspapers"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C5/"
        label="MS Newspapers" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>by Matthew Caston
<br />
July 21, 2008
<br />
If youre looking for someone to blame for the high gas prices, look no further.&nbsp; Apparently its been Barack Obama&#8217;s fault the whole time&#8230; no, seriously.&nbsp; 
<br />

</p> <p>According to a new ad released today by Republican Presidential Nominee, John McCain, entitled Pump,&#1235; it is because of Obamas opposition to drilling in the US and off its coast that we pay $4 or more for gas.&nbsp; Even though Barack Obama only started campaigning for the presidency in February of 2007, he is still the sole purpose of high gas prices today.
<br />
	We have all heard many explanations for the high prices of gas: the US&#8217;s bad relations with OPEC, the war in Iraq, US oil companies exploiting the people, Bush.&nbsp; But thanks to Senator McCain all those rumors are put to rest and now we know the real reason why gas is so high.&nbsp; Thank you John McCain.&nbsp; To view Senator McCains ad and other fear-mongering and republican propaganda, go to the John McCain homepage (<a href="http://www.johnmccain.com/">http://www.johnmccain.com/</a>).&nbsp; The ad also can be seen on youtube or on your local television sets.
<br />
	
</p>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>ICE: Cold Blooded</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/ice_cold_blooded/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.235</id>
      <published>2008-07-16T17:57:01Z</published>
      <updated>2008-08-04T19:05:33Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="MS Newspapers"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C5/"
        label="MS Newspapers" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>by Matthew Caston
<br />
July 16, 2008
<br />
America has done it again.&nbsp; It seems that exploiting and dehumanizing a people is written somewhere in the American Constitution.&nbsp; In Postville, Iowa, America prevails in unjustly sending more than 300 people to jail, destroying countless families and killing the American dream that many of us hold in our hearts.
</p> <p>America has done it again.&nbsp; It seems that exploiting and dehumanizing a people is written somewhere in the American Constitution.&nbsp; In Postville, Iowa, America prevails in unjustly sending more than 300 people to jail, destroying countless families and killing the American dream that many of us hold in our hearts.&nbsp; Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) executed a raid of Agriprocessors Inc, the nation&#8217;s largest kosher slaughterhouse and meat packing plant in Postville.&nbsp; Despite its huge impact on the town, its people and those prosecuted, this operation remained hidden in the shadows and has been since May.&nbsp; It is only because of Mr. Erik Camayd-Freixas, Ph.D., and his essay entitled Interpreting After The Largest ICE Raid In US History: A Personal Account,&#1236; that the national public can know what happened in Postville.&nbsp; Camayd-Freixas is a Spanish interpreter for federal courts and a professor at  Florida International University.&nbsp; His essay recounts events that he as an interpreter has never experienced before. 
<br />
	The story is that ICE conducted a raid on Agriprocessors and rounded up about 397 illegal aliens, mostly Guatemalans, some hailed form Mexico, and a few from the Ukraine.&nbsp; As any caring person can imagine, a good number of those rounded  up were only trying to support their families back home.&nbsp; Many of the immigrants retell their story of how they came to the US in hopes of saving money and then returning to their homeland.&nbsp; One man walked from Guatemala.&nbsp; In the words of the Guatemalan, I walked for a month and ten days until I crossed the river,&#1236; then he hitched a ride to Dallas and found his way to Postville, Iowa.&nbsp; One woman form the Ukraine came to the US to work and save money for the operation her daughter desperately needed.&nbsp; But these pleas for justice, understanding, and compassion fell on deaf ears.&nbsp; ICE is one cold blooded agency.
<br />
	For the immigrants there could be a guilty&#1235; plea or a not guilty&#1235; plea.&nbsp; If one were to plead guilty to knowingly using a false Social Security number,&#1236; then the person would not have to face the heavier charge of aggravated identity theft.&#1236;  In addition to pleading guilty, there is a 5 month jail sentence, a deportation without hearing, and the person would be placed on supervised release&#1236; for 3 years.&nbsp; The injustice here is that many of the immigrants didnt knowingly commit identity theft or fraud, they just wanted to work.&nbsp; Many of the immigrants didn&#1170;t even understand the charges against them.
<br />
	A not guilty&#1236; plea would result in waiting for trial 6 to 8 months in jail without right of bail.&nbsp; If the defendant won the trail, he or she would still be deported.&nbsp; If the defendant lost the trail, there was a minimum 2 year sentence before being deported.&nbsp; Which would you pick?
<br />
	It was a lose-lose situation and many of the immigrants pleaded guilty so that they wouldnt spend too much time away from their families.&nbsp; The charge of &#1171;knowingly possessing or using false employment documents with intent to deceive puts the blame solely on the worker and not the company.&nbsp; Camayd-Freixas, his fellow interpreters, and even the judge questioned the situation.&nbsp; On paper it looked perfectly legal to convict 300 people of a crime they didn&#1297;t know existed, destroy their families and keep them in prison only to deport them, but at heart something didnt feel right.
<br />
	There are more twists to this case than just its heartlessness.&nbsp; Everything from Social Security, Homeland Security and even terrorism are all somehow involved and many are calling this a humanitarian crisis.&nbsp; To witness the American dehumanization of immigrants at its finest view Mr. Camayd-Freixas&#1170;s entire essay at <a href="http://thesanctuary.soapblox.net/showDiary.do?diaryId=269">http://thesanctuary.soapblox.net/showDiary.do?diaryId=269</a>.
<br />

</p>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Satire Is Hard</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/satire_is_hard/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.236</id>
      <published>2008-07-16T17:57:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-08-04T19:06:46Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="MS Newspapers"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C5/"
        label="MS Newspapers" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>by Matthew Caston
<br />
July 16, 2008
<br />
The &#8220;satirical&#8221; cover of the New Yorker appeared over the weekend.&nbsp; It depicts Democratic Presidential Nominee Barack Obama dawned in, as one Fox News correspondent calls, Muslim garb&#1236; in the oval office fist bumping his wife, Michelle Obama.&nbsp; She, supposedly depicted as an insurgent, carries an AK-47 and sports an afro.&nbsp; As the extremist couple fist bumps the American flag burns in the fireplace as Osama Bin Laden watches from his perch above. Perfect satire, right?
<br />

</p> <p>The cover can be viewed at <a href="http://hotlineblog.nationaljournal.com/archives/2008/07/discuss.html">http://hotlineblog.nationaljournal.com/archives/2008/07/discuss.html</a>.&nbsp; It depicts Democratic Presidential Nominee Barack Obama dawned in, as one Fox News correspondent calls, Muslim garb&#1236; in the oval office fist bumping his wife, Michelle Obama.&nbsp; She, supposedly depicted as an insurgent, carries an AK-47 and sports an afro.&nbsp; As the extremist couple fist bumps the American flag burns in the fireplace as Osama Bin Laden watches from his perch above. Perfect satire, right?
<br />
	Although the two articles featured in the magazine about Obama were very serious, it isnt hard to see why this cover has been the epicenter of news talk since its debut.&nbsp; The New Yorker says in its defense that all of their covers are satirical and that this one is no different.&nbsp; The cover is supposed to play on what conservatives think of Barack Obama and is somehow supposed to be funny, I couldnt tell.
<br />
	Many say that the New Yorker failed in its attempt at satire, I couldn&#1170;t agree more.&nbsp; Michelle Obama, with her fro and camo, looks more like a Black Panther than an insurgent.&nbsp; Just because a man has on a robe and turban doesnt mean he&#1170;s a terrorist, although Barack Obama does look rather happy.&nbsp; As for Osama above the fire place, I wouldnt be surprised to find him in actually in the White House.
<br />
	On behalf of Obama&#1170;s defense, one blogger wrote that the next cover of the New Yorker should be a tottering old McCain dressed up in his old POW uniform chasing kids off his lawn while simultaneously trying unsuccessfully to use a computer, singing &#1171;Bomb, bomb, bomb Iran, calling his wife vile names, and kissing the butts of the religious zealots he used to criticize. Of course while this is going on, secret Vietnamese radio waves will be beaming Manchurian candidate instructions into his brain.&#1106;  Now thats satire.
</p>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>L.A. Times: Musgrove&#45;Wicker Race Highlights GOP Woes</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/la_times_musgrove_wicker_race_highlights_gop_woes/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.233</id>
      <published>2008-07-07T18:01:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-07-07T19:21:51Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="US Congress"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C16/"
        label="US Congress" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>Jackson is buzzing about a story in the Los Angeles Times this weekend, in which the mainstream media concedes that remarkable political things may be happening in Mississippi (the prospect of which <a href="http://www.jacksonfreepress.com/index.php/site/comments/mississippi_youth_vote_blue/" title="the JFP wrote about back in 2004.">the JFP wrote about back in 2004</a>). 
</p>
<p>
<a href="http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-senate6-2008jul06,0,1446447.story" title="The Los Angeles Times reports">The Los Angeles Times reports</a> that the prospect that former Gov. Ronnie Musgrove could beat Roger Wicker for Trent Lott&#8217;s old seat &#8220;is a window onto a remarkable political trend that has been eclipsed by the fireworks surrounding the 2008 presidential contest: Democrats are running strong Senate campaigns in states such as Mississippi, Alaska and North Carolina that Republicans have long taken for granted.&#8221;
</p> <blockquote>
<p>
The outlook for the GOP is so grim that party leaders have readily conceded there is no chance they can regain control of the Senate in 2008, even though Democrats&#8217; current majority is slim, 51-49.
</p>
<p>
&#8220;If you have an R in front of your name, you better run scared,&#8221; said Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.), chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, who says the party will do well if it holds its losses to three or four seats.
</p>
<p>
The Mississippi race between Democratic former Gov. Ronnie Musgrove and Republican Sen. Roger Wicker distills the wide range of factors that have put congressional Republicans in their weakest position since the Watergate scandal of the 1970s.
<br />
</p></blockquote>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Gas Price Woes; Wicker to the Rescue?</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/gas_price_woes_wicker_to_the_rescue/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.234</id>
      <published>2008-07-01T18:23:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-07-07T19:29:02Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="US Congress"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C16/"
        label="US Congress" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>by Matthew Caston
<br />
July 1, 2008
</p>
<p>
Summer time usually means a road trip with the family, but this year summer is just  four hot months.&nbsp; The reason, as we all know, is the exceptionally high gas prices.&nbsp; The people&#8217;s answer to high gas prices is an organization founded by Dustin Coupal and Jason Toews called <a href="gasbuddy.com" title="Gas-Buddy Organization">Gas-Buddy Organization</a>.&nbsp; The organization has made it its mission to provide a real-time gas price forum that consumers can access to find the least expensive gas in their community.&nbsp; The Web site boasts that it is proven, tested, and guaranteed&#1236; to save consumers 19 percent or more at the pumps.&nbsp; According to gasbuddy.com, the national average for gas in the U.S. currently is $4.10.&nbsp; The site also offers a map of the U.S. that can be used to pinpoint the exact location of the cheapest gas in their community.&nbsp; The cheapest gas around Jackson can be found at Raceway on 4615 Clinton Blvd at $3.75 a gallon for regular unleaded gas.
</p> <p>Gasbuddy isn&#8217;t enough; with gas prices still on the rise we need a permanent solution.&nbsp; In comes Mississippi Republican Sen. Roger Wicker with his Gas Price Reduction Act.&nbsp; The legislation, introduced June 26, is an effort by Senate Republicans to reach out to their Democratic colleagues&#1236; and has so far has 42 co-sponsors according to  a press release issued June 26.&nbsp; Its goal is to lower gas prices and reduce our dependence on foreign oil. Wicker said his legislation takes &#8220;a multi-pronged approach to quelling gas prices and foreign dependency.&nbsp; The legislation covers everything from lifting the moratorium on oil shale development in the west (oil shale is a rock that contains large amounts of kerogen that contains hydrocarbons which can be extracted and developed into a usable fule. It may cost a little more to process but oil shale will deffinately rid us of foreign oil) and to expanding research for alternative energy vehicles.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
The legislation sounds pretty good, but Title I reads, &#1299; DEEP SEA EXPLORATION IN THE OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF (OCS).&nbsp; According to the legislation, exploration of the outer continental shelf would make 14 billion barrels of oil in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans available for production.&nbsp; The legislation goes on to say that the 14 billion barrels are &#1299;more than all U.S. imports from the Persian Gulf countries over the last 15 years.&nbsp; The legislation also addresses the distribution of funds stating that 50 percent would go to the Federal Treasury, 37.5 percent to states and 12.5 percent to the Land and Water Conservation Fund.
<br />
	
<br />
Tilte II focuses on Utah, Colorado, and Wyoming, saying that together they have &#1299;more than three times the oil reserves of Saudi Arabia.&nbsp; According to the legislation there are 800 billion to 2 trillion potentially recoverable barrels of oil in these three states. 
</p>
<p>
Title III, the least detailed of the four, reads:
<br />
* We need better batteries to maximize electricity range &amp; use less gas
<br />
 
<br />
* Increased R&amp;D for advanced batteries
</p>
<p>
* Direct Loans for advanced battery manufacturing facilities
</p>
<p>
* Sense of Senate that the Federal Government should increase its purchases of these vehicles
</p>
<p>
What in the world is &#1299;R&amp;D?
<br />
Title IV focuses on the Commodity Futures Trading Commission or CFTC.&nbsp; The CFTC is an independent organization that has been mandated to regulate commodity futures and option markets in the United States.&nbsp; Under Title IV of the Gas Price Reduction Act the CFTC will receive increased funding and staff.&nbsp; It also requires the CFTC to gather information on index traders and swap dealers.&nbsp; Title IV also directs the President&#8217;s Work Group on Financial Markets to study the international regulation of commodities markets.
</p>
<p>
More:
</p>
<p>
 <a href="http://www.gasbuddy.com/">http://www.gasbuddy.com/</a>
</p>
<p>
<a href="http://www.cftc.gov/">http://www.cftc.gov/</a>
<br />

</p>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Gov. Haley Barbour&#8217;s 2008 &#8216;State of the State&#8217; Address</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/gov_haley_barbours_2008_state_of_the_state_address/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.232</id>
      <published>2008-01-21T23:12:01Z</published>
      <updated>2008-01-22T00:16:36Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="Legislature"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C1/"
        label="Legislature" />
      <category term="Overview"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C6/"
        label="Overview" />
      <category term="Governor"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C12/"
        label="Governor" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>[verbatim] Governor Bryant; Speaker McCoy; ladies and gentlemen of the Legislature; and fellow Mississippians: This is the fifth time you have allowed Marsha and me to join you in this historic chamber to report on the State of our State.&nbsp; Were honored the people of Mississippi have allowed us this opportunity, and I&#1170;m grateful and proud to have the best partner a man could have to help meet this challenge, Marsha.
</p>
<p>
It is appropriate we are again together for this occasion on Dr. Martin Luther King Day.&nbsp; Our state has the highest percentage African-American population; and the issues, with which we will deal, affect all Mississippians and should receive our best effort to serve the interests of all.
</p> <p>
I look out over this chamber and I see many new faces  new Representatives and Senators and new statewide elected officials such as my old friend, Lieutenant Governor Phil Bryant.
</p>
<p>
And I am glad to see familiar faces &#1430; such as our Speaker and my friend, Billy McCoy.
</p>
<p>
We gather in this chamber, Republicans and Democrats, from different regions, backgrounds and interests, but with a common bond: that we have been sent to Jackson to do the peoples business, to keep our state headed in the right direction, to continue moving forward together.
</p>
<p>
Each of us is here because we engaged in a political campaign, but those campaigns are over.&nbsp; It is time to govern.
<br />
 
<br />
For the thirty-three of you who are newly elected and here for the first time; my advice is, don&#1170;t believe everything you hear or read in the paper about partisanship or the Legislature and the Governor
<br />
fighting.&nbsp; The news media likes to focus on fights, but youre going to find we can deal with contentious issues without being contentious ourselves.&nbsp; You&#1170;ll learn that when I called Billy McCoy my friend, I
<br />
meant it.&nbsp; And youll find a lot can be . . .indeed, has been accomplished by working together.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
In these last four years consider the examples of tort reform, reorganizing and emphasizing workforce development and job training, Momentum Mississippi and other economic development projects, upgrading education and replenishing the Rainy Day Fund.&nbsp; Some of those were very tough issues, but working together we got them done.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
I will say of you freshmen, you&#1170;ve come to the Legislature at a time of great promise but also one that requires caution.
</p>
<p>
It is said that in the Chinese language the symbol for crisis is the same as the symbol for opportunity.&nbsp; If thats so, it&#1170;s an appropriate symbol for this year.&nbsp; We have the wind at our backs, but there are storm clouds on the horizon.
</p>
<p>
The State of our State is good; in some ways extremely good.
</p>
<p>
We have record employment . . . more people working than ever . . . a net gain of more than 50,000 jobs in the last four years . . . and there are thousands more jobs in the pipeline at Toyota, General Electric,
<br />
PACCAR, SeverCorr, ADP, PSL-North America, CCA and so on.
</p>
<p>
Nearly twenty billion dollars of capital investment is underway . . . in permitting or on the drawing board in our energy sector alone.
</p>
<p>
Personal income increased by twenty percent these last four years.&nbsp; We not only have more people working, but we have been replacing lower skilled, lower paying jobs with higher skilled, higher paying jobs.
</p>
<p>
There is a can-do attitude in Mississippi.&nbsp; As I said last week at the Inauguration, not only did the country and the world see the spirit and character of our people after Katrina; we learned so much about ourselves . . . about our strength and courage . . . about compassion and community.
</p>
<p>
We have been moving forward together, and people recognize it.&nbsp; Most people are very bullish on our state and our future.
</p>
<p>
Nevertheless, we have to recognize the national economy has been softening.&nbsp; Serious troubles in the financial markets have not only generated pessimism but also have caused a real credit crunch.&nbsp; Reduced availability of credit will make economic development harder.
</p>
<p>
Nationally the housing industry, a huge employer and major producer of wealth for average Americans, is in a tailspin after an extremely long boom.&nbsp; Our state is already being affected.
</p>
<p>
Energy prices, while driving some large economic development projects in the state, are placing a heavy financial burden on our citizens.
</p>
<p>
Inevitably these problems impact the states budget.&nbsp; Last Tuesday the front page of the Wall Street Journal proclaimed, &#1171;States prepare to tighten belts as growth in revenue slows.&nbsp; The same week our State Economist said Mississippi sales tax receipts for July through December, 2007, the first half of this fiscal year, had increased only one-tenth of one percent!
</p>
<p>
There have been a spate of stories about the severe budget deficits other states are facing.&nbsp; Four years ago our state was in the deepest budget hole in  history.&nbsp; It is our responsibility &#1302; yours and mine  to make sure we don&#1426;t get back in that kind of shape again.
</p>
<p>
This will require considerable budget discipline.&nbsp; It means well have to tell some people &#1171;No; it means some good things won&#1298;t get funded or wont get as much funding as some people would like.&nbsp; Sometimes it&#1170;s our job to say No,&#1236; even to our friends and to our favorite programs.
</p>
<p>
A review of current spending compared to the budget four years ago should make it easier to maintain that budget discipline, because spending on priority programs has increased dramatically in those four
<br />
years.
</p>
<p>
General fund revenue in Fiscal Year 2004 was $3.6 billion.&nbsp; General fund revenue available for the budget youll consider this session is estimated at $5.1 billion.&nbsp; That&#1170;s a 42% increase.&nbsp; And with other
<br />
revenue available for General Fund purposes, you will have $5.6 billion to appropriate.
</p>
<p>
In the current year, FY 08, appropriated state spending is 31% higher than in FY &#1170;04, and revenue is 38% more.
</p>
<p>
This year our K-12 schools are receiving more than $4.2 billion from state, federal and local sources . . . more than $8,500 for every child
<br />
attending our public schools compared to $6,800 per child just four years ago.&nbsp; The state appropriation of more than $2.2 billion has increased $529 million in four years. That is an average increase of more than $130 million per year for K-12 schools alone.
</p>
<p>
Education is our top priority, but we must recognize we wont be able to increase K-12 spending nearly that much this session, unless you&#1170;re willing to gut other critical programs, which Im not.
</p>
<p>
Higher education also received record increases in state funding these last four years.&nbsp; Universities saw state funding go up by nearly one-third, and it was greatly needed after a seven percent cut in funding during the Musgrove administration.
</p>
<p>
Community colleges got cut even more when Musgrove was governor, and
<br />
I&#1170;m proud that in my first administration state appropriations for
<br />
community colleges went up fifty-two percent, including a more than
<br />
doubling of state spending on workforce development and job training . .
<br />
. a key to our job creation success.
</p>
<p>
Im on record as favoring continued, large increases in funding
<br />
higher education . . . increases similar to my first term; but I&#1170;ll
<br />
tell you right now, we cant afford that this year.&nbsp; The money won&#1170;t
<br />
be there.
</p>
<p>
Our duty is to live within our means . . . to pass an honest balanced
<br />
budget; and particularly this year to protect our strengthening  Rainy
<br />
Day Fund.
</p>
<p>
When I stood here four years ago for my initial State of the State
<br />
address, the unallocated balance in the Rainy Day Fund was less than ten
<br />
million dollars, a tiny fraction of what it was supposed to be.
</p>
<p>
Today the Rainy Day Fund is nearly $270 million, the highest ever and
<br />
about three-fourths of its current statutory limit.&nbsp; As the name
<br />
implies, this fund is to protect our taxpayers and our program
<br />
beneficiaries if there is a revenue shortfall or economic slowdown.
</p>
<p>
Later this week I will present you a detailed balanced budget proposal.
<br />
 It will strengthen our Rainy Day Fund because I realize this is
<br />
essential as we prepare for the possibility of a national economic
<br />
downturn.
</p>
<p>
My budget reflects the fact that public education is the number one
<br />
economic development issue in our state, and it is the number one
<br />
quality of life issue.&nbsp; My budget fully funds the Mississippi Adequate
<br />
Education Program.
</p>
<p>
Just as importantly, my budget funds education reforms so we can get
<br />
better results for the money we spend.&nbsp; And that is the test in
<br />
education.&nbsp; What are the results we demand and achieve for our
<br />
children?
</p>
<p>
I will continue to support the State Superintendents proposal to
<br />
redesign high school, to make it more rigorous and especially more
<br />
relevant to kids who are not on a path to college, as a way to attack
<br />
our unacceptably high dropout rate.
</p>
<p>
To keep our best teachers, we should increase the salaries of teachers
<br />
with more than 25 years experience.&nbsp; My budget will.
</p>
<p>
For our beginning teachers, we need to give them more support as they
<br />
learn to manage a classroom full of kids.&nbsp; We lose a third of our new
<br />
teachers within three years.&nbsp; As my Teacher Advisory Council has told
<br />
me, more young teachers leave teaching because of discipline issues than
<br />
over teacher pay.&nbsp; Every new teacher in our schools should have an
<br />
experienced teacher serving as a mentor, and we should pay that mentor
<br />
an extra $1000 for this valuable service.&nbsp; It is more than worth it.
</p>
<p>
To help kids at risk of not succeeding, our schools should screen every
<br />
first grader for dyslexia and other learning disabilities and get them
<br />
treatment.&nbsp; Children must first learn to read before they can then read
<br />
to learn, and that is so much harder if they are saddled with obstacles
<br />
like dyslexia.
</p>
<p>
To help get our kids ready to learn by age five, we need to better
<br />
utilize the existing early childhood programs that already serve 80% of
<br />
our four-year-olds&#1157;by providing financial incentives for them to expand
<br />
and improve their educational content.
</p>
<p>
The Legislature has already passed, and I have signed into law, these
<br />
common sense reforms: authorizing mentors, dyslexia screening, and early
<br />
childhood education.&nbsp; It is past time to put politics aside and fund
<br />
these programs for our teachers and our children.
</p>
<p>
So that we can afford to continue making investments in all levels of
<br />
education, including our universities and community colleges, we must
<br />
make tough choices and run government smarter and more efficiently.
</p>
<p>
One part of budget discipline is to get control of bonded indebtedness.
<br />
 State debt exploded from the early 90s to 2003 &#1174; soaring from $500
<br />
million to more than $3 billion.
</p>
<p>
Thanks in large part to State Treasurer Tate Reeves leadership, that
<br />
spike in state indebtedness flattened out these last four years.
</p>
<p>
As Dave Ramsey says, if we&#1170;re to balance our budget in challenging
<br />
economic times, the first thing we need to do is to cut up our credit
<br />
cards.&nbsp; Thats why I will oppose authorizing any new state debt during
<br />
this session of the Legislature unless it&#1170;s related to creating jobs.
</p>
<p>
We also must work to find ways to run government smarter.&nbsp; I have asked
<br />
Lieutenant Governor Phil Bryant to lead a taskforce to root out waste
<br />
and inefficiency in state government.&nbsp; I am confident we will not only
<br />
find savings for the taxpayers but also get better performance for our
<br />
people.
</p>
<p>
To that end my budget will propose more flexibility for state officials
<br />
and department and agency heads to achieve savings and greater
<br />
efficiencies and effectiveness.
</p>
<p>
It will be very difficult to have budget discipline and achieve
<br />
necessary savings unless everybody participates.&nbsp; There is no department
<br />
or agency that cant find savings if we allow them to do so.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
The biggest budget challenge we face is Medicaid.
</p>
<p>
In this past four years, we&#1170;ve made significant progress in saving
<br />
Medicaid for the nearly 600,000 Mississippians who rely on it.&nbsp; We have
<br />
enacted reforms because we know it is wrong for a family to work hard at
<br />
two or three jobs, to raise their kids and pay for their healthcare, and
<br />
then have to turn around and pay extra taxes so others who are able to
<br />
work and take care of themselves choose not to but instead get free
<br />
healthcare at taxpayers expense.&nbsp; That&#1170;s not right.
</p>
<p>
Under this Administration, the Division of Medicaid checks peoples
<br />
eligibility face-to-face, and the Medicaid rolls have decreased to fewer
<br />
than 600,000.&nbsp; This drop is what you should expect when the number of
<br />
people employed has increased by more than 50,000.
</p>
<p>
We&#1170;ve changed our prescription drug program to better utilize generic
<br />
drugs.&nbsp; That, along with Medicare Part D, is saving taxpayers tens of
<br />
millions of dollars on pharmaceuticals with no negative effect on
<br />
beneficiary health.
</p>
<p>
But even with these common-sense, successful savings efforts, the
<br />
Medicaid budget faces a large shortfall.&nbsp; This is primarily because the
<br />
federal government has forced us to stop using certain funds to cover
<br />
the state Medicaid match requirement.
</p>
<p>
For example, we have to replace the $90 million of state match that was
<br />
previously provided solely by public hospitals to generate $275 million
<br />
of federal Medicaid funds.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
Sixteen years ago, the Legislature approved that plan, proposed by the
<br />
Mississippi Hospital Association, to use funds provided by public
<br />
hospitals to match both federal Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH)
<br />
payments and other standard Medicaid claims payments.&nbsp; As far back as
<br />
the Clinton administration, the federal government had warned
<br />
Mississippi and almost every other state that it was closely examining
<br />
these types of financing schemes.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
Finally, in the summer of 2005, the federal government disallowed this
<br />
part of Mississippis system.&nbsp; Since then, we have gotten through two
<br />
and a half years by using $225 million of one-time federal money, made
<br />
available through Katrina supplemental funds to pay this state match . .
<br />
.&nbsp; with the understanding that Medicaid would implement a new financing
<br />
program.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
That federal money is gone.&nbsp; So now we have no choice but to put in
<br />
place a long-term solution.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
For the last year and a half, I&#1170;ve proposed a plan to fill this gap
<br />
by conforming the program we used for 14 years to the new federal rules.
<br />
 This would restore the payments by hospitals but would involve all
<br />
hospitals  not just public hospitals.&nbsp; This Gross Revenue Assessment
<br />
will again cover the state matching requirement so we will not lose $275
<br />
million of federal funds from which all hospitals benefit.
</p>
<p>
That&#1426;s not an easy decision, but its time for the Legislature to
<br />
act on this issue.
</p>
<p>
To fill the rest of the Medicaid hole, we will have to make some
<br />
savings, and my budget will reflect that.&nbsp;    
</p>
<p>
We should also take action to improve the health care situation for the
<br />
tens of thousands of working Mississippians who aren&#1170;t eligible for
<br />
Medicaid but dont have private health insurance.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
Compared to the rest of the country, fewer Mississippi small businesses
<br />
offer health insurance to their employees.&nbsp; According to the Robert Wood
<br />
Johnson Foundation, only 24% of Mississippi&#1170;s businesses with fewer
<br />
than 50 employees offer health insurance to their workers.&nbsp; The Census
<br />
Bureau says 134,000 Mississippians work for small businesses that
<br />
dont offer employer-sponsored health insurance.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
This is mostly because of the high cost of health insurance to small
<br />
businesses.&nbsp; I propose helping people get health insurance through a
<br />
voluntary Mississippi Health Insurance Exchange, and legislation will be
<br />
offered this session to create this exchange and fund its small, initial
<br />
operational cost.&nbsp; Let&#1170;s help more Mississippians who work for small
<br />
businesses have private health insurance.
</p>
<p>
Beyond the issues to come before this legislative session, well
<br />
continue to focus on two main goals:&nbsp; To continue and expand the surge
<br />
of job creation that has taken place these last couple of years; and to
<br />
complete the recovery from Katrina and get every area on the Coast well
<br />
into rebuilding and renewal.
</p>
<p>
With the legitimate concerns about the national economy, it is far from
<br />
certain our job creation surge will continue.&nbsp; At best, we have our work
<br />
cut out for us, but I&#1170;m an optimist when it comes to Mississippi.
</p>
<p>
MDA is doing a great job, and the energy sector, as I mentioned
<br />
earlier, is expanding in the state at a terrific pace.&nbsp; Gulf LNGs $1
<br />
billion terminal and Chevron&#1170;s newest $500 million upgrade at
<br />
Pascagoula, Rentechs $3.4 billion coal-to-liquids project at Natchez
<br />
and Mississippi Power&#1170;s proposed coal-gasification plant in Kemper
<br />
County at $1.8 billion; the $3 billion Strategic Petroleum Reserve
<br />
facility at Richton and Entergys second Grand Gulf nuclear station at
<br />
more than $5 billion; all these are announced and either underway or in
<br />
permitting.&nbsp; The Ergon-Bunge ethanol plant at Vicksburg is under
<br />
construction, and Scott&#1170;s bio-diesel plant in Greenville is operating.
<br />
Denbury Resources is increasing oil production through sophisticated
<br />
tertiary recovery in these areas of the state.
</p>
<p>
These and other energy projects  will help our country become more
<br />
energy independent.&nbsp; They also will give our state a significant
<br />
advantage years from now, when industries will ask not what does the
<br />
energy cost but instead will ask, Can we get it?&#1236; Being known as an
<br />
energy reliable state will be a major economic development advantage in
<br />
the future.
</p>
<p>
Another economic bright spot is our defense industry.&nbsp; Navistars new
<br />
IMG facility at West Point employs some 800, building mine-resistant,
<br />
ambush-protected vehicles for the military.&nbsp; Northrup Grumman&#1170;s
<br />
shipyards at Pascagoula and Gulfport have just won new multi-billion
<br />
dollar ship contracts from the Navy.&nbsp; General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin,
<br />
Rolls Royce: our traditional defense contractors are strong.&nbsp; And
<br />
weve added some new defense industries, such as EAD&#1170;s American
<br />
Eurocopter at Columbus, which received a $3.3 billion contract to build
<br />
light utility helicopters for the Army, and RTI International Metals,
<br />
which will make titanium sponges for the aerospace industry at Amory. 
<br />
Then there are Aurora Flight Systems and Stark Aviation, both affiliated
<br />
with the Raspet Flight Center at Mississippi State and General
<br />
Electrics new composite jet engine fan blade and assembly plant being
<br />
built in Batesville.
</p>
<p>
The defense industry, like energy, is not subject to the same economic
<br />
variables as most other sectors.
</p>
<p>
In other industries caution will prevail and make job creation more
<br />
difficult.&nbsp; Generally there will be fewer new plants and fewer
<br />
expansions.
</p>
<p>
This fact requires us to put special emphasis and effort on the best
<br />
opportunities for success, and, of course, the best example is
<br />
recruiting Toyota suppliers to locate facilities in Mississippi now. 
<br />
The state and numerous communities are deeply involved in bringing more
<br />
such suppliers, and more will be announced this year.
</p>
<p>
Those of you who were in the Legislature last year know that recruiting
<br />
suppliers was a critical goal in our Toyota effort.&nbsp; We included
<br />
incentives for suppliers in the package you passed, something previously
<br />
unheard of.
</p>
<p>
We recognized only one community could host the main assembly plant,
<br />
but many communities could have supplier facilities . . . and they can
<br />
be spread over a large area of the state.&nbsp; All of north and east
<br />
Mississippi can compete for suppliers, and we know suppliers have looked
<br />
at communities from Interstate 20 to the Tennessee line.&nbsp; Towns in
<br />
central Mississippi, particularly those near I-55, I-20, I-59 and
<br />
Highways 45 and 49,  can serve Nissan and Toyota as well as Alabama auto
<br />
assembly plants.
</p>
<p>
A serious job creation issue is highway infrastructure.&nbsp; Toyota is a
<br />
&#1171;just in time manufacturer, so logistics are crucial to success.
<br />
 We have some gaps in our highway system that need to be addressed if we
<br />
are to garner the number of supplier jobs that are available to us. 
</p>
<p>
I will ask you to expand the Economic Development Highway Program not
<br />
only to provide funding for key links but also to materially expedite
<br />
the construction process.
</p>
<p>
Currently this Economic Development Highway Act, which Speaker McCoy
<br />
authored some years ago, is the only vehicle that considers job creation
<br />
and private capital investment effects on highway construction or
<br />
improvement priorities.&nbsp; Thank goodness we have it, but it requires
<br />
special funding, over and above MDOT&#1298;s $1 billion annual budget.
</p>
<p>
I will ask you to consider other ways we can involve MDA and job
<br />
creators in setting transportation priorities.&nbsp; In economic times like
<br />
those approaching our state, we must be able to respond quickly and
<br />
effectively if we are to keep winning the race to help Mississippians
<br />
have better, higher paying jobs.
</p>
<p>
Further and in the future, we need more options for funding key
<br />
transportation infrastructure.&nbsp; I applaud the Legislature for passing a
<br />
law last year allowing toll roads to be built when non-toll alternatives
<br />
are available.&nbsp; We need creative thinking if we are to meet our
<br />
transportation needs, especially for job creation.
</p>
<p>
As you know, I have appointed a blue ribbon commission to study
<br />
Mississippis tax code on a comprehensive basis, including how the
<br />
federal and local tax structures affect our citizens and businesses. 
<br />
Leland Speed, one of our state&#1170;s long-time business leaders and a
<br />
terrifically successful director of the Mississippi Development
<br />
Authority, has agreed to chair the group.&nbsp; The commissions work will
<br />
give you in the Legislature, the public and me a much more accurate and
<br />
clearer picture of the tax system under which our taxpayers labor than
<br />
we&#1170;ve had in the past.&nbsp; Well get this report by the end of August.
</p>
<p>
I&#1170;ve told Leland and his commission members that they are authorized
<br />
to look at everything.&nbsp; Nothing is off the table; though I hasten to
<br />
add, my goal is to put a net tax cut in place during my term.&nbsp; Overall,
<br />
the commission will help us give Mississippi a tax system that insures
<br />
everyone pays his or her fair share and that is pro-economic growth and
<br />
pro-job creation, while funding state government at necessary,
<br />
appropriate levels.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
There is no question this is an ambitious agenda, loaded with
<br />
significant opportunities and formidable challenges.&nbsp; Successfully
<br />
achieving it is made more difficult because, after 38% revenue growth
<br />
these last four years, we will have revenue growth of less than 3% for
<br />
this budget.&nbsp; Thats difficult but hardly impossible.
</p>
<p>
Everyone in this room knows savings can be achieved in every state
<br />
government department and agency, except those like Medicaid and Human
<br />
Services which have large cost increases caused by litigation or federal
<br />
rule changes.&nbsp; Even education, where we&#1170;ll have important new
<br />
initiatives and 100% funding for MAEP, can find ways to be more
<br />
efficient and save money.
</p>
<p>
It wont be easy, but we&#1170;ll work through our budget issues. Well
<br />
maximize our job creation opportunities despite uncertainty about the
<br />
national economy.&nbsp; We&#1170;ll find answers, get results, make progress for
<br />
our people and for Mississippi.
</p>
<p>
I believe that because I believe the folks we represent expect it, will
<br />
demand it, and, most of all, deserve it.&nbsp; Despite any differences we may
<br />
have, we must work together and get to positive results.
</p>
<p>
Having watched our people after Katrina, I know they are entitled to no
<br />
less: those courageous, strong people on the Coast who overcame
<br />
obliteration and bounced back in the face of the devastation, but also
<br />
the compassionate people in the rest of the state who opened their
<br />
pocketbooks, their homes and their hearts to those in South Mississippi
<br />
and on the Coast who needed help so much.
</p>
<p>
Make no mistake!&nbsp; Much remains to be done about Katrina rebuilding and
<br />
getting the Coast back, bigger and better than ever.&nbsp; Insurance problems
<br />
must be better addressed at both the state and federal levels, and the
<br />
private sector has a huge role there.
</p>
<p>
Rebuilding, especially of affordable housing, must be sped up.&nbsp; Extra
<br />
state resources, paid for with federal funds, are being brought to bear
<br />
on the reconstruction and workforce housing fronts.
</p>
<p>
We are making progress.&nbsp; The number of families in travel trailers on
<br />
the Coast has been reduced eighty percent, and employment on the Gulf
<br />
Coast is growing faster than any other place in the nation. But as much
<br />
progress as has been made, it is still way too slow to suit me, and
<br />
there remains much to do.
</p>
<p>
I want to say how much I appreciate the way the Legislature has
<br />
responded when federal assistance needed to be supplemented: like
<br />
important reforms and the $80 million you appropriated to keep wind pool
<br />
insurance rates from skyrocketing even more, and the $18 million you
<br />
provided to keep struggling local governments afloat.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
But again, how can you not do whatever it takes for those peopleour
<br />
people&#325;the people who sent us here to get resultsto spend their tax
<br />
dollars wisely&#325;to take as few of their dollars in taxes as possible.
</p>
<p>
I pledge to you and to all the constituents I share with you, which is
<br />
every Mississippian, that I will work with you to get the best results
<br />
for our citizens and to stay focused on the future of Mississippi, and
<br />
make it the brightest future weve ever had.&nbsp; May Mississippi&#1170;s next
<br />
four years, be our best four years.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
God Bless you and your work here.&nbsp;  And God Bless the state of
<br />
Mississippi and our country.
</p>
<p>
                                                           ###
</p>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Treasurer Tate Reeves: &#8216;No New Bonds in 2008&#8217;</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/treasurer_tate_reeves_no_new_bonds_in_2008/" />
      <id>tag:statedesk.com,2008:index.php/site/index/1.231</id>
      <published>2008-01-17T16:49:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-01-17T17:51:56Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>ladd</name>
            <email>donna@jacksonfreepress.com</email>
                  </author>

      <category term="Legislature"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C1/"
        label="Legislature" />
      <category term="Economic"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C19/"
        label="Economic" />
      <category term="Republicans"
        scheme="http://www.statedesk.com/index.php/site/C24/"
        label="Republicans" />
      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>Mississippi state Treasurer Tate Reeves released the following fiscal update today. Reprinted verbatim:
</p>
<p>
Jackson, Miss: (January 17, 2008) - State Treasurer Tate Reeves spoke to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other members of the House and Senate today at the annual fiscal briefing.&nbsp; In Reeves briefing, he made a recommendation that the Legislature withhold from authorizing the issuance of any new bonds in the 2008 session. According to Reeves, since 2003 the states debt has begun to level off, and in order for this positive trend to continue the Legislature must reduce the authorization of new bonds. &#1171;We have made great progress in the last few years reducing the overall debt burden on Mississippi taxpayers Reeves said. &#1299;Given the budget challenges that face the Legislature this year, the only fiscally prudent approach to bonds is to forego the pressure and not authorize any new debt.
</p> <p>In todays fiscal briefing, Reeves also reminded the members of the Legislature of the importance to remain in control of the state&#1170;s overall debt burden.Reeves pointed out that in 1990, Mississippi had outstanding debt of $589 million which is approximately 16 percent of the state&#18;s constitutional debt limit. By 2004, that had increased to over $3 billion which is more than 36 percent of the state&#18;s debt limit. Reeves said that over the last four years, the total debt burden on the Mississippi taxpayers has stayed the same, and the debt as a percentage of the constitutional limit has declined to 25 percent.
</p>
<p>
Reeves also stated that debt service at its peak comprised nearly 10 percent of the state&#18;s total state appropriations. Currently, it is estimated to be 6.75 percent of the 2008 budget.&#32; According to Reeves, if the state continues to reduce the states debt burden there will be more money in the state budget for Mississippi&#1170;s priorities such as education and economic development.
<br />
-MORE-
<br />
 Every dollar we spend on principal and interest is a dollar we can&#1234;t spend on public education. Every dollar we spend on principal and interest is a dollar we can&#18;t spend on public safety. And the nearly $400 million we spend on principal and interest this year is $400 million that we can&#18;t spend on the other vital services that state government provides.&#1312; 
<br />

</p>
      ]]></content>
    </entry>


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