Here is where you will find all the 2008 monthly Polk Democrat newsletters.
February 2008 newsletter
What's Here
Video, "Why I'm a Democrat"
Super Tuesday Party
PCP Precinct Committeeperson Registrations
Notes From the Chair
Richard Riggs Declares for House 20
DVD/CCTV Broadcast Secretary of State Candidates Night
Wayne Kinney Feb. 14 Speaker
Betty the Yeti Coming
The Not-so Lonely Vigil
Thank you, Wendy Brokaw / new editors
Links to Candidate Websites
We're on YouTube!
"Why I'm a Democrat"
A short video of statements (3 min.) by nine Oregon Democrats from
Pendleton to the coast, including our chair Alan Holland, on “Why I’m a
Democrat” was placed on YouTube.com two weeks ago.
(These and the other highlighted buttons will leave our site; use your back buttons to return)
It can be seen here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mgLolxxeZ7Q
or here on Daily Kos with comments:
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/1/22/185556/738
The video has been watched over 1300 times and has gathered nice comments (especially on DailyKos).
SUPER TUESDAY
Feb. 5 is SUPER TUESDAY. Let's have a party and watch the primary results at Wallery's Pizza in West Salem on Edgewater near Safeway. Wallery's is next to Copy Cats.
Party from 7:30-9:30pm.
For more info, call Alan or Gloria Holland at 503-371-3920
Precinct Committee Persons
More PCP’s are needed and welcome. PCPs have from now until March 11 to register to get their names on the ballot. Current PCPs will need to re-register! Forms are available
online here: http://www.sos.state.or.us/elections/forms/sel105.pdf
Printed forms will be available at the CC meeting in February. The March meeting is after the registration deadline.
Please call Alan Holland and read the information on this site for more information on the duties of a PCP.
Notes from the Chair
Alan Holland, February 1, 2008
2008 promises to be an exciting and historic year in US politics with many interesting challenges for Polk County Democrats. The first African American or the first woman President may win the White House. Democratic momentum may bring a strong majority to control Oregon’s House and Senate. Additionally, strong candidates are challenging Gordon Smith in a targeted race for the U.S. Senate and will need our help to win.
These races and some likely ballot measures demand that we serve Polk Dems with information, voter registration, and candidate support. To these ends we must unify as a county party for fundraising efforts, and the many ways that volunteers can help: each PCP and activist is a valuable resource because direct contact with voters is many times more effective than e-mail, mailings, and ads. An important element will be raising funds to provide a county office to serve as an enduring presence, a base of operations, and a source for information and registration materials. All these things require us to renew our resolve and work as much as we can.
I celebrate the 35 people from 3 counties who spent hours in training on the Vote Builder computer system at LBCC January 26; seven Polk Dems were included. This will increase our ability to target voters with phone lists, and precinct walking maps.
Thanks for all the work done in ’07, let’s win some races in ’08! We can do it together!
Richard Riggs Declares for House Dist. 20

Richard Riggs, member of the Polk County Democrats, has filed papers with the Secretary of State officially declaring his candidacy for State Representative.
Riggs is running in District 20, which runs from Salem to Monmouth and Independence. Riggs has been active in the Polk County Democratic party since 2006, and in 2007, with the help of many Polk County Democratic PCPs, Riggs was elected to the Chemeketa Community College Board of Directors, representing Polk County.
With two kids in public schools, and experience on the Chemeketa Community College board, Riggs believes that quality education is critical to improving Oregonians’ quality of life and attracting companies to the state that will provide living wage jobs with health care.
Riggs, age 39, is a native Oregonian and 20 year Navy veteran. In 2003, he served in Iraq on the guided missile destroyer, USS O’Kane, as operations officer and tactical action officer. Riggs is also a master gardener, member of the Salem Sunrise Rotary Club, and is currently enrolled full time at Willamette University College of Law, where he will graduate in 2009.
Rich and his wife, Shannon, live in West Salem with their two children, Sabrina and Jake. Shannon won the 2007 Oregon Book Award for Children’s Literature, and Sabrina and Jake attend Walker Middle School.
All Polk County Democrats are welcome to attend Riggs’ campaign launch party at the Blue Pepper, on Commercial Street, downtown Salem, February 13th, 6-8 PM
Wayne Kinney Featured PCDCC Speaker at Feb. 14 Meeting
PCD-CC Feb 14 meeting speaker, Wayne Kinney, will give us insights into how to be a National Convention delegate.
Wayne Kinney is a member of the Democratic National Committee from Oregon and the chair of the Rules Committee for the Democratic Party of Oregon.
"How to be a Delegate to the National Convention." is a 15-20 minute presentation with plenty of time for questions.
From the DPO website http://www.oregondemocrats.org/wayne_kinney :
DNC Committeeman Wayne Kinney
Wayne Kinney is in his second term as Oregon’s Democratic National Committeeman. He has been a member of the DPO State Central Committee since 1991, and a member of the Executive Committee since 1993. In that time, Wayne has served two terms as DPO Secretary, two terms as chair of the Second Congressional District, two terms as chair of the Platform and Resolutions Committee, and he’s in his second term as chair of the Rules Committee.
He’s also served three times as temporary chair of the DPO, and was secretary of the DPO Platform Convention in 1998. In addition, he’s served as chair of the county parties in Lake and Union counties, and is vice chair of the Deschutes County Democrats.
During Wayne’s time in the DPO, he has been the only party leader who lives east of the Cascades. When Wayne was elected Democratic National Committeeman in 2001, he was the first Eastern Oregonian elected to that position since 1932.
Wayne was born in Bridgeport, Conn., and raised in central Massachusetts. He first moved West in the mid-1970s, and was a reporter and editor for newspapers in Oregon, Idaho and Washington before becoming a property appraiser in Lake County in the early 1990s. There, at the urging of a county commissioner, he became chair of the Lake County Democrats and became involved with the DPO.
In 1996, he joined the staff of newly elected U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, and moved to La Grande to establish a field office there. As Sen. Wyden is fond of pointing out, Wayne was the first-ever rural field representative for an Oregon U.S. Senator. Wayne moved to Bend in 2005, where he covers most of Central and Eastern Oregon from Sen. Wyden’s field office there.
Wayne’s roots are in small-town New England, and his heart is in rural Oregon. He thinks of himself as a rural liberal, and believes strongly in democracy, responsive government and public service. He’s tried to stay true to those values in his work within the Democratic Party of Oregon.
Pentacle Theater June 4 Benefit for Polk Democrats
The Polk County Democrats are hosting a theatre event June 4, with a performance of "Betty the Yeti" by Jon Klein.
In this comic Call of the Wild, a disgruntled logger, Russ Sawyer, heads for the woods after losing his job and his wife. It takes a lonely bigfoot to finally touch the logger's heart.
It is more than a silly sex comedy about a man and his odd beast. All the characters (Sawyer, his estranged wife Terra Sawyer, her mother Clare Kutz, fiance Trey Hugger, Iko from the Forest Service, even Betty the Yeti) represent points of view. They tangle, and what do you know?: passion for a cause is entangled by special interest groups.
Lots to think about, and laugh about at the same time.
Tickets are $20, and you should purchase them early. Thanks to everyone who is selling the tickets! To join them, and for full information, see Upcoming Events
CCTV Broadcast of Secretary of State Candidates Night
DVD of event now available!
Recorded live Dec. 13th in West Salem.
Candidates Forum with all four Democratic Candidates vying for Oregon Secretary of State. Hosted by Polk County Democrats, sponsored by Polk, Marion, Linn and Benton County Democratic Central Committees. Producer Wendy Brokaw and her company, Shedlight Productions, covered the event using a sophisticated studio-in-a-box TriCaster complete with three cameras and a computer to live-switch, making for an exciting, professional production.
The film was shown three times in January, and the last showing (Comcast cable channel 21) will be:
February 3rd, 2008 (Sunday) 1:00 pm [21] Oregon Secretary of State Democratic Candidates Forum
DVD's are available from CCTV. To order yours for $7.50, complete with attractive cover as shown here, call (503) 588-2288.

Monmouth Peace Vigils - every Wednesday
We're still meeting in the same place (Monmouth Main Street Park), and on the same day (every Wednesday), but a little earlier because of the winter light: we now meet from 4:30 until 5:30. Contact Armelle Hofer: Armelle.Hofer@oregonstate.edu.
A note about the Peace Vigil.
The first time I went to the vigil - early summer, 2007 - I was just a little nervous: what will the response be? An hour later I felt much, much, better.
It was unavoidable - feeling better, that is. How could we help it? We'd just had 60 cars or carloads of people drive by and tell us that we doing a great thing: honking their horns, waving, excited. I soon realized I wasn't only expressing myself: we helped a hundred other people express their opinions.
The numbers grew, and we counted more carefully. In August we twice counted 180 cars (more people than that) with positive responses, and 6 negative. (That positive-negative ratio has never been lower than 30 to 1)
We’ve had memorable incidents, all positive:

- The older couple from out of the area who left their station wagon in the east-bound lane, crossed the street and shook our hands individually, "God Bless You."
- The old codger from Texas who parked his pickup across the street, strode directly to Don Dimock with his Impeach sign and declared, "George Bush! I Know George Bush! I used to work with him in the oil fields! ... They should have impeached his sorry a__ long time ago! ... 'course, the Democrats ain't much better..." (sic.)
- The stranger who insisted on arranging us photogenically (see pic to right).
- The wonderful business people from across the street who bring us coffee on the cold and windy days.
- The children delighted and excited to be part of the vigil.And many others.
In the cold winter days, with light and visibility fading, the numbers dropped.
A couple of times we quit early, fighting the wind and rain. But the days are lengthening.
I don't know if it is effective. I don’t know if it is what Gandhi would do. But those people who drive by are really happy to see us, and if you should happen to be feeling down, for any reason, try this cure:
Join in the vigil. How often do you have a hundred people tell you you're doing a good thing? I guarantee it - after an hour you'll feel cheerful. -tp
New Editor/ Wendy Brokaw Leaving
Until now Wendy Brokaw was doing essentially all the PolkDems website work: newsletter, website, calendar, etc. Wendy will be much more involved with her company Shedlight Productions, producing television features and change through illumination via our local cable news channel CCTV.

With this issue Wendy Brokaw passes the newsletter torch to a new editor, Truman Price.
Wendy is passing on a lot more than the torch: the format, the entire layout, the know-how, the files of photos and logos, and lots of detailed coaching ("no, move the cursor down one notch and click twice: now, do you see a highlighted word that says Edit?... poke that and, and, and...").
Thank you, Wendy!
We will split Wendy's PolkDems website duties between several different people.
With her generous help, this crew of people have stepped up to fill the jobs she took on singlehandedly:
Sherry Pittam will return as webmaster. Thank you, Sherry!
Gloria Holland will upload documents to the password protected site.
Alan Holland will do the calendar (still send your information to calendar@polkdems.org).
Lisanne will edit the Upcoming Events page.
Truman Price will edit the newsletter (please send articles to truprice@wvi.com!).
Suzi Price will serve as web director. Continue to send calendar items to Alan and newsletter items to Truman. But please send all other website suggestions, corrections, kudos and complaints to Suzi (shprice@oldchildrensbooks.com) and she will funnel them to the appropriate person.
Links to Candidate Web Sites
U. S. Senate Race
Note: There are three more declared Democratic Candidates for the Senate
David Loera (D) - Mental Health Counselor and Community Activist
Pavel Goberman (D) - Fitness Instructor, Machinist & Frequent Candidate
Roger Obrist (D) - Retired Construction Worker & Frequent Candidate
For a complete guide to Oregon candidates (and some nice old buttons) see http://politics1.com/or.htm
Attorney General (alphabetical order)
Secretary of State (alphabetical order)
House District Candidates
House District 20 / House District 23
March 2008 newsletter
What's Here
Notes From the Chair
About the Neighbor-to-Neighbor Program
Obama Visit to Salem on CCTV
That Super Tuesday Party - Recap
Registration Drive in Independence
5th Congressional District Meeting, West Salem 3/15
WOU Democrats Caucus 3/7
On the Importance of State House Races
Betty the Yeti Coming June 4 - selling tickets now
The Monmouth Peace Vigil: 5 years of war
Channel 22: Wendy Brokaw interviews Normon Solomon and Peter Bergel
DVD/CCTV Broadcast Secretary of State Candidates Night
Links to Candidate Websites
Notes from the Chair
Alan Holland, February 1, 2008
Notes from the Chair
Alan Holland,
March 1, 2008
The country is on the threshold of a historic era and Democrats are
riding a wave of momentum unprecedented in our lifetimes. Public
support for Democratic candidates is high and for opponents among the
lowest in history. We must take advantage of these sentiments and
organize to be as effective as possible in helping our candidates sweep
into office to lead us forward. The Neighbor-to-Neighbor (NTN) program is
the epitome of grass roots organizing and we all should be doing our
share to make it happen locally. The program initiated by DNC chair,
Howard Dean, calls on activists to sign on with a commitment to
communicate with neighbors, friends, and coworkers during this election
season so accurate information can be delivered and tailored to voters'
needs and interests with the trust of a local acquaintance and support
resources provided. Research shows how dramatically more effective
personal contact is over literature, e-mail, and phoning and this is
why the NTN program is essential. I urge all PCP’s and concerned
Democrats to sign up via a form available from any PCD Officer or visit
www.oregondemocrats.org to sign up online at
http://www.oregondemocrats.org/neighborhood_leader_program. We do
better together!
I celebrate the 35 people from 3 counties who spent hours in training
on the Vote Builder computer system at LBCC January 26; seven Polk Dems
were included. This will increase our ability to target voters with
phone lists, and precinct walking maps.
Thanks for all the work done in ’07, let’s win some races in ’08! We can do it together!
Alan
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About the Neighbor to Neighbor (N2N) Program:
From Autumn Wilburn, State Partnership Program
The N2N program consists of party members identifying
neighborhood helpers who are willing to share information back and
forth with a number of their neighbors or acquaintances. Ideally, each
"Neighborhood Leader" or "NL" would link up with 25 other people. It's
been shown that face to face communication is most effective and the
N2N program thus magnifies Party contact in ways impossible for PCP's.
A NL has less responsibility than a PCP but is a valuable resource for
the local, state, and national Party. We need to help recruit them and
it is important that each NL be recorded with their contact information
either online or via the N2N volunteer card supplied at meetings or
online at the site given below.
1. Recording NL’s: If folks that are doing the work of a Neighborhood
Leader (PCP’s, volunteers etc.) aren’t coded as NL’s in the My Campaign
database, they don’t count. This means that if you have Neighborhood
Leaders in your county that aren't on this database your county isn’t
getting credit for them. Get credit for your hard work – get them into
the system!
2. Next Steps: There will be a new online tool “Neighborhood
VoteBuilder” that will roll out this Spring that will allow them to
create their own walking/calling lists, print them, and do their own
data entry. If your PCP’s (or other volunteers) are already going door
to door,
they should sign up as Neighborhood Leaders and get access to this
tool. Polk County will then get credit with the DNC for their hard
work. If they aren’t in the system as N2N, your hard work is not being
counted by the DNC.
o You can go online and quickly enter the information in at:
http://www.oregondemocrats.org/neighborhood_leader_program
o OR, you can email a list of names with basic contact info to your
Field Organizer, Autumn Wilburn, Democratic Party of Oregon,
autumn@dpo.org , and she can enter them for you.
POLK County will help make the difference this election!
The DNC and Presidential Campaigns are looking daily at Oregon’s
numbers to see if we are adequately preparing for Election ’08. We need
every county to participate fully in this program and to help us meet
our goals. The goal for Oregon is to have recruited 1800 Neighborhood
Leaders for the entire state. This is a 36 county program and we look
forward to working with you to make it a success.
More on Neighbor-to-Neighbor: Progress to Date (Feb 29)
Good News! We are currently at 1706 Neighborhood Leaders across the state! Thank you for all of your help in getting us there!
Parag Mehta, DNC Director of Training, will be leading a training
on Neighbor to Neighbor at the DPO Platform Convention in Eugene
Saturday April 12th. There will also be trainings on the new online
tool – “Neighborhood VoteBuilder”. Please be sure to attend or to send
someone technologically competent who will be the local resource.
Thanks again, and keep up your great work!
Autumn Wilburn
Field Director
DNC State Partnership Program
Democratic Party of Oregon
autumn@dpo.org
Obama visit to Salem on CCTV - entire!
It is Oregon's first seriously contested Democratic primary since 1988.
CCTV (Capitol Community Television---cable channels 21, 22, and 23) was
there, taped the entire Obama Town Hall, and has posted it to their
website where it can be watched at any time. They also played it on
their channel at 8:30 the night of the event and will be replaying on
their broadcasts.
Check it out at www.cctvsalem.org
The candidate also visited Portland, Corvallis (briefly, for a pizza
stop and impromptu chat), Eugene and Medford. I was impressed by the
interview with a Eugene Register-Guard journalist, including:
Question: Are there things in the Pacific Northwest, like forest policy, that you’ve taken a look at?
Answer: On
forest policy, dealing with these county payments in a serious,
long-term way so local counties can have an opportunity to plan their
budgets, I think is going to be very important. ... (more at Register-Guard)
Several Polk Democrats attended, including Jackie Pierce, here recruiting voter registrations outside.
That SUPER TUESDAY PARTY

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"Feb.
5 is SUPER TUESDAY. Let's have a party and watch the primary results at
Wallery's Piza in West Salem on Edgewater near Safeway. Wallery's is
next to Copy Cats. Party from 7:30-9:30."
The
Super Tuesday party was fun, I hear. There was confusion about the
starting time, and the Marion County folks had been in full swing for
an hour before most of the Polk contingent arrived.
|
 |
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while the results pour in -- meet Marion County Chair Wayne Baum and Polk County Chair Alan Holland --
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| it was fun...
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and we kept on registering |
and meeting people
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| Major, you're leaning... |
Our Deer in the Headlights award goes to stalwart activist David Papen
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Profuse thanks to Jackie Pierce
for these wonderful photographs!
5th Congressional District Meeting, West Salem 3/15
Hi Everyone,
It is time for our official notice to go out for this quarter's 5th
Congressional District meeting. This month it will be at the West Salem
Library, 395 Glen Ceek Road NW, on Saturday, March 15 at 10 am.
Diane Hill, Secretary
5thCD Democratic Committee
(503)582-0980
Registration Drive in Independence Getting Organized
Many citizens in Independence, especially people turning 18 this year,
will be registered to vote with the help of Voz Hispana, a statewide
group sponsored by PCUN. A preliminary meeting was held in the Colonia
Amistad Housing Farm Worker apartments in Independence on February 26,
lead by Francisco Lopez and attended by some PCD members. On March 27,
at St. Patrick's church in Independence, there will be workshops in
Spanish and English to train people in charge of registration in
Independence, and to identify good local opportunities to register
voters. Anyone interested in helping or in donating should contact Bart
Marquez at 503-982-0243, ext. 20 or online:
http://www.pcun.org/resources/sisterorganizations.asp (scroll down to the page bottom)
Also, Tambien, Voz Hispana invita al primer taller de formacion sobre
la Campana de Registro para Nuevos votantes. On March 11, at PCUN, 300
Young Street, Woodburn, 5:30-7:00 pm. Para mas informacion sobre este
taller por favor de llamer a Juan Argumedo al telefono: (503) 982-0243 Extension 204 o Francisco Lopez al telefono: (503) 269-5694
!SOY AMERICAN Y MI VOZ CUENTA!
Join The
And caucus for your favorite Presidential Candidate!
Western Democratic Caucus
Friday, March 7th
6:00 pm
WUC, Columbia Room
Free Parking in H lot behind Werner University Center
For more info: woucd@yahoo.com
For more information, visit: CollegeDems.com
(College Outreach Arm of the Democratic Party)
On the issue of the importance of state house races...
Thank you, Wayne, for reminding us of the
importance of getting on board these races early. While the
Presidential race may be more sexy, bigger media, etc., what we all
need to understand is that the state house and state senate campaigns
are the grass-roots that benefit ALL Democratic campaigns in this
state!
When potential volunteers say, "Sure I support you for Oregon House,
but I'm really excited about campaigning for Obama/Clinton," Jason says
"Great!! The best way you can support the Democratic Presidential
candidate is by working for your local house candidate, because we are the ones who meet with voters face-to-face in our communities, and our local campaign is what turns them out to vote."
Fact is, when progressives and swing voters feel confident in their D
candidate for state house, odds are they will vote right on up the
ticket for the D for state senate, the D for Congress, the D for U.S.
Senate, and the D for President! The reverse, unfortunately, is not
true... If people turn out to vote just for their Presidential
candidate, Dems and non-affiliated voters in particular, are likely to
leave the rest of their ballot blank! What a loss for our state, and
for the U.S. Senate and House!! We can't let this happen. That's where
our local house races come in: If we put our effort into campaigning
for our state house candidates, we will turn out plenty of D's and win
all the way up! It seems counter-intuitive at first, but the best way
to help the Dems win in 2008 is by getting on board with our local
house candidates.... and the sooner the better!
Added bonus: If we get organized now behind our local candidates, then
when the Presidential campaigns roll into town in October, we'll be
ready for them. Our strong ground teams will be in place to benefit the
national campaigns, instead of being steam-rolled by them.
Think Global, Act Local!
Lisanne
----- Original Message -----
From: Wayne Estes
To: PolkDemoNetwork@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, February 18, 2008 4:21 AM
Subject: [PolkDemoNetwork]
Democrat enters House District 20 race
[re: Statesman-Journal article on Richard Riggs.
Folks, if we hang together, instead of separately,
we can retire one more Republican in the Legislature.
Rich and Shannon Riggs are willing to work nonstop.
What will you do to help?
I have already invested hundreds of hours in this project and am not
stopping. We need to flood the SJ with letters containing specific
points of failure by this “moderate” Republican, Berger. You have to
wait 60 days between letters. If you start in March you can log four
letters against Berger before the General Election. Consult Rich Riggs
for particulars. Coffees in your home will also help immensely because
money is at a premium in a second tier campaign. We need to act RIGHT
NOW, not when the season heats up later or else we will absolutely get
blind sided by national campaigns. That happened to us in ’04 and I
vowed it would never happen again in HD 20.
Please, Polk County Democrats, unify behind this exceptional candidate, and we in South Salem will match you stride for stride.
RichardRiggs01@yahoo.com
What say you?
Wayne Estes
We still need to sell tickets for Betty the Yeti, so here's the description again:
Pentacle Theater June 4 Benefit for Polk Democrats
The Polk County Democrats are hosting a theatre event June 4, with a performance of "Betty the Yeti" by Jon Klein.
In this comic Call of the Wild, a disgruntled logger, Russ Sawyer,
heads for the woods after losing his job and his wife. It takes a
lonely bigfoot to finally touch the logger's heart.
It is more than a silly comedy about a man and
his odd beast. All the characters (Sawyer, his estranged wife Terra
Sawyer, her mother Clare Kutz, fiancee Trey Hugger, Iko from the Forest
Service, even Betty the Yeti) represent points of view. They tangle,
and what do you know?: passion for a cause is entangled by special
interest groups.
Lots to think about, and laugh about at the same time.
Tickets are $20, and you should purchase them early. Thanks to everyone
who is selling the tickets! To join them, and for full information, see
Upcoming Events

Monmouth Peace Vigils - every Wednesday
The vigil still meets in the same place (Monmouth, Main Street Park),
and on the same day (every Wednesday), They plan to return to the
summer-light time schedule soon, 5 to 6 pm. Contact Armelle Hofer: Armelle.Hofer@oregonstate.edu.
.
Wednesday March 19 will be the 5th anniversary of the invasion of Iraq.

If you have been thinking of maybe dropping by the vigil one of these
days, how about doing it on March 19? It would be good to have a big
turnout on that date.
There are several extra signs in the trunk of the Prices' car, also some blank cardboard and marker pens.
Here are a couple of more slogans we haven't gotten around to making yet:
Honk to Impeach
Bring Our Taxes Home Now*
* (to stand beside Bring Our Troops Home Now)
From Wendy:
Norman Solomon Movie, + Interview with Solomon and Peter Bergel.
A reminder: watch CCTV channel 21 starting March 6 at 8 pm for a 90
minute movie, "War Made Easy", followed by a half-hour Conversation
With Norman Solomon and Oregon Peaceworks executive director, Peter
Bergel (produced by Wendy Brokaw).
Must see television! Here's a link to the rest of the schedule. Tell your friends! Wendy
http://hexi.com/cctv/schedule.php3?keyword=War%20Made%20Easy
Wendy Brokaw, producer
Shedlight Productions
1136 Westfarthing Way NW
Salem, OR 97304
(503) 585-3394
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
note: this article is lifted
entire from Wikipedia. The highlighted words all work, by removing from
this site to Wikipedia or elsewhere. Use your back buttons to return.
Norman Solomon (b. 1951) is a journalist, media critic and antiwar activist. A longtime associate of the media watch group Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR), Solomon is also the founder and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy,
a national consortium of policy researchers and analysts which works
pro-actively to provide alternative sources for journalists. His weekly
column, "Media Beat", has been in national syndication since 1992.
Biography
Solomon came under FBI scrutiny after he picketed for the
desegregation of a Maryland apartment complex at age 14. As a high
school senior, he drew further FBI surveillance for his efforts on
behalf of the Montgomery County Student Alliance activist group. He
became aware of their surveillance later, through a Freedom of
Information request. In Portland, Oregon, he was an activist against
nuclear power and nuclear weapons and was a researcher for the
Committee for U.S. Veterans of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
In September 1984, Solomon served 10 days in jail for obstructing
railroad tracks in Vancouver, Washington, to block a train carrying
U.S. Dept of Energy cargo bound for the U.S. Naval submarine base in
Bangor, Washington. USNAVSUBASE Bangor was a home port for submarines
armed with Trident D-5 missiles. Soon afterward, Solomon became
"disarmament director" for the interfaith Fellowship of Reconciliation, where he remained until spring 1986.
As a freelance reporter, Solomon worked for Pacific News Service and Pacifica Radio.
He made eight trips to Moscow during the 1980s. In February 1986, he
and U.S. military veteran Anthony Guarisco engaged in a sit-in at the
U.S. Embassy in Moscow, demanding that the U.S. join the Soviet Union
in a nuclear test ban. In 1988, Solomon worked briefly as a
spokesperson for the Alliance of Atomic Veterans in Washington, D.C. In
August 1988, Solomon was hired to run the new Washington, D.C. office
of FAIR.
Solomon's book, Killing Our Own: The Disaster of America's Experience with Atomic Radiation, co-authored with Harvey Wasserman, appeared in 1982. In 1990, he and Martin A. Lee wrote Unreliable Sources: A Guide to Detecting Bias in News Media. Since then, Solomon has written ten more books--most recently, Made Love, Got War: Close Encounters with America's Warfare State (Fall 2007). War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death (2005) was the basis for a Media Education Foundation film by the same name.
Barbara Ehrenreich has called Solomon "one of the sharpest media-watchers in the business."
External links
Norman Solomon's website
Made Love, Got War
War Made Easy documentary
War Made Easy
Author interview in Guernica Magazine
Portraits of Norman Solomon
CCTV Broadcast of Secretary of State Candidates Night
DVD of event still available -
Recorded live Dec.13th in West Salem.
Candidates Forum with all four Democratic Candidates vying for Oregon
Secretary of State. Hosted by Polk County Democrats, sponsored by Polk,
Marion, Linn and Benton County Democratic Central Committees. Producer
Wendy Brokaw and her company, Shedlight Productions, covered the event
using sophisticated equipment, making an exciting, professional
production.
The film was shown four times in January and February on Comcast cable channel 21.
DVD's are still available from CCTV. To order yours for $7.50, complete with attractive cover as shown here, call (503) 588-2288.
Links to Candidate Web Sites /for Democratic Primaries
House District Candidates
Also running in HD 23: Wesley
"Buddy" West of Sheridan, Grand Ronde tribal elder and former tribal
council member. Photo not available.
U. S. 5th Congressional District. (former Rep. Darlene Hooley's seat).
Note: The likely Republican candidate, Mike Erickson, unopposed in the Republican primary, has just loaned his own campaign $340,000.
U. S. Senate
Note: There are three more declared Democratic Candidates for the Senate
David Loera (D) - Mental Health Counselor and Community Activist
Pavel Goberman (D) - Fitness Instructor, Machinist & Frequent Candidate
Roger Obrist (D) - Retired Construction Worker & Frequent Candidate
For a complete guide to Oregon candidates (and some nice old buttons) see http://politics1.com/or.htm
Attorney General (alphabetical order)
Secretary of State (alphabetical order)