Author Topic: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video  (Read 11809 times)

Soul Crusher

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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #175 on: February 22, 2011, 06:47:56 PM »
Wisconsin Teachers Union owns health insurance company - collectively bargained for.
PublicSchoolSpending.com ^ | Fall 2010 | Education Action Group / MacIver Institute





Here are a few simple, startling facts for anyone concerned about the financial condition of Wisconsin public schools:

WEA Trust, an insurance company established and closely associated with the Wisconsin Education Association Council (WEAC), siphons millions of crucial dollars from K-12 schools and their students every year.

WEA Trust has grown very fat on public school dollars, with a net worth of $316 million and a team of 12 administrators all receiving compensation packages worth six figures per year.

Sadly, this insurance swindle is endorsed by state law. We at Education Action Group believe it’s time for the citizens of Wisconsin to demand that their school boards be allowed to freely shop for less expensive employee health insurance.

That’s particularly important in the current economic environment, when schools have been forced to lay off teachers, curtail student programs, privatize services and, in some districts, seek permission from voters to exceed their local revenue caps.

The problem is state law, which makes the identity of a school district’s employee health insurance carrier a topic of collective bargaining. That means school boards and local school employee unions must agree on the insurance company that will provide health coverage.

So most unions have traditionally come to the negotiating table demanding expensive WEA Trust insurance coverage, and the strategy has been effective. About 64 percent of Wisconsin’s 426 districts carry WEA Trust insurance, despite its prohibitive costs.

Why do union employees demand WEA Trust coverage?

WEA Trust offers what is commonly known as the “Cadillac” of school employee health coverage. It earned that moniker for two very good reasons - the health coverage is very thorough, and the cost to local school districts is very high.

WEAC pressures its local union officials to stick with WEA Trust. One district administrator told us about a meeting where everyone present, including union employees, agreed that a non-WEA health plan would be better for the district. He said state WEAC representatives were present and argued in favor of WEA Trust, just because it’s the union’s insurance brand.



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Soul Crusher

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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #176 on: February 24, 2011, 10:35:38 AM »
WI State Employees Receive Preliminary Layoff Notices (inc GOP Sen majority leader's wife)
Channel 3000 ^ | February 24, 2011 | WISC





HUSTISFORD, Wis. -- Lisa Fitzgerald, wife of Republican Senate majority leader Scott Fitzgerald, is among a group of 34 state employees who have received preliminary layoff notices.

Superintendent Jeremy Biehl said the school board sent layoff slips to all 34 members of the teaching staff, including librarians and counselors. Biehl said the move is in response to the uncertainty of the state budget repair bill.

The superintendent said the district is following the advice of the Wisconsin Association of School Boards, which urged local school officials to decide on staff cuts by Monday or risk having those layoffs challenged later in court.

State law requires school districts to provide staff final layoff notices by March 15 and preliminary notices 15 days before that.


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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #177 on: February 25, 2011, 07:39:16 AM »
February 24, 2011 6:03 PM
Liberals call on Obama to fulfill campaign promise, walk with Wisconsin union protesters


http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-20036133-503544.html


___________________--




(Credit: AP Photo/The Oshkosh Northwestern, Adam Jungwirth) Back in 2007, then-Sen. Barack Obama said that if he were president, he'd be walking the picket lines in solidarity with workers if unions were ever threatened. Now, the president has that chance in Wisconsin, but the White House says President Obama has no such plans.


Massive demonstrations have gone on for days in Wisconsin, as public workers and their supporters protest Republican Gov. Scott Walker's so-called "budget repair bill," which would scale back public workers' benefits, as well as their collective bargaining rights.


Public workers and their supporters argue that eliminating most public unions' collective bargaining rights has nothing to do with the budget and that the governor should drop that element of his plan. Walker isn't budging, however -- meaning that the ongoing debate has more to do with ideology than the state budget.


On the campaign trail in 2007, Mr. Obama had this to say: "If American workers are being denied their right to organize when I'm in the White House, I will put on a comfortable pair of shoes and I will walk on that picket line with you as President of the United States."


CBS News chief White House correspondent Chip Reid asked White House Press Secretary Jay Carney about that promise today, to which Carney responded that the president has already made his position on the matter clear.


"I think that the president has different means of speaking out on issues and being heard," he said. "And, clearly, he did. He made his viewpoints known on the situation in Wisconsin, the need for people to come together."


In an interview last week with local television station WTMJ-TV, Mr. Obama said, "Some of what I've heard coming out of Wisconsin, where you're just making it harder for public employees to collectively bargain generally seems like more of an assault on unions. And I think it's very important for us to understand that public employees, they're our neighbors, they're our friends... And I think it's important not to vilify them or to suggest that somehow all these budget problems are due to public employees."


Organizing for America, Mr. Obama's political arm of the Democratic National Committee, has played a role in facilitating the protests in Wisconsin and across the country, but the organization has downplayed its role. Meanwhile, as the conflict over public sector workers spreads to other states, several of Mr. Obama's potential 2012 Republican challengers are speaking out in support of Gov. Walker.


Leaders of the House Progressive Caucus are calling on the president to go to Wisconsin and continue to voice his support for unions.


"Of course I'd like to hear more from President Obama," Caucus co-chair Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) said on MSNBC on Wednesday. " He's made some statements, he should get credit for that, we'd like to hear him make some more statements. I think President Obama should come to Wisconsin and stand with the workers."


On a conference call on Wednesday, co-chair Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.) said, "There's a bully pulpit there that the president has and I think it needs to be used."


Amy Dean, a labor activist and former AFL-CIO official in California, told the Wall Street Journal the president could do more as the leader of the Democratic Party.

"Everybody is looking to the president on this one," she said.

Protesters in Wisconsin said the same to the Huffington Post.

"He owes it to us," said Kathie Free, a retired Milwaukee public school social worker. "Obama was not put into office just by the big money. He was put into office by millions of poor and middle-class people who walk the neighborhoods, talking to neighbors, getting the votes, and that's how Obama got in, and he has to start remember how he got in. He'd better start working for the middle class and poor people."

Not everyone on the side of the unions, however, thinks the president's presence would benefit their cause. "I don't think the president's involvement in making this a Republican and Democrat issue would be particularly helpful at this point," said Andy Stern, a former president of the Service Employees International Union, the Wall Street Journal reports.

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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #178 on: February 25, 2011, 12:02:02 PM »
Wow.   Freaking animals. 


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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #179 on: February 25, 2011, 12:18:48 PM »

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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #180 on: March 02, 2011, 04:25:14 AM »
AWOL WI Dem admits parents financially supporting him in lieu of paycheck
Examiner ^ | March 2, 2011 | Marc Schenker




AWOL WI Dem admits parents financially supporting him in lieu of paycheck. AWOL Wisconsin Democrat State Senator Jon Erpenbach is admitting that his mom and dad are now financially supporting him because he refuses to go back to Wisconsin to pick up his paycheck for being a state senator. In a TV interview from an undisclosed location in Chicago, the absent Erpenback also admitted that he was basically running out of money to support the hotel stay in Illinois that he has chosen for himself due to his refusal to come back to Wisconsin. He also confessed that he lives paycheck to paycheck and that he is grateful that his parents are there to prop him up. The only problem is that Erpenbach is 50 years old, which is an age that is too old for a man to still be relying on mom and dad (who are already on Social Security).


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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #181 on: March 02, 2011, 05:39:59 AM »
Ha ha ha ha ha



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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #182 on: March 02, 2011, 05:47:36 AM »
NATIONAL REVIEW ONLINE          www.nationalreview.com           PRINT

The Corner



Wisconsin State Employees Should Have Some Koch and Smile

By Christian Schneider

Posted on March 01, 2011 10:32 AM When the history books record l’affaire Wisconsin, public-employee unions will have plenty of villains. They will remember Republican governor Scott Walker, who proposed scaling back their ability to collectively bargain. They will revile Assembly Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald, who cut off debate and “rushed” the bill to a vote after 61 hours of debate on the Assembly floor. But for the Left, the most enduring villain might be the billionaire Koch brothers.

When frequently vile Buffalobeast.com blogger Ian Murphy prank-called Walker, he pretended to be David Koch — thinking that would be the most embarrassing call Walker could take. (Or perhaps Murphy simply hadn’t perfected a Kim Jong-il impersonation yet. “Hey Scott, it’s your boy Kim!”)

The vitriol from protesting Wisconsin workers towards the Kochs emerged quickly and intensely. Signs ranging between lame and vulgar (often both) dot the public-union marches.

But what the protesters don’t realize is that they actually have a reason to root for the Koch brothers.

According to the State of Wisconsin Investment Board (SWIB), the Wisconsin Retirement System owns $5.5 million in Georgia Pacific corporate bonds. (Georgia Pacific is owned by Koch Industries.) This is the retirement system in which the overwhelming majority of state and local employees participate. These are the pension benefits that public employees are trying so hard to protect.


So here’s the challenge: Explain to a Wisconsin state worker that they are the ones helping fund the Koch brothers. Then sit back and watch the fun.

Granted, $5.5 million out of a $18.5 billion fixed-income bond fund isn’t a whole lot. (The state also holds about $5 million worth of Colgate bonds, meaning it is in the pocket of Big Toothpaste.) But one imagines the public unions’ vitriol will soften a little bit when they realize their retirement payout is incumbent on the success of the Kochs. They’re all part of the same money-making ecosystem, despite many state employees believing all their retirement funds are invested exclusively in dreams and rainbows.

So in the end, public unions should recognize that the real Koch will do them a lot more good than the fake one ever did.

— Christian Schneider is a senior fellow at the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute.

PERMALINK


________________________ __________________


 ;D  ;D  ;D
 



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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #183 on: March 02, 2011, 08:46:04 AM »

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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #184 on: March 03, 2011, 04:47:02 PM »
State says damage to marble at Capitol could hit $7.5 million (Slobs destroy MY Capitol building!)
 jsonline ^ | 3/3/2011 | don walker





State officials said Thursday that damage to the marble inside and out the State Capitol would cost an estimated $7.5 million.

Cari Anne Renlund, chief legal counsel for the state Department of Administration, said in Dane County court that estimates of damage to marble includes $6 million to repair damaged marble inside the Capitol, $1 million for damage outside and $500,000 for costs to supervise the damage.

Much of the damage apparently has come from tape used to put up signs and placards at the Capitol.


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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #185 on: March 04, 2011, 02:35:04 PM »

BOMB THREAT at Scott Walker News Conference–Leftist Protester Arrested!
big government ^ | 3/4/11 | Jim Hoft



Far Left protester Patrick J. Knauf, 43, of Eau Claire was arrested on Wednesday for the violation of making a bomb scare under state statute 947.015.

He was released on a $3,000 signature bond.

On Wednesday a bomb threat was made at an aviation business in Eau Claire just hours after Governor Scott Walker spoke there. Police brought in a man who was protesting this week against the Republican governor. The Pierce County Herald reported:

An investigation continues into a bomb threat made this week at an aviation business in Eau Claire, just hours after Governor Scott Walker held a news conference there.


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Re: Liberal Hatefest in Wisconsin to protest budget cuts. Video
« Reply #186 on: March 04, 2011, 03:01:52 PM »
Wis. governor tells unions it will lay off workers
Associated Press ^ | March 4, 2011 | JASON SMATHERS




MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has formally notified state unions that he intends to lay off workers, but affected employees may not see the notice for at least two weeks.

Walker's spokesman Chris Schrimpf said Friday that the unions have been notified and more details will come soon.


(Excerpt) Read more at hosted.ap.org ...