Thursday, December 1, 2016

Rediscovering Our Political Voice

New Haven-based sculptor/painter, performance artist and teacher David Livingston will offer himself as a fictitious candidate for office in a mock speech to be delivered at The Ferguson Library this Saturday afternoon, December 3, using as his template the familiar tropes of national pride, gender, race and class, bound together by the provocative, yet deliberately imprecise imagery and language so typical of the mainstream political scene.

What makes this appeal distinctive from the canned character of the “real” thing is that
David’s presentation will be shaped by dozens of questions submitted to him by library patrons prior to the event—in response to a disarmingly convincing campaign video displayed in the library lobby since November 3.

In the aftermath of one of the most polarizing presidential elections in national history, Livingston’s “Vote Your Conscience” provides an opportunity to expand the conversation,  in the words of Terri C. Smith of Franklin Street Works, for the “many people living in the U.S. (who) find themselves to be more introspective than ever about what it means to be an American.”  

untitled, 2010
David is co-sponsoring his performance with the downtown art space/cafĂ© and the library; "Vote Your Conscience" is part of the Ferguson’s contribution to The Aspen Institute’s national project “What Every American Should Know”, funded through a Regional Initiative Grant awarded to the library by the Cultural Alliance of Fairfield County, in partnership with the Connecticut Office of the Arts. David is an adjunct professor at the University of New Haven and Gateway Community College; he received his MFA from Pratt and has exhibited nationally.

After the presentation, be sure to join him at a reception at Franklin Street Works, just a block down from the library.

Both the performance and reception are free and open to the public.

Performance:
Third Floor Auditorium
The Ferguson Library
1 Public Library Plaza
Stamford, CT 06901

3-4 pm

Artist Reception:
Franklin Street Works
41 Franklin Street
Stamford, CT 06901

4:15-5:30 pm

Contact:
Terri C Smith
Creative Director
Franklin Street Works
203-253-0404

Monday, November 7, 2016

What Progressivism Is and Is Not: A Response To Anonymous Mail-In Propaganda

I suppose it's flattering someone would go to so much trouble at the last minute to generate confusion about the Stein campaign and what the Green Party is about. Please view before voting...

Submitted yesterday to the Stamford Advocate Facebook page

I wish to draw the attention of Stamford voters to Jill Stein, the Green Party’s candidate for president of the United States and the only candidate refusing to accept corporate contributions. As a local Green candidate for this year’s Stamford Registrar of Voters, I can attest to the amazingly low public awareness of Jill Stein’s run and what she stands for as a substantial alternative to the offerings of the Democrat/Republican duopoly.

This is no surprise, as, though it is the media that we look to to inform of us of our options, it is also this same media complex which presumes to define for us what is to be expected of our current political system and what is possible. 

When did we, as voting adults, lose sight that this is supposed to be OUR job? 

Even a quick perusal of her site (www.jill2016.com) and numerous Youtube interviews demonstrate that Dr. Stein is a practical, solutions-, rather than fear-driven, candidate who supports her convictions consistently and at repeated cost to her personal safety and liberty, such as in defense of those losing their homes at a New York bank protest in 2012. Trump and Clinton have yet to do anything comparable.

Contrary to what we are told, the numbers are actually against the Democrats and Republicans. A recent Gallop poll shows more than half of all voters are hungry for more than the limited number of options that can constitute a choice (Stein’s multiple proposals to eliminate student debt, alone, could mobilize over 40 million college voters to decide the election). 

A culture of bitterness and learned helplessness stoked by the “major” parties’ offensive and frightening antics, while the global scene stands on the cusp of nuclear war can no longer be defended by the same complaints repeated every four years of “Anybody but (fill in the blank)!”, or “I can’t wait until the election is over!” 

Overcoming these issues depends on inspiring more voter participation at all levels, which is why I stand with Stein in advocacy of reforming the winner-take-all, binary approach to elections that only fosters anger, powerlessness and the apathy and misplaced blame the two-party system thrives upon. 

Ranked Choice Voting encourages more participation by more of the electorate left out of the process due to gender, ethnic or economic disenfranchisement by allowing voters to choose from several candidates of various political views at once, based on order of preference, rather than on a straight win/lose basis. Portland, Maine elected its mayor in 2011 on this basis; Cincinnati elected two African-American city council members in the 1950s using RCV and the state of Illinois had it for almost 100 years following the Civil War (in fact, Abraham Lincoln was a third-party candidate). It forces candidates to become more detailed and dignified in their platforms and eliminates the “spoiler” or “lesser evil” rationales for and against candidates.
From the end of slavery and child labor, to victories in workplace rights/safety and civil liberties and more, we didn’t get this far as a society by settling for just A or B; it’s time we drew on that pride and courage to reconnect with our pluralistic heritage.

Rolf Maurer
Green Party Candidate for Registrar of Voters. City of Stamford
Co-Chair, Fairfield County Chapter
Green Party of CT

Sunday, November 6, 2016

Secretary of the State Denise Merrill's Channel 3 Song & Dance

Denise Merrill
The opening segment with Secretary of the State Denise Merrill on Channel 3's Meet the State program from a week ago, preceding discussion with Libertarian Party representative Larry Sharpe and Green Party of CT's Cora Santaguida (State Coordinator for the Jill Stein campaign; State Senate candidate in the 27th District), was as embarrassingly fawning as it was lacking in relevant detail: Merrill attempted to claim a "save" over the fact that a few years ago when Bridgeport polls didn't have enough ballot forms on hand, it was supposed to be to the system's credit that on-site copies were quickly printed so that people could cast their votes.

Such overblown claims of her department's flexibility during a 2014 "crisis" overlooks the fact that it is hard to see how the number of sheets needed for any municipality is hard to get wrong in advance, given that they would naturally use the same number used to send reminder notices to all registered voters in the area in the days prior to the CT governor's race. Yes, mistakes happen (although they happen too often in areas predominantly non-white). What she failed to mention was that the scanners did not accept the copies.

Of course, the fact that write-in votes were not counted in Stamford, Hartford, Bridgeport (again) and other cities in 2012 resulting in no legal consequences for those doing the tallying, even though such an oversight constitutes a felony, was also not discussed, among other important issues regarding the state's electoral process.