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Ending Corporate Looting on the Gulf Coastby Ana Maria Recently, a man got four years in prison for burglarizing a neighbor’s home to loot it right after Katrina. What kind of jail time will the insurance industries’ corporate cronies get for deliberately contriving to steal the claims money from policyholders in the Katrina-ravaged areas that crossed three states: Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama? Here in Mississippi, we have two state officials responsible for holding these corporate crooks accountable to the people. We have State Attorney General Jim Hood who is doing his job to bring justice to the people of Mississippi, and we’re grateful to him for his strength and fortitude in the face of tremendous pressure to go along to get along—a position of weakness, for sure. We also have State Insurance Commissioner George Dale, whose idea of justice is more of an insurance insiders "Just Us" mentality. Dale’s own words portray a man in the back pocket of the insurance industry.
What a lovely sentiment coming from a public official who should be the first defender for us as policyholders. Those words should be put on bill boards, television ads, and radio spots throughout South Mississippi. What a betrayal this man has wrought upon the families and business owners inside Katrina Land. Of course, it would be unrealistic for us to expect a man who is in the pocket of the insurance industry to be our protector against the industry’s fraudulent practices.
Who are these folks interested in "good government"?
And that was in 2006. Dale: A Democrat? An Independent? A Dino? Simultaneously, Dale’s Republican attorney argued that the Democratic Party MUST allow Dale to run as a Democrat AND that Dale ought to be allowed to run as an Independent because he can’t win as a Democrat. Huh?! Dale pulled the ultimate Lieberman, as in U.S. Senator Joe Lieberman who ran on the Lieberman Political Party of Connecticut—or some such nonsense—when the Connecticut Democrats voted Ned Lamont as their Democratic nominee last year sending Lieberman packing his bags. Lieberman then started his own political party and accepted help from the Karl Rove wing of the Republican Party. Dale apparently took a page out of Lieberman’s playbook. I’m a Democrat! I’m an Independent! I’m a DINO! (Democrat in Name Only) Conflicts, Conflicts Everywhere Regarding the fact that he was being represented by a big insurance lobbyist attorney, Dale said Apparently, the man is blind. Too bad it is not in the way that Justice is blind. In another glaring example of Dale’s cozy conflict-of-interest ridden relationship with the insurance industry, he allowed State Farm to pick up the tab for the attorney who was helping Dale’s Deputy Insurance Commissioner Harrell prepare for a deposition in a lawsuit that the Scruggs Katrina Group was bringing against . . . State Farm. Ding! Ding! Ding! By now, alarms should be going off in a major way. Yes, you read that correctly. State Farm was paying the attorney fee for the lawyer helping the Mississippi Deputy Insurance Commissioner prepare for his testimony under oath and representing him at the proceedings in one of the large lawsuits that Mississippi policyholders are bringing against . . . State Farm. Can you believe it?! Talk about the fox guarding the hen house!! But this is really more like a criminal defense team paying the salary of the local prosecuting attorney assigned to its case. What a whopper of a conflict of interest. Here’s a guide to the deposition and links to the deposition itself. The only reason we found out this horrifyingly awful but important piece of information is because the Scruggs Katrina Group deposed Deputy Commissioner Harrell as part of its ongoing case of Thomas and Pamela McIntosh vs State Farm. The SKG website characterizes the Harrell deposition as "one of the most eye-popping depositions our group has ever seen." Now that’s saying something. You know, most of us think of the insurance commission as a consumer advocate, the place where we can turn for real assistance when an insurance company isn’t treating us or our family members fairly. Unfortunately, Dale acts as if his job is to advocate on behalf of the insurance companies. Are we in good hands with George Dale? Hardly. The man is a walking betrayal of public trust. And in a matter of days, with some effort, George Dale can be sent his walking papers when the voters go to the polls on Tuesday, August 7th. Like George Dale’s only Democratic opponent Gary Anderson says. "You can't protect the pocketbook of consumers, if you are in the pocketbook of insurance companies." Indeed, indeed. To bring good old-fashioned, mom and apple pie kind of justice to the people of South Mississippi, we can raise a little political hell! You know what that means. If you are a registered voter inside of Mississippià Vote. Inside or outà contribute. Inside or out à volunteer. Turning out for this election to turn out our current insurance commissioner—who thinks he is in the business of carrying water for corporate insurance executives, is the way we stop George Dale’s permissive reign of corporate looting.
Listen to the podcast. If you liked this piece, you may also enjoy reading the following. Broadening Katrina’s Lens: A five Part Series _______________________ Ana Maria authors A.M. in the Morning!, dispatches from Katrina's ground zero . . . a distinctly progressive political perspective. In March, this native daughter drove from her home in Silicon Valley, Calif., to surprise her mother with a visit to their family home in Bay St. Louis--ground zero for Katrina's devastation. The surprise was on Ana Maria. She launched her blogin May 2007 and added podcasting in June 2007 to express her dismay and provide detailed, poignant, on-the-ground accounts of what the people of the Gulf Coast are still experiencing nearly two years after Katrina's devastation. Not for the faint of heart, A.M. in the Morning! provides first-hand accounts of post-Katrina life written in a scathing style redolent of the region's famous cuisine--hot, strong and spicy. Nobody escapes Ana Maria's wrath whether they are the callous insurance industry, the bumbling leadership of FEMA, do-nothing politicians, or incompetent government contractors. A progressive political blog with a decidedly activist bent, A.M. in the Morning! includes her Center for Political Hell Raising, which provides activist tools of ready-made email letters, addresses, phone scripts and phone numbers to whomever is lucky enough to be caught in her crosshairs. From the Gulf Coast of Miss. to the heartland of Nashville, Tennessee, from the nation’s capitol to Silicon Valley, California, Ana Maria has been politically active as a professional and a volunteer on the local, state, and national levels. Ana Maria is committed to using her blog and podcast to reinvigorate the discussion and generate a renewed national sense of purpose to efficiently and effectively rebuild the area.
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Depressing
The United States has the means to do anything in the world and it chose to spend 340 billion of its finances toward the Iraq War.
A good chance to win the election
There is great cause for hope. Gary Anderson, an African-American male who got his mater's at Ole Miss--the state university that had to be forced to intergrate many decades ago, is on the cusp of winning against this good ol' boy and hte corporate greed he has come to symbolize.
This is positive and uplifting news on a number of planes. First, it is terrific to be able to defeat a man (George Dale) who betrayed the families and businesses that took a beating in Katrina and another at the hands of the insurance industry. Secondly, it is terrific that here in Mississippi where racism has been so central, so prominent in the culture, that an African American man can be within striking distance of this kind of electoral win.
Third, to have a man of integrity--an African American man of integrity who was born, raised, and educated here inside of this state--to come wihtin striking distance of putting hte nail in the coffin of greed is a gloriously uplifting event, indeed.
As we move toward all of our political goals be they ending the unprovoked and unnecessary war in Iraq or the continual assault on women's reproductive healthcare or the raiding of the national treasury for the likes of Halliburton or whathaveyou, it could do us quite a bit of good to keep our eye on the goal as we move the ball down the field one play at a time understanding what every football player (and fan) understands quite well. Every sweet victory comes with understanding the fundamental nature of the game to be a contact sport. And so it is with politics.
Focusing solely on one play, or one game, or one season as the wholly all of the entirety of our goals is to give up before taking the field, is to cede ground before beginning the assault on the opposition and implementing our own political strategies that will take us to the victory lines over and over and over again.
Personally, I find that my previous kne-jerk cynical reaction to anything served to help my own political paralysi. I had plenty of company, of course. We'd moan and winge and complain. But I wasn't part of the solution.
Today, I choose to think and respond differently. Before I chose cynicism. Today, I choose informed optimism to go along with all the work that must be done. I find that my prior cynicism weighed me down where as a more determined optimistic perspective allows me to draw on the endless supply of energy required for the long haul that is needed to achieve all the victories we seek.
In this instance, putting a few dollars into Gary Anderson's campaign, volunteering with the campaign--maybe dphone banking long distance if he campaign is dong that, and voting for him are all steps that can be taken to be part of a solution. That is what each progressive seeks--to be part of the solution.