Defense

Senator Klobuchar (02/02/07)

The Senate raised the federal minimum wage this week ... and the Iraq War debate continues. Two of the things we ask Minnesota's junior senator about when she joins us at the Almanac table.

Franken Wades In

Friday, February 2, 2007 - 9:17 am
I've never been a big fan of Al Franken. He's always struck me as smug, thinking himself a lot funnier than he really is and routinely confusing drollery for comedy. His soon-to-be-defunct Air America Radio show is one of the dullest things on the airwaves, a self-regarding cavalcade of conventional liberal wisdom doled out by a rotating list of dreary guests from the Center for the American Prospect, the New York Observer, and partisan blogs. It's a sign of the show's intellectual poverty that one of its most noteworthy resident public intellectual's chief claim to political insight is his hand in helping to create The West Wing on TV.

Franken's near-lachrymal regard for "our young men and women in uniform" is also deeply off-putting. Yes, indeed, we should provide our troops with the equipment they need to survive Bush's hellish war of choice, and we certainly, as a society, owe them the finest medical and psychiatric care possible when they return home, but ... if we are ever to escape the clutches of the military-industrial-Congressional complex that, like kudzu in a flower garden, is slowly choking the bloom of republican (that's with a small "r") virtues, we are going to have to return to the healthy skepticism of militarism and a standing army that marked our nation's entire history up until World War II. Enough with "Support the Troops." Let's start bringing them home and demobilizing the whole defense establishment.

Having said all that, Franken should prove a formidable candidate in a Senate race against Norm Coleman, if for no other reason than Coleman — who recently threw his father, regularly cited by the Senator as "my personal hero" because the old man had fought at Normandy, overboard when Norm, Sr. was arrested for consorting with a prostitute in St. Paul — is a walking definition of the word "pusillanimous." But for Paul Wellstone's tragically premature death, Coleman would have long ago sunk into the private sector; today, he has all the sweaty, Willy Loman-esque hallmarks of a one-term Senator. Like GW Bush, he is a failure fallen temporarily on good times.

Easily one of the most interesting features of this match-up is the prospect that, if Franken defeats Coleman, he will be the fourth consecutive Jewish-American elected to this particular Senate seat. That's truly remarkable in a state where the Jewish population represents less than one-percent of the state's residents and a striking testimony to the the transformation of Minnesota, known as recently as the late 1940s as the one of the most anti-Semitic states in the Union. Although it is easy at times to feel as if everything in this country is going down hill, this is one change we can all feel good about, especially in light of the fall's election of Keith Ellison as the first Muslim member of Congress.
I've never been a big fan of Al Franken. He's always struck me as smug, thinking himself a lot funnier than he really is and routinely confusing drollery for comedy.

Mental Health Equity: "We Need to Set Them Free"

Monday, January 29, 2007 - 10:56 am

My eyes filled with tears when I read this weekend of Prior Lake Marine Jonathan Schulze, who took his own life as he tried to cope with his return from Iraq. They were tears for Jonathan's family, for this never-ending war, and tears in memory of my brother-in-law, who jumped five stories to his death over seven years ago.

A week ago I attended a hearing at the Humphrey Institute hosted by Congressmen Jim Ramstad (R-Minn) and Patrick Kennedy (D-Rhode Island) on a subject we don't talk about very much: mental health. The room was nearly full. We attended in suppport of legislation to insure mental health parity: the Paul Wellstone Mental Health and Addiction Equity Act. The good news is this: Congressman Kennedy predicts passage of this bill, one that has languished for years, by June of this year. He expects the President to sign it.

The bill will be too late for some ... those who have been denied insurance coverage for their mental health illnesses. And it won't be enough in itself for servicemen and women like Jonathan Schulze, who, according to news reports, desperately sought treatment from the VA, but was denied due to sorely lacking mental health resources for veterans. But in the end, the biggest victory for these Congressmen and their supporters will be shining light on this issue for others ... for helping to remove the stigma of mental illness so that others will get help.

As Congressman Kennedy noted:

Many of our Iraq veterans are coming back in body, but not in mind. They are still imprisoned. We have millions who are prisoners of post traumatic stress disorder ... just like the children who witness gunshots or see violence in the home. They need to be set free.

I will add others to this list: survivors of child sexual abuse. One of four of the children you know is a victim of child sexual abuse. They, too, bear secrets and shame for years before they understand the nature of their injury. They, too, need years and years of therapy to be set free.

What can we do? We can mobilize in support of the Campaign to Insure Mental Health and Addiction Equity. Go to www.equitycampaign.net. We can speak out about our own experiences as authentic voices ... just as Sen. John Hottinger, Rep. Mindy Greiling and both Congressmen did at the hearing on Monday. Nothing is more moving, more powerful, than a public figure sharing this vulnerability to help others.

If you want to share your story, contact me at ember@visi.com and I'll make sure it gets to the right place to help others.

My eyes filled with tears when I read this weekend of Prior Lake Marine Jonathan Schulze, who took his own life as he tried to cope with his return from Iraq. They were tears for Jonathan's family, for this never-ending war, and tears in memory of my brother-in-law, who jumped five stories to his death over seven years ago.

The Political Panel (01/26/07)

We cover the political ground, both state and national, with Republicans Sarah Janecek and Andy Brehm and Democrats John Hottinger and Blois Olson.

Headlines (01/25/07)

Gov. Pawlenty reacts to Pres. Bush's State of the Union...

National Guard Extension (01/15/07)

It was a tough week for Minnesota Guard troops who found out that their stay in Iraq will be extended until summer. Major General Larry Shellito is our guest.

The Political Panel (01/12/07)

We bring you up to date on all the happenings under the Capitol dome in St. Paul.

Congressional Thoughts (12/15/06)

Minnesota's three new members of the U.S. House — Keith Ellison, Michele Bachmann and Tim Walz — join us live to talk about the big issues looming in Washington D.C.

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