Wednesday, October 10, 2018

We Won't Vote for Hillary in 2020 Either


by Mona Shaw

Democrats, if you think you can bully third-party voters into voting for another Hillary or Hillary Clone in 2020, get over that shit now.

We hate Trump more than you do.  We hated Trump when Hillary, Bill, et all were still enjoying photo ops with him. Why not try giving dying Americans a reason to vote for you other than we all hate Trump?

You’ve had two years to come up with a comprehensive message for making things better, but instead, you’ve chosen to inch further right. With only a couple of rare exceptions, your candidates are all further right.  Rather than getting on board with Single Payer (80% of your base wants it), you’ve chosen to water-down HR676, so that it saves fewer lives than it does now. You’ve done nothing about war for profit but support widening it.

You suck at holding your official’s feet to the fire, and you’ve not been in the streets about war or healthcare since 2008. You either lack vision or don’t care that this death march will serve to give us worse candidates next time and kill more innocent people.  Someone has to interrupt that trajectory.  That can only be done by creating a political liability for it. You’ll go further right if we keep voting for you. Maybe, if you lose a few elections, you’ll begin to get it.

But, whether or not you change, insulting us-- “we’re voting for Trump, or we’re extremists or purists”--isn’t going to win us over. You have two more years to get with it. Clean up your death machine. Dump your lackluster message and give dying people some hope they might live.  Or, look forward to four more years of Trump.

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

The Liberal Reich of Johnson County


by Mona Shaw

Former Johnson County employee Shanti Sellz is suing her former boss Josh Busard and members of the Board of Supervisors after she was fired following a complaint of assault.

Every “progressive” and “progressive entity” should be at her back, from every labor leader in the county to the Women’s Center to Iowa City Federation of Labor, to the Labor Center,  et al.  They won’t be. They will join the circle of wagons protecting the “progressive” members of the Board of Supervisors.  The Supervisors are carrying water for Busard. He’s one of their own. That’s what they do.

A few may give her support sub rosa while explaining some self-interested rationale for why they must stay neutral publicly. A few will question this with a member of the Board of Supervisors. Those few will nod and let it go when that Supervisor says, “Well, she had other problems, but I can’t talk about that.”

Co-workers friends who have been sympathetic and know she’s telling the truth will be terrified to be seen with her in public.  Some will deny their own abuse at Busard’s hand and be bullied into betraying her.

Shanti Sellz may not have known that worst place she could have taken her assault complaint was to Lora Shramek director of Johnson County Human Resources.  She guaranteed she would be fired that day. She was, no doubt, encouraged after her first meeting with Shramek.  That’s how it works.  She may not have seen Shramkek’s betrayal coming.  But it come, it did. A follow-up letter to Sellz from the county’s human resources department said that Busard and Sellz should “work through issues with the help of a counselor.”

This “solution” is essentially no different than expecting Brett Kavanaugh and Elizabeth Blasey Ford to work through their issues with a counselor. Anyone claiming to be a feminist should be horrified.

However, it’s not as if any Johnson County employee has a choice, including those protected by a union contract.  The County’s union contract doesn’t protect workplace abuse or assault.  A supervisor can treat a worker anyway they please, and the abuse cannot be grieved under the contract.

The County does have a provision for complaints of “bullying” outside the contract.  In my initial meeting with Shramek in which she was completely sympathetic, she told me the provision was created with my abuser, County Auditor Tom Slockett in mind because his abuse was so notorious. She told me Slockett had even abused her (Shramek) when she was nine months pregnant. She would later claim I was lying when I repeated that in a hearing.

This provision has never had a finding. It’s never even gone to a hearing. County Attorney Janet Lyness is very skilled at kicking out these complaints on a technicality until you’re worn down.

Not that the contract gives you that much cover. After my complaint of abuse, the retaliation was inhumane and brutal. I was the first employee in County history who ever had a finding in my favor for unfair discipline.  The facts were too clear to deny. One was for typing out “Iowa” instead of using the initial “IA” in a memo.  They denied one of my grievances of discipline also for a petty clerical error, that I found and corrected before my boss knew it.  A County employee, who was privy to this, told me later, “They had to give him one. They have to live with him.”

Sellz may not know that until I was on the bargaining committee in 2005, that the County contract didn’t even protect against unfair termination. If any worker was fired, they were fired. Period. They had no recourse.  It wasn’t until I threatened to go public that this changed.

I detest writing about Johnson County leadership, and since 2012 I seldom do. It causes me to relive painful memories. It always brings back my most painful memory in my own ordeal.

A close friend invited me for dinner. I would soon learn that she had been tasked to bully me into dropping my complaint. She was running for office, and she was protecting her affinity with the Democratic Party.  I kept making my case until she interrupted me.

“Has Slockett ever abused you?”

“Yes,” I told her.

She laughed. A long mocking laugh that seemed to never end. That laugh broke me in that moment. I hadn’t touched a bite of my dinner.  She didn’t notice. I said nothing more except I wanted to go home. The moment ended a 30-year friendship.

That laugh is indelibly imprinted in my own hippocampus. It hurt more than the unfair disciplines, more than being put in front of my supervisor for constant scrutiny, more than being warned by that supervisor of being disciplined if I didn’t keep my hands in full view at all times. I couldn’t reach in my purse for a Kleenex. It hurt more than being told I couldn’t go the restroom without that supervisor’s permission, or when, after asking permission, that supervisor would go into Slockett’s office for twenty minutes or more until I was finally allowed to leave. It hurt more than the day I returned from lunch and found my file of evidence for my complaint had been erased from my computer. I filed a FOIA request to get the files back—they were public files.  I was told there would be a fee of $2500 to get them. An ITS worker told me it would take him 20 minutes top to retrieve them. It hurt more than when I was characterized as “unstable” because the abuse led to major clinical depression and two hospitalizations for suicidal ideation.

It took eight years, but I prevailed. Sort of. After nearly a decade of doggedly putting out my documentation and with the anonymous confirmation of others, the electorate of Johnson County chose to remove Slockett from office in the 2012 election. 

It cost me more than $600,000 in lost wages and benefits, rendered me permanently unemployable and placed me in poverty for life. Even so, I’d do it again.

I wasn’t fired by the way.  I resigned when Slockett began issuing formal discipline to those caught talking to me. After Travis Weipert won the election, I emailed the Board of Supervisors and asked for them to meet with me about getting my job back. I mentioned the damages I had incurred.  I heard nothing for a month. Finally, Janelle Rettig phoned me and told me no meeting would happen. She said some members were bitter about how I’d damaged the reputation of the party and didn’t want to see me in the building ever again.

When I said I would forgo the job and damages if the Board would work with me to institute protections so that no employee would ever have to go through this again, Janelle told me to take it up with the Iowa legislature.

I thought about suing, but not long.  You only get money from litigation at best.  You don’t get justice.  You also get an NDA (Non-disclosure Agreement).  I knew I wouldn’t be able to shut up for any amount of cash.  It remains satisfying to learn that my soul really isn’t for sale.

If there is any justice in Johnson County, Shanti Sellz will prevail.  If there’s any justice, feminists and labor leaders will stand publicly and proudly with her.  They all know, or they should know the Board of Supervisors didn’t have to fire her.  They have dozens of employees who remained in their jobs who didn’t file for FLMA until after they’d exhausted their sick leave. Even if she technically didn’t meet the requirements of the Family Leave Act, and that’s a big “if, the spirit of that provision was clearly violated. According to their own documentation, Shanti Sellz was a good employee.  That should have led them to help her. There was nothing that prevented them doing that.  They just didn’t.

One of the last things Janelle Rettig said to me was, “Look, I work with cowards, but I have to work with them.”

Shanti Sellz didn’t put me up to writing this. She doesn’t know that I’m writing this.

I just know that it takes uncommon courage to go up against this Reich.  Shanti Sellz has shown that courage. Does anyone in the County have the courage to stand with her?

In the immortal words of Florence Reece, “Which side are you on?”


Monday, October 1, 2018

Kavanaugh and Clinton Should Be Sharing a Prison Cell

PREDATOR
by Mona Shaw
If you're still even slightly inclined to defend Bill Clinton, or you think he's better than Kavanaugh, read all of this, and get back to me.

I’m an advocate for the poor and working class. This means I’m just as passionately anti-racist. First, because underclass women of color are even more vulnerable to oppression and abuse. Second, because race, sex, and class oppression are inextricable clubs used by the ruling class to maintain control of the U.S. system.

Astute friends have reasonably asked me why I care about the Kavanaugh nomination. It can certainly be regarded as a in-fight within the privileged class. I’ve been following the Kavanaugh appointment closely for two primary reasons. One, I can’t resist the temptation to help take down a rich, white man with power. Second, because it provides such a perfect launching pad to address class.

It has given me a platform to warn women who don’t have privilege. If you are one of these women, you need to know that voting for Democrats won’t help you. It may help women of privilege, but that benefit won’t trickle down to you.

More than a few of those privileged women whom you march with today, will join the hands of others who will throw you under the bus if you ever need their help. If, they don’t actively gaslight and slander you, they will wring their hands whimpering, “I just don’t know,” and announcing they are “staying out of the controversy.”

I could give you an endless list of examples, but, for now, I’m only going to give you one.

William Jefferson Clinton

William Jefferson Clinton is a vicious predator. Yet he remains, a darling of the Democratic Party and liberals everywhere. He’s paid top dollar for speeches and is the most sought-after speaker for Democratic Party fundraisers.

Liberals rush to defend Clinton stating his indiscretions were “consensual.” They set aside the inherent harassment of someone having sex with a subordinate, how young and vulnerable she would be to such a powerful man. Indeed, many of them have spent the past three decades making that young woman the punchline of dirty jokes.

They don’t just dismiss Clinton’s lies about his long-time affair with Gennifer Flowers. They also dismiss Clinton’s efforts to defame and gaslight Ms. Flowers for telling the truth. He slandered her in a now-famous interview on national television with Hillary Rodham Clinton indignantly proclaiming, “I’m not some Tammy Wynette standing by her man.”

In turns out H.R. Clinton was doing just that, when the couple later conceded they knew at the time Flowers was telling the truth.

If those were W.J. Clinton’s only indiscretions or even if all his philandering was consensual, it would be disgusting, but they’re not.

W.J. Clinton has a long history of sexual assault allegations, and his wife knows it. Moreover, Moveon.org knew it when they formed to encourage us to “move on” after Clinton’s impeachment.

While it’s not exhaustive, here is a chronological list of some of W.J. Clinton’s alleged sexual assaults.

Eileen Wellstone, 19-year-old English woman who said Clinton sexually assaulted her after she met him at a pub near the Oxford where the future President was a student in 1969. A retired State Department employee, who asked not to be identified, confirmed that he spoke with the family of the girl and filed a report with his superiors. Clinton admitted having sex with the girl, but claimed it was consensual. The victim's family declined to pursue the case.

In an interview with Capitol Hill Blue, the retired State Department employee said he believed the story Miss Wellstone, the young English woman who said Clinton raped her in 1969.

''There was no doubt in my mind that this young woman had suffered severe emotional trauma,'' he said. ''But we were under tremendous pressure to avoid the embarrassment of having a Rhodes Scholar charged with rape. I filed a report with my superiors and that was the last I heard of it.”

Ms. Wellstone, then married, confirmed the incident when contacted by journalists in the 1990s, but refused to discuss the matter further. She said she would not go public with further details of the attack.

In his book, Unlimited Access, former FBI agent Gary Aldrich reported that Clinton left Oxford University for a "European Tour" in 1969 and was told by University officials that he was no longer welcome there. Aldrich said Clinton's academic record at Oxford was lackluster. Clinton later accepted a scholarship for Yale Law School and did not complete his studies at Oxford.

In 1972, a 22-year-old woman told campus police at Yale University that she was sexually assaulted by Clinton, a law student at the college. No charges were filed, but retired campus policemen contacted by journalists confirmed the incident. The woman, also tracked down by journalists, confirmed the incident, but declined to discuss it further and would not give permission to use her name. The State Department official who investigated the incident said Clinton's interests appeared to be drinking, drugs and sex, not studies.

In 1974, a female student at the University of Arkansas complained that then law school instructor Bill Clinton tried to prevent her from leaving his office during a conference. She said he groped her and forced his hand inside her blouse. She complained to her faculty advisor who confronted Clinton, but Clinton claimed the student ''came on'' to him. The student left the school shortly after the incident. Interviewed at her home in Texas, the former student confirmed the incident, but declined to go on the record with her account. Several former students at the University have confirmed the incident in confidential interviews and said there were other reports of Clinton attempting to force himself on female students.

Juanita Broaddrick, a volunteer in Clinton's gubernatorial campaign, said he raped her in 1978. Mrs. Broaddrick suffered a bruised and torn lip, which she said she suffered when Clinton bit her during the rape.

From 1978-1980, during Clinton's first term as governor of Arkansas, state troopers assigned to protect the governor were aware of at least seven complaints from women who said Clinton forced, or attempted to force, himself on them sexually. One retired state trooper said in an interview that the common joke among those assigned to protect Clinton was "who's next?". One former state trooper said other troopers would often escort women to the governor's hotel room after political events, often more than one an evening.

Carolyn Moffet, a legal secretary in Little Rock in 1979, said she met then-governor Clinton at a political fundraiser and shortly thereafter received an invitation to meet the governor in his hotel room. "I was escorted there by a state trooper. When I went in, he was sitting on a couch, wearing only an undershirt. He pointed at his penis and told me to suck it. I told him I didn't even do that for my boyfriend and he got mad, grabbed my head and shoved it into his lap. I pulled away from him and ran out of the room."

Elizabeth Ward, the Miss Arkansas who won the Miss America crown in 1982, told friends she was forced by Clinton to have sex with him shortly after she won her state crown. Last year, Ward, who is now married with the last name of Gracen (from her first marriage), told an interviewer she did have sex with Clinton but said it was consensual. Close friends of Ward, however, say she still maintains privately that Clinton forced himself on her.

Paula Jones Corbin, an Arkansas state worker, filed a sexual harassment case against Clinton after an encounter in a Little Rock hotel room where the then-governor exposed himself and demanded oral sex. Clinton settled the case with Jones recently with an $850,000 cash payment.

Sandra Allen James, a former Washington, DC, political fundraiser says Presidential candidate-to-be Clinton invited her to his hotel room during a political trip to the nation's capital in 1991, pinned her against the wall and stuck his hand up her dress. She says she screamed loud enough for the Arkansas State Trooper stationed outside the hotel suite to bang on the door and ask if everything was all right, at which point Clinton released her and she fled the room. When she reported the incident to her boss, he advised her to keep her mouth shut if she wanted to keep working. Miss James has since married and left Washington. Reached at her home by journalists during the 1990s, the former Miss James said she later learned that other women suffered the same fate at Clinton's hands when he was in Washington during his Presidential run.

Christy Zercher, a flight attendant on Clinton's leased campaign plane in 1992, says Presidential candidate Clinton exposed himself to her, grabbed her breasts and made explicit remarks about oral sex. A video shot on board the plane by ABC News shows an obviously inebriated Clinton with his hand between another young flight attendant's legs. Zercher said later in an interview that White House attorney Bruce Lindsey tried to pressure her into not going public about the assault.

Kathleen Willey, a White House volunteer, reported that Clinton grabbed her, fondled her breasts and pressed her hand against his genitals during an Oval Office meeting in November, 1993. Willey, who told her story in a 60 Minutes interview, became a target of a White House-directed smear campaign after she went public.

These women didn’t matter to the Democratic Party establishment, and neither do you if you don’t have privileged status. Oh, sure the Democrats will sacrifice a few to make themselves look good, but not with also satisfying their own self-interests, e.g. Al Franken and John Conyers, leftier members they’re always trying to purge. Do you really believe that two liberal Democrats are the only members of Congress who engage in sexual harassment?

However, if you go up against one of their own, they’ll sell you down the river faster than you can sign the complaint.

You also don’t matter to Moveon.org. Moveon is nothing more than a get-out-the vote arm of the Democratic Party. By, the way, when they were asked about the allegations listed above (many more than have accused Kavanaugh), they said, “Well, we don’t find these women believable, and it was a long time ago.” Sound familiar?

Vote how you want. Do what you want. But be careful, and don’t get your hopes up. You have been warned.