Archive for the ‘Virginia Politics’ Category

Falls Church votes to allow Red Light Cameras

April 1, 2009

The city of Falls Church recently voted to allow photo red light enforcement. The details can be found on DC CameraFRAUD’s blog at http://dccamerafraud.wordpress.com/2009/03/27/falls-church-va-sneaks-into-the-deadly-camera-game/

If you live, work or shop in the city of Falls Church, VA, please contact the mayor and city council members (info is at the link above) to voice your disapproval (as I have already done).

Remember, these cameras cause more accidents than they prevent, and line the coffers of both government and private industry at the expense of citizen safety.

We may be distributing information in Falls Church this Saturday, April 4- more information will be forthcoming.

Speed Camera Protest

February 10, 2009

Here is an email I recently received from DCCameraFraud.com:

Although this is going to be in Maryland, this is an important event to show we’re serious about stopping this nonsense:

DC.CameraFRAUD.com is planning its first anti-speed camera demonstration in Montgomery County, MD on Feb 15th at 1pm. Our preliminary plan is to meet in Chevy Chase Village where we will be holding signs, passing out fliers, and taking photos and videos. Our goals for this activity are:

a) Make Maryland residents aware of the fraud and deception which has surrounded the current cameras in Montgomery County
b) Help people understand that, barring a large public outcry, we are on the verge of having cameras enforcing laws on almost every road in
the state
c) Help our representatives understand that if the above happens, people will be marching in the streets in protest

To the best of my knowledge nobody has done something like this in MD before. The group CameraFRAUD.com got its start in Arizona where similar protests have brought about the near-certain end of freeway photo radar in that state. For more information on what’s happening with speed cameras in Virginia, DC and Maryland, visit:

http://DC.CameraFRAUD.com

If you want to help out with the protest, send an RSVP to either:
StopBigBrotherMD@gmail.com
or dc@cameraFRAUD.com

For those who don’t know, here is why I oppose speed cameras and red light cameras:
1. Privacy. It’s government electronic surveillance and it’s a dangerous trend. This is a classic example of what has been called the “camel’s nose” effect in public policy. Once the camel gets its nose under the edge of the tent, it’s only a matter of time before the whole camel is inside. Citizens are slowly becoming more complacent about electronic surveillance, and it needs to stop.

2. It combines traffic laws with revenue generation. For those who claim they are about safety, read about Montgomery County’s traffic scam. This all about

3. Proponents claim they make the roads safer, but the evidence shows they make the roads more dangerous. If you think they make the roads safer, read about the multi-car pile up caused by a driver trying to avoid a red light citation. Prefer hard data to anecdotes? VDOT’s own statistics show that red light cameras caused accidents to go UP (both T-bone and rear-end accidents, despite the claims by proponents of these devices).

4. In the specific case of Montgomery County, the contractor who runs the electronic ticket program is paid on a PER TICKET basis, which is ILLEGAL under county law and encourages the disbursement of questionable citations.

It is true that running red lights is dangerous. However, the statistics show that red light cameras make intersections MORE dangerous, not less. If state and local governments were interested in keeping us safe, they would increase the time on yellow lights. Data shows that doing so DECREASES accidents at intersections. However, there is no money in that.

It is also true that excessive speeding is dangerous. However, what the government considers excessive speeds and what is actually an excessive speed are two different things. According to the commonwealth of Virginia, driving 80 mph is “reckless.” I see people doing that speed (or faster) on I-95 every single day. And I’ve never seen any of them get in an accident. If said behavior was truly reckless, there would be mass carnage on the highway. Painting an arbitrary number on a sign does NOT mean it is the maximum speed at which a vehicle can be safely operated. The government sets speed limits and traffic laws in a manner that allows them to issue citations and make money, not in a manner designed to keep us safe and facilitate the flow of traffic.

So, head out to Montgomery County on Feb 15 and support the effort to rid our region of these despicable devices.

Virginia bans smoking in bars and restaurants (well, sort of….)

February 6, 2009

Earlier today, the Virginia State Assembly struck a deal that outlawed smoking in bars and restaurants (with some exceptions).

The bill is not a complete ban on smoking like MD and DC have, and there have been some complaints about it (read the article). But it represents another shift in Virginia politics. The State Assembly is a place where the statement “because we’ve always done it that way” is justification for almost anything. As a tobacco-producing state, Virginia has traditionally been very responsive to the tobacco lobby and very hesitant to do anything. Virginia’s Speaker of the House, William J. Howell, is part of that tradition, and he had been holding up various bills to ban smoking in the Assembly. However, Speaker Howell gave up his opposition after an agreement was reached with Tim Kaine.

This is a dramatic change from Virginia. One of the more conservative legislatures has changed a long-held stance on an important issue. Tobacco growth is on the decline, as is Big Tobacco’s influence over the state government. VA has long been a Republican stronghold, but voters have chosen two straight Democratic governors, two straight Democratic US Senators, and Democrat Barack Obama in the recent presidential election.

The population boom in Northern VA has been slowly changing the state’s demographics for several decades, and it looks like it has finally passed the point of no return, and change is inevitable. Hopefully those changes will be for the better.

Red Light Cameras return to Fairfax City

January 27, 2009

Last week, a Washington Times editorial reported that Fairfax City (the independent city, NOT all of Fairfax County) has re-instated photo red light cameras.  Aside from being an invasion of privacy, these cameras cause more accidents than they prevent.   Don’t believe me?  VDOT itself reported that the cameras increased accidents.

So, what can we as citizens do? First, if you live in Fairfax City, vote against anyone who supported this legislation. Second, don’t drive through Fairfax City or patronize businesses there. If you do, you are risking an unjust and unsafe ticket. Force the business community to put pressure on the city government.

Third, use technology to fight technology. If you have a GPS device, download Points of Interest (POI’s) for speed traps and red light cameras at this site: http://www.gps-data-team.com/poi/united_states/safety/. It has POI’s for every major brand of GPS, and once installed, you can set your GPS to warn you of impending red light cameras and speed traps. And it’s perfectly legal. I have used the red light camera POI’s with a TomTom One in the DC area with great success. In my experience, the red light camera POIs are more reliable than the speed trap POIs, but the speed trap ones still have some value. Just use them with caution and don’t think of them as a license to speed.

You can also use Photoblocker, which is a spray designed to make your license plate more reflective, so the flash from red light/speed cameras blurs your license plates and prevents the system from issuing a ticket. A few words of caution:
1. Photoblocker is illegal in some jurisdictions.
2. Photoblocker will not work against infrared cameras and will not work in daylight.
3. Photoblocker has received mixed reviews online and some claim it yellows license plates.

Personally, I have not tried Photoblocker, however, I am going to buy it and test it on an old license plate. I will take before and after photos and post the results here. So, now that you’ve read the disclaimer:
Photoblocker website
Buy Photoblocker cheaper on Amazon

In addition, a group called Camerafraud has been monitoring all the traffic camera developments in the DC metropolitan area. Check their website for updates.

These cameras will not go away unless citizens band together and fight back.

Ignorance alive and well in Virginia

October 31, 2008

As most people are aware by now, the fairly recent mass migration to Northern Virginia has turned the state from a solidly Republican state to a swing state that has leaned Democratic in the last few statewide elections (Governors Kaine and Warner, Senator Webb).  This caused McCain advisor Nancy Pfotenhauer to comment that McCain has support in “real Virginia.”

Jon Stewart and the Daily Show responded with an hilarious piece on this that can be viewed here.

Marc Fisher of the Washington Post responded with an article searching for the dividing line between “real Virginia” and “fake Virginia,” which can be read here. And he found an appalling level of ignorance.

First, one Virginian by the name of Mitch Dickinson said he was

going to vote Republican to protect against radical socialist communist views. It’s also about faith: I don’t see how any person who believes in Jesus Christ could vote for Obama or any Democrat.

I don’t know where to start with the ignorance in this statement. Obama certainly isn’t a pure capitalist by any means and he does have some policies that lean socialist, but to call him a “radical socialist communist” shows a lack of understanding of all three of those terms. There are differences between socialism and communism, and neither a “radical communist” nor a “radical socialist” would ever take part in the American political system the way Obama has already done. As far as no Christian ever voting Democrat, the Republicans have advocated torture, started two wars (one unjustifiably, at least in my opinion), and ushered in an era of greed with their economic policies and deregulation. Apparently those are Christian values now. The problem with this line of thinking is that it equates Christianity solely with a few strongly Republican issues, like being pro-life and opposed to gay rights, without thinking of the other Christian values or considering that the President does not have a large effect on these issues.

Dickinson also expressed concern that if Obama is elected, “the homosexuals will get their rights passed.” He does have a legitimate concern. It really would be a shame if the country founded on the concept that “all men are created equal” actually lived up to that ideal.

The next gem comes from Angela Greene, who worries that “we’ll become friends with Iran.” Of course, she fails to consider that the only way the US would ever become friends with Iran is if they abandoned their nuclear program and stopped threatening Israel. Would it really be a BAD thing to turn an oil-rich enemy pursuing nukes into an ally? Certainly there would be concerns if Obama or any other president aligned themselves with Ahmedinijad as he acts now, but that simply isn’t going to happen regardless of who is in the White House.

As appalling as those statements are, it only gets worse from there. Here’s an except from the article:

“There could be small riots, because people don’t like that amount of change,” says Willy Humphreys, a farmer and construction worker in Stafford who, at 39, plans to cast his first vote ever, for McCain. “I’ve noticed that a lot of younger people are kind of into Obama, but for a lot of people my age, it’s always been a Caucasian male.”

“We’re not ready for a black guy,” says Angi Kraft, 39, a mortgage processor who has been laid off three times since February. “I’m scared he will be killed. I don’t trust him. And I’m telling you, we are becoming a minority — and a Northern state. They’re all coming down here, the Northerners.”

Small riots? What evidence is there that ANYONE would riot because of Obama’s policies? Our country has a civilized, orderly political process. If Obama or any other politician tried to push through change that was too much for the American people, there are plenty of opportunities to stop it in an orderly, systematic fashion long before riots became necessary. And for both of these people to be concerned about Obama solely because he’s black? That’s nothing but unapologetic racism. As if that wasn’t bad enough, Angi Kraft continues by resurrecting this division between the North and the South. The only legitimate point she makes is that Obama could be a target of white supremacy groups because of his race, yet she seems oblivious to the fact that the people who may try to assassinate a black president are simply a more extreme version of her own ignorance.

I grew up in Western New York, and many people there hold a lot of stereotypes about the South. The people in Fisher’s article reinforce a lot of them. In the interest of full disclosure, I will be voting for Obama, but I’m not trying to suggest that everyone should be doing the same. I, too, have reservations about some of Obama’s policies. If these people had said they disagree with Obama’s tax plan or think he’s weak on foreign policy or even that they don’t like his stance on abortion, those would be legitimate arguments. Yet, they didn’t take that route. They had to invoke racism, homophobia, xenophobia and general ignorance. If that constitutes “real” Virginia, I’ll gladly stay in “fake” Virginia. Or move back North.

Driving 80 or Killing Someone: Equal under Virginia Law.

June 10, 2008

On February 12, 2008, Ashley McIntosh, a 22-year old teaching assistant, was killed when her vehicle was struck by a Fairfax County police officer responding to a call. The police officer was speeding and did not have her sirens on. After several months, the officer was finally charged with reckless driving.

For those of you who recall my campaign against the abusive driver fees last year, driving 20 mph over the speed limit or driving 80 mph also results in a charge of reckless driving. There are two blatant absurdities in this situation: first, that the police officer received such a lenient charge for an action that resulted in the death of another human being. Does anyone honestly believe that a private citizen would have received the same lenient charge? Second, Virginia law levies the the same charge for the often harmless act of speeding as they do for the actions that caused a death.

My sympathies go out to Ms. McIntosh’s family and friends, and it is my sincere hope that they do not think I am turning her death into a political cause. Unfortunately, sometimes it takes an instance like this for us to wake up and think about whether justice is truly being served. The state of Virginia and Fairfax County trumps up charges for speeding motorists to make more money while allowing police officers to get away with manslaughter, and it’s embarrassing.

If you oppose a gas tax increase, do the math

May 16, 2008

According to this Washington Post article, 80% of Virginians opposed a 15-cent a gallon gas tax increase in a recent public opinion poll.

First, these polls are fundamentally flawed.  I won’t go into the statistical details- that topic will require a post of its’ own.  But when pollsters offered the question to Virginians, they failed to mention that the governor’s proposed alternative to a gas tax is a 1% sales tax increase on everything except food.   The results of the poll would be quite different if people had to face the reality of the cost of everything else going up.

Second, “15 cents a gallon” is an arbitrary number.  No one in Virginia’s General Assembly has proposed such a large increase, and in fact state Sen. Richard Saslaw is taking about a 6 cent a gallon gas tax increase.  The poll has no validity because the number is much higher than what is really needed and it did not mention the alternative sales tax increase.

Gas is too expensive as it is and no one wants the price to go up further due to taxes.  But do the math- 6 cents a gallon on gas or 1% of everything else?   For the majority of Virginia’s citizens, the 6 cents a gallon is the cheaper option.

Gov. Kaine’s new Transportation funding plan

May 13, 2008

MORE TAXES! The details of the plan are in this Washington Post article.

Please contact your state Delegate and Senator to voice your concerns. You can find out who your state representatives are using the GA’s Who’s My Legislator page.

Below is the letter I sent to Del. Mark Sickles and state Sen. Toddy Puller regarding the proposal:

Sen. Puller and Del. Sickles,

First, I would like to thank both of you for your support on the
“abuser fees” issue and commend you for your work in getting the fees
repealed.

I am contacting you today about several concerns I have regarding Gov.
Kaine’s new transportation funding bill.

For starters, I’d like to know what measures- if any- were taken to
use existing funds more efficiently and/or cut waste before new taxes
are proposed. The state government should ensure that it is using the
people’s money as responsibly as possible before requesting more money
from its constituents.

Second, the governor is proposing a $10 increase in the vehicle
registration fee. Any flat tax is a regressive tax and hurts lower
income Virginians first. Granted, it is only $10, but Virginians
already pay registration fees, safety inspections, emissions
inspections (in some areas), decal fees (in most areas) and the
infamous personal property tax, owning a vehicle in VA is already very
expensive. Public transportation is insufficient in most of the
state, so owning a car is a necessity for most people and the
government already capitalizes off that fact more than it should. (more…)