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Lincoln's Grave Warning Realized

...a letter from President Abraham Lincoln to William F Elkins on 21 November 1864:

"I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country...corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed."

Eight Principles of Uncivilization

by Paul Kingsnorth and Dougald Hine


‘We must unhumanise our views a little, and become confident
As the rock and ocean that we were made from.’


  1. We live in a time of social, economic and ecological unravelling. All around us are signs that our whole way of living is already passing into history. We will face this reality honestly and learn how to live with it.

  2. We reject the faith which holds that the converging crises of our times can be reduced to a set of‘problems’ in need of technological or political ‘solutions’.

  3. We believe that the roots of these crises lie in the stories we have been telling ourselves. We intend to challenge the stories which underpin our civilisation: the myth of progress, the myth of human centrality, and the myth of our separation from ‘nature’. These myths are more dangerous for the fact that we have forgotten they are myths.

  4. We will reassert the role of story-telling as more than mere entertainment. It is through stories that we weave reality.

  5. Humans are not the point and purpose of the planet. Our art will begin with the attempt to step outside the human bubble. By careful attention, we will reengage with the non-human world.

  6. We will celebrate writing and art which is grounded in a sense of place and of time. Our literature has been dominated for too long by those who inhabit the cosmopolitan citadels.

  7. We will not lose ourselves in the elaboration of theories or ideologies. Our words will be elemental. We write with dirt under our fingernails.

  8. The end of the world as we know it is not the end of the world full stop. Together, we will find the hope beyond hope, the paths which lead to the unknown world ahead of us.



The Dark Mountain Manifesto

(excerpt)
Walking on lava

The end of the human race will be that it will eventually die of civilisation
Ralph Waldo Emerson

Those who witness extreme social collapse at first hand seldom describe any deep revelation about the truths of human existence. What they do mention, if asked, is their surprise at how easy it is to die.

The pattern of ordinary life, in which so much stays the same from one day to the next, disguises the fragility of its fabric. How many of our activities are made possible by the impression of stability that pattern gives? So long as it repeats, or varies steadily enough, we are able to plan for tomorrow as if all the things we rely on and don’t think about too carefully will still be there. When the pattern is broken, by civil war or natural disaster or the smaller-scale tragedies that tear at its fabric, many of those activities become impossible or meaningless, while simply meeting needs we once took for granted may occupy much of our lives.

What war correspondents and relief workers report is not only the fragility of the fabric, but the speed with which it can unravel. As we write this, no one can say with certainty where the unravelling of the financial and commercial fabric of our economies will end. Meanwhile, beyond the cities, unchecked industrial exploitation frays the material basis of life in many parts of the world, and pulls at the ecological systems which sustain it.

Precarious as this moment may be, however, an awareness of the fragility of what we call civilisation is nothing new.

‘Few men realise,’ wrote Joseph Conrad in 1896, ‘that their life, the very essence of their character, their capabilities and their audacities, are only the expression of their belief in the safety of their surroundings.’ Conrad’s writings exposed the civilisation exported by European imperialists to be little more than a comforting illusion, not only in the dark, unconquerable heart of Africa, but in the whited sepulchres of their capital cities. The inhabitants of that civilisation believed ‘blindly in the irresistible force of its institutions and its morals, in the power of its police and of its opinion,’ but their confidence could be maintained only by the seeming solidity of the crowd of like-minded believers surrounding them. Outside the walls, the wild remained as close to the surface as blood under skin, but the city-dweller was no longer equipped to face it directly.

The remainder of the essay can be read online: Dark Mountain manifesto.


Paul is the author of One No, Many Yeses and Real England. He was deputy editor of The Ecologist between 1999 and 2001. His first poetry collection, Kidland, is forthcoming from Salmon Poetry. His website is www.paulkingsnorth.net

Dougald writes the blog Changing the World (and other excuses for not getting a proper job). He is a former BBC journalist and has written for and edited various online and offline magazines. His website is www.dougald.co.uk

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Editorial Notes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The "Eight principles of uncivilisation" are expanded in the Dark Mountain manifesto (also available as PDF or purchased as a limited-edition, hand-stitched pamphlet.

See the site for the blog and information about their upcoming festival May 28-30.

Several Energy Bulletin contributors are on their Blogroll, including John Michael Greer, Sharon Astyk, Rob Hopkins and Dmitry Orlov. Also mentioned are Wendell Berry and Ivan Illich.

George Monbiot recently wrote a column in the Guardian about Dark Mountain Project: I share their despair, but I'm not quite ready to climb the Dark Mountain.

On Common Dreams, Robert C. Koehler wrote a related piece: Dark Green.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Original article available here
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Our American Objectives

"Our national goals must be to rejuvenate the domestic economy; transfer the economic basis of our nation from consumptive to productive; recapitalize education and the technologies industries; achieve complete energy independence; move towards renewable energy sources;
restore public confidence in the government's ability to undertake large national infrastructure projects, and re-assert its right to set goals and policies to ensure those projects proceed smoothly; define the overarching standards for a reconstructed America including a federal review of the building and planning codes now in use, and probably the writing of new mandates that set out 21st-century standards and priorities for energy use, urban and transportation planning, and environmental design, which once put into law and accepted into general use, will be very difficult to change; commit funding for a massive 10- or 20-year program that will upgrade or replace failing components of America's infrastructure as the nation is broke (as it was in FDR's day) and this kind of spending needs to be seen as the long-term investment in our economic future that it is; restore a fair, honest, broad-based system of public contracting that will put large numbers of Americans to work on these new projects (and write the new rules in a way that ensures that the firms doing the most innovative work don't have to compete with unfair behemoth corporations like Halliburton and Lockheed for the lion's share of the funding) so that once there is a healthy, competitive construction industry that knows how to build sustainable projects—and is relying on the government to keep it in business—we will get a political constituency that will fight to ensure that the rebuilding will continue for the next several decades, regardless of what political party is in power; use the forces of globalization and information to strengthen and expand existing democratic alliances and created new ones; employ these alliances to destroy terrorist networks and establish new international security structures; lead, through our historic principles, on international cooperative efforts in spreading economic opportunity and democratic liberties, nation building, counter-prolification, and optimum environmental protection and safeguards; and cherish, honor, and protect our history and traditions of liberty and freedoms domestically particularly with respect to the Bill of Rights."

"The renewed social contract for America with its middle class and poor must:
  • Raise the minimum wage still higher and on a regular basis. It has fallen far behind increases in inflation since the 1970s, and that affects higher level wages as well.
  • Encourage living-wage programs by local governments. Governments can demand that their contractors and suppliers pay well above the minimum wage. There is substantial evidence that this does not result in an undue loss of jobs.
  • Enforce the labor laws vigilantly. Minimum-wage and maximum-hour laws are violated to a stunning degree. American workers shouldn't be forced by their employers to understate the number of hours worked or be locked in the warehouse so they can't leave on time. Workers often make only $2 and $3 an hour.
  • Unions are not seeking a free pass to organize secretly when they advocate for open check-offs on cards to approve of a union vote. They are seeking to organize without persistent and often illegal management interference. Penalties for illegally deterring such organizing are so light, it makes little sense for management not to pursue strategies to stop organizing even at the cost of prosecution.
  • Request that trading partners develop serious environmental standards and worker-protection laws. This is good for them, bringing a progressive revolution and a robust domestic market to their countries. It is good for America, which will be able to compete on a more level playing field.
  • Demand that the president, governors and mayors speak up about unconscionable executive salaries and low wages. The influence from the top cannot be underestimated. A president who looks the other way sends a strong signal to business. A president who demands responsible treatment of workers will get a response. Business does not like such attention.
  • These measures should be accompanied by serious investment in modernized infrastructure and energy alternatives, which can create millions of domestic jobs that pay good salaries. It should also be accompanied by a policy that supports a lower dollar -- contrary to Rubinomics -- in order to stimulate manufacturing exports again. Accomplishing this may require a new system of semi-fixed currencies across the globe. The unabashed high-dollar policy of the past twenty years has led to imbalances around the world that have contributed fundamentally to US overindebtedness.
  • And finally, the nation needs more balance on the part of the Federal Reserve between subduing inflation and creating jobs. Americans can live with inflation above 2 percent a year. There is no academic evidence to support a 2 percent annual target, although the Fed has made this its informal target."

The Continuing Case for The Second Bill of Rights for All American Citzens

...from Michael Lind on Salon.com on 11 January 2010 ....

The Case for Economic Rights

FDR said it and it holds 66 years later: There are benefits and opportunities every American should expect to enjoy

Three score and six years ago, the greatest president of the 20th century gave one of his greatest speeches. On Jan. 11, 1944, in a State of the Union address that deserves to be ranked with Lincoln's "Gettysburg Address" and King's "I Have a Dream" speech, President Franklin D. Roosevelt called for recognition of a "Second Bill of Rights." According to FDR:

"This Republic had its beginning, and grew to its present strength, under the protection of certain inalienable political rights -- among them the right of free speech, free press, free worship, trial by jury, freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures. They were our rights to life and liberty. As our nation has grown in size and stature, however -- as our industrial economy expanded -- these political rights proved inadequate to assure us equality in the pursuit of happiness."

Roosevelt did not argue that economic rights had superseded basic, old-fashioned political and civil rights. The argument of authoritarians and totalitarians that economic rights are more important than non-economic liberty was abhorrent to him. Instead, with the examples of the fascist and communist regimes of his time in mind, he argued that the purpose of economic rights was to support and reinforce, not replace, civil and political liberties:

"We have come to a clear realization of the fact that true individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and independence. 'Necessitous men are not free men.' People who are hungry and out of a job are the stuff of which dictatorships are made.

In our day these economic truths have become accepted as self-evident. We have accepted, so to speak, a second Bill of Rights under which a new basis of security and prosperity can be established for all -- regardless of station, race, or creed."

President Roosevelt was not promoting economic rights that were necessarily enforceable in court, but rather economic benefits and opportunities that every American should expect to enjoy by virtue of citizenship in our democratic republic. Many of the rights he identified have been secured by programs with bipartisan support. These include:

"the right to a good education" (the G.I. Bill, student loans, Pell Grants, Head Start, federal aid to K-12 schools) and

"the right of every family to a decent home" (federally subsidized home loans and tax breaks for home ownership). But even before the global economic crisis, the U.S. fell short when it came to full employment --

"the right to a useful and remunerative job in the industries or shops or farms or mines of the nation"

-- and a living wage --

"the right to earn enough to provide adequate food and clothing and recreation."

Roosevelt's vision was controversial at the time and is contested today. When it comes to providing a safety net for Americans, there are three distinct paradigms, which I would describe as economic citizenship, welfare corporatism and faith-based charity.

Supporters of faith-based charity among "theoconservatives" such as Marvin Olasky argue that modern social insurance like Social Security and Medicare was a mistake. The medieval British and colonial American systems of relying on religious institutions to care for the sick and poor should have been continued and built upon, with government subsidies to "faith-based institutions."

The secular business-class right, however, has shown little interest in faith-based charity, perhaps because it is difficult for rent-seeking bankers, brokers and other private sector actors to extract huge amounts of money from tax-exempt church hospitals and church soup lines. The right's preferred alternative to the progressive vision of economic citizenship is what I call "welfare corporatism." Whereas economic citizenship views protection against sickness, unemployment and old age as entitlements of citizens in a democratic republic, welfare corporatism treats these necessities of life as commodities like groceries or appliances, to be purchased in a market by people who are thought of as consumers, not citizens.

Let's contrast ideal versions of the two approaches. In the ideal America of economic citizenship, there would be a single, universal, integrated, lifelong system of economic security including

single-payer healthcare,

Social Security, unemployment payments and

family leave

paid for by a single contributory payroll tax (which could be made progressive in various ways or reduced by combination with other revenue streams). Funding for all programs would be entirely nationalized, although states could play a role in administration. There would still be supplementary private markets in health and retirement products and services for the affluent, but most middle-class Americans would continue to rely primarily on the simple, user-friendly public system of economic security. As Steven Attewell points out, the Social Security Act of 1935 was intended not merely to provide public pensions for the elderly but to establish a framework for a comprehensive system of social insurance corresponding to President Roosevelt's "right to adequate protection from the economic fears of old age, sickness, accident, and unemployment." Attewell writes: "We need to go back to the original drawing board -- the Social Security Act of 1935 -- to finish the job it began and create a truly universal and comprehensive social welfare state."

In the utopia of welfare corporatism, today's public benefits -- Social Security, Medicare, unemployment insurance and, in a few states, public family leave programs -- would be abolished and replaced by harebrained schemes dreamed up by libertarian ideologues at corporate-funded think tanks like the Cato Institute and the Heritage Foundation. Tax subsidies would be funneled to insurance companies, brokers and banks. Social Security would be replaced by a bewildering miscellany of tax-favored personal savings accounts. Medicare would be replaced by a dog's breakfast of tax subsidies for purchasing health insurance and personal medical savings accounts. Unemployment insurance would give way to yet another Rube Goldberg scheme of tax-favored unemployment insurance accounts. As for family leave -- well, if you're not wealthy enough to pay out of pocket for a nanny for your child or a nurse for your parent, you're out of luck.

The strongest case for economic citizenship instead of welfare corporatism is economic. Economic citizenship is more efficient and cheaper in the long run, because the government need only meet costs, while subsidized private providers must make a profit. The Democratic and Republican supporters of welfare corporatism justify their system of massive subsidies for for-profit healthcare and retirement security with the claim that market competition will keep down prices. If only that were true. Competitive markets are probably impossible to create, in the highly regulated insurance sector and the highly concentrated financial sector that sells private retirement goods and services.

It follows that a policy of subsidizing oligopolies and monopolies, via government subsidies to consumers, in the absence of government-imposed price controls, is a recipe for cost inflation, as the providers jack up their prices, sending the consumers back to Congress to demand even more public subsidies. By its very nature, welfare corporatism funnels public resources, in the form of tax breaks, to rent-seeking, predatory firms in the FIRE (finance, insurance, real estate) sector, with ever-swelling dead-weight costs on the economy. Welfare corporatism equals corporate welfare.

Unfortunately, most progressives have failed to make the case against the libertarian myth of market competition in the provision of social insurance. All too many, including President Obama, have made the too-clever-by-half argument that the public option would keep prices down by means of market competition. In other words, the center-left has borrowed a bogus argument about competition from right-wing free-market fundamentalism in order to defend a token public program that ceased to be of any interest once Obama and the Democrats in Congress ruled that Americans with employer-provided insurance would be banned from joining the public option. When you're reduced to parroting the opposition's erroneous theories, in the process of begging for a slight modification of the opposition's pet program, you clearly don't have the nerve or the patience to play the long game in politics.

In a response to one of my earlier columns, Will Marshall wonders how I can dare to criticize the legacy of Bill Clinton, a Democrat. My reasons should be clear by now. I am not a partisan Democratic operative focused on winning the next election. I am interested only in strengthening the republic through a gradual expansion of economic citizenship in the tradition of Franklin Roosevelt's Second Bill of Rights. If this means criticizing Democratic presidents who expand welfare corporatism instead of economic citizenship, so be it.

As part of his opportunistic policy of triangulation between his own party and the opposition, Bill Clinton joined the Republicans in a three-pronged assault on New Deal economic citizenship. He and the Republican Congress abolished Aid to Families With Dependent Children, a flawed and unpopular means-tested program for the poor that should have been reformed as a national program rather than turned over to the states as the neo-Confederate right insisted. Instead of piecemeal expansion of single-payer healthcare, Clinton pushed a version of employer-based welfare corporatism plus subsidies that came out of the playbook of moderate Republicans like Nixon. And we now know that Clinton secretly agreed to support Newt Gingrich's drive to partly privatize Social Security, in return for dedicating the federal government's imaginary future surpluses to what was left of Social Security. In 2005, Will Marshall argued in favor of private accounts, on the grounds that they would soften up Americans for cuts in Social Security: "If today's workers start saving and investing more in stocks and bonds, the returns they earn would allow us to trim their Social Security benefits later, without reducing their overall standard of living."

While George W. Bush pushed for partial privatization of Social Security, he failed because of massive public opposition. But Bush and the Republican majority in Congress succeeded in enacting the Social Security drug benefit, a flawed but genuine expansion of economic citizenship. Clinton is the only president to have successfully supported the destruction of a New Deal entitlement, while Bush presided over the greatest expansion of the Rooseveltian entitlement system since Lyndon Johnson passed Medicare.

For his part, Barack Obama, like Bill Clinton, rejected single-payer in favor of a moderately conservative welfare corporatist approach to healthcare reform. In contrast, Obama's proposal for student loan reform, an idea discussed in the Clinton years, would move in the right direction, away from welfare corporatism and toward economic citizenship, by replacing subsidized third-party lenders with direct government provision of student loans to needy college students.

Parties are coalitions of interest groups, they are not public philosophies, and presidents, great and minor, are and have to be opportunists. In contrast, reformers only have a chance of succeeding if they stick to their basic principles and keep their eyes on the prize. Progressives should support any politician, Democrat or Republican, who expands economic citizenship to the detriment of welfare corporatism, and they should oppose any politician, Democrat or Republican, who expands welfare corporatism to the detriment of economic citizenship.

Any more questions?

Monetary Cost of Iraq War

31 January 2008

Discouraging, Unsettling News from Afghanistan

The long ongoing war against the Taliban and al-Qaida in Afghanistan, now at over six years, continues to be at best a stalemate and only promises greater frustrations and tragedies for the remainder of 2008 and on in to 2009. It would be highly beneficial to see an additional one-half million NATO and US troops in Afghanistan to aid in the efforts, along with workers to help build roads, infrastructure, schools, parks, and housing for the disadvantaged and seniors. A widespread attempt to commit to such lofty goals would be formidable but could pay off handsomely. But it is not going to happen. And that is too bad in a part of the world where life is hard beyond our imagination and where the next generation of anti-Western and fervantly anti-American terrorists are desparately struggling currently as merely children.


*****

Economic Stimulus Proposal Largely Meaningless

Sure, the Bush junta and the hapless Congress are going to throw hundreds and thousands of dollars at American consumers to the tune of over $150 billion in the futile and desparate hope of reviving the economy. As usual, Jim Hightower has a much more meaningful and constuctive proposal that should be employed. It is much better than the idea the Bush junta has that going shopping will be the salvation of the economy.




*****

White Collar Crimes Have Been Massively Committed

It is about time the FBI is getting on the cases of mass mortgage and other loans frauds. These "law enforcement agents" should have working on investigations and filing prosecution papers with federal attorneys going back at least a few years. But instead they work on things like trying to locate DB Cooper, Communists, gamblers, and other relatively petty and insignificant problems.


*****


Why Edwards and Kucinich Supporters Are Moving Towards Supporting Obama

With the withdrawal of John Edwards from the campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, along with the earlier withdrawal of Dennis Kucinich, Progressives and Communitarians across the nation are likely to transfer their support to Senator Obama and rally to help him win the nomination, and ultimately, the presidency. Obama is in a close struggle with Clinton for the nomination and the upcoming Super Tuesday Primaries and Caucuses in 22 states will go a long way in making that determination.

This writer has yet to determine who will get his support with the withdrawal of Edwards and Kucinich, but logic and reason would say that it would have to go to Obama, probably after further clarification of policy direction aspirations are made more clear.


*****

$20 Trillion to Save the Planet

The cost of changing our energy sources and economy to save the Earth and its inhabitants from the effects of global warming is at least a staggering $20 TRILLION and probably more realistically double to triple of that. It is unimaginable to believe governments, corporations, and the wealthy are going to spend and invest anywhere near this kind of money that would be required to keep society and civilization operating largely as it is now, as flawed as it currently is.

The inevitable logical conclusion is that global warming is going to continue to increase full force and much more powerfully and quickly than is being discussed resulting in enormous numbers of deaths and huge numbers of displaced people, substantially altered ecosystems and mass extinctions of wildlife, a marked change in weather, climate, temperature, and precipation patterns and predictability, and a crippling impact on perhaps billions of people with vast property losses and steep declines in standards of living and quality of life down to the most basic levels of drinking water, foods, and dietary nutrition.


http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/01/31/6751/


http://www.voanews.com/english/Science/2008-02-01-voa21.cfm



http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2008/01/bill-we-just-ha.html



*****

Widespread Substandard and Failing Colorado Roads and Highways May Not Get the Help Needed

Roads and highways across Colorado, particularly in the Front Range corridor from Fort Collins to Pueblo, and from the eastern Denver suburbs to Vail and beyond, are quickly deteriorating and are in desperate need of maintenance,upkeep, and improvements. Many highways are markedly over safe capacity and are being used by triple to quadruple the number of vehicles the highways and roads were designed for. There are thousands of lane miles in need of improvements such as safety improvements (permanent weatherproof lane, median, and shoulder stripings and markings with rumblestrips); additional lighting and signage; expansion of on/off ramps and extensions of acceleration/deceleration lanes; construction of additional lanes, HOV lanes, buslanes, and corridors for lightrail and other mass transit; and reconstruction and widening of bridges and overpasses. All projects need to also include safety and access improvements for pedestrians and bicyclists.

I-25 is in need of serious work throughout the far southern part of the immediate metro Denver area (south of County Line Road to Castle Rock) and north from I-270 to 144th Avenue; I-70 needs work from east of Quebec to east of the Mouse Trap at Brighton Boulevard and west from Pecos to the I-76 interchange and west from Kipling to the C-470 interchange and then westward well into the mountains; I-270 needs extensive work virtually its entire length from York to I-70; I-76 needs work from its western start near Wadsworth northeast past Brighton; C-470 is in bad shape from 1-25 west past Santa Fe and very soon all the way west and north to I-70; I-225 needs intense attention from Colfax south to Parker; US6 needs major work from east of I-25 clear west past Colfax and into Golden; US36 (Boulder Turnpike) needs extensive improvements from west of Federal northwest all the way into Boulder. and US 285 needs tremendous improvements from C-470 east past Santa Fe and beyond to I-25. Santa Fe Drive/US 85 needs to be converted into a full freeway from Castle Rock north and west to C-460 and north from Highlands Ranch through Littleton, Englewood, and on into Denver with a terminus at Alameda Avenue. Wadsworth Boulevard needs to be converted into a full freeway from C-470 north to US6 and from I-70 north to Broomfield and perhaps all the way to Longmont. Alameda needs to be made into an expressway from Leetsdale east past I-225 to Buckley Avenue. Arapahoe Road needs to be a full freeway from west of Havana to well east of Parker Road. Parker Road need substantial improvements to a make a safer expressway from west of Havana and east and south to the town of Parker. A new freeway to parallel I-25 needs to be constructed from SE Castle Rock to E-470 east of I-25. 120th Avenue should be converted into a freeway/expressway from just east of Broomfield east to Tower Road. And construction of the Prairie Falcon Freeway from north of Greeley going south to the north side of Pueblo needs to be started upon within a few years.

Statewide, I-25 needs work from Wellington south to Erie; and from south of Castle Rock to south of Pueblo. Numerous state highways from the Four Corners region through the mountains and northwest plateau and out on the eastern plains are in need of upgrades and expansion. The list of surface streets and arterials is very lengthy and would have to be quite detailed to be included here. Getting the Heartland Expressway Freeway in Eastern Colorado constructed and built connecting I-27 out of Amarillo north into Colorado using US 287 as a guide to Limon and then north to near Sidney, Nebraska is another project that needs to be have ground broken on in the next few years

The cost of addressing all of Colorado's current and looming transportation issues would be near $500 billion. The only logical way to secure funding for all the necessary projects that need to be done over the next generation is through a change and an in increase fuel taxes (from a cents per gallon basis to a percentage per gallon basis); a dedicated sales tax of 1 1/2 to 3 percent on all sales of auto parts, accessories, equipment, services, and chemicals; an excise tax of 8 to 10 percent on all motor vehicle sales in excess of $25,000 with additional excises on vehicle prices exceeding $50K and $60K; and increased fines on violations of the motor vehicle code with greater enforcement and fines on largely ignored offenses such as loud bass stereo noise audible from more than 10" from the vehicle, illegal suspension and exhaust systems, and vehicles that have excessive window tinting.

It is possible to get Colorado's roads and highways modernized and upgraded, but it will have to come for a variety of funding sources, and not just by skyrocketing registration fees which will only encourage and often necessitate avoidance of compliance by the poor and working class.


*****

January is the New March ?

Scientific evidence is starting to point that way with the wild weather experienced across the nation in the first month of 2008. It will be interesting to see the final numbers for January when they get fully compiled in about two weeks. Of greater interest is what the weather and climate will be like in February and March. Hopefully it will be warmer and less unsettled. It would be super really nice also if some of that record warmth made it to the part of country where I reside. Winter has gotten stinky old here on the Front Range corridor with ongoing two plus months with little, if any, break from ongoing extreme winter cold and frequent snow and wind.


http://www.usatoday.com/weather/news/2008-01-31-wild-january-weather_N.htm?loc=interstitialskip

http://twister.sbs.ohio-state.edu/text/severe/records/

*****

30 January 2008

The Real State of the Union

These are the true, cold hard facts about what the State of the Union here in the United States really are. The honest picture is much different than all the horse manure and bald-faced lies the Bush junta tried to sell us on Monday Night on Capital Hill. These thirteen truths and facts listed in this article are what is really going on in America, and we, the ordinary people, are the big huge losers with no end in sight and things likely only to worsen.

http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/01/30/6725/

*****

We Should All Be This Excellent

This has got to be the epitome of government arrogance and ineptitude. It is difficult to believe this local California municipality is using the courts to mandate this man to create trash and not recycle just so they can continue to collect $50 per month off him. I would have to think he is going to "clean up big" when this does get in front of a judge.


*****

Map Showing Foreclosures Nationally

Here is a map from Realty Trac that shows where foreclosure rates are at. As expected the highest rates are in Sunbelt cities and suburbs as well as a few Rust Belt areas like Cleveland and Detroit. It appears states like North Dakota, Iowa, South Dakota, Mississippi, West Virginia, and Kentucky are largely untouched by the real estate crash and debacle. Here in the Northern Rockies, foreclosures are occuring, but at a much smaller rate than points south and west. One must conclude banking practices are more responsible and thoughtful in these areas where rates of foreclosure are significantly lower.


*****

Feds Stunningly Pull Support for FutureGen Coal Plant in Illinois

Much the same as the Super-collider Federal project in the late 80s, federal funding support for a new energy technology generation coal plant to be constructed in Illinois was cancelled due to politics and more powerful influences favoring other uses of the monies and bias towards existing energy technologies. This is a tremendous setback to creating alternative clean energy sources to address global warming. Hopefully the next administration will reverse this serious error of judgement and offer full support for this project in 2009 so we can get to work soon on cleaning up all the harmful CO2 emissions from electricity generating coal plants across the nation within a decade.




*****

The Tyranny of the Supreme Court

Increasingly, decisions by courts, particularly the Supreme Court, show a pronounced bias favorable to corporations and the wealthy, and against the poor, economically hardshipped, and financially disadvantaged. Unfortunately this is not going to change in the next decade as the conservative majority is likely to continue for quite some time as those justices are young enough to probably be on the bench well into the next two decades. The core of the conservatives - Roberts, Thomas, and Alito- are all still fairly young and one can expect them to be still adjudicating in the year 2020 and beyond. The liberal leaning judges - Stevens, Ginsburg, and Souter - are all aged or well on their way and probably will need to be replaced for one reason or another within the next few years. Scalia and Kennedy will probably be gone as well within 10-15 years, if not sooner, and Breyer should still be serving as 2020 nears. Much depends on whom will be elected President not only in 2008, but also 2012 and 2016. The political makeup of the US Senate is also an important factor on whom will get designated for a seat on the land's highest court.


*****

The Sunset on America is About Here

It is has been a long run for the United States as the dominant economic, and often, political power on the globe for over the last century. It would appear that the United States will become more like Britain and France, predecessors to America's reign, and become a second rate power globally within a generation. This is a good thing, as it will probably mean a greater likelihood of improvements in the standard of living and quality of life for many Americans if the historical precedents in the former European powers is followed.


*****


Satellite Probable to Impact North America

Most of the satellites and assorted space junk that orbits far above the planet usually burn up or plunge somewhere into the vast oceans when coming down from high above. But this time, a spy satellite is now projected to make an impact somewhere on the North American continent in late February or early March. So, HEADS UP, when the word comes down on the details of when, where, and how much we can expect from this looming crash.


*****

News on Tunguska Meteor Disaster

Many of us have read or heard of the massive destruction likely caused by a meteor across eastern Siberia almost a century in June 1908. For many years it is has been somewhat unclear on what happened in that region and what the cause was. Early speculation was on a meteor that made an impact, but later research determined it was an aerial explosion of a meteor that created the widespread destruction of the Taiga forest in this remote desolate largely unpopulated region even today. Russian scientists still theorize it was a small comet that was the cause. Today's story reports research seems to indicate the heavenly body was probably much smaller than earlier believed as a result of studying the impact and extent of the damage.

We had a near miss earlier this week of an asteroid hitting the earth, and that body was much larger than the astronomical "rock" that blew down hordes of trees in Siberia. Fortunately, this time it was a miss. Had there been in an impact on land the destruction would have been vast.

But someday an impact from a body of that size, perhaps larger, will occur.



*****

The Baseball Network Draws Closer to Its Birth

With this news of construction of this new building to house the new Baseball Network in New York City's Harlem borough, the reality of this broadcast channel coming on board most everywhere in thirteen months is getting closer.

The Baseball Network will go live in February 2009 on the basic package of most cable TV packages, unlike the networks from the NFL, NBA, and NHL. The network will feature a couple of live games per weeks to start with, and the extensive lengthy library of baseball games and features will make up much of the remainder of the programming along with coverage and reporting of the sport on a daily regular basis. It is also likely to have games from minor league and college baseball as well.


*****

North Dakota: Where Honest, Straightforward Politics Still Occurs

The Peace Garden State is truly a breath of fresh air when it comes to how politics are conducted. Once upon a time, long ago and far away, it was this way in most places across the nation. But in states and metro areas where populations exceed two million, probably less, the business of politics is very impersonal, very expensive, very time-consuming, and relies heavily on television to get the message out.


*****

John Edwards Gives Up the Ghost

Former North Carolina US Senator and 2004 Democratic Vice-Presidential nominee John Edwards withdrew from the campaign for the Democratic Presidential Nomination on Wednesday 30 January in New Orleans after a steady series of third place finishes in the already completed primaries and caucuses. Edwards had settled in third place in the race and, with funding on the wane, prospects for improvement in the field were all but gone.

The Edwards presidential candidacy raised important critical issues to voters across the nation but he lacked the charisma of Obama and the machine and organization of Clinton. However, it is likely Edwards will play a key role in helping determine the eventual nominee and much of the policy recommendations to be put forth in the party platform at the late summer Democratic National Convention in Denver. Another vice-presidential nod is very unlikely for Edwards, but if Clinton or Obama is elected President, Edwards could be tapped for a key cabinet position, most likely Attorney General.

Edwards declined to endorse one of his rivals on Wednesday, but look for an endorsement before the end of February after things shake out in the next few weeks.

Edwards was one of the candidates I greatly supported, along with Kucinich, for the presidency. His departure leaves me uncommitted and uncertain on whom to support. Clinton is out and I am still waiting to hear more specifics from Obama. I have never voted Republican for President in my 32 years of presidential elections, but a vote for McCain is something I have not ruled out at this point.

But it is still over nine months to general elections on Tuesday 4 November.

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20080130/D8UGF5FG5.html

*****

Giuliani Bags It, Throws Support to McCain

As was widely anticipated, Rudy Giuliani ended his campaign for GOP presidential nomination on Wednesday 30 January and gave his support and endorsement to frontrunner John McCain.

The Giuliani endorsement does no favors for Willard Romney, as the former Massachusetts governor already faces a huge uphill battle to overtake McCain with the 19 state Super Tuesday primaries looming in six days with a sizeable number of delegates at stake.

The swift and sudden demise of the Giuliani candidacy for the presidency was largely due to about three reasons: whispers over inproprieties and scandals while he was mayor of New York City, a lack of national and foriegn policy experience, and a seeming distrust and lack of confidence on what kind of a man he really is. Add all that to a foolish campaign strategy to place all his cards on Florida and what resulted is not too big a shocker in hindsight.

McCain is now likely to sweep to big wins in most of the larger primary states next week, and his efforts in California are likely to reinforced with a forthcoming endorsement on Thursday from California Republican Governor Arnold Schwartzenegger.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/30/us/politics/30cnd-campaign.html?hp

*****

29 January 2008

George, It Over ! Just Start Marking Time Like the Rest of Us Already Have Been Doing

If George Bush and his junta think that they are going to get anything accomplished in the next ten and one-half months remaining in their positions, they are sadly and pathetically mistaken. Particularly in the matters of foriegn affairs, there is absolutely zero chance of getting anything done. On the domestic front, he may stop some legislation or force it to be altered, but we all know that better as gridlock.


*****

Obama to Make Big Gamble

The issuance of drivers licenses to illegal aliens is a hotbutton issue, and is opposed by over two-thirds of American citizens. Obama is supporting the issuance of licenses to illegals in hopes of capturing the votes of Hispanics in upcoming Democratic primaries, particularly in California.

But this decision will ultimately come back to haunt him and bite him big, even if he does not win the Democratic presidential nomination. Most Americans do not want anything done whatsoever to facilitate the presense of outsiders, essentially invaders, that are in country illegally and causing enormous legal, economic, and cultural upheavals in many places across the land.


*****

Lawsuit Filed to Stop Killings of Wolves

Rather than kill wolves, areas where there is an excess of the creatures not good for the microecosystem should be trapped, removed and transferred to other areas where wolves are needed to bring ecosystems back into balance. That would be about 80 % of the Mountain Time Zone; over 95 % of the American West and Great Plains, the historical range of Northern Wolves in the continental US; and nearly 100 % of the nation at whole.

But lawyers and rich corporations will stop the right thing from being done eventually unless there is a change of leadership and vision in various levels of government and an epiphany in the outback of America. Hopefully this lawsuit will be successful initially and ultimately.



*****

Why Investigative Journalism Has Largely Disappeared

As the research shows, it is because of the money necessary to support a journalistic enterprise that almost completely comes from corporations and their advertisements in the press. You cannot take on the source for the food that feeds you unless you are independent enough. And also virtuous, conscientious, and with a consciousness. And with the widespread of demise of investigative journalism by most of the mainstream print and broadcast journalism outlets and sources in the nation, the losers are the American public, who are left without the necessary information for our democracy and economic system to work the way it is supposed to.
*****

Wealthy People, Corporations Doing Lions Share of Destruction to Planet

Monbiot makes a powerful and compelling argument on why overall population growth is far less harmful to the planet than the excesses and greed of corporations and wealthy people. There is little doubt the soulless immoral peddlers of unlimited consumption and their consumer addicts are doing far greater damage to the environment of the planet which will result inevitably in a very short time in a cataclysm that is largely unimaginable to most everyone, particularly the poorer and nonwealthy masses that will directly and personally feel and experience the epic change.


*****

John McCain Scores Victory in Florida Republican Primary

Arizona US Senator John McCain scored a critical victory over Willard Romney in the Florida Republican Primary on Tuesday 29 January, picking up all 57 delegates in play in the primary contest. McCain is expected to win the primary by about three to six percentage points over the former Massachusetts governor and ex-front runner. Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee continued to fade with his fourth place finish in the Sunshine State, behind Rudy Giuliani. Giuliani did poorer in Florida than was expected, basically ending his campaign for the nomination. The former New York City mayor is expected to drop out on Wednesday 30 January in Californina and extend his support and endorsement to McCain after Giuliani seemingly was a leadpipe-cinch certainty to win the nomination just weeks ago.

For a campaign that was all but dead less than three months ago, McCain has made a tremendous and unexpected comeback to seize the lead for the nomination that he could very well may begin to cement next Tuesday with the nineteen Republican primaries and caucuses being conducted on 5 February. McCain is favored to win most of those contests according to polls and research at this time.
The win in the Florida Primary for McCain was tremendous and a huge step towards earning the GOP Presidential nomination. For Romney and Huckabee, the defeats were staggering defeats and very well may be another step towards the demise of their candidacies unless they make surprising rebounds on Super Tuesday. Otherwise, those two campaigns may be all but dead.


*****

Is It Much Worse Than We Can Imagine ?

I truly believe the American economy is headed for a long period in the toilet, but I largely doubt the current economic downturn will spiral into a depression. I would think that such an economic deterioration of that extent would be unlikely, but trying to understand and grasp all the dynamics in our economy is difficult if not impossible at times. I would think, though, that an unanticipated surprising trigger mechanism, such as war with Iran or another shocking terrorist attack on American soil, would have to occur to push the American economy even minimally into a depression. Could the assassination of one of the frontrunners in the campaign for the presidential nominations impact the economy to that extent ? History would say no, so if a tragedy like this were to occur, the economy would not be impacted.


*****

Major Coverup Being Exposed by European Press on Secret Nuclear Sales by American Authorities to Turkey and Elsewhere

I do not believe virtually any Americans anywhere are aware of this building story that involves serious breaches of US law by American authorities in the Executive Branch, including George Bush and Richard Cheney. This is indeed a growing scandal that will rock the nation once it becomes more publicized.


*****

Comparing Emissions from US States to Nations

This is an interesting and insightful report and study. The 291 million Americans are creating greenhouse gases and pollution greater than over three billion other peoples around the planet. Some of the ratios between state(s) and a nation creating a similar level of pollution are alarming when comparing their populations. Just four states - Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, and Oklahoma - create as much pollution as India ! And surprisingly, another four states - North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, and Iowa - exceed the pollution created by Brazil ! And just eight states - Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, and Maryland - create greater pollution than the entire continent of Africa !



*****

Senseless Murder in the Galapagos

The news of the slaughter of these peaceful innocent friendly creatures is utterly sickening and appalling. It is rapidly getting to the point where these ecologically unique islands need to be placed in isolation with only limited human access, almost exclsuively scientific, due to the enormous destruction mankind is creating in effect on and to the creatures and the ecosystem on the Galapagos Islands.


*****

Clinton Rebounds to Win Florida Democratic Primary

New York US Senator Hillary Clinton rebounded from her overwhelming defeat Saturday in South Carolina to win a largely meaningless Florida Democratic Primary on Tuesday 29 January.
Her victory margin over Barack Obama will be in the area of 15 - 19 % in the Sunshine State where no delegates will be awarded.

Next up is the big day being awaited for by candidates, the media, observers, and many voters: Super Tuesday, 5 February, when over 20 states conduct primaries and caucuses to select candidates for nomination in both parties.

*****

27 January 2008

A Horrible Injustice Righted, to a Small Extent

Law Enforcement and the District Attorneys office in Fort Collins and Larimer County, CO, conducted a broad evil conspiracy to frame and convict a man innocent of a heinous crime. This is not that rare across America. Every week we hear of someone's conviction getting thrown out and that individual being freed after being wrongfully convicted due to subterfuge and treachery from police officers, investigators, and government paid lawyers. How many 100,000s of people have had this happen to them in the history of this nation ? How many 10000s of people are currently being incarcerated because of this evil ? Pressure from corporate officials and other government officials on cops and district attorneys often compel them to frame someone just to get a conviction. Get a conviction, any kind of conviction, on anybody who can possibly be sold to a jury as the one who did the crime, when in actuality and fact, they had nothing to do with it. This is a sad commentary on the character-deprived types of people who have the responsibility for upholding and enforcing the law.

These public officials must be held accountable for their conspiracy and evil in framing this innocent man. Hopefully he will win an eight figure settlement and those involve in this debacle will be incarcerated themselves.


*****

Corporations Do Not Care About Global Warming and the Environment ! Duh !

The unmitigated uncontrollable narcotic of greed and money making and power acquisition are far too universally important and an all consuming activity for most corporations to think about doing something constructive on their part to address global warming and environmental degradation. Too bad, they will be sorry sooner than they could ever realize and maybe most, if not all, of them will cease to exist along with the most of the rest of us.

*****

Romney Gains Essential Endorsement

Most of the endorsements Willard Mitt Romney has received already are from types of people very similar to the one giving this endorsement recently.



*****

No Soup for You, Poor People !

The Bush junta and Fed chairman Barnanke obviously do not give a damn about providing any economic assistance with the recovery program they have announced. If you are not a taxpayer, retired, unemployed, handicapped, retarded, or disadvantaged, tough luck, says George and Ben, you are not getting another dime out of this government !

Actually this is not too surprising for these heartless soulless greedy scalawags. After all, if you think about, this economic stimulus program is actually a bank bailout program in disguise. Most people are going to use their money to pay their credit card debt or simply save it. Either way, it gives cash flow and monies for banks. Less than 20 % of taxpayers getting money from the government in this bailout are expected to spend it on consumer goods at stores and retailers.


*****

Depth and Breadth of Obama Win in South Carolina Rather Amazing

Senator Barack Obama scored a victory convincingly in the South Carolina primary on Saturday. Analysis of the results show a surprising cross section of support in all types of demographics and voter groups. And the numbers in the areas where he was supported less in are likely to grow with this victory and growing endorsements from other respected Democrats and media sources.

*****

Obama Picks Up Key Endorsements

The overwhelming primary victory in South Carolina on Saturday was just the beginning of the good news for Barack Obama. Sunday he picked up endorsements from the Philadelphia Inquirer and Sacramento Bee newspapers.

But, most importantly, he gained endorsements from long respected Democratic stalwart Senator Edward M Kennedy and the daughter of the late President John F Kennedy, Caroline Kennedy. These two key endorsements will hold substantial weight and thought in the minds and opinions of older Democratic voters, an area where Obama has lesser support.

The Clinton machine has to be further stunned with these two endorsements. Obama is gaining momentum and it very well may result in greater successes and endorsements with further surprising victories in the primaries coming in the next nine days.




*****


Near Miss of Asteroid Hitting Earth Expected

This asteroid, measuring at least 150 meters and as much as 600 meters in length, is expected to narrowly miss Earth by about one-third of a million miles on Tuesday 29 January. A close call in space terms, but there are asteroids in outer space that are going to get closer and, one day soon, a significant one will impact our planet.

I am hoping a monster one annihilates Mercury so as to possibly disrupt planetary orbits around the sun. It would also be interesting to see a good sized one impact the Moon. That would probably result in a massive destructive meteor shower on Earth and a change in gravitational physics on our planet.


*****

26 January 2008

Economic Downturn to be More Prolonged

Economists are becoming increasingly gloomy on the nation's economic prospects, with some forecasts showing a recession or continued little or no growth through perhaps even through 2009. Unemployment is forecast to now exceed 8 %, and 9 % is not out of the question. Energy prices will continue to rise and the corresponding ripple in prices of other goods and services will continue to be upward, perhaps as much as 8 to 10 % for some products. Interest rates will probably be cut another 1 1/2 to 2 % before years end, fueling additional declines in the value of the dollar internationally with the Euro perhaps getting to $1.65 or more in value and the Canadian dollar exceeding $1.10. One thing is certain: 2008 is going to be a sorry bad year for most Americans economically. Hopefully with a new administration in less than 12 months, an upturn will begin sooner than later in 2009.

*****

Obama Steamrollers Clinton to Easily Win in South Carolina

Illinois US Senator Barack Obama rolled to a surprisingly easy victory in the South Carolina Democratic Primary on Saturday 26 January, whipping delegate-leading Senator Hillary Clinton by a better than 2-1 margin. Obama's wide margin helps to springboard him as the favorite to win in Tuesday's Florida primary, three days away, and positions him well to secure some unexpected additional victories when the 20 plus states Super Tuesday primaries are held on 5 February from the Northeast to the South and west to California.

The Clinton machine has been shocked and stunned by the resiliency and growing strength of the Obama campaign. The Clinton machine is struggling deeply to come up with a message and strategy to end once and for all the Obama quest. Clinton remains the favorite to win the nomination, but is in a much greater precarious position than she was just weeks ago. Obama may yet win this nomination, but much remains to be decided in states from coast to coast over the next several weeks. Whether the Clinton machine can rebound with any resounding primary wins in the coming weeks remains to be seen.
*****

Book Recommendation

Decade of Nightmares: The End of the Sixties and the Making of Eighties America, by Philip Jenkins (Oxford University Press).

http://www.amazon.com/dp/0195178661?tag=commondreams-20&camp=0&creative=0&linkCode=as1&creativeASIN=0195178661&adid=107THYVT81N6XM1VH46E&

*****

Why I Will Not Vote For Hillary Clinton

Clinton thoroughly represents the powerful monied interests of the corporate-industrial complex, the entities largely responsible for the decline of the American Dream and the longterm ongoing collapse of the middle class standard of living in this nation. I have yet to hear anything to indicate plans or policy changes to address the global oligarchization of business and industry going on this nation and the decline of entrepreneurial competitive opportunity from their camp.

*****

Foolishness and Shortsightedness

The Bush junta's decision to open this largely pristine ecosystem for widescale logging and its eventual destruction is utterly sickening. Can a reversal on this decision or preservation and protections from courts be expected? Maybe, but it is seemingly unlikely.

The Bush Junta and the timber corporations want the countryside surounding Juneau to be like what surrounds Los Angeles in 25 years -- a desert like clime with hills and mountains only with scrub brush and weeds on them.



*****

Surprising Huge Increase in Antarctic Icecap Melt

Up to now it was largely believed there was only minimal melting occuring at the bottom of the planet. But satellite imagery and analysis is showing an exponential increase in the melting of the icecap on the last continent. Antarctica holds about 70 % of the Earth's fresh water in the form of ice and snow. While an impact on civilization is not imminent, conclusions can be made that determine a significant contribution of this meltwater will result in an increase in sealevels globally probably within a decade or so, perhaps by greater than one to two feet. And all this cold fresh water being dumped into surrounding warmer seawater is sure to also disrupt and alter currents in the southern hemisphere and result in more greater profound global warming and climate change in such places as Australia, South America, and sub-Saharan Africa.

*****

Mass Transit in Idaho Not as Welcome as in Utah

The Treasure Valley of west central Idaho where Boise is located is growing rapidly and sprawl is starting to show its ugly face with marked increases in traffic congestions and long commutes to employment centers from new exurbs where housing prices are more affordable. This is similar to what happened south in Utah in the last 25 years. Utah was late in getting into the mass transit mindset, but Utahns have embraced the change making it an unqualified success throughout the Wasatch Front despite heavy costs for development. Its unfortunate Idahoans cannot see the writing on the wall and get a jump start on establishing light rail and HOV corridors in the Boise metropolitan area now while costs are lower. If a mass transit program were to be launched in the next year or so, the Boise area could have a real state of the art system for a lot less money and this would also spur more responsible smart development and greater diverse commercial investment improving the standard of living and quality of life for Idahoans and visitors to the Treasure Valley in the coming decades as enormous population growth is projected in this region resulting in Boise becoming as large as Salt Lake City.



*****

25 January 2008

Yellowstone Wolf Ranges into Oregon

These remarkable creatures have been shown to have tremendous range. Already wolves have made into Northern Colorado, Utah, and South Dakota. Within a decade, the animals will make into Nevada, Central and Northern Californina, and eventually onto the Great Plains where plentiful game exists.

http://www.wyomingnews.com/articles/2008/01/25/local_news_updates/18local_01-25-08.txt

*****

New Mexico Considers Taxing Video Games, TV to Fund Health Care

The Leave No Child Inside Bill being proposed in the New Mexico state legislature sounds like a good idea to start with. It probably does not go far enough. Promotions to the next academic grade in all schools probably need to be made to include meeting certain physical fitness and wellness standards for all children that are medically and developmentally capable of meeting the standards required. The program could be put into place immediately for grades 1-3 and expanded a new grade level each new year to have all public, private and home-schooled students in the program in nine years. Similar programs could eventually be extended to college age students and employers who have a minimum number of employees and/or also receive or are eligible for government funds and contracts. For adults, tax incentives would be the lure.

We will see what happens, but the time is probably still not right for enactment of this kind of lifestyle altering legislation.

http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=080125230108.k05u9plm&show_article=1

*****

24 January 2008

Federal Economic Stimulus Plan Announced

The heart of the plan is the cash being given back ( and in some cases, away) to any working American making less than $125K per year. Individuals can look for $300; couples up to $1200; and $300 apiece for kids under 18. Thus my siblings can look forward to up to $1800; and I have friends with four kids who can look for $2400. Nice money.

If I were to get money I would probably spend it on getting my television repaired or maintenance work needed to be done on my truck, or I would save it for the inevitable future emergency.
There is a potential snag in the offing, however. It may take many months for the monies to get dispensed to the citizenry. Even if that does not happen, it is certain this federal plan will not save the US economy from further woes of continued dollar declines, greater unemployment, foreclosures, sinking home values, inflation, and business bellyups.




*****

Who Will the Nod for the Veep ?

It is always interesting to speculate on whom will chosen to be the vice presidential running mate for each party's presidential nominees. On the GOP side, my guess would be a Southern conservative, perhaps Huckabee or Thompson. Lieberman is also someone I could see getting tapped by Repubs. On the Democratic side, my guess would be Richardson, perhaps Napolitano, or Obama, if Clinton is the nominee. If Obama is the nominee, Edwards might have the veep choice, but I would guess it is going to be someone no is speculating about right now.

http://www.crisispapers.org/essays8w/runningmates.htm

*****

Interview with David Cay Johnston

Johnston, author of Free Lunch: How the Wealthiest Americans Enrich Themselves at Government Expense (and Stick You with the Bill), provides some great insight and explanation why the United States' economic and taxation system is completely wrong and immoral.

http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/interviews/092

*****

Arctic Icecap Loss Even Greater than Originally Feared

It is quite alarming to read how much ice has disappeared from the Arctic Ocean region. The projections of the icecap completely disappearing by 2012 seem to be very realistic given the rate and pace of change of the melting due to global warming. What is not so clear is what ramifications will occur on climates elsewhere on the planet and to what extent. What will climate and weather be like where I live and in places where I know individuals or may want to relocate to someday soon. I think you can boil it down to one word -- warmer...

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080123/sc_afp/arcticfranceclimatewarmingscience_080123230414

*****

Very Sad News

This is the kind of story one never reads about or hears from the mainstream media.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,2245036,00.html

*****