Pollster.com

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 March 2008

Keith Matthew Maupin, 1983 - 2004

Maupin was an US Army PFC captured on 9 April 2004 by enemy forces in Iraq and held prisoner and tortured for as an yet unknown period of time before being brutally murdered by those Arabs. DOD personnel have notified Maupin's family that his remains have been identified. Maupin was listed as POW/MIA until this recent discovery. His confirmed death joins the other over 4000 other American military personnel in Iraq. Maupin grew up and was a resident of Batavia, OH, a small town of less than 200o people about 30 miles east of Cincinnati, where some of his family still reside. His loss is a great tragedy, no greater or less than any of all the others in the Iraq War, but it is particularly noteworthy due to horrible and unimaginable circumstances surrounding it and the long period of time that elapsed. The strongest of condolences goes out to his family and colleagues and community, as it does to all those whose loved ones have paid the ultimate price in this war.

http://www.pownetwork.org/gulfII/maupin.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Maupin

*****

A Depression in Our Future ?

Increasing numbers of economists nationally and globally that are not associated with governments, politics, corporations, and media are starting to become more convinced the US is headed towards a Depression. Most economists in the limelight are saying nothing like this, but the underlying evidence is very disquieting. Additional debt is being used to finance the solvency of financial institutions that are staggering due to debt, primarily due to foreclosures, failed businesses, and increasingly slow pay by business reeling under the drop in sales and revenues. Actions that could be more forceful and effective in dealing with the growing economic crisis could be taken by the US federal government, but ideology and politics will all but prevent this. In many ways, it is looking like 1928 and 1929, and a McCain presidency may ensure the doom's occurence.

http://abcnews.go.com/Business/Economy/story?id=4544872&page=1

*****

Global Warming More Greatly Impacting Inner Mountain West

A study was recently released jointly by the National Resources Defense Council and the Rocky Mountain Climate Organization shows global warming is impacting the mountain states region more greatly than other regions in the US thus far. Since 2000, temperatures have increased by as much as 2.2 degrees F in places, particularly in the Colorado River Basin, and the High Plains of MT and WY. Arizona and Utah have been impacted the greatest with the impact on NM slightly less than elsewhere overall. The increase is estimated as being as much as 70 percent greater than elsewhere as a region. The greatest impact of these dramatic changes will be on water resources, already in critical shortage throughout much of the region due to increasing population and demands by agriculture and industry. Tourism is another industry that faces serious impacts as water, often in the form of snow, is essential for this industry. And agriculture and livestock also face increased strains due to global warming which may result in their reduction and even elimination is some areas. It will be interesting to see this same report in the middle of the next decade to observe if an even greater impact has occurred throughout the region due to global warming. This writer would think its a virtual certainty.


http://www.nrdc.org/globalWarming/west/contents.asp


*****

Best and Worst for State Taxes

This report factors in taxes that many do not pay, such as on cigarettes and liquor. States that do not or minimize the levying of income and sales taxes are most preferable, as they finance government and programs through sin taxes and taxes on corporations and non-residents. It is expected these trends will continue with further taxation and expansion of sins which will inevitably include soft drinks, fast foods, and other products which lead to unwanted behaviors and actions by people which impact society through their health and lifestyle. All things considered, sales taxes are probably more preferable to income taxes on the state and local level as the sales tax can be better managed and avoided by individuals who are thrifty, cost conscious, and buyer saavy. If possible, one should strive to live in a state where there is no income tax accessed and very adjacent to a state where there are no sales taxes. Nine states do not access income taxes (Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Washington and Wyoming; and New Hampshire and Tennessee for the greatest part) and five states lack sales taxes (Alaska, Montana, Delaware, New Hampshire and Oregon). Living in places like southern Washington, northern Wyoming, New Hampshire, NW Nevada, NW South Dakota, and Alaska make the most sense from the point of view of reducing and minimizing one's tax liabilities on a state level. This is an important reason why this writer is considering Vancouver, WA, as a possible relocation site.

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Taxes/Advice/TheBestAndWorstStatesForTaxes.aspx

*****

Costs of CAFTA

Yet another poorly thought through trade agreement is about to impact nations and peoples with strongly negative consequences. The impact of prior trade agreements like NAFTA have been devastating on many individuals, families, neighborhoods, and communities throughout North America. The social costs of these pieces of trade legislation far outweigh any positive they may produce. And what positives are produced are largely beneficial to wealthy American and multinational corporations exclusively focused on profit maximization and elimination of any and all competition, particularly if it is small and weak in power and size. Trade agreements like NAFTA and CAFTA must be fully eliminated to save the unique communities and cultures and all the diversity they have to offer for the sake of all mankind and ecosystems globally.

http://www.alternet.org/audits/80377/?page=entire

*****

29 March 2008

Census Estimates for July '07 Released

The latest estimates on population numbers for metro areas and counties was released this week by the US Census Bureau. Four Texas metro areas are among the top ten in growth in raw numbers and all of the top ten are areas in the Sunbelt with the exception of #7 Chicago. Areas showing the greatest percentage growth were also largely in the Sunbelt with the possible exception of #9 Grand Junction. 47 of the top 50 were either in the West or South. 83.5 % of the nation's population resides in the 363 metro areas of the US. Here in the Mountain Time zone, only seven counties saw significant declines in population: two in Montana, one in Wyoming (Albany), and four in New Mexico. Most counties away from metropolitan areas were up or down by one percentage point; most counties that are part of metro areas or located where tourism and retirement relocation are important local characteristics saw growth in excess of one percentage point.

http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/GCTTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=&-ds_name=PEP_2007_EST&-_lang=en&-mt_name=PEP_2007_EST_GCTT1_US25&-format=US-25US-25S&-CONTEXT=gct

http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/population/011671.html

http://www.azcentral.com/news/datacenter/counties.html

*****

28 March 2008

A New Kind of Capitalism for the US

Lets hope so ! The current model, largely in place for over two decades, has been a complete and unmitigated disaster for most Americans unless they were among the top ten percent of the wealthiest and best paid in the nation. A movement in the US towards more of a socialistic capitalism, as practiced in most nations in Europe, particularly Scandinavia, would be a tremendous improvement. Greater income equality, economic justice, entrepreneurship, competition, and opportunity would be just some of the positives that would arise as a result of a shift of this kind. And savings and investment would be at the foundation of this kind of economy rather than debt and obscene displays of wealth. In addition, many social problems that are inundating society would see a decline and reduction in numbers and scope.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/comment/outside-view-the-end-of-capitalism-as-we-know-it-799494.html

*****

Future Gloomy for Most Boomers

Very few Boomers have set aside enough money for retirement, let alone a comfortable retirement. There are numerous reasons for this, but three stand out. First, society has put enormous pressure on boomers to be consumers and purchase goods and services from the time they were youths and this psychological manipulation has continued with success usually unabated deep into adulthood. Two other reasons are probably more significant. The era of good steady employment, often for an adult lifetime, that boomers' parents had, ended over a generation ago. Employment for many in the years since has been lacking stability, commitment, and certainty as employers have utilized a different model than what existed prior to the 1980s and 1990s, including lower pay and little if any benefits. In addition, employment-paid and -provided pensions for workers have disappeared. This was another hallmark that existed in much greater numbers for the parents of boomers. Employers ditched pensions for their workers and left workers to pay for their own futures and retirement. As a result of these sea changes, the future is quite uncertain, if not grim, for boomers to a large part. Expect an explosion of social services expenses in the next two decades as boomers age and cannot continue to work. The tax system on all levels will need to be adjusted to pay for these essential critical government expenses. In addition, some boomers will opt to end their lives through suicide rather than live in an environment that is unacceptable, such as in poverty, group situations, and, most of all, old folks homes.

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/RetirementandWills/InvestForRetirement/BleakRetirementsFor150Million.aspx

*****

25 March 2008

Health Care Plan Proposal from Center For American Progress

On the surface, this plan looks outstanding. I still support Michigan US Representative John Conyers' legislation: HR 676 - The United States National Health Insurance Act, which is in process in the US House and now has eighty-eight cosponsors. Depending on what happens with the November elections, Conyers' legislation may reach the floor of the House for for the full body's consideration sometime in late 2009, and if the numbers are right in the US Senate, may even have a chance to be enacted and signed by the president, if the president is Obama. You can expect a lot of changes in the bill as it moves forward as a lot of horsetrading by the politicans everywhere will take place on such a monumental critical public policy legislative bill. The Center for American Progress offers some alternatives to consider for inclusion into the final bill. National health care and universal insurance are being strongly urged by medical professionals everywhere.

http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2005/03/progressive_prescriptions.html

http://www.americanprogress.org/projects/healthprogress/pdf/prog_prescriptions.pdf

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_National_Health_Insurance_Act

http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d108:HR676:

http://dromeish.com/2008/01/14/affordable-health-care/

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Nominees for the Corporate Hall of Shame

Most corporations are guilty of numerous sins and crimes against mankind, society, communities, families, and individuals. But there are some that are particularly aggregious. According to this website, the ones most guilty of injustice, greed, arrogance, waste, immorality and crime are Archer-Daniels Midland; Blackwater; Countrywide; Mattel; Nestle; Toyota; Wal-Mart; and Wendy's. I can come up with a list of hundreds of others that are also worthy of inclusion for shameful, immoral, and illicit acts and practices.

http://www.stopcorporateabuse.org/cms/page1651.cfm

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Most Stable and Prosperous Nations Globally

This analysis of economic, political, and societal factors in 235 of the nations on the planet by the British firm Jane's has results that are not too surprising. The list in exclusively European States in the top ten percent with the exception of #11 New Zealand, #19 Australia, and #23 Canada. Japan is the only Asian nation in the top 38; and Costa Rica comes in at #40 for the first Central American nation. The most unstable nations are all in Africa or in areas that are war torn or rife with civil discord, such as Haiti and Gaza. Iraq ranks at #224; and the United States has slipped all the way to #24 after having been in the top ten in past years in the 2oth century.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/article3617160.ece

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article3613926.ece

http://www.janes.com/

http://www.janes.com/news/security/countryrisk/

http://sentinel.janes.com/public/sentinel/index.shtml

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane%27s

*****

Mega Seaport Planned for Mexico's Baja Pacific Coast

Plans are approaching development in Mexico approximately 150 miles south of Los Angeles for a new seaport that would cost eventually in excess of $5 billion that would be the new starting point for carrying much of Asian made manufactured and agricultural products and materials into points throughout North America. The port is planned for completion in 2014, and a new rail and highway system would also be created in northern Mexico to ship these goods to population centers into the United States, perhaps even into New Mexico and Texas besides California and Arizona. The development of this facility and all this infrastructure would be a tremendous boon to Mexico, creating perhaps hundreds of thousands of jobs directly and indirectly which would go a long way in helping with the vast poverty and economic injustice that continually plagues Mexico and leads to widespread illegal immigration into the US. All that being said, one has to have concerns with the environmental impact of a project of this scope and, given the current world economic situation, whether funding and investment can be secured to even embark on this project in the next few to several years. If if is realized, it may spell the end of much of the port business in the Los Angeles metro area within two decades. Stay tuned.

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-mexport25mar25,1,5870690.story

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punta_Colonet

*****

Even Clint Eastwood Seen as "Too Liberal" By GOP Powerbrokers

The news of the ouster of Clint Eastwood as a member of the California State Parks Commission smacks of politics in every way. Eastwood and other members of the Commission stood up against a proposal to have a freeway placed through San Onofre State Beach, which is north of San Diego near the northern boundary of San Diego County. California has long been praised and lauded for having one of the nation's first and best state parks system and any effort to damage and destroy them should be quelled at every opportunity. California is already the freeway capital of the planet and additional ones, particularly in a sensitive area such as this state park, are plainly foolish and wasteful. California would be best off investing its taxpayer funds for new freeways into a statewide mass transit high speed train system, connecting San Diego to Los Angeles and cities further north in the Golden State. While additional and new freeways are a good idea in other states, the coming shock of massive gasoline prices will render the idea of new freeways a passe idea very soon in California, and mass transit in such a populated state is the only answer and direction to take.

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-clint26mar26,0,1332561.story?track=mostviewed-storylevel

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Onofre_State_Beach

*****

Outdoor Life's 200 Best Rated Places

The periodical Outdoor Life has come out with a list of the 200 Best Places to Live. Many of the communities identified as best are within the Mountain Time Zone. Most of these places have already been discovered by enthusiasts looking to escape the rat race and declining quality of life in urban and suburban America. Change is already impacting some of these communities in the form of higher housing prices, shortages of affordable housing, increased traffic and congestion, and higher incidences of many kinds of pollution. On the positive side, these places are also seeing increased options and diversity in commercial activities and increases in the local tax base. One community I identified as a possibility for eventual relocation and retirement in my future is Lewistown, MT, number six on this list. Lewistown is a remote isolated small town in central Montana and a long ways away from much of what currently defines America. It is at the base of a small ringlet of forested mountains at the western edge of the Great American Prairie. Currently, the population in the community and surrounding Fergus County is less than 15,000. Because it is so remote, growth will be slow but somewhat steady for many years ahead. Another factor working against becoming bigger faster is the weather in that area. Winters are incredibly harsh and long lasting (but very similar to to Cheyenne WY, save the wind) and often getting away to one of the larger communities that are two and one-half hours away like Billings and Great Falls are trips that are ill-advised and very dangerous for extended durations of time. As I get older, this is a kind of place that appeals to me as one has greater privacy, solitude, and freedom from the growing negative elements that are tainting and staining many places in urban and suburban America as well as smaller cities like Cheyenne where I am now. What these places seemingly offer to many people is a simpler life and a return to the past with all its freedoms. I am not sure those ideals are still obtainable and achievable even in these "best places".

http://www.newwest.net/topic/article/outdoor_life_best_places_rankings_chock_full_of_western_towns/C41/L41/

http://www.outdoorlife.com/article_gallery.jsp?ID=1000019027&showall=Y

http://www.outdoorlife.com/article.jsp?ID=1000057228

http://www.outdoorlife.com/article_gallery.jsp?ID=1000019027&page=8

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewistown,_Montana

http://www.wrcc.dri.edu/cgi-bin/cliMAIN.pl?mtlewi

*****

Partial Collapse of Antarctic Wilkens Ice Shelf Occurs

Satellite observation confirmed the recent collapse of a portion of the Wilkins Ice Shelf off Anarctica in recent days. The chunk that broke away to the sea is only about 4 % of the shelf, but the entire remaining shelf is highly in danger of fully breaking away soon, although it will probably not occur in 2oo8 as the brief but intense Antarctic summer is nearing its end. It has been believed the full Wilkins Shelf would not collapse until after 2020 at the earliest, but now it seems it is likely in the next year or so. This ice shelf is seven times the size of Connecticut and its slippage into the sea will make a noticeable addition to sea levels globally by a inch or so if not more over time. A collapse of this magnitude so much earlier than projected raises concerns with the much larger West Antarctic Ice Shelf, whose collapse is projected in the next half-century. Increases in the intensity of growth of global warming, particularly near the poles, may see this mass of ice the size of Brazil collapse before 2025 or sooner. This collapse would be an epic historical event and contribute to a sea level increase of greater than one foot quickly and more in time globally which would have a significant devastating effect on individuals, ecosystems, nations, and mankind.

http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-sci-antarctic26mar26,0,4061120.story?track=mostviewed-storylevel

*****

24 March 2008

Phoenix Sky Harbor to Get Rail System

Plans will be underway shortly for the construction of a rail system at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport that will link all terminals and concourses of the facility as well as parking, rental car centers, and first of all, the light rail system under construction in Phoenix itself that will be up and running later this year. The light rail station at 44th St and Washington in Phoenix will enable commuters to enter the airport's separate rail system by 2013 with full completion of the airport project by 2020. The $1.1 billion project, which will be nearly five miles in length, will paid for by bonds issued by the airport and repaid through passenger facilities fees collected by the airlines and other businesses in the airport facility. Sky Harbor is expected to have 45 -50 million people using the airport by 2013, and the eighteen car train fleet system is expected to help minimize traffic congestion at and near the airport and will greatly encourage greater use of the growing mass transit system underway in Phoenix and in the adjacent suburbs that will undergo further additional expansion in the coming years. Airports in Denver and Dallas have rail systems. A commuter rail line connecting Phoenix to Tucson is in the planning as well. Phoenix and Maricopa County voters authorized a vast project including highway construction and expansion in the region in 2004 that will be underway until 2025.

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/0323train0323.html

http://www.valleymetro.org/METRO_light_rail/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valley_Metro_Rail_(Phoenix)

http://valleymetro.org/METRO_light_rail/Downloads/Maps/maps/METRO-starter-line.pdf

http://www.raillife.com/blog/default.aspx

http://lightrailaz.blogspot.com/

http://www.valleymetro.org/METRO_light_rail/Downloads/Publications/Newsletters/METRO%20summer%202007.pdf

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/opinions/articles/0211sun1-11.html

http://www.azcentral.com/news/pics/prop_400_main.PDF

*****

23 March 2008

4000 Americans Dead in Iraq

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20080324/D8VJHCO80.html

http://www.icasualties.org/oif/

*****

Proposal for New Dam North of Fort Collins

A proposal is under consideration for the construction of a new dam that would fill a seven mile long valley creating a reservoir and necessitating relocation of US highway 287 to the east by several miles. The Glade Dam would cost in excess of $500 million and basically would end most of the flows of the Cache La Poudre River through Fort Collins. The river itself would have to be partially rerouted to fill and create the the new reservoir and keep it filled. It would meet the annual water needs of 40,000 new households in the Larimer County area, but this only about one-half at best of the expected growth to occur by 2035. There will be a lot of opposition to this proposal of a project of this magnitude on a number of grounds, which very well may prevent the project from ever being undertaken. US Hwy 287 cuts down the center of this narrow thin valley which this writer has traveled through on numerous occasions from Colorado to Wyoming several miles north of Fort Collins. A new replacement road would be built to the east on the other side of the hills and might even include a tunnel or a construction project to carry the new roadway through the escarpment of the hills themselves. In addition, this road has been and continues to be utilized heavily by semi-truck traffic which has made the current road inadequate and unsafe. Plans are underway to widen the Wyoming stretch of US 287 from a two lane road to a four lane highway with a natural median separating the two directions of traffic: this a 25 mile stretch of road which will take the better part of a decade to be completed according to plans currently. If a new road is built in Colorado, a similar upgrade would be ideal, perhaps to even include construction of the long planned and envisioned bypass highway routing US 287 to I-25 from going through Fort Collins itself. The current US 287 runs through and near downtown Fort Collins which is an enormous inconvenience and nuisance for local residents. A realization of a new bypass road would be greatly welcomed by Fort Collins citizens and businesses, but how this new road could be paid for is still unclear, like the dam project itself at this point. Look for this proposal never to get past just that.

http://www.trib.com/articles/2008/03/23/news/breaking/doc47e6de4f70791451018712.txt

http://www.denverpost.com/breakingnews/ci_8664957

*****

Spring Commencing Earlier in WY

Recently this writer posted information about the changing climate in the Yellowstone Ecosystem. Evidence also strongly indicates a changing climate in the surrounding area in WY. Earlier springs are being documented, snowmelt is occurring faster and earlier, and summers are getting hotter. These events are more greatly amplified at higher altitudes and higher latitudes. This article brings more details to the news of climate change and its effects in the Central Rockies and adjacent High Plains.

http://www.trib.com/articles/2008/03/25/news/wyoming/ae21db6bcb93784687257416007da08f.txt

http://www.trib.com/articles/2008/03/23/news/breaking/doc47e6d217b1dfb769029033.txt

*****

A Long Hard Stretch of Tough Times Is Underway

In the minds of most Americans, a recession is here. Most economic news is of a negative nature and often quite alarming. The big questions out there are the basic ones being asked : How bad is it going to get, and how long will this downturn last ? Both questions are difficult to answer. Many economists do not see the end in sight, and an upturn is unlikely until sometime deep into 2009 at the earliest, but not for everywhere in the nation. Places like CA and AZ may be in recessions until 2011 and beyond. As far the extent or depth of this downturn, many economists are quite glum. Rising commodity prices; limits on available credit for individuals, families, and business; an ocean of debt being generated daily by the federal government; and ever declining home values along with continuing increases in foreclosures spell a strong probability of this downturn being the worst in over a half-century and more. The always misleading GNP numbers may say otherwise, but for most Americans who are not wealthy, the next two to three years promise to be of great difficulty with taxes probably needing to be increased on most levels, higher prices for consumer goods which are all being imported thanks to corporate greed and misguided trade policy, declining home values, increased costs for goods and services, fewer employment opportunities, and a debt crisis in many households that continues to mushroom as Americans struggle to enure themselves to a lower standard of living brought on by globalization, corporate greed and waste, and government complicity.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/E/ECONOMY_ON_THE_EDGE?SITE=NVLAS&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

http://www.alternet.org/blogs/peek/80462/#more

*****

Economic Slowdown Unseen in Heartland

The economic recession underway across the US is an event that will have a far greater impact and notice in urban and suburban areas and their adjacent areas. In rural America and much of the Midwest, the recession will not have nearly the impact. States like North Dakota are in a boom, with widespread energy resources development underway and prices of commodities such as wheat grown in the state at near or record highs. Many other states in this region are also avoiding the downturn for the better part as lending practices for homes was much more disciplined and traditional than Sunbelt and older areas more suburbanized. These other states include South Dakota, Nebraska, rural Kansas, Montana, Iowa, and Wyoming, as well as other rural areas in adjacent states.

http://abcnews.go.com/Business/Economy/story?id=4516180&page=1

http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0324/p01s05-usec.html

*****

22 March 2008

Bush Junta Continues Economic Misinformation

The continuing arrogance and ineptitude of the Bush Junta is clearly on display here at their white house website. Proudly stating falsehoods and blatant lies about the current condition of the American economy is consistent with the policies, actions, and attitudes of these boobs and hoods since day one back in 2001. The American economy is swooning, perhaps even collapsing, and the junta continues to fiddle as Rome burns. The worst is yet to come obviously, but it very well may be considerably worse than most imagine or forecast with military operations imminent in Iran.

http://www.crooksandliars.com/2008/03/21/white-house-scrubs-web-site-on-the-economy/

*****

Tibet Atrocities Threaten Chinese Olympics

In the wake of atrocities and murders by the Red Chinese military and police in Tibet this week that has resulted in over 100 deaths and an unknown number of wounded Tibetans, sentiment is growing globally to have some nations not participate in the upcoming '08 Olympics in Peking. As expected, the Bush junta has been completely silent on the ruthless violent actions of the dictatorial and oppressive Chinese communist government towards protestors in illegally occupied Tibet, which has been illegally under Chinese control since 1959 with only limited cries and words of protest from nations around the world, particularly ones like the US that hypocritically claim to espouse democracy and choice for any and all peoples around the world. Hopefully, this growing tide of an Olympic Boycott will continue to swell and result in an international humilation and rebuke of China, the nation on this planet that is the greatest threat to the future of mankind, liberty, and freedom. Tibet is not the only region with an active independence movement within Communist China as an active movement also exists in far northwest Communist China in the province of Sinkiang.

http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/03/22/china.tibet/index.html

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Germany-Tibet.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008_unrest_in_Tibet

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibetan_independence

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Tibet

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Turkestan_independence_movement

*****

20 March 2008

Best Cities Economically Across the Nation

This report by Forbes Magazine shows which cities are among the best economically, particularly in terms of employment and greater employment opportunities. Most of the top ranked cities are smaller cities that have only gotten larger in the last few decades. Many are places where a university is at the center of the communities economic and cultural heart and soul. Lists like this often include state capitals where opportunities for employment for state government are best or in fields that work closely with government.

In the top twenty:

>state capitals in BLUE; sites of major universities in GREEN; both in RED; (cities after #100 from the mountain time zone and adjacent western states)

1) Raleigh NC
2) Boise
3) Fort Collins
4) Des Moines
5) Lexington KY
6) Atlanta
7) Richmond
8) Olympia
9) Spokane
10) Knoxville
11) Provo
12) Durham
13) Albuquerque
14) Indianapolis
15) Nashville
16) Colorado Springs
17) Fayetteville AR
18) Lincoln NE
19) Springfield MO
20) Seattle
21) Mercer County NJ
22) Naples FL
23) Ogden
24) Lynchburg VA
25) Washington DC/Northern VA
26) Asheville
27) Gainesville
28) Virginia Beach
29) Madison
30) Allentown
31) Denver
32) Little Rock
33) Houston
34) Omaha
35) Portland OR
36) Eugene
37) Charlotte
38) Wilmington NC
39) San Antonio
40) Lake County IL
41) Tampa - St Pete
42) Cedar Rapids IA
43) Tacoma
44) Phoenix
45) Oklahoma City
46) Sarasota FL
47) Austin
48) Ann Arbor
49) Tucson
50) Huntsville AL
51) Edison NJ
52) Rochester NY
53) Harrisburg
54) Pensacola
55) Jackson MS
56) Columbia SC
57) Greeley
58) Hagerstown MD
59) Winston-Salem
60) Salem OR
61) Lakeland FL
62) West Palm Beach
63) Ft Worth - Arlington
64) Orlando
65) Tallahassee
66) Jacksonville
67) Portland ME
68) Wilmington DE
69) St Louis
70) Palm Bay FL
71) Baltimore
72) Ft Lauderdale
73) Ft Wayne
74) Poughkeepsie
75) Camden NJ
76) Cape Coral FL
77) Boulder
78) Riverside CA
79) Gary IN
80) Columbus OH
81) Scranton
82) Salt Lake City
83) Pittsburgh
84) Greensboro
85) Sacramento
86) New Haven
87) South Bend
88) Holland MI
89) Charleston SC
90) Savannah
91) Louisville KY
92) Santa Ana
93) Dallas
94) Albany
95) Kansas City
96) Deltona FL
97) Ft Smith AR
98) Roanoke VA
99) York PA
100) Huntington WV
---------------------
105) San Diego
112) Las Vegas
128) Amarillo
137) Reno
139) Wichita
140) Tulsa
143) Honolulu
145) El Paso
146) Anchorage
154) Los Angeles
156) Myrtle Beach
157) Oakland
165) Santa Barbara
166) San Francisco
169) San Luis Obispo
174) San Jose
182) Lubbock
187) Santa Cruz CA
188) Santa Rosa CA
198) Modesto
199) Merced
200) Salinas CA

No cities from Wyoming, Montana, or South Dakota made the list.

http://www.forbes.com/lists/2008/1/bestplaces08_Best-Places-For-Business-And-Careers_Rank.html

*****

Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics

Its not surprising that reports on the rate of high school graduation in states across the nation show a higher rate of graduation than what is truly reality. Most states and school districts inflate their numbers, often doubling the rate. High school graduation rates are not above 85 % in any state. The true numbers in some states is probably below 50 %, especially in the states where there are greater numbers of blacks and Mexicans, as well as states where poverty and economic injustice is more prevalent. The No Child Left Behind Federal Education program established by the Bush junta is getting students better somewhat prepared to take tests, but it has done nothing to address the growing problem of high school dropouts. And when one considers all the federal monies at stake for states and school districts, its no wonder they blatantly lie to maximize the flow of federal funding.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/20/education/20graduation.html?pagewanted=2&ref=us

*****

19 March 2008

Arrest Made in Congo Gorilla Massacre

A park ranger has been arrested for masterminding the massacre of approximately ten critically endangered mountain gorillas in the Virunga National Park in eastern Congo. These gorillas, known to researchers and observers as the Rugendo gorilla family, were senselessly slaughtered last July. Only 700 of these mountain gorillas still exist in the wild, and less than 100 are in the Congo portion of the Virunga Range which also is in Uganda, Burundi, Rwanda, and Tanzania. The population of mountain gorillas has stablized and even shown some increases this decade after many years of decline. Koko, the gorilla many have heard of that was trained in sign language, was a Mountain Gorilla.

http://news.aol.com/story/_a/ranger-arrested-in-gorilla-slaughter/20080319164409990001?ncid=NWS00010000000001

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_gorilla

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virunga_National_Park

*****

Important Concerns With CFLs

I have been wary of compact fluorescent lightbulbs (CFLs) and their dark secrets. This product is not the save-all and panacea it is being promoted and hyped as, and serious questions exist whether it is a better alternative to the incandescent bulb. I believe CFLs create a greater hazard to the environment than i-bulbs particularly when it comes to the mercury content in the CFLs and the ramifications of billions of those bulbs going into landfills and eventually seeping into the water table and food chain in time. GE is promising a new generation of CFLs in the next few years which are more environomentally responsible, but the better product on the horizon by about the same time will be LED lamp bulbs. They will probably be more expensive than CFLs initially but offer greater efficiency, durability, a longer life, and environmental thoughtfulnness. Right now and for the short term, CFLs raise too many question of their hazardous effects and consequences for this writer to embrace this relatively newer source of lighting for the next few years at least.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23694819/

*****

America's Cleanest Cities

I have not had the fortune of spending much if any time in most of the cities making this list. Most of the cities I have been in the last two decades are quite dirty and lacking in beauty and cleanliness. Freeways and roads lined with litter, trash, waste, and weeds; rampant grafitti; little if any attempt to maximize the placement of trees, shrubs and flowers along infrastructural corridors including freeways; the use of cement walls and wood fences instead of hedges and vines to provide a more healthy and aesthetic presentation; sloping hills covered with weeds along freeway and road interchanges that are more than eyesores; and the ever present issues of air, water, and surface pollution of many and varied sources that seeming only continues to worsen. Instead of warehousing lower level criminals, all levels of law enforcement should be putting these offenders to work addressing these issues of dirtiness and filth that exist in most places, be it a town, city, suburb, rural county, or area of natural beauty that has been tainted and scarred.

The top ten cleanest cities:
1) Miami (surprising)
2) Seattle (expected)
3) Jacksonville (surprising)
4) Orlando (somewhat surprising)
5) Portland, OR (expected)
6) San Francisco (surprising)
7) Oklahoma City (shocking)
8) Tampa-St Pete (somewhat surprising)
9) Minneapolis-St Paul (expected)
10) San Jose-Sunnyvale (somewhat surprising)

Cities I would have thought would have made the list would be San Diego, Colorado Springs, Palm Springs, Fort Myers/Naples, West Palm Beach, Charleston SC, and Asheville.

http://abcnews.go.com/Business/BusinessTravel/story?id=4513175&page=1

http://www.forbes.com/2008/03/17/miami-seattle-orlando-biz-logistics-cx_tvr_0317cleanest.html

*****

The Iraq War: Five Years and Counting

Wednesday 19 March marks the start of the sixth year of the seemingly endless ongoing Iraq War. It is without question one of the greatest, if not greatest, blunders and misjudgements in American history, greater than the Mexican-American War, the Spanish-American War, the decades-long wars against Native Americans, and the War Between the States. What has been accomplished in these five long years of war in Iraq ? Besides the ousting and execution of a tyrannical, maniacal, murderous despot - not much. Life for Iraqis is worse and over one million of them are dead with countless more wounded and hurt. The costs for Americans is tragic and disgusting: almost 4000 lives lost thus far; over 30,ooo wounded and increasing; pain, grief, and loss forever by families and communities; expenditures over $500 billion with a final cost nearing or surpassing $3 trillion; a loss of respect and prestige internationally across the planet by most nations and peoples towards America; a generation of lost opportunities, investments, and programs; skyrocketing record high fuel and energy prices; and the American economy decimated and headed into a deep recession if not worse. The historical legacy of the Bush presidency will be eternally one of utter complete failure and misguided wrongful vision and policy. The final 307 days of his reign cannot elapse fast enough. It is the ultimate disgrace to America for its government to be led by criminals. And anyone with any brains or insight saw this all coming over five years ago.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0320/p01s04-ussc.html

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/03/19/iraq-casualties-iraq-cos_n_92303.html

http://roguecolumnist.typepad.com/rogue_columnist/2008/03/five-years-that.html#more

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/19/washington/19cost.html?_r=2&ref=world&oref=slogin&oref=slogin

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-watchlist18mar18,1,4529250.story

http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8VGJT8G1&show_article=1

http://www.metrotimes.com/editorial/story.asp?id=12643

http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/03/19/7777/

http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080318_bushs_legacy_of_failure/

http://tomdispatch.com/post/174907/greg_mitchell_getting_it_right_on_iraq

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/fisk/robert-fisk-the-only-lesson-we-ever-learn-is-that-we-never-learn-797816.html

http://www.miamiherald.com/851/story/461978.html

*****

18 March 2008

Changes in Yellowstone

Global warming and climate changing are making the greatest impacts at this time at the places in the world closer to the poles, highest elevations, in the oceans, and soon at coastal areas. At Yellowstone, change is also underway as the growing season has lengthened by three weeks in around the last dozen years, resulting in greater success by invasive species such as Canada Thistle. This has resulted in a greater presense in the region by lower level fauna like ground gophers, which is in turn becoming a greater part of the diet by one of the greatest animals in this ecosystem, bears. Change of this magnitude will only to continue to occur and rapidly as Yellowstone is in some ways one great natural laboratory for climate change and its micro impacts.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/18/science/18griz.html?ref=science

http://www.yesmagazine.org/article.asp?id=2416

http://www.azcentral.com/news/green/articles/0319warmspring19-on.html

*****

Fiscal Troubles in Colorado Springs Region

Colorado Springs and El Paso County have been the heart of Republican right wing extremism and anti-government zealotry for going on two decades or longer. The area is very scenic with lots of natural beauty so it is a shame so many of the people in that area are somewhat loopy. It is surprising crime is not a bigger problem in this area as it is the perfect place for criminal operations. But social welfare issues and economic injustice are rampant. This writer has considered at times relocating to the Pikes Peak and Rampart Range Front region, as has my youngest brother and his family. But one has to hesitate and think seriously about that when information that is so alarming as in this article is factored into the debate. The natural beauty of this area seriously belies the underlying quality of life.

http://www.denverpost.com/breakingnews/ci_8607677

*****

The Most Dangerous States in 2008

The latest ratings of which states are the most and least dangerous to live in or visit has been released and the usual suspects are where they ought to be. Nevada, Louisiana, New Mexico, South Carolina, and Arizona are the top five. Interestingly, these are all places where it is usually hot weather and that are transitioning from rural states to urbanized states. Most of the states in the worst half of the ratings are in the southern half of the nation with some exceptions like Alaska, Maryland, Michigan, Delaware, Washington, Illinois, and Ohio. Almost exclusively, the safer states are in the northern half of the nation. There is largely something to the belief that cold and harsh weather keeps the riff raff out and crime down perhaps.

http://os.cqpress.com/Crime%20State%202008_Most%20Dangerous.pdf

*****

17 March 2008

Ongoing Increasing Economic Collapse Has a Greater Price for All Americans

The economic news only continues to worsen with alarming developments occuring daily. The sad consequences of this downturn will be of enormous cost and pain for most everyday Americans as governments are largely impotent and inept in facing and dealing with this crisis in ways that help the nation and its people as a whole rather than just monied special interests, corporations, and the wealthy elite. Without dramatic change occurring in the November elections, those costs will cut deep and harshly for most of the American middle class, the poor, and small business. Desparately needed federal programs such as universal health care and investment in infrastructure and 21st century new and alternative energy sources development are at serious risk, among numerous others, of not dawning. And any efforts to further address global warming will be all but nil.

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080331/howl

*****

Understanding What Has Happened to the US Supreme Court over the Last Generation

This in depth and lengthy article analyzing the changes in the US Supreme Court over the last twenty years or so in the court's rulings concerning corporations is deeply alarming and disconcerting. The epic sea change seen in Supreme Court Rulings since the mid to late 198os has seen a virtually unanimous stance in favor of corporations and business over consumers, citizens, and the public good in the court's judgements This is truly a dangerous and frightening trend that is likely to largely continue for at least another decade unless there is an overwhelming switch to progressive legislators and executive branch officials on both the federal and state level which indicates a strong public sentiment for a nation and society that is more economically just and fair. Any new gains to help the citizenry in their struggle with the powerful corporations and their seemingly endless riches and lobbyists will certainly be hard fought in the coming years given the makeup and philosophy of the existing justices that are likely to serve for quite some time.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/16/magazine/16supreme-t.html?ref=washington&pagewanted=all

*****

The Ten States Most Likely to Reverse Their '04 Vote

This analysis recently in the Washington Post shows which states are most likely to switch their '04 general election presidential vote this time around. The report shows the Democrats likely to pick up Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado, Missouri, Iowa, Ohio, Virginia, and Florida. The Republicans could gain Minnesota and New Hampshire. This would swing 97 electoral votes Democratic and but 14 to the GOP. All things remaining equal, the projection would be then 335 electoral votes for the Democratic nominee and 203 for Arizona US Senator John McCain. I can see numbers like this at this point today if it is Obama v McCain, but nothing like this if it ends up being Clinton v McCain.
*****

Growing Pressures on State Governments Nationwide

The recession and the housing mortgage crisis are having a strong impact on a number of states and their governments. The effects are resulting in a decline in state revenues, causing legislative bodies to scramble to balance state budgets. The problems seems to be greatest in states having the most distress with housing foreclosures and falling home values. States that rely on sales tax revenue instead of income tax revenue seem to be having struggles as well. Among the 25 states most strongly under the gun include California, Rhode Island, New York, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and Arizona. Not surprisingly, states seeing little or no impact on theur budgets are largely located where home foreclosures have been lessor in numbers, such as in the upper Midwest, Northern Rockies, and Pacific Northwest where energy development and agriculture are doing well.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/17/us/17fiscal.html?ref=todayspaper&adxnnlx=1205748045-a6HFDmCF/Gf7qRZxg0HRGg&pagewanted=all

http://www.trib.com/articles/2008/03/17/news/breaking/doc47debb1e7bb2b698064711.txt

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Salmon Fishing to be Halted Along West Coast

Scientists have discovered a troubling development in the Sacramento River watershed in northern California. The Chinook salmon that originate and later return to spawn in this river basin during the autumn season have all but disappeared. As a result, it is all but certain that salmon fishing will be halted along the Pacific coast from northern Oregon along California to Mexico for four months starting 1 May. What has caused the precipitous decline in the salmon numbers is still unclear, but the mostly likely reason may have to do with altered conditions in the Pacific Ocean that change currents and oceanic movements that usually provide the salmon with their food sources, krill and phytoplankton. The likely overriding reason of this phenomena very well may be global warming, but that connection cannot be firmly made yet. Nevertheless, the Pacific Fisheries Management Council that oversees this and other fisheries will make a decision that will have a large economic impact on local area fishermen, communities, consumers, and on the price and availability of this valuable nutritious food source for many months ahead.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/17/science/earth/17salmon.html?em&ex=1205899200&en=45c4eee6ac268a9c&ei=5087%0A

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15 March 2008

Analytical Reports on State Governments

The Pew Center for Public Policy Studies has recently released reports on the efficiency, professionalsim, proficiency, and performance of state governments throughout the United States. Here in the Mountain States region, Utah is seen as having the best state government for its citizens, while Colorado, Montana, and Nevada are the worst of the region. Nationally, the states of Washington and Virginia have the best state government; New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Illnois, California, Arkansas, New Jersey, Maine, and Massachusetts are the worst.

http://www.pewcenteronthestates.org/

http://www.pewcenteronthestates.org/gpp_report_Card.aspx

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Idaho Formally Opposes REALID

The Idaho State House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill opposing the Federal READ ID Act that could lead to further pressure on the US Congress to reverse this federal legislative usurptive act that is without question unconstitutional. Thirty other states have also stated at least some level of opposition to this federal law. Montana has fully and formally repudiated and rejected REALID. It would appear this decision by the Idaho House will likely become state law, as Idaho Governor Otter is an affirmed publicly stated opponent of REALID.

http://www.newwest.net/city/article/idaho_house_shoots_down_real_id/C108/L108/

http://www3.idaho.gov/oasis/H0606.html

http://www.newwest.net/main/article/gov_schweitzer_signs_bill_rejecting_real_id/

http://www.realnightmare.org/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/REAL_ID_Act

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Hard Economic Times Even Felt at Wal-mart

One knows that things are getting tough economically across the nation when even Wal-mart is impacted. The meglomaniacal Arkansas retail behemoth announced that it will not be building a store in Douglas, WY. Decisions that reverse plans for a store construction only happen with community citizen activity against the largest evil monster corporation of all, like what has happened in western Montana and Ravalli County. Plans for building other stores in two other remote small Wyoming towns, Rawlins and Worland, may also change resulting in no economic decimation of local businesses there. Even the most powerful and largest of beasts often feel and experience sluggishness and lethargy due to overconsumption and regular overgorging. And the smaller and smarter creatures find shortcomings and take advantage of and exploit the monster in minimal, almost unseen ways.

http://www.trib.com/articles/2008/03/15/news/wyoming/b2092520cb3e0e688725740c007c4c6f.txt

http://www.ravallirepublic.com/articles/2008/03/17/news/news02.txt

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Nader Making an Impression in Polling

Polls are just that, surveys in the moment of individuals and their thoughts, impressions, attitudes, opinions, moods, and actions. Zogby has a poll out showing Ralph Nader with a level of support in the area of five to six percent. It would seem unlikely this level of support would continue into November, but if it were to, or perhaps even increase, it would have a great effect on the presidential election. Support of Nader of any substantive amount would definitely push the election to McCain, particularly if Clinton is the Democrat opposition. Obama might be able to weather a Nader candidacy better, but its no sure thing. It will be interesting to observe what develops along these lines in the coming months with all the bad news and hardship on the increase nationally.

http://www.zogby.com/news/ReadNews.dbm?ID=1467

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News on American Economy Worsens

The news on the American economy only increasingly worsened through the week. The most stunning and alarming development was the Federal Reserve Board's bailout of the financial services giant Bear Stearns only days after a huge $200 plus billion cash infusion for banks and financial institutions. This is the first time a step of this magnitude has been taken since the Great Depression. Whispers also are occuring concerning the financial viability of Lehman Brothers and other corporations. Look for more shocking news to continue. Other economic news was just as grim. The dollar continues to swoon to record lows across the board against all other currencies; oil prices crossed the $110 per barrel threshold this week which makes this fuel the most expensive in history, surpassing the prior peak set in 1980 when adjusted for inflation; the price of gold reached an incredible $1000 per ounce; and inflation in the prices of other consumer goods continues to rise, most painfully in the area of food and groceries. Some businesses within the US are now starting to refuse to take dollars for payment of goods and services. And everywhere, people are shutting down their spending and starting to seriously hunker down in the looming collapse now underway. The Bush junta seems paralyzed and unable to act in any way. They look and sound a lot like the bumbing idiots that made up the administration of Herbert Hoover over 75 years ago. Will history largely repeat itself ? Hopefully not, but overall, things are looking quite bleak.

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/0314economy0315.html

http://www.latimes.com/news/la-fi-petruno15mar15,0,7779108.story?page=1&track=ntothtml

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080313/ap_on_bi_ge/diving_dollar

http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts03132008.html

http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2008/03/15/recession_is_here_economist_declares/

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080324/ehrenreich

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11 March 2008

Obama Takes Mississippi Primary

Illinois US Senator Barack Obama won the Tuesday 11 March Mississippi Primary over Hillary Clinton by approximately a 3-2 margin. The win follows up his recent victory last Saturday in the Wyoming caucuses by a similar margin over Clinton. With the completion of this primary, the campaign goes into a relative period of inactivity as the flurry of primaries and caucuses that has occured over the last two plus months comes to a temporary halt for six weeks until the 22 April Pennsylvania Primary. Look for an ever so slight decline in the intensity of media coverage of the campaign and the candidates for the next few weeks or so, but also expect the mudslinging and dirty campaigning by the Clinton camp to increase noticeably as she struggles to overcome the Obama advantage in the last few weeks of the remaining campaign season starting in Pennsylvania and continuing into May in such states as Indiana, Kentucky, Oregon, West Virginia, and North Carolina. The 33 delegates at stake in the Magnolia State will be apportioned based on the results so look for Obama to get about 20 t0 22 of those delegates and Clinton 11 to 13. This would give Obama an estimated total of about 1610 delegates, about 415 short of what is needed to clinch the nomination. Clinton has about 1475 delegates, and trails Obama by around 125 to 135 delegates according to estimates. Lets all enjoy the upcoming respite from the besiegement of this seemingly eternal campaign in the coming months.
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Another Consequence (and More Welcome One) of the End of Cheap Oil

James Kunstler, the renowned author of the book, The Long Emergency, among others, has an article out that proclaims the end of activities like dirtbike riding, snowmobiling, racecar driving, and ATV use on national and state public lands is coming soon with the huge price increases that will occur for oil and gasoline. He develops a strong argument for this with the historic analogy to smoking, but he does interject some humorous overtones with his description and analyis of the South, its people, as well as other regions and peoples in the nation that have a similar culture and lifestyle. I largely agree with his conclusions, but I believe these changes will not occur for better part of a generation or more. The really entertaining part of the article is all the wacky and irate comments published following the article.

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A Tiny Measure of Justice for Libby, Montana

News comes today about the WR Grace Corporation agreeing to pay the US government $250 million for the asbestos contamination that has decimated the far northwest Montana town of Libby which has killed many and has many residents crippled with cancer. The company mined vermiculite ore outside the town which was strongly laced with the deadly carcinogen asbestos. Miners unknowingly spread the carcinogen to their families and throughout the community, and the WR Corporation was aware of the crisis and did nothing to act about it. Only through investigation and the diligence of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer newspaper did any publicity come to light concerning this tragedy and disgrace. This little quaint town in the forests of the northern Rockies has been decimated by this blatant act of incompetence and greed by this corporation and many will continue to suffer for years ahead.

http://www.reuters.com/article/bondsNews/idUSN1162541220080311

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/uncivilaction/

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Followup on Winter '07-'08 Forecasts

The forecasts of a mild winter across the US turned out somewhat incorrect as research in the article indicates. It would seem the areas of probability were misdrawn to a certain extent. The West and Midwest were colder than expected and precipitation was greater in the Southwest and along the South Atlantic Coast. In retrospect, this was probably not all that surprising. The La Nina phenomena is not fully understood and weather and climate contains a lot of dynamics and unintangibles that make forecasting challenging. One other possible factor that cannot yet be conclusively considered is the effect global warming is having on storm development, moisture patterns, and extreme events. This will be more established in the coming years with further research, analysis, and observation.

http://www.usatoday.com/weather/climate/2008-03-11-winter-prediction_N.htm

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American Lifestyles Largely Financed on Debt

This analysis by University of Vermont Gund Institute for Ecological Economics Robert Costanza does a superb job of explaining recent economic history and the near term future implications. Vast reworkings of public policy particularly in the areas of taxes; corporation empowerment, market share, and subsidies; the decline of competitiveness in most business and commercial sectors; and trade policy particularly in the area of tariffs is critically needed immediately to reverse the drastic decline seen in the last one-third century.

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-costanza10mar10,0,7077076.story

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Federal Reserve Continues to Pump Up Flailing Banks with Cash

The Federal Reserve Board continues to print money like no tomorrow as today the board pumped around $200 billion into the banking system. This is a very unwise course of action by the Fed as it simply delays banks dealing with their financial issues, and the Fed and the US government takes on the liability of bad bank debt themselves. This will only hurt the US economy even more so, and continues to make the dollar weaker against other currencies, further pushes oil prices higher, and contributes to inflation on consumer goods. The amount of foreclosures and bad bank debt is no where to getting to the point of being on a downturn trend, and the action of the Fed will only add to further added bad bank debt and foreclosures as it adds to the decline of home values, upside down mortgages, and probably unemployment. The inevitable has to happen: wealthy investers and corporations have to lose their shirts and go bellyup. And that has to include banks, even ones as noteworthy as Citigroup, who has mentioned in discussions in many circles as nearing the point of failure and bankruptcy, a development that would seem impossible only a short time ago.


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