December 2007 - Posts

Moscow's Top 10 Stories of 2007

Here’s my list of Moscow’s Top 10 Stories of 2007. These are based on your feedback and the number of comments/hits to this blogsite during the last year.

1. Deadly shootings: seven people were killed in four separate incidents.

  • May: Jason Hamilton murdered his wife Crystal Hamilton, Moscow Police officer Lee Newbill, First Presbyterian Church sexton Paul Bauer, and then killed himself -- but not before shooting and injuring Deputy Brannon Jordan and UI student Peter Husmann.
  • March: former UI student John Delling allegedly shot and killed his high school friend David Boss in Boss' Moscow apartment.
  • June: James Leonard allegedly killed his friend Tyler Lee at a rural home west of Genesee.
  • June: Zachary Fredrickson allegedly killed Jeremiah Johnson with a .22 rifle after a night of drinking in Troy.

2. Mayor Chaney's shenanigans.

3. Moscow's City Council election: The Moscow City Council took a turn to the center when voters threw out Linda Pall and Aaron Ament in favor of Dan Carscallen, Wayne Krauss and Walter Steed. That leaves only GMA sweethearts Nancy Chaney and Bill Lambert. And it leaves voters with a lot of hope that the Mayor will be a lame duck for her remaining term.

4. MSD levy elections -- Moscow voters approve of more financial waste. We have money to burn in Moscow.

5. UI's many, many woes.

6. Leepike Ridge.

7. Boycotting Christ Church Businesses: Moscow's bigots have a little list.

8. Tom Lamar’s appointment to the Moscow City Council

9. Discrimination and Zoning

10. Tom Hansen Quote of the Day referring to Wal-Mart's "psycho welcome guys". This is the typical nonsense from Moscow’s leftists.

Welcome to my town in 2007.

May 2008 bring us peace, stability, tolerance, and liberty.

Posted by Right-Mind | 1 comment(s)

Obituary Of The Late Mr. Common Sense

This is making its way around the internet.

Today we mourn the passing of a beloved old friend, Common Sense, who has been with us for many years. No one knows for sure how old he was, since his birth records were long ago lost in bureaucratic red tape. He will be remembered as having cultivated such valuable lessons as: Knowing when to come in out of the rain; Why the early bird gets the worm; Life isn't always fair; and Maybe it was my fault.

Common Sense lived by simple, sound financial policies: (don't spend more than you can earn) and reliable strategies: (adults, not children, are in charge).

His health began to deteriorate rapidly when well-intentioned but overbearing regulations were set in place. Reports of a 6 -year- old boy charged with sexual harassment for kissing a classmate; teens suspended from school for using mouthwash after lunch; and a teacher fired for reprimanding an unruly student, only worsened his condition.

Common Sense lost ground when parents attacked teachers for doing the job that they themselves had failed to do in disciplining their unruly children. It declined even further when schools were required to get parental consent to administer Tylenol, sun lotion or a band-aid to a student; but could not inform parents when a student became pregnant and wanted to have an abortion .

Common Sense lost the will to live as the Ten Commandments became contraband; churches became businesses; and criminals received better treatment than their victims.

Common Sense took a beating when you couldn't defend yourself from a burglar in your own home and the burglar could sue you for assault.

Common Sense finally gave up the will to live, after a woman failed to realize that a steaming cup of coffee was hot. She spilled a little in her lap, and was promptly awarded a huge settlement.

Common Sense was preceded in death by his parents, Truth and Trust; his wife, Discretion; his daughter, Responsibility; and his son, Reason.

He is survived by his 3 stepbrothers; I Know My Rights, Someone Else Is To Blame, and I'm A Victim.

Not many attended his funeral because so few realized he was gone.

HT: Randy S.

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Download Uproar: Record Industry Goes After Personal Use

WashingtonPostFrom the Washington Post:

Now, in an unusual case in which an Arizona recipient of an RIAA letter has fought back in court rather than write a check to avoid hefty legal fees, the industry is taking its argument against music sharing one step further: In legal documents in its federal case against Jeffrey Howell, a Scottsdale, Ariz., man who kept a collection of about 2,000 music recordings on his personal computer, the industry maintains that it is illegal for someone who has legally purchased a CD to transfer that music into his computer.

The industry's lawyer in the case, Ira Schwartz, argues in a brief filed earlier this month that the MP3 files Howell made on his computer from legally bought CDs are "unauthorized copies" of copyrighted recordings.

"I couldn't believe it when I read that," says Ray Beckerman, a New York lawyer who represents six clients who have been sued by the RIAA. "The basic principle in the law is that you have to distribute actual physical copies to be guilty of violating copyright. But recently, the industry has been going around saying that even a personal copy on your computer is a violation."

RIAA's hard-line position seems clear. Its Web site says: "If you make unauthorized copies of copyrighted music recordings, you're stealing. You're breaking the law and you could be held legally liable for thousands of dollars in damages."

This is an interesting move by the recording industry. Many people purchase an audio CD and rip the music onto their MP3 player — since the MP3 player doesn’t play CDs. They’ve purchased the music; they are not sharing the music, just “porting” it over to their compatible player.

It will be interesting to see how the courts deal with this one. My take on it is the same as Beckerman’s: you have to distribute actual physical copies to be guilty of copyright violation. Reformatting a personal copy for personal use isn’t illegal.

Posted by Right-Mind | 2 comment(s)

Andreas Schou Quote of the Day

In response to Gary C’s question “What is it you suggest should be done to curb the murderous rampage that is causing this horrifying rift in the community”, Andreas Schou gives the classic Intolerista response:

Starving Wilson's church to death using all powers short of state coercion.

And this man wants to practice law.

Is there any wonder that the likes of Schou have well earned the nickname of “Intolerista”?

Update: Andreas clarified his remarks, just in case there is any doubt:

I mean driving it bankrupt. Driving it out of town. Making it unable to continue operations as a religious institution.

Perfectly clear?  

Posted by Right-Mind | 4 comment(s)

Higher State Taxes = Lower Population Growth

MarkJ.PerryMark J. Perry is a professor of economics and finance in the School of Management at the Flint campus of the University of Michigan

It could be a causal relation (the higher the tax rate, the fewer kids that a family can afford). Or it could be the other way (the more kids in a state, the less tax burden the citizens can afford).

This is from his site: Carpe Diem

The chart above shows graphically the negative relationship between state population growth using Census data available from the WSJ here, and state tax burden data available from The Tax Foundation here, both for 2007.

The OLS regression results above further verify that the negative relationship between state population growth and state tax burden is statistically significant at the 1% level (highest level generally reported).

Implication of the OLS Results: Based on the negative regression coefficient of -0.232, we could say that as the state tax burden increases by 1%, population growth decreases by about .23%. Alternatively, we could also say that for every one percent decrease in state tax burden, state population growth would increase by .23%. (For an overview of OLS/linear regression, go here.)

Bottom Line: States with lower tax burdens attract more businesses, workers and people, and states with higher tax burdens lose businesses, workers and people. In other words, these results confirm the theory that if you tax something, you'll get less of it.
Carpe_states
Carpe_ols
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'Underground' Christmas thrives in PC world

Mr.Ed IversonEd Iverson has a column in today's Moscow-Pullman Daily News.

Christmas is a time of traditions.

We have to contend almost daily with a secular state on steroids, determined to stamp out the last vestiges of Christmas. Still, the traditions persist.

Covert Nativity scenes pop up in a most unexpected fashion. A checkout lady at Stuffmart will defiantly recommend that we have a Merry Christmas. A tired and disheveled government apparatchik will furtively glance each way before shyly murmuring the forbidden, politically incorrect, greeting.

It can't be too much longer before the Sensitivity Police discover the traditional lights of Christmas originated long ago when our Christian ancestors wanted to devise a symbol to represent the scriptural proclamation that Jesus came as the light of the world. Don't speak of it too loudly however, or Christmas lights will be banned because it is just not inclusive.

There is another Christmas tradition that many keep alive. That is to bemoan all the materialism of Christmas. I am here to defend materialism. There is a kind of materialism particularly appropriate for the Advent season. This kind of materialism is at the very center of the historic Christian celebration of Christ's nativity. Allow me to explain.

"God became man and dwelt among us." This is what the ancient scriptures proclaim; and so Christians have believed for two millennia. Nothing can be more scandalously "materialistic" than this incarnation of God. The Biblical narrative is filled with details calculated to make readers understand that this is not a mystical story communicating merely a spiritual truth. The particulars of the Nativity are not at all spiritual. Instead, we read a simple account filled with earthy details about over-booked lodgings, substandard accommodations, emergency childbirth, and small-town gossip. The story turns tragically violent when government operatives perceive a threat to the status quo. An insecure despot orders the physical (material) slaughter of little boys living in the region where Jesus was born.

Christmas is a yearly remembrance of events that took place in time and in history. If you had been present with a picture phone, you could have e-mailed photographs of the players. You could have captured an MP3 file that mingled the cries of a woman in painful labor with the cows in the stable mooing. CNN could have caught the video of soldiers ruthlessly prying little boys away from their frantic parents and systematically murdering them. The world might have watched it all on the evening news.

The enemies of Christmas understand this better than do the casual celebrants. They know the power of story, especially the power of THE story. They don't want it told. They are not threatened by some vague, fluid, amorphous, "Spirit of Christmas." They are threatened by the materialistic stuff of history.

If Christmas symbolized only a generalized spirit of good will and jollity, the secularists at Southwestern Oklahoma State University wouldn't have their undies in a bundle. The president of that government school would have felt no need to issue his directive, the one that forbade employees to say or write the word "Christmas." Conversely, when the friends and guardians of Christmas attempt to defend something they call the "Spirit of Christmas," they are wasting their time. Real Christmas is "down and dirty." Real Christmas is the story of Ultimate Spirit "grubbing about" in the world of matter.

What, then, can be more appropriate than celebrating Christmas with lots of material stuff? The story is about a historical Joseph and Mary and a material feeding trough in which was laid the infant who was wrapped in material strips of fabric. There were flesh-and-blood shepherds minding their material sheep on the geographic hills surrounding the historical village of Bethlehem. The Nativity of Christ is unflinchingly embedded in the world of matter.

Cheerful gift-giving is the offspring of true generosity. And true generosity springs from a deep well of gratitude. If there really is something that we could identify as the Spirit of Christmas, it is the attitude of thankfulness. We imitate God's expensive gift of his Son to us when we put gifts under the Christmas tree.

Ed Iverson is the head librarian at New Saint Andrews College in Moscow.
He earned a master’s of library science at the University of Southern Mississippi
and studied theology at Regent College in Vancouver, BC.
In 1990, he ran for the Idaho Senate as a Republican from Mullan.
He lives with his wife at Viola.
They have two children and six grandchildren.

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Groups wait for word on worm

They cannot say what the impact will be until after the worm is declared endangered?

Yet they say that the cause is farming?

You don't have to have a PhD to see where this is going. Anything that could harm a worm would have to immediately cease. That would include all development, farming, etc.

As reported in today’s edition of the Moscow-Pullman Daily News.

The federal government has just one week to add the giant Palouse earthworm to the endangered species list or environmental groups will take the battle to the courts.

Noah Greenwald, a conservation biologist for the Center for Biological Diversity, said attorneys for a team of environmental groups - including the Palouse Prairie Foundation, the Palouse Audubon Society and Friends of the Clearwater - and three private citizens are at work preparing to file suit against the government in anticipation of its refusal to add the earthworm to the list by Jan. 5.

"Our attorney is working on that right now, so we should be pretty close," Greenwald said. "It's going to have to go through the courts since we haven't heard anything from Fish and Wildlife."

The earthworm's only known habitat is the grassland of the Palouse in west-central Idaho and southeastern Washington, much of which has been destroyed by agricultural development, invasive species and pesticides.

The earthworm was described as very abundant in 1897, but has not been sighted since May 2005. Before that, it had not been sighted since 1988.

Fish and Wildlife announced in October it had denied a request by the environmental groups to list the earthworm as endangered. The agency indicated information regarding the range, distribution, population size and status of the earthworm was too limited to add it to the endangered species list.

Greenwald said the lack of information on the earthworm should have been reason enough to add it to the list.

Buckley said it is difficult to know what the effect on Palouse-area residents would be if the earthworm was classified as endangered.

"Until we know more about the earthworm we can't answer that question," Buckley said. "Once we learn more about it we will be able to address those questions."

Greenwald said if the earthworm is listed it will be easier to raise awareness of the earthworm, which would result in the more money for studies and more protection of the animal's habitat.

Posted by Right-Mind | 1 comment(s)

Top 10 Films of 2007

AFI lists its Top 10 Films of 2007 (in alphabetical order):

  • BEFORE THE DEVIL KNOWS YOU'RE DEAD
  • THE DIVING BELL AND THE BUTTERFLY
  • INTO THE WILD
  • JUNO
  • KNOCKED UP
  • MICHAEL CLAYTON
  • NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN
  • RATATOUILLE
  • THE SAVAGES
  • THERE WILL BE BLOOD
Posted by Right-Mind | 2 comment(s)

Pope’s exorcist A-teams will wage war on Satan

From the UK’s Evening Standard:

The Pope has ordered his bishops to set up exorcism squads to tackle the rise of Satanism.

Vatican chiefs are concerned at what they see as an increased interest in the occult.

They have introduced courses for priests to combat what they call the most extreme form of “Godlessness.”

Each bishop is to be told to have in his diocese a number of priests trained to fight demonic possession.

The initiative was revealed by 82-year-old Father Gabriele Amorth, the Vatican “exorcist-in-chief,” to the online Catholic news service Petrus.

“Thanks be to God, we have a Pope who has decided to fight the Devil head-on,” he said.

“Too many bishops are not taking this seriously and are not delegating their priests in the fight against the Devil. You have to hunt high and low for a properly trained exorcist.

“Thankfully, Benedict XVI believes in the existence and danger of evil - going back to the time he was in charge of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.” The CDF is the oldest Vatican department and was headed by Benedict from 1982, when he was Cardinal Ratzinger, until he became Pope in 2005.

Posted by Right-Mind | 1 comment(s)

A new, younger jihadi threat emerges

Swami Nick Gier -- Intellectual Leader of the IntoleristaDedicated to Nick Gier, who still cannot tell the difference.

From the Christian Science Monitor:

Sleepecurity analysts and terrorism experts say is an emerging threat facing both Western and Arab countries: younger jihadis who have been recruited over the Internet or inspired to act through militant Islamist literature or videos. What’s more, analysts say, these young radicals often don’t belong to a centralized group and may even act on their own.

“As I speak, terrorists are methodically and intentionally targeting young people and children in this country. They are radicalizing, indoctrinating, and grooming young, vulnerable people to carry out acts of terrorism,” said Jonathan Evans, the director general of the British MI5, the security service, in November.

He warned that teenagers as young as 15 and 16 have been implicated in “terrorist-related” activities as a result of a deliberate strategy pursued by radical Islamist groups.

On Wednesday, Pakistani police arrested a 15-year-old boy for allegedly trying to blow himself up at a rally for opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, who was killed Thursday as she left an election rally in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. In September, a 15-year-old killed 30 people when he drove a truck full of explosives into an Algerian naval barracks.

And, in mid-November, the US declared that Omar Khadr, a Canadian national detained in Guanta’namo Bay, was eligible for trial by a military commission, making him potentially the first minor to be tried for war crimes. He was arrested in Afghanistan when he was 15 and accused of killing a US soldier and conspiring with Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda network.

Analysts say this younger, more diverse, disparate, and more unpredictable crop of operatives is a prime recruiting pool for Al Qaeda’s off-shoots as the terror network becomes increasingly decentralized.

“We now face organized groups as well as individuals with no clear links to terrorist groups, some of them quite young,” said Khalid Zerouali, who heads Morocco’s effort to combat transnational crime at the Interior Ministry. “It makes it that much harder for us to identify them.”

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The Top 12 Blunders of the Presidential Campaign

TownHallFrom John Hawkins over at TownHall

12) Mike Huckabee attacks Romney's religion

11) Mitt Romney "saw" his father march with Martin Luther King

10) Obama's Flag Pin and National Anthem Flap

9) Hillary's campaign says Obama is a coke-dealing Muslim liar who has been lying since kindergarten

8) Fred Thompson skips New Hampshire For Leno

7) Southern Fried Hillary

6) John Edwards' running feud with Ann Coulter

5) Fred Thompson's rejection of a Constitutional amendment to ban abortion

4) John Edwards' $400 Haircut

3) John McCain supports the Senate amnesty bill

2) Fred Thompson gets in the race late

1) Hillary's drivers' licenses for illegals flap

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The right answer to a non problem is to have the courage to do nothing

GlobalWarming From ***:

 There is no Global Warming taking place at this time.  The solar warming of the last few decades has ended and now the Earth is cooling.  But the Global Warming doomsayers continue to grab headlines with their International Meetings, Nobel Peace Prize and predictions of disastrous consequences from "CO2forcing.

As soon as the global warming alarmists realize this, they will declare victory.

HT: Robert H.

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Idaho ranks as fourth fastest growing in nation -- mostly from high birth rate

We’re making our contribution to the cause.

From today's Idaho Statesman:

Idaho held onto its post as one of the nation’s fastest growing states, although this year the Gem State dropped a notch and relinquished its third highest ranking to the Beehive State, Utah.

Idaho was the fourth fastest growing state from July 1, 2006 to July 1, 2007 according to information released from the Census Bureau this week. But not all of Idaho’s growth is due to people moving into the state.

Idaho has one of the nation’s highest birth rates and a lower than average death rate, which means the state is generating more people.

Idaho’s population increased by 35,524 people — 21,837 moved to Idaho from other states or countries.

The rest of the population growth resulted from births exceeding deaths by 14,198, Idaho’s rate of natural increase is the fourth highest is the fourth highest in the nation, behind Utah, Alaska and Tennessee. Idaho ranked 14th in the number of people moving in from other states or countries.

The state’s population increased 2.4 percent between July 1, 2006, and July 1, 2007, for a total population of 1,499,402.

Nevada, with a 2.9 percent increase, experienced the nation’s fastest growth rate followed by Arizona and Utah, continuing a pattern of strong growth in the nation’s western interior.

Nationally, the U.S. population grew by 1 percent.

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Census: A new migrant every 30 seconds

US Census Bureau News Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
THURSDAY, DEC. 27, 2007

  • Robert Bernstein
  • Public Information Office
  • 301-763-3030/763-3762 (fax)
  • 301-457-1037 (TDD)
  • e-mail: pio@census.gov
  • CB07-181
  • Broadcast release [PDF]

tags-->

Census Bureau Projects Population of 303.1 Million

     As our nation prepares to ring in the new year, the U.S. Census Bureau today projected the Jan. 1, 2008, population will be 303,146,284 -- up 2,842,103 or 0.9 percent from New Year’s Day 2007.

     In January, the United States is expected to register one birth every eight seconds and one death every 11 seconds.

    Meanwhile, net international migration is expected to add one person every 30 seconds. The result is an increase in the total U.S. population of one person every 13 seconds.

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For Heather W.

I thought this was amazing.

#1 son said “is he crazy!?!” 

 

HT: Charles K.

Posted by Right-Mind | 3 comment(s)

CWA says domestic partners bill a precursor to same-sex 'marriage'

One step at a time.

Free_republic_logoFrom the Free Republic:

A spokesman for Concerned Women for America warns that yet another piece of legislation being promoted in the Democrat-led Congress would force taxpayers to subsidize immoral and dangerous behavior.

Senators Gordon Smith (R-Oregon) and Joe Lieberman (I-Connecticut) have introduced a bill that will extend domestic partner benefits to homosexual federal employees. The measure would allow an employee and his or her same-sex partner to be eligible for federal health benefits, the Family and Medical Leave program, long-term care, insurance, and retirement benefits. Representatives Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisconsin), who is an open homosexual, and Tom Lantos (D-California) have introduced the bill in the House and included foreign service workers for the first time.

Matt Barber is policy director for cultural issues at Concerned Women for America in Washington, DC. He says the bill is the camel's nose in the tent for a litany of pro-homosexuality legislation, along the lines of the Employment Nondiscrimination Act.

"For the government to take a moral stance here [regarding] people who engage in homosexual conduct is essentially equating that conduct to natural sexual relations between married, heterosexual couples," states Barber. "This really introduces us to the whole idea of gay 'marriage' at the national level to federal ENDA."

Barber believes most people do not realize that all of the major benefits being sought by homosexual "couples" are already available through relatively simple means, such as power of attorney and rights of inheritance.

"It's just a matter of filling out the paperwork," he explains. "But I think the big issue here again, the big problem, is that this lends official government recognition to unhealthy and immoral behavior."

Michael Guest, an openly homosexual former U.S. ambassador to Romania under President Bush, recently resigned from the State Department following his criticism of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice for failing to "redress policies that discriminate against gay and lesbian employees." 

HT: LCJ

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Sen. Craig Naughtiest Of '07 Naughty Americans

Betsy Z. Russell works as staff writer for The Spokesman-Review. In that position, Russell covers Idaho news from our bureau in BoiseDetails from Spokesman Review Betsy Russell's blog An Eye on Boise.

Believe it or not, there’s an organization that puts together a list called the “Naughty Nine,” honoring “the year’s naughtiest Americans.” And this year, Idaho’s senior senator, Larry Craig, topped the list at No. 1. Craig even beat out Britney Spears (No. 3). The list is posted at TheNaughtyAmerican.com (Caution: Ads contain adult material), a self-described "mainstream news Web site" put up by NaughtyAmerica.com, an adult entertainment company. The list’s editor, David Moye, said, “This year was a truly watershed year for naughtiness. Besides usual naughty suspects like Britney Spears or Barry Bonds, there were toe-tapping senators and diaper-wearing astronauts who practically demanded by their actions to be on the list".

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Moscow -- the Exception Again

This headline is making the news everywhere: “Home prices post record annual drop.”

But notice the difference here in Moscow. Back in Feb 2007, the average residential home cost $230,000. Today the average residential house in Moscow costs $238,000.

Supply (low) and demand (high) has kept us immune to the housing costs crashing around the rest of the US.

From Reuters:

Prices of existing U.S. single-family homes recorded their biggest annual drop in October, suggesting the housing slump is far from over, a national home price gauge released on Wednesday showed.

The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller year-over-year index of 10 metropolitan areas fell to 209.68 in October, down 6.7 percent from a year earlier. The decline surpassed the 6.3 percent drop in April 1991.

"No matter how you look at these data, it is obvious that the current state of the single-family housing market remains grim," said Robert Shiller, chief economist at MacroMarkets LLC, in a statement.

The firms' newer, composite home price index on 20 metropolitan areas declined to 192.89 in October, down 6.1 percent from a year ago.

On a month-over-month basis, both indexes lost 1.4 percent in October compared with September.

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Notable Deaths of 2007

The New York Times has the list.

Notable-obits-span-600

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US braces for baby boom retirement wave

From Breitbart:

The first of the vast US baby boom generation goes into retirement in January, setting off a demographic tidal wave with wide-ranging economic, political and social implications.

Kathleen Casey-Kirschling, born on January 1, 1946, is acknowledged as the nation's first baby boomer and the first to apply for social security benefits, for which she will be eligible in 2008.

The New Jersey grandmother is the first of an estimated 80 million Americans born between 1946 and 1964, a generation that led a social revolution in the 1960s and changed the fabric of most facets of society.

The cost for government-funded social security and medical care for the boomers leaves a funding gap of between 40 and 76 trillion dollars for next 75 years, according to various estimates.

"America is facing a demographic juggernaut," says Brent Green, a marketing consultant and author, in his "Boomers" blog.

"An unprecedented number will soon be entering the retirement stage of life. One-third of the population will be over 50 by 2010. One in five will be over 65 by 2010."

 

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Plan Would Let Seniors Work to Pay Taxes

How nice of the town — allowing seniors to work for $7/hour to keep the houses that they own.

From the Associated Press:

GREENBURGH, N.Y. (AP) - Audrey Davison lives alone, gets a $620 Social Security check each month and worries about the sharply rising taxes on her four-bedroom house. Davison, 76, raised her family there and after 43 years, she really doesn't want to leave Greenburgh.

Greenburgh doesn't want her to leave, either.

The town is pushing a program that would let seniors work part-time, for $7 an hour, to help pay off some of their property taxes.

"People shouldn't have to sell their house, move away to a place with less taxes, leave behind their family and friends," said Town Supervisor Paul Feiner.

He envisions retired doctors mentoring schoolchildren, retired accountants helping with the town's finances, retired lawyers offering their services for a discount. But there are plenty of less-skilled jobs that need doing, he said.

"It's not like we're going to see grandma running the snowplow," he said. "There are lots of things people can do for the town and it wouldn't cost us that much to pay them."

The proposal has caused a stir in Greenburgh, a town of 90,000 in Westchester County, which has the nation's third-highest homeowner property taxes. The plan would be unusual if not unique in New York, but similar programs are considered successes in Colorado, Massachusetts, South Carolina and elsewhere.

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Denver Breaks Record For Snowfall On Christmas Day

GlobalWarmingMore signs of global warming.

The previous record dates back to 1894.

It certainly made for quite the winter wonderland on this Christmas Day, and provided quite the surprise to residents.

“I think we expected a few flurries and there's probably eight or nine inches now. It's just like Norman Rockwell," said Denver resident Adam Haynes.

Denver officially recorded 7.8 inches of snow on Christmas Day.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Global Warming Will Save America from the Right...Eventually

This has got to be one of the most hysterical articles I’ve ever read.

I wonder if Lindorff attended philosophy classes at the University of Idaho? All of this is going to happen within the lifetime of his two cats? He must be drinking from the Algore fountain.

GlobalWarming From Dave Lindorff over at the Baltimore Chronicle:

Say what you will about the looming catastrophe facing the world as the pace of global heating and polar melting accelerates. There is a silver lining.

Look at a map of the US.

The area that will by completely inundated by the rising ocean—and not in a century but in the lifetime of my two cats—are the American southeast, including the most populated area of Texas, almost all of Florida, most of Louisiana, and half of Alabama and Mississippi, as well as goodly portions of eastern Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina. While the northeast will also see some coastal flooding, its geography is such that that aside from a few projecting sandbars like Long Island and Cape Cod, the land rises fairly quickly to well above sea level. Sure, Boston, New York and Philadelphia will be threatened, but these are geographically confined areas that could lend themselves to protection by Dutch-style dikes. The West Coast too tends to rise rapidly to well above sea level in most places. Only down in Southern California towards the San Diego area is the ground closer to sea level.

So what we see is that huge swaths of conservative America are set to face a biblical deluge in a few more presidential cycles.

Then there’s the matter of the Midwest, which climate experts say is likely to face a permanent condition of unprecedented drought, making the place largely unlivable, and certainly unfarmable. The agribusinesses and conservative farmers that have been growing corn and wheat may be able to stretch out this doomsday scenario by deep well drilling, but west of the Mississippi, the vast Ogallala Aquifer that has allowed for such irrigation is already being tapped out. It will not be replaced.

So again, we will see the decline and depopulation of the nation’s vast midsection—noted for its consistent conservatism. Only in the northernmost area, around the Great Lakes (which will be not so great anymore), and along the Canadian border, will there still be enough rain for farming and continued large population concentrations, but those regions, like Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois, are also more liberal in their politics.

Finally, in the Southwest, already parched and stiflingly hot, the rise in energy costs and the soaring temperatures will put an end to right-wing retirement communities like Phoenix, Tucson and Palm Springs. Already the Salton Sea is fading away and putting Palm Springs on notice that the good times are coming to an end. Another right-wing haven soon to be gone.

So the future political map of America is likely to look as different as the much shrunken geographical map, with much of the so-called “red” state region either gone or depopulated.

There is a poetic justice to this of course. It is conservatives who are giving us the candidates who steadfastly refuse to have the nation take steps that could slow the pace of climate change, so it is appropriate that they should bear the brunt of its impact.

The important thing is that we, on the higher ground both actually and figuratively, need to remember that, when they begin their historic migration from their doomed regions, we not give them the keys to the city. They certainly should be offered assistance in their time of need, but we need to keep a firm grip on our political systems, making sure that these guilty throngs who allowed the world to go to hell are gerrymandered into political impotence in their new homes.

There will be much work to be done to help the earth and its residents—human and non-human—survive this man-made catastrophe, and we can’t have these future refugee troglodytes, should their personal disasters still fail to make them recognize reality, mucking things up again.

It should be considered acceptable, in this stifling new world, to say, “Shut up. We told you this would happen.”

Posted by Right-Mind | 2 comment(s)
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More than 8 out of 10 Americans identify with a Christian faith

According to a recent Gallup poll:

About 82% of Americans in 2007 told Gallup interviewers that they identified with a Christian religion. That includes 51% who said they were Protestant, 5% who were "other Christian," 23% Roman Catholic, and 3% who named another Christian faith, including 2% Mormon.

Because 11% said they had no religious identity at all, and another 2% didn't answer, these results suggest that well more than 9 out of 10 Americans who identify with a religion are Christian in one way or the other.

Has this changed over time?

Yes. The percentage of Americans who identify with a Christian religion is down some over the decades. This is not so much because Americans have shifted to other religions, but because a significantly higher percentage of Americans today say they don't have a religious identity. In the late 1940s, when Gallup began summarizing these data, a very small percentage explicitly told interviewers they did not identify with any religion. But of those who did have a religion, Gallup classified -- in 1948, for example -- 69% as Protestant and 22% as Roman Catholic, or about 91% Christian.

It's one thing to identify with a religion, and another to be actively religious. What percentage of Americans are actually members of a church?

Sixty-two percent of Americans in Gallup's latest poll, conducted in December, say they are members of a "church or synagogue," a question Gallup has been asking since 1937.

Given the state of moral decay in the USA, I find these numbers disturbing.

Posted by Right-Mind | 2 comment(s)
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