
29 November 2008

Oprah did a great show last week on The Blue Zones-term coined by Dan Buettner--referring to areas in the world where people live the longest.
Starting Healthy Habits Later In Life Still Makes A Difference
Written by Kathryn Savage
We know that diet and exercise play a vital role in living a long, healthy life, and scientists are always coming up with new information that helps explain why this is.
A recent study, (July, 2007), published in the journal Science, reveals that even if we start later in life, healthy lifestyle habits, (eating lots of fruits, vegetables, whole grains and a diet low in saturated fat, along with exercise), has a profoundly balancing effect on our hormones. This may extend more than our ability to rock those skinny jeans, it also extends the health of our brains.
Read more here.
26 November 2008
The Iraq War Has Claimed All Kinds
I debated about whether or not I was going to post this video. It's sick. I found this site (http://patdollard.com/young-americans) from another site, and it appears to be that of a soldier who fought in Iraq. This video is disturbing, and while I cannot imagine what it is like to fight in a war, etc, it's a little scary to think these people are living among us.
25 November 2008
24 November 2008
FERRELL INAUGURATES B'WAY-BOUND BUSH BASH

By JACKSON F. KURTIS
A helicopter tether falls from the ceiling and an annoyed ex-president, George W. Bush, is lowered to the stage.
"I told them to take me someplace interesting. Someone suggested the Island of Manhattan," he says. "But I didn't realize that's just the Indian word for New York City."
With that, comedian Will Ferrell kicks off his two-hour monologue, "You're Welcome, America. A Final Night with George W. Bush."
The show premieres at the Cort Theatre on West 48th Street in February, but a surprised audience - which included "Juno" star Michael Cera - got a sneak peak of the sketch this week as Ferrell perfected his "strategery" at Los Angeles' Upright Citizens Brigade theater.
According to people in the audience, Ferrell jokes about:
* Global warming: "I believe in that about as much as I believe in Bigfoot. Then again, I believe in Bigfoot about 80 percent, so I guess that's pretty real."
* The Geneva Convention: "The laws that will govern us when we colonize the moon."
* The contested 2000 presidential election and Al Gore's retracted concession: "That kind of p - ssed me off, since I had already taped my M-80s [fireworks] to my superhero action figure."
* Reducing water-quality standards: "Everyone knows that after calcium, arsenic is the most important ingredient for strong bones."
* Dick Cheney: "Some say he's the strongest president we've ever had . . . He shot a guy in the face and that guy apologized to him."
* Drilling in ANWR: "It would give the animals something to talk about."
* Finding Osama bin Laden: "Kinda dropped the ball on that one."
Beyond the one-liners, Ferrell's portrayal of Bush was surprisingly touching, as in moments when he mused about the members of the military who had died.
23 November 2008
We Failed Miserably

Katrina Kids: Sickest Ever
By Mary Carmichael | NEWSWEEK
Even before the storm, they were some of the country's neediest kids. Now, the children of Katrina who stayed longest in ramshackle government trailer parks in Baton Rouge are "the sickest I have ever seen in the U.S.," says Irwin Redlener, president of the Children's Health Fund and a professor at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health. According to a new report by CHF and Mailman focusing on 261 displaced children, the well-being of the poorest Katrina kids has "declined to an alarming level" since the hurricane. Forty-one percent are anemic—twice the rate found in children in New York City homeless shelters, and more than twice the CDC's record rate for high-risk minorities. More than half the kids have mental-health problems. And 42 percent have respiratory infections and disorders that may be linked to formaldehyde and crowding in the trailers, the last of which FEMA finally closed in May. The "unending bureaucratic haggling" at federal and state levels over how to provide services and rebuild health centers for the Gulf's poor has made a bad situation much worse, says Redlener: "As awful as the initial response to Katrina looked on television, it's been dwarfed by the ineptitude and disorganization of the recovery."
More here.
21 November 2008
MORE BOURNE!!!

I'm very excited. I hope it is good, though, in the spirit of the first three, and not just a lame attempt to make another hit.
20 November 2008
Memphis, TN, gives Barack Obama a Booking Number

Link here.
Memphis Tennessee infamous for being the city where Martin Luther King lost his life in 1968 will now go down in history as the city that placed the first Black President in the criminal system.
On November 4th an over zealous City of Memphis Public Works employee, Gene Soucy cited Barack Obama personally and not the local campaign office for the placement of campaign signs in areas that the city states they should not be.
Obama court date was set for yesterday and after the President -elect did not appear a bench warrant was about to be rendered in General Sessions Div 14 by a judge that was sitting in for Judge Potter who was absent from his bench on yesterday.
The word of this foolish act got to attorney Javier Bailey who also is a Democratic State party member who went in and got the date reset for December 8,2008 at 1:30 PM.
On the very same day that he became President of the United States of America where he was voted into office by millions,He also received a booking number 08725976.
I spoke with Pulic Works Director Dwan Gilliom who stated that he had been expecting my call and was about to refer me to Toni Holliman the spokesperson for mayor Willie Herenton. But as our conversation continue we both found that there no need to call with Holliman because I had more information about the matter then either of them. Gilliom was unaware that President -Elect Barack Obama now had a booking number and wondered why Soucy didn't confer with him on the matter.
TO SEE FOR YOURSELF CLICK ON AND TYPE IN BARACK OBAMA UNDER GS CASE HISTORY
http://jssi.co.shelby.tn.us/
Giving Up on God
By Kathleen Parker
WashingtonPost.com
WashingtonPost.com
As Republicans sort out the reasons for their defeat, they likely will overlook or dismiss the gorilla in the pulpit. Three little letters, great big problem: G-O-D.
I'm bathing in holy water as I type.
To be more specific, the evangelical, right-wing, oogedy-boogedy branch of the GOP is what ails the erstwhile conservative party and will continue to afflict and marginalize its constituents if reckoning doesn't soon cometh.
Simply put: Armband religion is killing the Republican Party. And, the truth -- as long as we're setting ourselves free -- is that if one were to eavesdrop on private conversations among the party intelligentsia, one would hear precisely that.
The choir has become absurdly off-key, and many Republicans know it.
But they need those votes!
So it has been for the Grand Old Party since the 1980s or so, as it has become increasingly beholden to an element that used to be relegated to wooden crates on street corners.
Short break as writer ties blindfold and smokes her last cigarette.
Which is to say, the GOP has surrendered its high ground to its lowest brows. In the process, the party has alienated its non-base constituents, including other people of faith (those who prefer a more private approach to worship), as well as secularists and conservative-leaning Democrats who otherwise might be tempted to cross the aisle.
Here's the deal, 'pubbies: Howard Dean was right.
It isn't that culture doesn't matter. It does. But preaching to the choir produces no converts. And shifting demographics suggest that the Republican Party -- and conservatism with it -- eventually will die out unless religion is returned to the privacy of one's heart where it belongs.
Religious conservatives become defensive at any suggestion that they've had something to do with the GOP's erosion. And, though the recent Democratic sweep can be attributed in large part to a referendum on Bush and the failing economy, three long-term trends identified by Emory University's Alan Abramowitz have been devastating to the Republican Party: increasing racial diversity, declining marriage rates and changes in religious beliefs.
Suffice it to say, the Republican Party is largely comprised of white, married Christians. Anyone watching the two conventions last summer can't have missed the stark differences: One party was brimming with energy, youth and diversity; the other felt like an annual Depends sales meeting.
With the exception of Miss Alaska, of course.
Even Sarah Palin has blamed Bush policies for the GOP loss. She's not entirely wrong, but she's also part of the problem. Her recent conjecture about whether to run for president in 2012 (does anyone really doubt she will?) speaks for itself:
"I'm like, okay, God, if there is an open door for me somewhere, this is what I always pray, I'm like, don't let me miss the open door. Show me where the open door is.... And if there is an open door in (20)12 or four years later, and if it's something that is going to be good for my family, for my state, for my nation, an opportunity for me, then I'll plow through that door."
Let's do pray that God shows Alaska's governor the door.
Meanwhile, it isn't necessary to evict the Creator from the public square, surrender Judeo-Christian values or diminish the value of faith in America. Belief in something greater than oneself has much to recommend it, including most of the world's architectural treasures, our universities and even our founding documents.
But, like it or not, we are a diverse nation, no longer predominantly white and Christian. The change Barack Obama promised has already occurred, which is why he won.
Among Jewish voters, 78 percent went for Obama. Sixty-six percent of under-30 voters did likewise. Forty-five percent of voters ages 18-29 are Democrats compared to just 26 percent Republican; in 2000, party affiliation was split almost evenly.
The young will get older, of course. Most eventually will marry, and some will become their parents. But nonwhites won't get whiter. And the nonreligious won't get religion through external conversion. It doesn't work that way.
Given those facts, the future of the GOP looks dim and dimmer if it stays the present course. Either the Republican Party needs a new base -- or the nation may need a new party.
Jobless claims surge to a 16-year high
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The ranks of Americans getting by on unemployment insurance are rising fast.
As the number of Americans filing for unemployment insurance reaches a 16-year high, President Bush on Thursday announced he would extend unemployment benefits by signing the stand-alone jobless benefits bill pending in Congress.
19 November 2008
Bar Exam Study Time Again

It's getting to be like a ritual--twice a year--it begins anew. I am going to blog about the painful process this time in hopes that this somewhat provides additional accountability somehow. Not that being unemployed for this long does not provide adequate motivation, but I find it difficult to focus at times, living in this dark apartment, no where to go to hang out, no true friends nearby to commiserate with, all the while Doby is lounging on the couch staring at me trying to will me to take him outside once again.
Life in Jonesborough, TN, in my lovely and quaint house, and my little job at the courthouse doesn't seem quite so bad right about now. It was comfortable, cozy, rural enough but close enough to the "city" so as not to feel isolated on an island in the middle of the Pacific somewhere, and it didn't cost $1000 a month. It wasn't freezing nearly 9 mos of the year (our house is always cold here, regardless of the season), and it allowed light in through the windows more than a mere 3 hours a day.
Oh well, that was then, this is now. I am where I am; I must endure, because it has just got to get better than this.
And, speaking of the bar exam, it really is a self confidence buster at times to think of those past who have passed the stupid thing, yet, I seem...unable...but I know I am capable, just different circumstances. And besides, had I passed the thing the first time around, I would not have had all this time to really change to become the person I am meant to be.
Obama's Use of Complete Sentences Stirs Controversy
by Andy Borowitz
In the first two weeks since the election, President-elect Barack Obama has broken with a tradition established over the past eight years through his controversial use of complete sentences, political observers say.
Millions of Americans who watched Mr. Obama's appearance on CBS's 60 Minutes on Sunday witnessed the president-elect's unorthodox verbal tick, which had Mr. Obama employing grammatically correct sentences virtually every time he opened his mouth.
But Mr. Obama's decision to use complete sentences in his public pronouncements carries with it certain risks, since after the last eight years many Americans may find his odd speaking style jarring.
According to presidential historian Davis Logsdon of the University of Minnesota, some Americans might find it "alienating" to have a president who speaks English as if it were his first language.
"Every time Obama opens his mouth, his subjects and verbs are in agreement," says Mr. Logsdon. "If he keeps it up, he is running the risk of sounding like an elitist."
The historian said that if Mr. Obama insists on using complete sentences in his speeches, the public may find itself saying, "Okay, subject, predicate, subject predicate -- we get it, stop showing off."
The president-elect's stubborn insistence on using complete sentences has already attracted a rebuke from one of his harshest critics, Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska.
"Talking with complete sentences there and also too talking in a way that ordinary Americans like Joe the Plumber and Tito the Builder can't really do there, I think needing to do that isn't tapping into what Americans are needing also," she said.
18 November 2008
Burlington, Vt., is healthiest city, CDC says

-Church Street in Burlington
What's the healthiest city in America? It appears to be Burlington, Vt.
Vermont's largest city is tops among U.S. metropolitan areas by having the largest proportion of people — 92 percent — who say they are in good or great health.
It's also among the best in exercise and among the lowest in obesity, diabetes and other measures of ill health, according to a recent report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
This New England city of 40,000, on the shores of Lake Champlain, is in some ways similar to the unhealthiest city — Huntington, W.Va. Both are out-of-the-way college towns with populations that are overwhelmingly white people of English, German or Irish ancestry.
But there the similarities end:
_Burlington is younger, with an average age of 37, compared to 40 in Huntington, according to the Census Bureau.
_Burlington is better off financially, with 8 percent living at the federal poverty level, compared to 19 percent in Huntington.
_It's much more educated, with nearly 40 percent of area residents having at least a college bachelor's degree. Only 15 percent in the Huntington area do.
The cultures are significantly different, too. Bicycling, hiking, skiing and other exercises are common in Burlington. Neighborhood groups commonly focus on improving parks, working in community gardens and repairing and improving sidewalks.
"There's this norm of a lot of activity," said Chris Finley, Vermont's deputy health commissioner, who works in Burlington.
And though college staples like pizza are common, healthier foods are also popular. Grass-fed beef is offered in finer restaurants, vegan options are plentiful, and the lone downtown supermarket is run by a co-op successful in selling bulk rice and other healthy choices to low-income residents.
Burlington is helped by the presence of IBM and other employers offering more generous health benefits and corporate wellness programs than companies in Huntington, some experts suggested.
17 November 2008
Focus on the Family...Not So Much

More layoffs at Focus on the Family
Ministry spent more than $500,000 to pass California's Prop. 8 gay marriage ban
UPDATE: Focus on the Family announced this afternoon that 202 jobs will be cut companywide — more than 20 percent of its workforce. Initial reports bring the total number of remaining employees to around 950.
Focus on the Family is poised to announce major layoffs to its Colorado Springs-based ministry and media empire today. The cutbacks come just weeks after the group pumped more than half a million dollars into the successful effort to pass a gay-marriage ban in California.
Critics are holding up the layoffs, which come just two months after the organization’s last round of dismissals, as a sad commentary on the true priorities of ministry.
“If I were their membership I would be appalled,” said Mark Lewis, a longtime Colorado Springs activist who helped organize a Proposition 8 protest in Colorado Springs on Saturday. “That [Focus on the Family] would spend any money on anything that’s obviously going to get blocked in the courts is just sad. [Prop. 8] is guaranteed to lose, in the long run it doesn’t have a chance — it’s just a waste of money.”
In all, Focus pumped $539,000 in cash and another $83,000 worth of non-monetary support into the measure to overturn a California Supreme Court ruling that allowed gays and lesbians to marry in that state. The group was the seventh-largest donor to the effort in the country. The cash contributions are equal to the salaries of 19 Coloradans earning the 2008 per capita income of $29,133.
In addition Elsa Prince, the auto parts heiress and longtime funder of conservative social causes who sits on the Focus on the Family board, contributed another $450,000 to Prop. 8.
“They should do more with their half-million dollars than spending it to collect signatures to take the rights away from a class of people,” said Fred Karger, the founder of the anti-Prop 8 group Californians Against Hate. “I think it’s wrong and it’s hurtful to so many Americans.”
In addition to promoting socially conservative issues such opposition to abortion and gay rights, and supporting abstinence-only education, the evangelical Christian ministry is a purveyor of Christian books, CDs and DVDs. Two months ago, citing Wal-Mart and online retailers as having cut into its product market, Focus announced that 46 employees would be laid off from its distribution department. Late Friday, Focus spokesman Gary Schneeberger confirmed that more layoffs are in store, but said the ministry will not release details until Monday afternoon. Schneeberger hinted that some programs may be eliminated entirely, but declined to elaborate.
“We’re going to need to talk to our own family first,” he said. “We need to respect the people who are affected.”
Schneeberger also refused to discuss the funding priorities that Focus made this fall, including pumping money and in-kind contributions into Proposition 8.
This is the third year that Focus has laid off employees due to budget cuts. In its heyday, the ministry, which relocated to Colorado Springs from Arcadia, Calif., in 1991, employed more than 1,500 people. Many of those employees worked in mailroom and line assembly jobs, processing so much incoming and outgoing correspondences that the U.S. Postal Service gave Focus its own ZIP code.
In September 2005, nearly 80 employees were reassigned or laid off in an effort to trim millions of dollars from its 2006 budget. In addition, 83 open positions were not filled in the layoff, which included eliminating some of the ministry’s programs. At the time, Focus employed 1,342 full-time employees.
“To the extent that we can place them within the ministry, we will try to do that,” said then-spokesman Paul Hetrick. “Most of them will not be able to be placed.”
In September 2007, amid a reported $8 million in budget shortfalls, Focus on the Family laid off another 30 employees; 15 more were reassigned within the company. Most of the layoffs were from Focus’ constituent response services department (i.e. the mailroom).
At the time, Schneeberger, who had replaced Hetrick, said that giving was actually up by $1 million during the fiscal year. However, a very “aggressive” budget goal of $150 million did not materialize.
In a statement issued this September, marking the end of the ministry’s fiscal year, Chief Operating Officer Glenn Williams weighed in on the additional layoffs of 46 people.
“It is certainly heartbreaking that in this case fulfilling that duty means having to say goodbye to some members of our Focus family, but industry realities really leave us no alternative,” he note in his statement. “We are accountable to our donors to spend their money in the most cost-effective and productive manner possible.”
But Lewis, the Colorado Springs activist, wonders whether the families who donate to the nonprofit ministry, realize where their funds really end up.
“Seriously, I would imagine their supporters have got to be asking the question about whether their church is really practicing their theology.”
For Lewis, who is straight, the issue boils down to the significance of targeting a class of citizens for exclusion, at the expense of the families that the ministry could be helping — in this case their own employees.
Lewis likened Proposition 8 to Colorado’s Amendment 2, the 1992 anti-gay measure that was designed to prohibit gays and lesbians from seeking legal protections. Colorado voters approved the measure, which was marketed by proponents, including Focus on the Family, as an effort to prohibit gays and lesbians from seeking “special rights.” The U.S. Supreme Court stuck down the measure as unconstitutional four years later.
“You can’t make homosexuals second class citizens — we’ve learned that already,” Lewis said. “People will look back on this and see how absurd it is.”
Days before this year’s election, Focus founder James Dobson appeared at a closing rally at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego to rally the anti-gay troops.
Karger of Californians Against Hate, termed the rally a “big bust.” Organizers promised that more than 70,000 supporters would show up; the final tally was close to 10,000, he said.
Yet three days later, California voters approved the measure with 52 percent of the vote. While the measure will certainly head back to court, California has become the 31st state in the country to pass measures that define marriage as being between a man and woman only. In all, Proposition 8 has proven to be the most expensive social issue in the country, with more than $73 million pumped into the cause from both sides. One of the larger contributors to the anti-Prop. 8 efforts was Colorado gay philanthropist Tim Gill, who contributed $720,000 to oppose the measure.
“I’m very disturbed by organizations from out of state like Focus on the Family,” Karger said. “They came in early to make sure the measure got on ballot; they’ve got muscle and they are out to hurt a lot of people and destroy a lot of lives.”
16 November 2008
14 November 2008
Michael Vick's Pits
January 20, 2009

In this Jan. 20, 1981 file photo, shows a wide angle view from the Capitol balcony as President Ronald Reagan, visible at center, addresses the nation following his swearing-in ceremony in Washington. President-elect Barack Obama's inauguration is expected to draw 1 million-plus to the capital, and already some lawmakers have stopped taking ticket requests and hotels have booked up. (AP Photo, File)
-From Huffington Post
Working on a plan to get to the Inauguration!!
October U.S. Deficit: $237.2B

WASHINGTON — The federal government began the new budget year with a record deficit of $237.2 billion, reflecting the billions of dollars the government has started to pay out to rescue the financial system.
The Treasury Department said Thursday that the deficit for the first month in the new budget year was the highest monthly imbalance on record. It was far bigger than analysts expected, over four times larger than the October 2007 deficit of $56.8 billion, and more than half the total for all of last year.
More here.
13 November 2008
Rosie O'Donnell's Blog Entry on Election Day
election day with ruby dee
11.04.08 at 8:36 pm in life
i am in detroit r shooting america
a film about foster care
which we r making in a former boys home
closed a few months ago
in the extras waiting room
a bright blonde beautiful boy
a young eminem
looked about twelve
fifteen he told me
and i asked him to stand
which he did - smiling
a neck full of hickeys
later in the driveway
with his older pal in tow
we chatted about life - his parents
his parole officer - his medication
he lived in the foster home
we were filming in
for over a year
he is back with his parents now
he doesnt sleep home often
he crashes with friends
on couches or floors
his nails were dirty
did i sleep on my money - he asked
a million dollars in the mattress?
he has no plans for his future
no dreams of what he will be
in ten years i ask
what do u imagine for ur life
i hope with a house
and maybe a car - he said
i looked at his tiny body
not even in puberty
his baggy pants sagging
he held my eyes
mama lucas is inside - he told me
from american gangster
shes in the wheelchair
right in there
ruby dee
civil right activist - leader inspiration
what a privilege to spend this election day
in her presence
we spoke of martin and malcolm
their words and spirits felt this november day
as the nation once again rides together toward the truth
amen amen
she walked onto the set
opened her heart
like watching picasso paint
baryshnikov fly
the crew applauded after each take
amazed - captivated
as she wiped the tears
from her ethereal brown face
such grace
such beauty
such a gift
for us all
peace be with u
11.04.08 at 8:36 pm in life
i am in detroit r shooting america
a film about foster care
which we r making in a former boys home
closed a few months ago
in the extras waiting room
a bright blonde beautiful boy
a young eminem
looked about twelve
fifteen he told me
and i asked him to stand
which he did - smiling
a neck full of hickeys
later in the driveway
with his older pal in tow
we chatted about life - his parents
his parole officer - his medication
he lived in the foster home
we were filming in
for over a year
he is back with his parents now
he doesnt sleep home often
he crashes with friends
on couches or floors
his nails were dirty
did i sleep on my money - he asked
a million dollars in the mattress?
he has no plans for his future
no dreams of what he will be
in ten years i ask
what do u imagine for ur life
i hope with a house
and maybe a car - he said
i looked at his tiny body
not even in puberty
his baggy pants sagging
he held my eyes
mama lucas is inside - he told me
from american gangster
shes in the wheelchair
right in there
ruby dee
civil right activist - leader inspiration
what a privilege to spend this election day
in her presence
we spoke of martin and malcolm
their words and spirits felt this november day
as the nation once again rides together toward the truth
amen amen
she walked onto the set
opened her heart
like watching picasso paint
baryshnikov fly
the crew applauded after each take
amazed - captivated
as she wiped the tears
from her ethereal brown face
such grace
such beauty
such a gift
for us all
peace be with u
For a Washington Job, Be Prepared to Tell All

By JACKIE CALMES
New York Times
WASHINGTON — Want a top job in the Obama administration? Only pack rats need apply, preferably those not packing controversy.
A seven-page questionnaire being sent by the office of President-elect Barack Obama to those seeking cabinet and other high-ranking posts may be the most extensive — some say invasive — application ever.
The questionnaire includes 63 requests for personal and professional records, some covering applicants’ spouses and grown children as well, that are forcing job-seekers to rummage from basements to attics, in shoe boxes, diaries and computer archives to document both their achievements and missteps.
Only the smallest details are excluded; traffic tickets carrying fines of less than $50 need not be reported, the application says. Applicants are asked whether they or anyone in their family owns a gun. They must include any e-mail that might embarrass the president-elect, along with any blog posts and links to their Facebook pages.
The application also asks applicants to “please list all aliases or ‘handles’ you have used to communicate on the Internet.”
The vetting process for executive branch jobs has been onerous for decades, with each incoming administration erecting new barriers in an effort to avoid the mistakes of the past, or the controversies of the present. It is typically updated to reflect technological change (there was no Facebook the last time a new president came to town).
But Mr. Obama has elevated the vetting even beyond what might have been expected, especially when it comes to applicants’ family members, in a reflection of his campaign rhetoric against lobbying and the back-scratching, self-serving ways of Washington.
Read more here.
You know things are bad when even lawyers are getting laid off.
...
Over all, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Friday that the legal services industry lost more than 1,000 jobs in October.
...
“The last time we saw anything like this, this bad, was in the early ’90s,” Ms. Miller said. “But it’s starting to feel even worse.”
...
Over all, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Friday that the legal services industry lost more than 1,000 jobs in October.
...
“The last time we saw anything like this, this bad, was in the early ’90s,” Ms. Miller said. “But it’s starting to feel even worse.”
Librarians To Out Smart Google
How do people judge credibility on the Internet? According to research from the "Credibility Commons" project, the two top factors are 1) how pretty does it look? and 2) do I agree with it already? This is, to say the least, a nonoptimal way of evaluating information, and the Reference Extract project wants to use extensive academic credibility research to build a search engine that can out-Google Google—and the group has $100,000 in funding to come up with the technical blueprints for the system.
More here.
More here.
12 November 2008
I Was So Excited
Former Bexar County DA lost faith in capital punishment system
SAN ANTONIO – Sam Millsap is embarrassed to admit he doesn't remember how many people his office sent to death row when he was district attorney here in the 1980s.
"Somebody who has been responsible for making those decisions, for directing those prosecutions, ought to be damned certain how many executions he's responsible for," he says, wincing.
He estimates it was eight, maybe nine.
Back then, he just didn't think much about the death penalty, Mr. Millsap says. "I was 35 years old. I knew everything. I was bulletproof."
Now 60, he thinks about the death penalty a lot – about wrongful convictions, flawed eyewitness testimony, DNA analysis.
"I am concerned that the system is absolutely incompetent to deal with these issues," he says.
'Breathing fire'
If anyone had told Mr. Millsap he'd lobby against the death penalty 25 years ago, he would have laughed. Growing up in San Antonio, his interest in law was piqued by the Perry Mason television show – where he was amazed that the prosecutor never won.
But as a student at the University of Texas, Mr. Millsap was "in love with the idea of being a top drawer corporate lawyer," he says.
In 1973, he joined a prestigious civil firm in Houston. But he returned to San Antonio and ran for district attorney in Bexar County in 1982.
"Breathing fire" during the campaign, if asked about the death penalty, he responded that he would "prosecute it vigorously."
"It's sort of like income taxes ... it's part of what we live with, it's a given."
During his four years in office, he guesses his prosecutors pursued the death penalty in 30 to 40 percent of eligible cases.
Mr. Millsap never witnessed an execution.
But back in civil practice in the late 1990s, he "started getting twitchy" about capital punishment. The "waterfall of DNA exonerations" in noncapital cases bothered him. So did a study about problems in the administration of the death penalty.
And the execution of Gary Graham from Harris County, who insisted the lone eyewitness in his case was mistaken, disturbed him.
"That was the first death penalty case that I think I ever really, really looked at and was bothered by on the innocence issue," Mr. Millsap says.
Doubts about system
After Mr. Graham was executed in 2000, Mr. Millsap publicly called for a moratorium. "I am no longer satisfied that our legal system guarantees the protection of the innocent in capital murder cases," he wrote.
But, he says, he remained "absolutely certain that every person I had prosecuted for the death penalty was guilty and deserved to die."
His statement made a small stir that faded quickly. But his wife's reaction made him mad.
"You're an opponent of the death penalty but don't have the courage to admit it," she said.
"The position that you've taken is that there should not be any more executions until we have a system that guarantees the protection of the innocent. [But] the system will never guarantee the protection of the innocent."
Mr. Millsap eventually realized he agreed with her.
Several years later, the Houston Chronicle called him about Ruben Cantu, a 17-year-old whom Mr. Millsap's office prosecuted for a robbery and murder on the basis of a lone eyewitness. He was executed in 1993, but the witness later recanted his statement.
Mr. Millsap was initially disbelieving that he could have sent an innocent man to death. But after re-examining the case, his opinion changed. For a while he thought Mr. Cantu was innocent, which meant "the most ultimate failure imaginable."
An academic exercise became deeply personal. So personal that he broke prosecutorial ranks and called for abolition of the death penalty.
Today, he doesn't think Mr. Cantu was innocent, but he believes the case should not have been prosecuted as a capital crime because it was based solely on one eyewitness.
The case haunts him.
"It's not about Cantu; it's about what we owe ourselves," he says. "In every criminal case, there but for the grace of God, go you."
He tells his story to law schools, legislators and journalists. On the anti-death penalty circuit, he is "treated like a rock star."
Practical reasons
Mr. Millsap is not particularly comfortable with the movement, which often lionizes death row inmates. "There aren't any innocent lambs," there, he says.
His opposition to capital punishment is rooted in practicality.
"Retribution is an acceptable goal," he says, "so it's really hard for me to identify with, you know, what I refer to is the 'turn-the-other-cheek' crowd.
"Because the sanction is so final, so absolutely final, what we have to have is a system that guarantees the protection of the innocent."
The only way to do that, he says, is to ban executions.
"As long as human beings are making the decisions and they are at every point in the process, the potential for error is there," he says.
Mr. Millsap thinks the chances of outright abolition are small. But practicality may demand a de facto abolition.
"The moralists have been carrying this debate for decades," he says, "and they haven't moved the needle at all. ... What's driving the movement right now is the innocence issue."
He believes Texans can be persuaded to abolish the death penalty, because it costs more to prosecute a capital case through execution than it does to imprison someone for life.
The system "will collapse of its own weight," he predicts.
Glamour Women of The Year Awards

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice accepted her award by saying "When you find your passion, you'll realize that you didn't find it, it found you."
Have We Found Yet Another Way

To undermine Bushy??
Congressional Democrats are eyeing a little-known, Clinton-era law as a way to reverse Bush administration midnight regulations — even ones that have already taken effect.
It’s a move that would undermine the White House’s attempt to finalize its energy and environmental regulations by November so that Barack Obama couldn’t undo them after he’s sworn in as the 44th president on Jan. 20.
It could take Obama years to undo climate rules finalized more than 60 days before he takes office — the advantage the White House sought by getting them done by Nov. 1. But that strategy doesn’t account for the Congressional Review Act of 1996.
The law contains a clause determining that any regulation finalized within 60 days of congressional adjournment — Oct. 3, in this case — is considered to have been legally finalized on Jan. 15, 2009. The new Congress then has 60 days to review it and reverse it with a joint resolution that can’t be filibustered in the Senate.
In other words, any regulation finalized in the last half-year of the Bush administration could be wiped out with a simple party-line vote in the Democrat-controlled Congress.
Piper's Goin' Places
Inbred Klan Members

Eight people were arrested Tuesday, one on a charge of murder, in connection with the fatal shooting of a woman at a remote Louisiana campsite during what police say was an initiation ceremony for the Ku Klux Klan.
11 November 2008
Obama's Transition Team Ethics Rules
• Federal Lobbyists cannot contribute financially to the transition.
• Federal lobbyists are prohibited from any lobbying during their work with the transition.
• If someone has lobbied in the last 12 months, they are prohibited from working in the fields of policy on which they lobbied.
• If someone becomes a lobbyist after working on the transition, they are prohibited from lobbying the Administration for 12 months on matters on which they worked.
• A gift ban that is aggressive in reducing the influence of special interests.
-Huffington Post
• Federal lobbyists are prohibited from any lobbying during their work with the transition.
• If someone has lobbied in the last 12 months, they are prohibited from working in the fields of policy on which they lobbied.
• If someone becomes a lobbyist after working on the transition, they are prohibited from lobbying the Administration for 12 months on matters on which they worked.
• A gift ban that is aggressive in reducing the influence of special interests.
-Huffington Post
A Personal Rumination

Four years ago now I thought going to law school was the answer to all of life's problems, the promise of a path to a higher purpose.
Since graduation I have ascended hills and descended to lower valleys wondering if it was all a myth, an ego trip of some sort. The idea I could be a lawyer...just the word seemed to have so much effect (I'm sure a lot of Investment Bankers might be feeling the same sentiment right about now).
I have finally reached a place I can convincingly (to myself) say I am right where I am supposed to be. I have learned:
-my "problems" will follow me until I deal with them, no matter how good the job, the relationship, the house, the weather, the circumstances.
-inner peace is paramount to anything else, which requires one not to care whatsoever what anyone else thinks, and also requires the ability to make peace with everyone in one's life no matter what has happened (it's for me not them, but both benefit).
-the ego causes many more problems than I ever could have conceived.
-giving to and helping, in whatever capacity, someone else pays more dividends than any paying job ever can.
-my mind is a beautiful thing, but can simultaneously be rather torturous, control is a work in progress.
-out of this hell I emerge a forever changed and better person, but I am eagerly anticipating the end, while also trying to embrace patience to ensure a polished finished product.
That is all for now.
The South's Reign in Politics...Gone

For South, a Waning Hold on National Politics
By ADAM NOSSITER
VERNON, Ala. — Fear of the politician with the unusual name and look did not end with last Tuesday’s vote in this rural red swatch where buck heads and rifles hang on the wall. This corner of the Deep South still resonates with negative feelings about the race of President-elect Barack Obama.
What may have ended on Election Day, though, is the centrality of the South to national politics. By voting so emphatically for Senator John McCain over Mr. Obama — supporting him in some areas in even greater numbers than they did President Bush — voters from Texas to South Carolina and Kentucky may have marginalized their region for some time to come, political experts say.
The region’s absence from Mr. Obama’s winning formula means it “is becoming distinctly less important,” said Wayne Parent, a political scientist at Louisiana State University. “The South has moved from being the center of the political universe to being an outside player in presidential politics.”
...
Less than a third of Southern whites voted for Mr. Obama, compared with 43 percent of whites nationally. By leaving the mainstream so decisively, the Deep South and Appalachia will no longer be able to dictate that winning Democrats have Southern accents or adhere to conservative policies on issues like welfare and tax policy, experts say.
That could spell the end of the so-called Southern strategy, the doctrine that took shape under President Richard M. Nixon in which national elections were won by co-opting Southern whites on racial issues. And the Southernization of American politics — which reached its apogee in the 1990s when many Congressional leaders and President Bill Clinton were from the South — appears to have ended.
...
The Republicans, meanwhile, have “become a Southernized party,” said Mr. Schaller, who teaches at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. “They have completely marginalized themselves to a mostly regional party,” he said, pointing out that nearly half of the current Republican House delegation is now Southern.
Merle Black, an expert on the region’s politics at Emory University in Atlanta, said the Republican Party went too far in appealing to the South, alienating voters elsewhere.
“They’ve maxed out on the South,” he said, which has “limited their appeal in the rest of the country.”
...
Several Southern states, including Arkansas, Louisiana and Tennessee, have voted for the winner in presidential elections for decades. No more.
...
David Bositis, senior political analyst at the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, pointed out that the 18 percent share of whites that voted for Senator John Kerry in 2004 was almost cut in half for Mr. Obama.
“There’s no other explanation than race,” he said.
...
Race was a strong subtext in post-election conversations across the socioeconomic spectrum here in Vernon, the small, struggling seat of Lamar County on the Mississippi border.
One white woman said she feared that blacks would now become more “aggressive,” while another volunteered that she was bothered by the idea of a black man “over me” in the White House.
Don Dollar, the administrative assistant at City Hall, said bitterly that anyone not upset with Mr. Obama’s victory should seek religious forgiveness.
“This is a community that’s supposed to be filled with a bunch of Christian folks,” he said. “If they’re not disappointed, they need to be at the altar.”
...
“I am concerned,” Gail McDaniel, who owns a cosmetics business, said in the parking lot of the Shop and Save. “The abortion thing bothers me. Same-sex marriage.”
“I think there are going to be outbreaks from blacks,” she added. “From where I’m from, this is going to give them the right to be more aggressive.”
F.E.A.R. = False Evidence Appearing Real

10 November 2008
MSNBC

MSNBC is clearly in the tank for Obama. While I agree with them on most of their reporting/commentary, I think the last thing we need is a leftist version of Fox. Fox is pathetic; most "liberals" harbor deep seated animosity and rage towards this faux news agency. Therefore, we should not stoop to their level. Just my humble opinion.
You Might Disagree
With his policies, but I think an objective person has to admit that the Obamas are really good parents, very loving, caring, and affectionate. Also, if you have not seen the 60 minutes piece on The Insiders talking about the campaign, you should watch it; it is here on the blog. It is indicative, I believe, of how Obama will govern, how thoughtful he seems to be, and it seems like he is one to go with principle (at least on some issues-a general prediction cannot be made at this juncture) no matter how it will play out in the public. For example, his speech on race was his idea, and he decided to deliver what he thought, and if the public was not accepting then he would not be president. I really like what I'm hearing thus far.

Barack delivering his children to school. How many male officials of any position do you see doing this?



Barack delivering his children to school. How many male officials of any position do you see doing this?



09 November 2008
It Truly Is A Magical Place
And, now has even more meaning to me than before. I want to go to DC to work for Obama/Biden.




But now we have the delicious irony that a white president from a patrician family, whose administration was so negligent about America’s poor and black citizens, was so incompetent that he helped elect the first black president.
-Maureen Dowd
But now we have the delicious irony that a white president from a patrician family, whose administration was so negligent about America’s poor and black citizens, was so incompetent that he helped elect the first black president.
-Maureen Dowd
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