Saturday, October 01, 2005

1571 How MoveOn.org will fix New Orleans

They don't seem to have a plan for the white Texans hurt by Hurricane Rita, but here is the plan for NOLA.

"Liberal Group Lays Out Its Agenda"

Step 1. Throw in the kitchen sink. Repeat as often as necessary, but have no rebuilding plan.

The group is demanding "a responsible exit strategy from Iraq with a timeline that starts now."

How would an exit strategy have gotten drowned busses to the convention center; caused a levee secure for category 3 to withstand a category 4 hurricane; and correct all the past greedy politicians of both parties, local and state, who have kept New Orleans poor all these years through graft and corruption?

That means increasing the minimum wage, the group said.

2.7 % of working Americans make minimum wage or less. What does this have to do with damaged levees or terrible schools? Teachers and construction workers are protected by unions and make big bucks.

"We'll also work to prevent Republicans from privatizing Social Security and offering more tax cuts for millionaires -- policies which benefit the very rich and leave most of us behind," the press release said.

Adding a private plan to an overburdened government benefit program that gets borrowed to fund other programs won’t stop levees from failing, but won’t build them either; it won’t graduate students from poor schools, nor building new schools. Focus, people. Keep with the program, please.

And under the heading of "sustainability," MoveOn.org mentions global warming - which "almost certainly increased the force of Hurricane Katrina."

So will you also be telling China what to do with their industry? Their use of natural resources, particularly oil, will soon surpass ours. There’s not a shred of evidence that global warming caused this hurricane, unless it was a problem in the 1940s when there were more.

It also mentions out-of-control gas prices and says it will fight for "energy independence."

Don’t suppose that independence includes drilling in Alaska, or more refineries in the lower 48?

MoveOn.org also said its members want electoral reform - and Supreme Court justices that "serve the public, not just their friends."

Liberals have controlled the Supreme Court for years, so just what are you saying? Be careful what you wish for. Cronyism has served you well.

MoveOn.org has one goal only--to get us out of Iraq and allow millions of Iraqi people to die in the chaos that will follow--just like we did in VietNam, and to keep the Middle East destabilized so Israel can be destroyed.

1570 Bush is spending money like a Democrat

I'm not the only Bruce unhappy with the way Bush throws money at problems when government programs consistently have been proven to be a huge part of those same problems. Tammy Bruce agrees with me. He will never win the admiration or votes of Democrats for imitating them, and he most certainly alienates Republicans and Libertarians, who unlike Dems, have a reputation for NOT standing by their man.

1569 Good Samaritans and Katrina

A "Good Samaritan" is a term for someone who helps someone else without thought of pay back. It's based on Jesus' story in the New Testament. In veterinary medicine there are donor dogs and cats called "good Sams." We saw many Good Samaritans on the scene after Katrina. As I noted early in September, I sent my donation to the Southern Baptists after seeing the Central Ohio Chain Saw team get ready to go south before the flooding to clear trees. The rest of the country thought the hurricane had by-passed NOLA at that time and had gone back to business as usual.

There are also Good Samaritan laws intended to protect people, organizations or corporations that may be performing a service that places them in harm's way (i.e., in the cross hairs of lawyers). The American Institute of Architects has a whole package of proposals, one of which the passage of federal and state "Good Samaritan" legislation that protects architects and other design professionals from tort liability during the voluntary provision of free services to governmental authorities in times of disaster and catastrophic events.

I have only one problem with AIA's package. The AIA v.p. of Government Advocacy is a former Louisiana legislator. I have no idea if he is a Democrat or Republican, if he was good or bad in that position of responsibility. I do know this package comes with a huge price tag, and Louisiana has a really poor track record for abusing government funding, whether it's for pulling people out of poverty, educating children for employment and college, or building levees.

I do believe that professionals working in a volunteer capacity in their field should be shielded from law suits, however. Now that law firms are increasingly outsourcing legal work to India, it will be cheaper and cheaper for them to litigate, but more and more expensive for the rest of us.

Friday, September 30, 2005

1568 Graduate school in Education

Oh Snap is a very interesting blog (new I think).

"Today I had a seminar in which we discuss our student teaching experience. It was interesting--a LOT of the people in my seminar have the same kind of complaints about their schools that I do: lack of discipline, lack of consequences, not enough attention to basic skills and knowledge, etc. Somehow the entire seminar agreed that these schools were examples of "liberalism run amok." So that was amusing.

That whole seminar is hilarious. The guy who runs it is probably the most intense person ever. He has wild black hair and I could tell from the first time I saw him that he holds views that are "radical." He's a great guy, and definitely has sound educational views--a result of teaching for three years in the worst high schools in Philadelphia. But somehow he always steers the seminar away from discussing teaching and schools and toward other social ills that we are really not going to be able to deal with. For example, today somehow we got to the prison-industrial complex."

1567 Bill Bennett's comments on abortion

Bill Bennett on his radio show tried to refute an article in a book (Freakonomics) that says abortions would reduce crime, and he gets strung up by the liberals who cooked up this scheme? Really! Liberals have been saying for years that killing the unborn will "save" children from poverty and a terrible life (and help our taxes). They've also published this crime theory and blacks in scholarly journals.

"Fertility declines for black women are three times greater than for whites (12 percent compared to 4 percent). Given that homicide rates of black youths are roughly nine times higher than those of white youths, racial differences in the fertility effects of abortion are likely to translate into greater homicide reductions." Quarterly Journal of Economics "The impact of legalized abortion on crime" by John Donohue III and Steven D. Levitt. (2001) James Taranto suggests that what really made them mad was his suggesting it was immoral.

Where was the outrage when academics proposed it? Where was Nancy Pelosi then? That woman's hypocrisy really gravels me for some reason. She and Feinstein are so whiny. How do you Californians stand it?

1566 I'll bet you're surprised, but I'm not

You are a

Social Moderate
(56% permissive)

and an...

Economic Conservative
(61% permissive)

You are best described as a:

Centrist




Link: The Politics Test on Ok Cupid
Also: The OkCupid Dating Persona Test

1565 How to control poverty in New Orleans

With very little government interference. Support and promote intact families in the media, in entertainment, in books, in churches, in the entire culture. Women, save your children from poverty.

1564 No slippery slope?

We could just pass the homosexual unions discussion and go directly to legalizing polygamous unions like the Netherlands. LaShawn Barber reports. Once you decide marriage is not between a man and woman, there is really no logical reason not to include any sort of union so the group can get their benefits. We've had serial monogamy for many years with men and women supporting by court decree spouses and children from various unions including those they never married.

1563 What to wear on a river cruise

Casual. I checked with my friend Nancy who travels a lot--in fact, she’d been on a Rhine cruise earlier this year. Casual, she said, very casual. So I carefully went through my Wal-Mart and K-Mart clothes and threw in a few better quality accessories, like Chadwick's and Kohl’s. I really didn’t need my basic, dressy black dress (plus it was a bit snug), but we had plenty of room, so I did take it just in case we had a dress-up occasion. Our weather was great--about 50s in the morning, maybe 65 in afternoon. Cool is better than hot, when you're struggling through cobblestone streets and hills. Here’s what I took.

We had 2 carry-ons bags and one smaller and one larger suitcases. We divided our clothes between the 2 larger suitcases, so that if one got lost, we’d each have at least 3 changes of clothes. Medications and make-up were in the carry-ons. We each packed one change of clothes in our carry-on and a change of shoes. One couple on the cruise did not have their luggage until the 5th day, and had only their carry-on. So pack that bag very carefully!

I chose a brown, black, cream and beige color scheme, with just a couple of other colors, like a bright blue and moss green thrown in so I didn't get too bored.

black, brown, cream


Brown knit slacks
Black knit slacks
Black cotton pull-on slacks to wear on the plane

Black knit skirt (rolled up for carry on)
Brown print skirt
Denim skirt

Cream knit short sleeve sweater (rolled up for carry on)
Cream long sleeve blouse
Black, brown, cream striped turtleneck
Cream long sleeve cotton knit shirt with small blue brown print
Moss green long sleeve turtleneck
White 3/4 sleeve blouse to wear on the plane
Dressy blue/black/pink jacket with sleeveless blue blouse
Short sleeve white knit shirt (never used)

Beige moleskin over-shirt, cardigan style
Beige linen blazer
White cardigan (never used)
Two scarves, one in blue tones, one in autumn colors
Lined, light weight, rain resistent blue jacket with hood

PJ’s, underwear, hose, anklets etc.
Black athletic shoes, loafers, sandals, heels
Tan sandals

If I'd packed differently, I would have left out the dress and bought a dressy sweater set to wear with slacks or a skirt. Dresses do seem to be a dying breed. My husband had two sport coats and two ties, but one would have been sufficient.

Because this is hurricane season, we chose to fly out of O'Hare rather than Charlotte, and it is actually a shorter distance to Frankfurt. But I like Charlotte's airport better.

1562 More work for lawyers

News that Paxil may cause birth defects during the first trimester, should fill in the time for any lawyers not flogging the Vioxx cases and Katrina mold.

Thursday, September 29, 2005

1561 Not yet, but maybe someday

Viet D. Dinh, suggests Vietpundit. I would say it's pretty remarkable he's made it this far.

1560 More comments on the Chronicle Librarian article

Paul provides some real horror stories about some instructors in his library school education. Wow. Wasn't that way when I went to college--I think the professors kept their politics to themselves. We talked about really old fashioned concepts like books, serials, history of information and the future of computers and how to make information accessible. I think the most dramatic thing I remember is discussing "In cold blood" by Truman Capote. Seems a little tame now. Must have been the blue jeans. No instructor--or even students--wore jeans to class in grad school. Raises the standards if you need to look nice to keep your job.

Paul recalls, "The head of the program, since departed, gave a seminar on the Robert Maplethorpe pictures that caused so much controversy due to their explicit depictions and federal funding. We got to see the famous photo of a naked Maplethorpe with a bullwhip stuck in his anus. She also showed us a photo by Mapplethorpe's protege which showed a four-year-old girl sitting down, raising her dress to reveal her vagina (no panties). She had, as our Director said, an "impish grin that revealed her hidden sexuality." Me and the woman sitting to my right were horrified, but we seemed to be the only ones. But, as David Durant points out, many often choose not to speak out in order to fit in."

1559 Little quiz time

You Are A: Lamb!

lambPeaceful and gentle, lambs have been used in religious imagery for millennia. Lambs are baby sheep, an animal tended by shephards since the dawn of history. As a lamb, you tend to stay together in a flock and graze on grassy land. Lambs don't mind being led and tend not to go off on their own.

You were almost a: Duckling or a Chipmunk
You are least like a: Monkey or a PuppyWhat Cute Animal Are You?


I saw this at Jenna's site.

1558 Why women?

"Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) affects approximately 2 million people in the United States. RA is prevalent across all ethnic groups, and can occur at any age, although most cases are seen in adults between ages 30 and 60 years. Women comprise 75% of all cases.[1] The disease accounts for more than 9 million physician visits and 250,000 hospitalizations annually, presenting a huge economic burden on society.[1] RA is a chronic, progressive autoimmune inflammatory disease of unknown etiology that attacks the synovial tissue leading to irreversible joint damage, chronic pain, stiffness, and functional impairment.[2] Most patients with RA develop permanent bone erosions and joint space narrowing and with time, many are disabled and may require joint replacement surgery. RA can reduce the average life expectancy by about a decade.[3]" From www.medscape.com. The sooner it is diagnosed, the more successful the treatment, but there is no cure.

"Autoimmune diseases run the gamut from mild to disabling and potentially life threatening. Nearly all affect women at far greater rates than men. The question before the scientific community is "why?" We have come a long way in the diagnosis and treatment of autoimmune disease. But more work is needed, especially in the areas of discovering the causes and developing more effective treatments and prevention strategies." from AARDA page

My daughter has Hashimoto's Disease, an autoimmune disease with a female to male ratio of 50:1. This disease destroys the thyroid. Do you suppose it is unreasonable to wonder if this was reversed--75% of RA cases were male--we'd have more answers? More funding? Just a thought.

1557 The Democrats may be socialists

but the Republicans are liars, opines Professor Chaos, who attended a party and didn't like what he heard.

1556 Telenovelas on Time Warner

So I was a few months late discovering our Spanish language channel. I was out of town all summer. I'm having a blast watching what I think are the telenovelas, or maybe they are just Latin soaps. Yesterday there was the most incredible cat fight between two women, with screaming, hair flying, eyes popping, slapping, kicking, and one helpless older guy watching and another peeking from behind a door snickering. The fashions, hair-dos, sets, story lines, family fueds, automobiles and other toys are way beyond your usual (yawn) suds stories. Even the commercials are less objectionable when you don't know what they are saying. I'd supply some links, but I haven't been able to catch the titles.

1555 Why Paula dumped me

She says it was this post that unlinked me from her blogroll. I have my doubts. She's got thicker skin than that. I'm old enough to be her mother and am from northern Illinois where she's from--maybe she's got issues? I've been reading her stuff since pre-blog days. She's a Romance writer--not sure if she's published, but I know someday she'll be rich and famous. Of course, I've never read a romance novel, so how would I know? But she loves what she does and that's part of it. Maybe luck? Possibly. Right time, right place? Follows guidelines? Probably. Most likely after the kids are out of the nest and she has plenty of time to concentrate.

Many writer-wannabes back in the 90s thought the internet would launch their writing careers. I think it eats up their energy and writing juices. The really good ones eventually get published, along with some really awful ones if the Half Price Book Store shelves are telling the truth. Since I have no idea what Paula's real name is, I may never know if I pass up her best seller in the bookstore.

1554 Ready to stay home for awhile

After a week in Florida in February, a week in Illinois in April, July and August at Lakeside interrupted by five days in Oklahoma and Arkansas for a Frank Lloyd Wright - Fay Jones architectural tour, and a September Danube River cruise in Germany and Austria to be followed by another week in Illinois, I'm ready to stay home for awhile. My husband's had even more travel with two trips to California to be with his dying father and then his funeral in March and May. That's why this poem written by my girlfriend Lynne (since highschool) which arrived yesterday in the mail, means so much.

It's grand to go on holiday
and break the set routine.
It's nice to get away, you say
and have a change of scene.
It's tonic, so they say,
to see and to explore
The exciting world outside your door.

But then comes the moment--
you have had enough!

Then it's home you long for
Your own small, cozy kingdom
Where you know just where you are.
Oh, it's good to get back home
and breathe your native air,
And settle in your very own
familiar easy chair.

Thanks, Lynne, my thoughts exactly.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

1554 How to clean your iPod and Nano

See what I told you? I don't have a niche. This guy explains, with photos, how to clean your iPod with Brasso, and he gets 45 comments. I think I know what an iPod is, but have no idea about nanos. I thought that was Mork and Mindy talk. Oh, that was nanu. I saw Todd's blog at the Make.blog which I saw at Lethal Librarian, who belly dances.

Update: See how the bloggers are getting the jump on the news writers? Today's paper had an article about the Apple iPod and Nano--it gets good marks for features like holding 1,000 songs (who in the world needs that?), pictures of album covers, photos, podcasts and audiobooks. But bad marks for scratching!

1553 Library Juice runs dry

Not sure that you would care--I don’t really. Library Juice is a radical left wing librarian's on-line serial, whose writer/editor smugly proclaimed to be above the blogging fray. I don’t link to him although I do link to liberal blogs about librarianship (the majority of librarians are liberals, but many can stay on topic, promote the profession and do an excellent job in their blogs). Jack Stephens has a note about this at Conservator, referring to Lethal Librarian and reports that while proclaiming to support freedom of information, Library Juice also published 7 different issues in support of Fidel Castro, old Mr. Fuzzy Bear himself.

I hope Mr. Litwin can find himself (he's going to start blogging). He seems to violate everything our profession used to stand for, and now that the profession is struggling to stay afloat, maybe he's jumping the [librarian]ship.

Blake, at LISNews.com also commented on Library Juice. "Rory was a big part of LISNews for years, and if I remember right, one of his big problems with LISNews is how I let everyone have a say. I don't subscribe to that theory in any way. However much I may want to start firewalling people that annoy me, I'll just never do it. I'll never avoid conversations I don't want to have by silencing everyone. It's easy to figure out who is a delusional nut job and who is interesting and informative, and I read people based on the reputation they've made for themselves. I don't think it does any of us any good if I silence them. I welcome constructive criticism, and I also welcome people I disagree with into my world."