Monday, February 28

One Step Forward ... You Two Step Back.*

"Helpful and Consistent" :

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The Obama administration will press ahead with its fight against one federal employee's bid to obtain health insurance for her same-sex spouse, according to a government court filing on Monday.

The decision by the Justice Department comes days after it announced that a federal statute defining marriage as a union between one man and one woman -- known as the Defense of Marriage Act -- was unconstitutional.

Karen Golinski, a lawyer who works for a U.S. appeals court in San Francisco, requested in 2008 that her same-sex spouse be added to her family health insurance plan, according to court filings.

Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Chief Judge Alex Kozinski, acting as a court administrator, ordered Golinski's insurance carrier to provide the benefits.

However, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management instructed the insurance carrier not to comply. Golinski sued OPM to enforce the order.

Given the recent Obama policy shift on the marriage act, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey White issued a written order last week asking the administration to explain how it could continue defending the Golinski lawsuit.
...
Jennifer Pizer, one of Golinski's attorneys, said it would have been much more "helpful and consistent" with Obama's shift had government lawyers taken the position that Golinski could reenroll her wife in the family health plan.

"That is the correct answer in this case," Pizer said.

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* But hey, he's still got that gay party planner thing going for him...

Iraq, Afghanistan...

Hell, we're not over-extended enough -- liberate Libya!
So sez Mr. Jeffrey Goldberg, blogger and humorist ("Jealousy ... ain't a part of me": Repeat Refrain...) currently working over at The Atlantic:

In Libya, right now, an evil man is killing large numbers of innocent people. Later, when this ends, and depending on how things go, there is a reasonable chance that the President and his advisers will feel badly about what they did, and did not, do. President Obama is undoubtedly repulsed by the actions of this evil man. He should use some of his power to fight this evil. I am not suggesting an invasion, but surely there are things that could be done, short of an invasion, that would turn the tide in this absurd and terrible civil war*, such as, for instance, shooting those Libyan jets now strafing civilians out of the sky. Freezing the assets of Libyan war criminals is fine; helping the people seeking the overthrow of those war criminals would be better.

Why don't you take up a private collection, Jeffrey? Maybe pass the hat in your circles, publicize, and collect?

I think the taxpayers are the clear losers when America continues to intervene in the Middle East. (And make no mistake: this part of Africa is geopolitically the same. We've more business in Haiti, than intervening over there.) If the leader of Libya is going to be overthrown, let the people of Libya do it. Surely they are up to the fight, and as we've seen again and again, the end result is much better when Americans don't use our military firepower to lead.

It's a sweet impulse -- this idea that America can save all innocent lives across the globe. But in reality? We'd best clean up after our own messes, before we go taking on somebody else's fight. Life is tough like that, Jeffrey, and we all mourn the innocent loss of lives, but there are limits to our military might...

Leave Rwanda out of it. (Something tells me that was a cheap ploy for him to push further Middle East intervention, not written out of concern for the already dead Tutsis -- may they rest in peace.)

Gotta watch those pro-Israel-at-all-costs guys especially closely these days... and Mr. Goldberg has done nothing but proven himself primarly that, in my humble opinion, of course.
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* See, there's a reason they call it a Civil War.

ADDED: Keep it at the humanitarian assistance level, Mr. President. Listen to wiser minds, and don't let yourself be led into going on the offense, because some lobbying group or another has you convinced this is in America's best interests.
Military planners are working on a wide range of options, said to include everything from imposing a “no-fly zone” over Libya to halt warplanes from attacking civilians to evacuation of wounded and innocents at risk to a more benign show of force off Libya’s shores, officials said.

While any American military action would be described as humanitarian assistance, it no doubt would indirectly apply even more pressure to a regime already fighting rebels from its own military who are supporting a popular revolt against the authoritarian rule.

Pentagon officials said the United States certainly would seek an international consensus for action -- most likely from the United Nations but also within NATO. And there is no appetite for assigning American ground troops to any mission.But the scope and pacing of planning underway is a substantial increase from just a week ago, when officials in Washington said that the most likely military action would come from regional states, such as Italy or France.

Officials said that the Obama administration had realized that only the American military could lead across a full range of options to halt the violence.
...
The American military has a large force of warships and combat and cargo aircraft available across Europe.

God help us all...
Think Mr. President, Think!
Before you commit to irreversible actions...

More Madness in Madison.

Wait a minute...
Are they locking the Capitol keeping the protesters out, or truth be told, are they keeping everyone out who wants to visit their State Capitol in the normal daytime business hours? (You might say, only protesters are wise to visit these days. But what of all the Winter Season athletes, and families, travelling to Madison this time of year, who often combine their sports events with a trip to the State Capitol? They can't get in to see the place either? What exactly are the facts of who gets in, and who doesn't? These policies make no sense.)

By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr.
MADISON, Wis. — The administration of Gov. Scott Walker abruptly locked out protesters from the Capitol on Monday morning, the latest gambit in the showdown between the new Republican governor and demonstrators rallying against his plan to strip public employee unions of almost all of their collective bargaining power.

About 60 demonstrators who had slept in the statehouse overnight remained inside as of noon Monday, and they banged drums, sang and danced in the rotunda. They had access to restrooms and, given the dwindling size of the group, appeared to have a decent supply of food. There was no indication that the police were preparing to arrest or eject them, and several said in interviews that they had no intention of leaving.

And why should those who remain inside be allowed then to stay? Grandfathered in?? They ought to be arrested if they don't vacate tonight -- no overnight guests, period.

And I see Jim Palmer -- referenced here -- made the NYT, giving a quote that to me, looks like he doesn't quite understand how the chain of power goes. Somebody set him straight, please. And clean up the building fully, by arresting those who don't voluntarily evacuate by tonight.
“Cooler heads prevailed,” said Jim Palmer, the executive director of the 11,000-member Wisconsin Professional Police Association. “They had said they were going to clear the place out, and then they thought the better of it. Now it’s clear that law enforcement professionals are running the show.”

Funny thing is... I never knew Jim to be a liberal at all. Funny how your attitudes/politics change when your own pocketbook might be at stake, eh?

Bang a Drum; Get It On... Hippie is as hippie does.

ADDED: Worth scrolling through that 2008 newsletter, if you still believe that union dues are necessary solely to protect workers' rights. The Waste!

Do. Be. Do Be. Do.

Mr. Ta-Nehisi Coates today links to a piece of art entitled "Hide. No. Seek." by Teresa Jay. *

Not sure if this is one of those "hidden pictures" pieces, or why the discussion in the comments section takes a turn toward the "parentesque" type... but hey, "That's a poorly rolled doob in the center of the picture!" And the little girl's shadow to the left, has it at her mouth...

Pot art, for the sophisticates?
Me no like.
----------------

*I'll stick with Charles** ... Bibbs myself.

** Scroll down to see his limited edition, The Guardian, framed. Love his colors. (He's proven a decent investment.)

What is Wrong with this Picture?

Madison - The Capitol is shut down to visitors from the public Monday morning, with only staff and media being allowed inside.

The state Department of Administration tightened rules on access to the statehouse Monday morning after deciding the night before not to force out hundreds of demonstrators who were camped out in the rotunda. Some of those protesters from the weekend are still in the building.
...
The remaining protesters in the building have mostly gathered in the rotunda on the ground floor. But there also several present in one wing of the first floor, where an area had been set up for protesting families to spend time with their children.

Megan Hendrick, 29, of Madison said her group intended to stay in place.

"We're just holding this space in the Capitol to defend our rights to peacefully assemble," Hendrick said.
...
On Sunday, police decided to let the crowd of several hundred drum-beating, dancing and chanting demonstrators spend the night and continue the protest against Gov. Scott Walker's budget-repair bill.

"The people who are in the building will be allowed to stay," Capitol Police Chief Charles Tubbs said Sunday night. "There will be no arrests unless people violate the law."
...
Tubbs announced the decision to let the protesters stay after he saw how they moved aside while work crews went about cleaning the Capitol, including mopping and polishing floors.

"People are very cooperative," Tubbs said. "I appreciate that."

"Plus, we're racking up booku overtime!" Tubbs added. *snark off*

I just hope they have this all cleared up by springtime, fieldtrip season when the schoolkids annually visit. Seems a shame to keep ALL Capitol visitors out, for the sake of protesting liberals who seemingly can't afford the costs of hotel rooms...

Start hauling them away, if necessary. If nobody else gets overnight privileges, why this group?

---------------
ADDED: Gag me with the hippie talk:
Dena Ohlinger, 22, a University of Wisconsin-Madison student, said for the last week, she had gone to classes and worked during the day and used a yoga mat and blanket while sleeping atop the cold marble floors of the Capitol at night.

"Everyone has been incredible here," she said. "Regular social barriers have been broken down."

Blanca Martin, 29, of Stevens Point said the protests accomplished many things even as the budget-repair bill makes its way through the Legislature. All 14 Democratic state senators fled to Illinois to block final passage of the bill.

"We've had unity of purpose, unity of spirit," Martin said. "Everyone who has been here has been transformed for life."

During the protest, demonstrators organized cleanup details, set up a system of marshals and brought in food.

"There has never been a cleaner group of protesters or a more public health conscious group of protesters," said Matt Kearny, 28, a research assistant at UW-Madison.

Shortly before 8 p.m., a worker on a waxing machine polished the main floor of the rotunda and dozens of demonstrators chanted: "Thank you. Thank you."


"Get Out!" *clap, clap* "Get Out!" *clap, clap*
We need to get that chant going, I think.

Bumble, Bumble, Crumble, Crumble... *

Really, is this any way to write, pass, and then selectively enforce federal legislation? Scrap the whole package, already...

In remarks to the National Governors Association, Mr. Obama said he backed legislation that would enable states to request federal permission to withdraw from the law’s mandates in 2014 rather than in 2017 as long as they could prove that they could find other ways to cover as many people as the original law would and at the same cost. The earlier date is when many of the act’s central provisions take effect, including requirements that most individuals obtain health insurance and that employers of a certain size offer coverage to workers or pay a penalty.

“I think that’s a reasonable proposal; I support it,” Mr. Obama told the governors, who were gathered in the State Dining Room of the White House.

“It will give you flexibility more quickly while still guaranteeing the American people reform.”

Again, we're just pushing back the paydate for these "free" promises further and further.
The administration officials said they had not yet discussed where to find an additional $4 billion, but described it as “not a lot of money” when compared with the estimated $1 trillion, 10-year cost of the law. They said they had not yet consulted with Congressional leaders to map a strategy for enacting the amendment.

-----------------
or, WWEKS?*

What Would Ezra Klein Say?
-----------------
ADDED: You know who, lately, I've been really feeling sorry for? Michelle Obama. The missus.

I mean,
Does this man ever tell anyone something they don't want to hear? How could you live with that, day in day out? (Honest question -- would drive me up a wall. Because surely somebody's got to be the realistic one.)

I almost wish she would play a more hands-on role in policymaking in this administration, a'la Hilary Clinton. Surely her background suggests more reality check, and backbone, than his. And yet she's just background social support, it seems, despite the legal background and real-life diversity she brings to the table.

Mike Nichols in the St. Paul Pioneer Press...

connected the dots rather ably this weekend:
If we're going to expand -- greatly -- the government bureacratic class to administer these new healthcare programs, do we really continue to trust the doctors' evidence to tell us who is eligible, and who is not?

...
At least some folks in the police department and at Milwaukee City Hall didn't want the pension board, which handles disability claims there, to pay the guy. Unfortunately, it wasn't their call. It was up to the doctors — and the doctors said, in essence, give the guy the money.

So they gave him the money.

Which is how things work.

I hadn't thought about that case until the other day, when the Associated Press reported allegations that doctors in Madison were handing out medical excuses to protesters who were taking time off work.

Something, on the other hand, should be alarming all of us. Doctors allegedly writing notes for protesters might not have a big financial impact, granted.

Generally speaking, however, doctors all across the country determine who gets an enormous chunk of public (not to mention corporate) money. They determine when a back injury is really disabling; they tell us when depression is real. We have no choice but to rely on them to, in essence, give away our money only to people who need it. More and more and more people, we are told, need it.

The federal Social Security Disability Insurance program alone, for instance, pays out about $124 billion per year to some 10 million Americans — many of whom are also eligible for Medicare, according to the Congressional Budget Office. At the current rate of claims, many of which are the result of medical diagnoses, the trust that pays the bills (and, in turn, gets revenue from payroll taxes) will be exhausted by 2018.

We see that a lot with mental health disability claims in northern Wisconsin: where there are less providers, it's not like Madison, where sometimes it seems there's a psychiatrist on every corner, eager to diagnose new business clients.

If the same person couldn't find a medical health provider to classify him as such up here, is it really fair, or consistent, for a perhaps more liberal, and generous doctor to complete the paperwork down in Madison, necessary to enable a person to collect benefits?

Remember: you get to choose your own docs to qualify you for these things, or if you don't have the money, only then will a local government-paid doc be provided to diagnose you... or not, as the case may be.

Perhaps the system ought to be changed, sooner rather than later, before we qualify new beneficiaries that will be almost impossible to boot from the system?

Because you'd hate to see this too further turn into a "who you know" connections kind of thing...

It's Not Our Fight...

In Geneva on Monday, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the United States was offering assistance to the Libyan rebels.

Where Krugman -- again -- gets it wrong.

In practice, however, when advocates of lower spending get a chance to put their ideas into practice, the burden always seems to fall disproportionately on those very children they claim to hold so dear.

Now I hope this doesn't come off as too harsh, but...
"The very children they (the fiscal conservatives) hold so dear"?

It's their own. Their own children and grands. Charity begins at home. We try to help beyond our own, and many of us give privately to support such charities.

(Why do the upper-class liberals always seem to put the bill for their own charitable impulses on the rest of the taxpayers? Can't they put their own money where their mouths are?)

But we recognize -- now! -- that the taxpayer-financed Ponzi scheme is simply unsustainable at the current growth rate. We need to tackle the problem today.

We're concerned about the fiscal futures of our own families, first and foremost. If you've been in a grocery store lately, or had to fill the tank on your own dime -- not comped on an expense account, you see the beginnings of fiscal austerity/continuing belt tightening.

We simply cannot afford to continue to incentivize the breeding and support of other people's children, who for whatever reason, cannot afford to care for their own, yet continue to demand ... more, more, more from the already overtaxed.

Yes, I know it sounds harsh. But there's a reason they tell parents to affix their own oxygen masks, say, before reaching out to help their children as the plane begins to go down... (A: You can't much take care of others, if you're wiped out yourself.)

Think about it? If we're willing to sacrifice the financial futures of the providers, the do-ers, the ones who keep the system working, then who will be around to fund the charity programs for all those who need special taxpayer help from birth on?
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ADDED: I'd also like a breakdown -- from Mr. Krugman, the numbers guy -- of how many of the impoverished (by American standards) children and those not graduating from high school are American citizens. I think that's fair to distinguish, no?

Perhaps instead of feeling sorry for these Texas children, their standards of life and current educational attainment rate, might indeed be higher than what their parents left back home, in Mexico and Central America? *

Again, how can you report on declining standards in Texas without addressing the illegal immigration problem that conservatives have been warning about for years?

Don't fudge the numbers -- instead, tell us how the Texas children of American citizens are faring in the state these days?

* For the record,
I don't blame, nor have any animosity toward these poor people, who chose to break laws to come here. They're simply doing what they think best -- for their own.

I blame the corporate business interests, that found it cheaper to import such illegal labor, essentially pushing the very needed social costs of their new employees onto the legal American citizen taxpayers. Who called that back then? That such "cheap" labor helping the law-breaking businesses to grow -- the motels/restaurants, the corporate farms, the factories, the daycare domestics -- would end up costing all of us? Who benefitted -- staying in those beds, eating that food, enjoying low-cost consumer trinkets, having their children watched by a woman at home? I'm guessing ... plenty of libs, like perhaps Mr. Krugman.


FROM THE COMMENTS SECTIONS:
Ken Freed
Georgetown, Texas
February 28th, 2011
12:36 am

As someone who grew up in New Jersey, has had all 3 kids go through the Texas school system, and has a wife who is a 7th grade language arts teacher here in Texas - you are dead wrong when you claim that the situation of Texas school children is "dire". We share a long common border with Mexico where public education only goes up to the the 5th grade. Our schools have to play "catchup" with these students. If there's one area Texas can be faulted - it's a lack of good high school vocational programs. Here everyone is supposed to go to college - whether they are college material or not. Subtract out kids who should not be on a college track and kids who barely speak english and haven't been to school in years - and I guarentee you, the stats from Texas will look a LOT better.

Over-TIME! Over-TIME! Over-TIME! *

or, Suprise, suprise.

Turns out: the public servant police officers that have been standing around inside the Wisconsin Capitol, preserving the peace, promising to clear out the overnight guests/hippie demonstrators by 4pm Sunday... yesterday backed off.

The protests will continue; the OT goes on!

or: Poor taxpayers. Anyway you look at this, you lose!

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* Cops can't chant, supposed to appear neutral and all...
But if they could: Over-TIME! Over-TIME! Over-TIME!

Other News of Note.

Because Greed Grows as the Stakes Go Up...
and these charges really aren't all that old*:

Former Director of Police Association Sentenced

On March 31, 2006, in the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin, Stanley James Kluss, former executive director of the Wisconsin Professional Police Association (WPPA), was sentenced after pleading guilty to one count of embezzlement. The 32-count indictment, returned in October 2005, charged Kluss with 14 counts of embezzling union funds and 18 counts of mail fraud. The indictment charged that Kluss caused the WPPA to pay for unauthorized personal expenses. When Kluss submitted expense vouchers to the WPPA, he altered the receipts deleting the detail portion of the receipts that identified the items purchased, or deleting the date or place of purchase. At sentencing the embezzlement amount was established as $95,048. The court sentenced Kluss to 15 months in prison with no eligibility for early release or community confinement. Kluss was also ordered to make full restitution.

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* Also, Jim Kluss hired Jim Palmer, currently serving as executive director. For what it's worth...

Bust these Unions! Save the Country. Keep the dollars in local pockets, where they can be better overseen, and spent more wisely.

Saturday, February 26

Deliver Your Future...*

or Fredrick Douglass: Travels in Ireland

By TOM CHAFFIN
Frederick Douglass drew on many influences during his life as an orator, journalist and anti-slavery activist. Few, however, are more unlikely than the man he met in 1845, during a two-year lecture tour of Ireland, Scotland and England: Daniel O’Connell.

Indeed, the ghost of the Irish nationalist, before and after the Civil War years, often inhabited Douglass’s thinking. And it was the influence of O’Connell that, in critical ways, led to the breach between Douglass and his early mentor, the abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison — and thus paved the way for Douglass’s support for and his guidance in shaping, via President Lincoln, the Union’s war policies against the slave-holding South.
...
For Douglass, his warm reception in Ireland also served as an ironic contrast to difficulties he would soon face in his native land. Even as he toured Ireland, a blight was destroying the potato crop on which the island depended. In the coming years, the disaster transmogrified into a full-fledged famine, sending millions of Irish to North America.

During that period and through the Civil War years, many — but not all — Irish-Americans and their leaders opposed Douglass’s fight to gain rights for African-Americans. They opposed his efforts to win rights for enslaved blacks in the South and for blacks in the North, free but denied U.S. citizenship and subject to widespread discrimination — including, in many cases, both de facto and de jure segregation.

Even so, Douglass, during his four months in Ireland, found in many Irish nationalists he met a kindred spirit of resistance against an oppressor — in his case, the slave-owning South; in theirs, the United Kingdom.
...
Awkward moments notwithstanding, Douglass in Ireland found new avenues for self-expression that he’d never been afforded in the United States. “I can truly say,” he wrote to Garrison, “I have spent some of the happiest moments of my life since landing in this country, I seem to have undergone a transformation, I live a new life.”

Speaking before Irish audiences — and feeling un-shadowed by “slave-catchers” and others who would do him harm — Douglass basked in a new confidence. And he came to view his fight against slavery as belonging to a larger, global struggle against all social injustices.

Douglass’s mentor Garrison studiously avoided conventional politics. O’Connell, by contrast, lived and breathed political conflict. ... At the same time, O’Connell, a successful trial lawyer, was no revolutionary: he believed in the rule of law, rejected violence and had a deep-seated wariness of the Pandora’s box of societal forces unleashed by revolutions.

O’Connell also passionately opposed slavery. Upon meeting an American, before shaking hands, he routinely asked whether the visitor was a slaveholder. If the answer was yes — no handshake.

In September 1845, Douglass appeared alongside O’Connell at a Dublin rally attended by more than a thousand followers. Douglass had read of O’Connell’s reputed oratorical abilities, but he assumed those skills to have been “greatly exaggerated.” The rally, however, persuaded Douglass that the reports were accurate. Though O’Connell was already a septuagenarian, “eloquence came down upon the vast assembly like a summer thunder-shower upon a dusty road,” Douglass later wrote.

Moreover, it seemed to Douglass that O’Connell “held Ireland within the grasp of his strong hand, and [that he] could lead it whithersoever he would.” The regard was mutual. O’Connell — still revered in Ireland today as “the Liberator” — soon took to calling Douglass “the Black O’Connell of the United States.”

O’Connell died in 1847, soon after Douglass left Ireland, and the American never followed O’Connell in rejecting violence. But O’Connell’s courage, his intellectual breadth, his grasp of mass politics, his belief in the moral authority of laws, self-government and political reform continued to shape Douglass’s world view.
...
True to form, in December 1860, Garrison welcomed South Carolina’s secession and agreed with arguments by secessionists that the American Constitution legally enshrined chattel slavery. By then, such arguments belonged to Douglass’s past. Animated, in part, by Daniel O’Connell’s political vision, the former slave was, by February 1861, girding himself for his public career’s most defining work — his eventual equation of the Union’s war efforts against the Confederacy, policies that he would help to shape, with his own long battle against slavery.

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*... It's in the Hands of Your Friends.

Crying Wolf, Take II ...

When I began reading Mr. Bob Herbert's column this morning, I was hopeful -- he's one of the few columnists these days, it seems, who still remembers what it's like to have his feet on the ground, in my humble opinion.

Rarely do we see a column starting out with old-time reporting tactics -- telling the stories of real people out there, where the writer subsumes his own opinions in telling the real-life stories of others.

Sadly, while his reporting was welcome -- of unemployed people struggling to keep their heads above water -- his conclusions today are off.

Those who still think of unionized teachers, police officers and firefighters as "working class", instead of protected government class, are living in the past. Some posts back, I referenced my work at the WPPA -- Wisconsin Professional Police Association union. At the time, we worked in a rented building at 340 Coyier Lane in Madison. Down the street from Badger Bowl, and fenced in by the Beltline, it was in the kind of neighborhood where you took care after hours, if you came in late from a roadtrip say, or wanted to stop into the office after dark.

Down the lane from us, past the newly installed roundabout, was the newly built Wisconsin Education Association Council union, -- WEAC building* -- (compound is perhaps a better word?) --, at 33 Nob Hill Road. With the help of Google maps, you can see what an amazing piece of property they purchased there, and built upon. All paid by mandatory union dues. The parking lot alone was a masterpiece, and even my fellow police union brethren used to refer to it as a type of Taj Mahal for teachers...

In Googling today, I see the WPPA itself has now moved to a rental suite in a fancy building on John Nolen Drive. Not that there's anything wrong with that, necessarily. As I mentioned, we rented, and the building itself was in need of general maintenance upkeep -- perhaps it was more cost efficient to move.

However:
When we read of the end of collective bargaining, for teachers say, and perhaps cops, we ought to be honest about what's really being curtailed, and what's being promised. If I wanted to serve as a public school teacher, why shouldn't I have the right to CHOOSE whether or not I wanted to be collectively represented by the unions -- paying the mandatory dues that go into financing the "Taj Mahal" building, and all the well-paid administrative staff that now works in those fancy offices.

If I came up conservatively -- knowing my dimes from dollars in a necessarily aware fiscal environment -- why should I be forced to help these unions grow ... beyond most columnists' wildest dreams? If the public unions have no self restraint themselves, taking in the dues monies and hiring essentially lobbyists to work the Madison political circles, wouldn't it be a better balance to allow the workers themselves -- the classroom teachers and beat cops -- to decide whether they and their families could better spend the dues money, which if you calculate over a full working career, adds up to plenty?

If I am the type of insurance customer who rarely or never puts in a claim, and I'm the type of cop or teacher who never faces disciplinary action or needs the union "protections", why must I necessarily join the others and throw in my lot with the rest? Why -- in order to serve as a teacher in a Wisconsin public classroom -- must I be required to support the WAY LARGE teachers' union, and help them build up like this, with "benefits" well beyond basic job protections?

I like Mr. Herbert's work, in general. He doesn't go for the cheap laughs, not realizing the rest of the country is no longer laughing, nor do I think he is plain out-of-touch with workers who struggle, and has no daily contact with such folk.

But I do think he ought to come to 33 Nob Hill Road. He ought to enter those buildings -- the WEAC credit union and trust, as I understand it, are housed separately -- and ask himself if all this is really necessary to protect teachers and benefit public education, or if there is a new white-collar government-administrative class to these organizations, that need their powers necessarily curtailed in order to best spend the money the public still does contribute, in the wisest fashion.

If not now, when?
If not us, who?
If not voluntarily -- competing to convince workers that these protections and services indeed benefit their families and communities as a whole -- then tell me: how big can they grow before they necessarily collapse under their own (greedy) weight?

This union-choice fight really isn't about protecting the "working class" public servants at all; truth be told, it hasn't been, for some time now.

Open your eyes; look up to the skies and see...


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*If you click the link for that map, and zoom in, please note that the large building above the Google marker, as well as the surrounding lots, are ALL part of the Madison WEAC administrative buildings. Really, it's only possible to do the ... people's work in such luxurious surroundings? Nevermind the need to build up the administrative staff levels to actually fill those buildings.

Think of the teachers throughout the state whose pocketbooks could be full of that cash, or at least spent more wisely as the actual workers themselves see fit, at the local levels.

Bring back the Choice, and the Competition will follow. Then, who knows? Maybe MORE of our American public classrooms and schools can begin to lift themselves, and become truly great once again.

Hope for Change!

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ADDED: Always good to find sympathetic friends in the comments sections:

nelson9NJ
February 26th, 2011 2:16 pm

This makes me mad.

I am sorry for the people in this story, and the people having hard times who do not make it into newspaper stories.

But I do not like the sly mixing by the columnist of these people with well-paid and well-protected unionized workers. Policemen, firemen, teachers, auto-plant employees all make far more than I ever did as a teacher (starting salary $10,500 because I had an M.A.; otherwise it would have been 10 even). And then have terrific insurance as well as pensions that, if less than what they counted on, sound pretty good to me.

I do not like painting millionaires and billionaires, bankers and businessmen, as single glob of evil driving to penury the out-of-work truck drivers and the union members who do not want to pay anything for their own health insurance.

Frankly, I think it is the millions of union workers, especially government workers whose every dime, including the double-dip dime that is common in New Jersey, is paid by me. And I think it is this element, not Warren Buffet, not Bill Gates, not reputable businessmen and bankers, who are taking from the least among us.

School superintendents where I live make in excess of 200k a year. The cops, some of whom I gave poor grades when I taught high school, make 60 and above, and can do anything they like short of murder in front of a few hundred witnesses, without penalty. The blue line, you know. The firemen have it made too. The unionized workers at big plants are set, as long as they keep their jobs.

These are the people with whom the unemployed trucker and his ill wife are losing out to.

Courting the Gay Vote...

by taking baby steps...

By Nia-Malika Henderson and Perry Bacon Jr.

The White House made history in two ways Friday, when it announced Jeremy Bernard as its new social secretary -- the first man and the first openly gay person to fill that role.
...
"Jeremy shares our vision for the White House as the People's House, one that celebrates our history and culture in dynamic and inclusive ways. We look forward to Jeremy continuing to showcase America's arts and culture to our nation and the world through the many events at the White House," President Obama said in a statement.
...
The East Wing has had high turnover at the top ranks over the past year and a half. Susan Sher, first lady Michelle Obama's first chief of staff, left in January and was replaced by Tina Tchen. Smoot replaced Rogers as social secretary in February of last year. Camille Johnston, former communications director, left in August and was replaced by Kristina Schake in December.

Bernard, who has been active in gay rights organizations, was a prominent fundraiser for the Obama presidential campaign in California. His selection marked a second decision by Obama this week that delighted gay rights activists.

Obama chose Bernard only two days after the administration announced it would no longer defend the Defense of Marriage Act, the federal law that bans recognition of same-sex marriage.

The two decisions, combined with Obama's signing the repeal of "don't ask, don't tell" in December, could help energize a largely-Democratic constituency, and perhaps delay gay activists' push for the president to declare his support for same-sex marriage.

Fred Sainz, spokesman for the Human Rights Campaign, emphasized that Bernard's qualifications, not his sexual orientation, were what should be highlighted, but added, "You can't help but notice the significance" of the two moves.

But John Aravosis, a gay rights activist and blogger, downplayed the significance, asking,
"Are we setting our sights just a tad too low when we go all euphoric that a gay man is now the White House party planner?"

Friday, February 25

Crying Wolf...

I linked this below, but isn't it funny how so many -- perhaps looking to stir the racial pot for added audience attraction? -- find anti-semitism in a family name that he referred to himself?*

CHUCK LORRE PRODUCTIONS, #327
I'm writing this vanity card in Israel. I like it here. Not for the geography, or architecture, or even the history. No, I like it because for the first time in my life I'm surrounded with DNA much like my own. Until I got here, until I wandered around Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, I didn't realize how much my double helix yearned to be around similar strands. Now that's not to say that I don't occasionally have that very same genetic experience in Beverly Hills (particularly in Chinese restaurants on Sunday night). But the sheer homogeneity of Israel overwhelms any over-priced kung pao gathering at Mr. Chow's. The cop, the cab driver, the hotel concierge, the pilot, the waiter, the shoe salesman, the beautiful girl looking right through me as if I didn't exist -- all Jewish! If I had to sum it up, I'd say the sensation is like being at a B'nai B'rith summer camp that is surrounded by millions of crazy bastards who hate the sound of kids playing tetherball, and all the poor little camp has going for it is pluckiness and nukes. Anyway, I have to believe my visceral and very pleasant reaction is some sort of evolutionary, tribal thing. Some sort of survival gene that makes human beings want to stay with their birth group. Which raises the question, why have I spent a lifetime moving away from that group? How did Chaim become Chuck? How did Levine become Lorre? The only answer I come up with is this: When I was a little boy in Hebrew school the rabbis regularly told us that we were the chosen people. That we were God's favorites. Which is all well and good except that I went home, observed my family and, despite my tender age, thought to myself, "bull$#*!."

I honestly don't get it. If you don't like pushback, why the heck do you go writing about "outliving" someone, in the first place and then call them names -- anti semite! -- and get all overly sensitive when they respond in kind? (Maybe because today, it still seems to work? **)

Silly rabbits... someday, when we see true anti-semitism and racial prejudice with actual consequences, the good majority will turn away, because we've been conditioned to accept somebody's hurt feelings = no actual harm. A shame really, but them's the times we's living in, apparently... where feelings matter more than facts, and merit rides shotgun to color consciousness that people in some circles seem to like feeding on... Enjoy it while it lasts, I suppose. I've got a feeling overall, people of all colors in this country are wising up to such divisive tactics.

------------

*You know,
I've been wondering for some time now,
if Mr. Ta-Nehisi Coates recognizes the titular similarity between his memoir -- The Beautiful Struggle -- and Hitler's Mein Kampf ? Doubt it; on a hunch that he's just not all that well read. (Does reading having read Hitler -- in historical context -- count as anti-semitism too these days?) ;-) Even if it's just one book of many consumed and considered? Wait a minute, don't answer that...

** Eugene Volokh tackles a similar subject on his (very meritorious, and always well-worth-reading) legal blog today:
Thugs Win Again
Eugene Volokh • February 25, 2011 4:07 pm

This time they are pro-Israel thugs as opposed to extremist Muslim thugs (and various other thugs), but thugs are thugs. Here’s what happened; I quote Seattle Mideast Awareness Campaign v. King County (W.D. Wash, decided last Friday): The county Department of Transportation in Seattle sells advertising on buses; the Seattle Mideast Awareness Campaign bought space for an anti-Israel ads: “The proposed ad read ‘Israeli War Crimes: Your Tax Dollars at Work,’ and featured a picture of children next to a bomb-damaged building.” When this hit the news, the Department got lots of objections, including “four [messages that] suggest[ed] an intention to disrupt or vandalize buses, four [that] communicate[d] violent intentions, [and] approximately twenty [that] express[ed] concern for rider safety.” The first two categories consisted of these messages:
If you want to see how tough Jews can be, then go ahead and run those despicable ads and we’ll see who has the last word on this. If you run these ads, we will work together with our Jewish friends and others to shut Metro down.
...

The Department then canceled the ad contract, partly based on these messages. And the federal District Court held that the action was likely constitutional, because the ad violated city policy that excluded ads that are “so objectionable under contemporary community standards as to be reasonably foreseeable that it will result in harm to, disruption of, or interference with the transportation system” or that are “directed at a person or group” and are “so insulting, degrading or offensive as to be reasonably foreseeable that [they] will incite or produce imminent lawless action in the form of retaliation, vandalism or other breach of public safety, peace and order.” This policy, the court said, was viewpoint-neutral and reasonable, when applied to this ad, because “The threats of violence and disruption from members of the public ... led bus drivers and law-enforcement officials to express safety concerns.”


Now on the one hand I sympathize with the Department’s safety concerns, and its desire to protect passengers. But on the other hand, behavior that gets rewarded — here, the making of threats — gets repeated.

The message is clear: If you want to stop speech that you dislike, just send a few threatening messages and you’ll win. You don’t actually need to act violently, and risk punishment for that. You could send the threats anonymously, in a way that makes it quite unlikely that you’ll be punished. In fact, it might well be that — as in this case — the agency will not even try to get you punished. (“[N]one of the threatening communications were referred to law enforcement.”) The very fact that the speech suppressors here weren’t that awful just makes the speech suppression itself even more dangerous.

Indeed, might the thugs in this case have learned this very lesson from past incidents where threats have led to the suppression of speech? And what will future thugs learn? What speech, whether pro-Israel, anti-Israel, pro-atheism, anti-Islam, pro-Christianity, pro-animal-research, or whatever else will be immune?

You know why I like that blog?

The "conspirators" (their humorous word, btw), for the most part, tend to write "up". So even when one disagrees, or perhaps doesn't initially understand the point being made, they don't go for the cheap score -- writing what readers might want to read... or rather, what readers might think they want to read...

And there's very little artificial diversity in the cast, as well.

Plus Eugene's my age (b. 1968)***, of fresh immigrant stock himself, and smart too in many matters.
---------



*** I'm pretty sure though -- with his boyish looks probably coming from "clean living" -- he's gonna outlive me. Not that there's anything necessarily wrong with that...

Heh.

Carlos Estevez vs. Chaim Levine...

Wow.

CBS and the television production studio Warner Brothers have decided to shut down production of the hit comedy “Two and a Half Men,” the companies said Thursday, after the show’s star, Charlie Sheen, attacked the creator of the show, Chuck Lorre, in two incendiary interviews.
...
[T]he two companies acted on Thursday after the two interviews, the first with a syndicated radio host and then with the celebrity gossip Web site TMZ.

In both, the actor assailed Mr. Lorre, calling him a “clown” and a “charlatan” whose “tin can” of a show Mr. Sheen said he had converted into “pure gold.”

Mr. Lorre, one of the most successful producers of television series in network history, has created two other comedies that are hits on CBS, “The Big Bang Theory” and “Mike and Molly.” He declined to comment.

For no apparent reason, in both interviews Mr. Sheen said Mr. Lorre’s real name is Chaim Levine. He was born Charles Levine; a Hebrew version would be Chaim. The comment struck executives at both CBS and Warner Brothers as anti-Semitic, according to an executive who had spoken with representatives of both companies.

It reminds me of when CNN host Ricardo "Rick" Sanchez was fired for clumsily (callously?) noting the lack of diversity in our entertainment and news media, after being referred to as "Dirty Sanchez" night after night:
"Everybody that runs CNN is a lot like (Jon) Stewart... And a lot of people who run all the other networks are a lot like Stewart."
...
Nothing excuses his insensitive remarks. But racism and anti-Semitism are like a virus. They need to be continually subjected to scrutiny, so we can see how ugly and powerful they are. Banishing Sanchez did nothing save derail his career. CNN should have suspended him or made him apologize on-air. Sanchez, a man who has been tasered and locked in a submerged car on camera, would've no doubt risen to the challenge.

Sanchez now admits that his anger at being ridiculed on-air by Stewart, night after night, led to his thoughtless rant. Maybe someday he will understand that Stewart, like himself, has indeed faced his own struggles with discrimination and acceptance. For proof of this, he need look no further than their birth names, which they both changed in order to succeed. Ricardo León de Reinaldo, meet Jonathan Stuart Leibowitz.

ADDED:
Ah! Jon Weisman at Variety hints at the real root of the problem, perhaps:
If it helps, Chuck, you are 13 years older ...
CHUCK LORRE PRODUCTIONS, #329

I exercise regularly. I eat moderate amounts of healthy food. I make sure to get plenty of rest. I see my doctor once a year and my dentist twice a year. I floss every night. I've had chest x–rays, cardio stress tests, EKG's and colonoscopies. I see a psychologist and have a variety of hobbies to reduce stress. I don't drink. I don't smoke. I don't do drugs. I don't have crazy, reckless sex with strangers.

If Charlie Sheen outlives me, I'm gonna be really pissed.
Like the song goes: "Jealousy ... ain't a part of me."

What Goes 'round, Comes Around...

Help me out here:
is Mr. Paul Krugman calling Rahm Emanuel a "right-wing ideologue"?

So hard to keep up with this political nonsense; some days it seems like these party mentalities are interchangeable....

From Chile in the 1970s onward, she suggested, right-wing ideologues have exploited crises to push through an agenda that has nothing to do with resolving those crises, and everything to do with imposing their vision of a harsher, more unequal, less democratic society.

Which brings us to Wisconsin 2011, where the shock doctrine is on full display.

Rahm Emanuel, circa 2008:
"You never want a serious crisis go to waste. And what I mean by that it's an opportunity to do things you think you could not do..."

Maybe it's some insider Journolister meme that I'm just plain missing?
-----------------

And the Brooks column today:
Since 2004, the 49 other states in the nation increased their debt levels by an average of 40 percent. Indiana has paid down its debt by 40 percent. Indiana received its first Triple-A bond rating in 2008, and now it is one of only nine states to have the highest rating from all three rating agencies.

At the same time, the business climate has improved significantly. Infrastructure spending is at record levels. The state has added jobs at twice the national average. For the first time in four decades, more people are moving in than moving out.

That's where the majority of the people moving out of the south suburbs are going, btw: Northwest Indiana, which has experienced a building boom as the farmfields are built up to accomodate them...

One Degree...

above freezing. Oddly enough, I'm optimistic for this Friday...

One above -- hey it could be zero!

Make it a great weekend, whatever temps Mother Nature is treating you to...

Thursday, February 24

Lest we think it's just a color thing...

or even native to Chicago.

SOUTHFIELD, Mich. — Three years ago, Lamar Grace left Detroit for the suburb of Southfield. He got a good deal -- a 3,000-square-foot colonial that once was worth $220,000. In foreclosure, he paid $109,000.

The neighbors were not pleased.

"They don't want to live next door to ghetto folks," he says.

That his neighbors are black, like Grace, is immaterial. Many in the black middle class moved out of Detroit and settled in the northern suburbs years ago; now, due to foreclosures, it is easy to buy or rent houses on the cheap here. The result has been a new, poorer wave of arrivals from the city, and growing tensions between established residents and the newcomers.

"There's a way in which they look down on people moving in from Detroit into houses they bought for much lower prices," says Grace, a 39-year-old telephone company analyst. "I understand you want to keep out the riffraff, but it's not my fault you paid $250,000 and I paid a buck."

The neighbors say there's more to it than that. People like John Clanton, a retired auto worker, say the new arrivals have brought behavior more common in the inner city -- increased trash, adults and children on the streets at all times of the night, a disregard for others' property.

"During the summer months, I sat in the garage and at 3 o'clock in the morning you see them walking up and the down the streets on their cell phones talking," Clanton says. "They pull up (in cars) in the middle of the street, and they'll hold a conversation. You can't get in your driveway. You blow the horn and they look back at you and keep on talking. That's all Detroit."

The tensions have not gone unnoticed by local officials.

"I've got people of color who don't want people of color to move into the city," says Southfield Police Chief Joseph Thomas, who is himself black. "It's not a black-white thing. This is a black-black thing. My six-figure blacks are very concerned about multiple-family, economically depressed people moving into rental homes and apartments, bringing in their bad behaviors."

For example, "They still think it's OK to play basketball at 3 o'clock in the morning; it's OK to play football in the streets when there's a car coming; it's OK to walk down the streets three abreast. That's unacceptable in this city."

Thomas has seen the desperation of the new arrivals. His officers, handling complaints, have found two or more families living in a single house, pooling their money for rent. They have "no food in the refrigerator and no furniture," Thomas says. "They can't afford the food. They can't afford the furniture." But they were eager to flee the gunfire of their old neighborhoods in Detroit.

The foreclosure crisis made it possible.

"We had a large number of people who have purchased homes from 2005 on, where the banks were very generous with their credit and they've allowed for people without documentation and income verification to borrow 95 to 100 percent of home values," Southfield Treasurer Irv Lowenberg says. "Many purchased homes when they had two jobs in the household and one of the jobs was lost.

"As values began dropping, people were looking around and saying 'Why should I stay and pay my mortgage when other people aren't?' They decided to hand the keys back to the bank."

Many of the foreclosed upon Southfield homes were going for $40,000 to $60,000. The median home value dropped from more than $190,000 to below $130,000 over the same period, according to Census figures.

With so many empty houses available, rents also dipped by hundreds of dollars. Renters increased from about 13,100 in 2006 to 15,400 in 2009.

The lure of low prices to Detroiters was obvious -- as was the likelihood that their arrival would not be without issues.

"Blacks, like all Americans, want good schools and a safe community, and they can find that in the suburbs," says Richard Schragger, who teaches local government and urban law at the University of Virginia.

Now, suburbs closest to big cities are "bedeviled" by the same problems that helped spur urban flight decades ago, Schragger adds. "And you're seeing further flight out. Rising crime levels, some rising levels of disorder."

These were the things that prompted Richard Twiggs to leave Detroit 23 years ago for the safety, quiet and peace of mind Southfield offered.

"The reason suburbs are the way they are is because a certain element can't afford to live in your community," adds Twiggs, a 54-year-old printer. "If you have $300,000, $400,000, $500,000 homes you're relatively secure in the fact that (the homeowners) are people who can afford it.

"But when you have this crash, people who normally couldn't afford to live in Southfield are moving in. When you have a house for $9,900 on the corner over there -- that just destroys my property."

The pride that comes with home ownership and a large financial investment in the property is missing, says Clanton, who lives across the street from Twiggs on Stahelin, about a half-mile north of Detroit. Back yards are deep and mostly tree-shaded. Sidewalks are few.


"I treasure what I bought," Clanton says. "I want to keep it, but I don't need somebody to come in and throw their garbage on mine. Why would they come and make our lives miserable because they don't care?"

Though they acknowledge they would lose money by selling their current homes, Clanton and Twiggs are contemplating moving further north.

Sheryll Cashin, who teaches constitutional law and race and American law at Georgetown University, says it would be a shame if black flight from the city set off black flight from the near suburbs.

Some blacks just don't want to live near other blacks, she says: "There is classism within the black community. The foreclosure crisis may be accelerating it." But she says middle-class blacks, like middle-class whites, are also put off by behavior of impoverished blacks who "have developed their own culture, one that is very different from mainstream America."

Those who contemplate fleeing have fallen into what Cashin calls the "black middle-class dilemma."

"You have a choice of whether you are willing to be around your people or go 180 degrees in the other direction," she says. "To the higher income black people, if you don't want to love and help your lower-income black brethren, why would you expect white people to? If you can't do it, no one in society can do it. You can try to flee or you can be part of the solution."

Hitting too close to home.

More crime in Chicago's south suburbs:

Twin brothers from Dolton have pleaded guilty and were each sentenced to four years in prison for forcing young women into prostitution in the south suburbs, prosecutors said this morning.

Tyrelle and Myrelle Lockett, 18, pleaded guilty in the Markham courthouse Tuesday to felony charges of human trafficking for forced labor or services after an undercover sting operation found that they forced young women, including one underage victim, to perform sex acts with men for money, according to a news release.

In the sting, sheriff's police officers met with Tyrelle Lockett in a Lansing motel after they answered an Internet ad placed by the Locketts, authorities said.
...
The 17- and 18-year-old victims, who were not charged, told police that the brothers beat them and threatened them if they didn't perform the sex acts, and took all the money.

You don't solve a problem just by transferring it out of your own jurisdiction.

ADDED: Good news!
A woman today shot and killed a man who Chicago police said was breaking into her South Chicago neighborhood home on the city's Southeast Side.

Police said the victim heard glass breaking in her basement on the 8200 block of South Kingston Avenue at about 10 a.m.

After grabbing her handgun, the woman confronted two intruders, but struck only one when she opened fire, police spokeswoman Officer Anne Dwyer said. The second man fled.

The wounded intruder, identified by the Cook County medical examiner's office as Vincent Fleming, 20, of the 300 block of West 42nd Street, was pronounced dead a short time later at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

An autopsy is scheduled for Tuesday.

Police said that the wounded man was holding a tire iron when he was shot and that the victim wouldn’t face any criminal charges. A representative with the Cook County state’s attorney’s office, which files felony charges, couldn’t be reached for comment.

Reached by telephone Monday evening, the 45-year-old victim said she remained traumatized by the shooting.

"I was scared for my life. I've never been so scared before in my entire life," said the woman who asked that her name not be released.

"And I thank God that I'm still here," she added.

In a brief interview with the Tribune, the victim wouldn't discuss specific details about the shooting, but described a seemingly constant streak of break-ins and home invasions in her lakefront community that has kept her on edge.

One neighbor's home was broken into three times just last summer, while an elderly neighbor's home was broken into twice while she was home, the victim said. The woman said her pleas to her local elected officials had gone unanswered.


STILL MORE:
Good Lord!
The 16-year-old girl is one of four victims authorities have linked to Tommie Naylor, a Forest Park mail handler, since 2003.

The girl was walking to a CTA bus stop on the South Side on the night of July 4, 2005, when her first attacker--who has never been found--approached in his car and talked her into getting in, said Calumet Area Lt. Anthony Carothers. She told police she voluntarily got in.

The man took her to what he said was his residence, apparently in the area of 79th Street and Loomis Boulevard, and there raped her, Carothers said.

Her assailant allowed her to leave, and as she was walking on the street about 2:45 a.m., Naylor pulled up in his car. The teen told him she had been raped, Carothers said. At that point, Naylor offered to help and drive her home, he said.

Instead, Naylor allegedly drove her into an alley in the area and assaulted her again before letting her go.

Naylor, of the 7900 block of South Yale Avenue, was charged earlier this month with two attacks in 2006 and 2008 and Wednesday night was charged with two more, the assault on the 16-year-old and another on a 14-year-old girl Dec. 10, 2003, in the 4300 block of West End Avenue on the West Side.

FINALLY:
I gotta stop clicking these links...
Glenwood police were called to a home in the south suburb this afternoon for what neighbors were told was a hostage situation.

Glenwood police officials said a firefighter was delivering light-up signs for homes in the area when a man approached the firefighter brandishing a gun.

The firefighter went to call police and when police arrived, the man went into the home and continued to brandish the weapon from inside the residence, police said. Officials believe the man was inside the home and were trying to negotiate a peaceful end, police said.

Kelly Powell, who lives near the incident on the 00 to 100 block of Centre Street, said that when her son was being dropped off near the home her son's bus was redirected about two blocks away, after officers said a hostage situation was underway.

Powell said the incident has been occurring since about 2:30 p.m., and she said many police and fire officials were at the scene.

One neighbor close to the standoff said police told her to shut off her deck light and stay in the basement, away from windows.

Maybe I watch too much Judge Judy...

but you know what I wondered in reading this little piece of navel gazing?

Why the allegedly unemployed man hasn't found the time to marry his fiancée, Tomoko, the mother of his latest child? I sure hope he hasn't been financially ... disincentivized via some special taxpayer funding, to remain unwed perhaps to qualify her, and them, for extra help. That just seems... wrong somehow. Call me judgemental or non-PC, but hey, that's how Judy thinks too! (She and Byrd, they're tired of carrying men who make babies they can't support.)

Since losing my job I’ve struggled with countless questions for which I have no suitable response: Is it healthy for my family to subsist on a diet entirely of packaged ramen, canned beans and grocery-store samples, and if so, must it be certified organic? Does baby really need a new pair of shoes? If I’m so smart how come I’m so broke? The worst question, though, and the one most likely to induce paroxysms of guilt, irritation and half-joking existential despair, is one that seems so simple to answer, but has proven the most vexing: if I’m not working, why don’t I have more time? Shouldn’t a jobless fellow like myself be free to relax, clean house, run errands for my fiancée Tomoko and, most important, spend time with my children, J.P., 4-years-old, and Ellie, the baby?
...
J.P.’s pre-school is out for winter break this week, but instead of having his jobless father at home with him, he was spending the day with Tomoko, playing checkers, helping her bake chocolate chip cookies and, with snow rendering our backyard impassable yet again, probably watching a fair amount of television. In the afternoon, the women from Tomoko’s new-mother’s group would stop by with their babies to visit with her and Ellie. And I would be at my computer, writing.
...
When J.P. was born his mother (my ex-wife) and I significantly altered our work lives. I left work hours earlier than my colleagues [ed. note: could that be the reason for the job loss, perhaps?]; she stayed home during the day and worked at night; the grandparents filled the gaps. This schedule likely didn’t do much for our marriage but it meant that we could directly care for our child, which had the benefit of being something that we wanted, and for which we had few alternatives: full-time day care in Brooklyn can run upward of $20,000, summers not included. Such decisions are far from unusual in this country, as parenting increasingly becomes a series of calculations needed to reconcile our jobs with our children. Tomoko will soon return to her job in advertising, and even though I’m out of work, we’ve decided to hire a nanny. It wasn’t an easy decision, financially or emotionally, but if I am to have any hope of earning a living, there simply wasn’t any other choice.
...
I believe that work has an intrinsic worth that goes beyond making money or staking a claim to one’s manhood. I have thought about this a lot lately. I want my children to see me work. I want them to know me as someone who works. But equally so, I want them to see me. This means that while I should perhaps keep honing this article, I’ll end it here for now. There’s a matinee at the neighborhood movie theater. If I hurry we could make it.


-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Theodore Ross is the author of the forthcoming book “Am I a Jew” and a contributor to the blog Dadwagon.


hmm... b-u-s-y ? or simply Y-Z-A-L ?

Wednesday, February 23

Lol @ NYT "correction".

Correction: February 23, 2011
An earlier version of this column misidentified one of Rahm Emanuel's campaign stops on the South Side of Chicago. It was the 95th Street El stop, not the 65th Street stop. There is no such stop.


Lol. I just knew there was no way Maureen Dowd and Rahm Emanuel were hanging 'round that far south -- 65th Street -- even out courting votes, with protection or not. No way, these days...

Full Disclosure:
I lived at 77th and Wolcott, from birth to age 4.* Auburn Gresham neighborhood. A block from Clara Barton Elementary School.**

Gangster Disciples now. *sigh*


------------

*Who'll give $5. to read my memoirs ??

**Got some work to do now, Rahm... (Hit the scorecard link). Tell your Hollywood pals you're busy for the next few years, and stay home from their parties helping these schools get back to where they once were? We're watching, friend. And you did want the job, not just the perks, no? The RESULTS are on you now... Good luck!

Why Collective Bargaining Too ... Must Go.

Money, money, money, money ... Money!


Read this recent article, and tell me if you think that's an A-Ok way to handle a grievance or a firing.

A veteran officer assigned to the Dane County Narcotics and Gang Task Force has resigned from the Madison Police Department after an 18-month investigation cleared her of illegal activity but found several policy violations that included "overbearing, oppressive or tyrannical conduct."

Denise Markham, 46, who has been on paid leave since June 2009, resigned on Dec. 31 but will continue on the city's payroll until Sept. 6, when her sick days, vacation and comp time runs out, Police Chief Noble Wray said.

Keeping Markham on the payroll for eight months after her resignation will cost the city $44,415, according to the city comptroller's office, including payment for vacation and sick days she accrued while on paid leave.

Wray, who released a brief summary of findings from the 18-month investigation Friday, said Markham's resignation was part of a negotiated settlement. Given contract provisions and the additional expense and time it could take if Markham appealed to the Police and Fire Commission, "this is really the best deal for all parties involved." Wray said.

Investigators found numerous incidents that revealed a pattern of policy violations over Markham's 4½ years with the task force, Wray said. Wray on Friday declined to release details of those incidents; a request by the Wisconsin State Journal under the state's open records law to view the entire investigative report is pending.

Broadly, investigators found Markham:

• Filed incomplete or inaccurate reports

• Conducted improper searches

• Conducted improper seizures of private property

• Improperly handled controlled substances

• Engaged in "overbearing, oppressive or tyrannical conduct."
...
Andrew Schauer, who represents Markham as an attorney for the Wisconsin Professional Police Association, said she'd ... agreed to resign rather than fight the allegations, primarily because of "personal family medical issues," Schauer said. Markham declined to be interviewed, he said.

Markham earned the vacation and sick leave she's taking through Sept. 6, Schauer said. "The department took 18 months to investigate," Schauer said. "That doesn't mean she was on some 18-month vacation. Being on suspension is not a vacation."

[Added: But, of course, there's nothing keeping you from going on vacation while you're on paid suspension. You are free to move about the country, not under house arrest or anything...]

Markham will be able to collect all the money the city put into her pension fund during the 22 years she worked for the police department. And she has a right to her unused leave, he said. "It's contractural," Wray said. "I understand how this may look from a taxpayer's standpoint, but my hands are really tied as to what the process allows me to do for termination."

Markham made $33.84 an hour, for an annual salary of $65,988, excluding overtime, said Pat Skaleski, payroll accountant in the city comptroller's office.

She has 977.5 hours of sick leave banked, Skaleski said, having earned half a day of sick leave each pay period, including the time she's been on paid leave. She also has about three weeks of vacation and 38 hours of comp time that was carried over since 2007, Skaleski said.


My 6-months post-law-school-graduation (2005) at the WPPA taught me, scarily, this is normal. (Oddly, they let me go. Poor fit and all. Still, I sleep well.)

And Madison cops have it the best in the state. Other places, they investigate and get your hearing held in a timely manner.

Of course, perhaps it's strategic on the unions part to drag these things out ... while the employee receives FULL PAY, sitting on their butts at home.

Something ain't right here, folks...


ADDED: Nice earring, eh? Yeah, that looks pretty safe for an active officer on duty...

Tuesday, February 22

Good Will Conquer Evil...

and the Truth Will Set You Free...
and I Know Someday, We'll Find the Key
.*

By JASON STRAZIUSO and MALKHADIR M. MUHUMED, Associated Press
NAIROBI, Kenya – Four Americans taken hostage by Somali pirates off East Africa were shot and killed by their captors Monday, the U.S. military said, marking the first time U.S. citizens have been killed in a wave of pirate attacks plaguing the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean for years.

U.S. Naval forces, who were trailing the Americans' captured yacht with four warships, quickly boarded the vessel after hearing the gunfire and tried to provide lifesaving care to the Americans, but they died of their wounds, the U.S. Central Command said in a statement.

RIP the 4 American lives taken by Somali pirates.

I don't want to hear right now how these poor people have no other options than pirating; there's too many good, poor people doing the right thing to lift themselves, to buy that.

Don't want to hear how the 4 had no business in those waters without protection -- that they courted their own deaths. Might be your true opinion, but they paid for their miscalculations.
Negotiations had been under way to try to win the release of the two couples on the pirated vessel Quest when the gunfire was heard, the U.S. military said.

The Quest was the home of Jean and Scott Adam, a couple from California who had been sailing around the world since December 2004 with a yacht full of Bibles. The two other Americans on board were Phyllis Macay and Bob Riggle, of Seattle, Washington.

No excuses. Let them RIP. I just hope we get a full and truthful accounting of what happened.

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*That's Jimmy Cliff (Many Rivers to Cross), not Bruce Springsteen, speaking, you know...

••♥❤(◠‿◠)❤♥••.♫♪♫•¸¸.•*¨*•

Monday, February 21

This is Country Music. And We Do...

Yesterday was "Hockey Day in America", with both the Wild and the Blackhawks playing on national tv. Also, the Daytona 500, where a fresh 20-year-old won big.

I caught Brad Paisley performing his new song, which I'd just heard on the radio recently. Catchy tune...

Well, you're not supposed
To say the word "cancer"
In a song.
And tellin' folks that Jesus is the answer
Can rub 'em wrong.
It ain't hip to sing about
Tractors, trucks, little towns or mama.
Yeah, that might be true.
But this is country music,
And we do.

Do you like to drink a cold one
On the weekends,
And get a little loud?
Do you wanna say, "I'm sorry"
Or, "I love you",
But you don't know how?
And do you wish somebody
Had the nerve
To tell that stupid boss a yours
To shove it,
Next time he yells at you?
Well, this is country music,
And we do.

So turn it on,
And turn it up.
And sing along.
This is real.
This is your life
In a song.
Yeah, this is country music.

Are you haunted by the echo
Of your mother
On the phone;
Cryin' as she tells you
That your brother
Is not comin' home?
Well, if there's anyone that still has pride
In the memory of those
That died defending
The ol' red, white and blue,
This is country music,
And we do.

So turn it on,
And turn it up.
And sing along.
This is real.
This is your life
In a song.

Just like a road that takes you home.
Yeah, this is right where you belong.
This is country music.

This is country music.

"He Stopped Loving Her Today"
(This is country music)
"Hello Darlin'"
(This is country music)
"God Bless the U.S.A"
(This is country music)
"Amarillo by Mornin'"
(This is country music)
"Stand by Your Man"
(This is country music)
"Mama Tried"
(This is country music)
"Take Me Home..."
(This is country music)
"I Walk the Line"
(This is country music)
"A Country Boy Can Survive"
(This is country music)




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Beauty's Where You Find It...


Why Wisconsin should bust public sector unions.

Because far from being the "people's servants", they are bargaining against US, the taxpayers. They hold our children hostage -- Madison teachers vote to cancel schools for the fourth straight day -- not negotiating for safer working conditions as trade unions might need to do, but to hang on to their cushy, non-competitive jobs.

If the teachers, garbage workers, cops, bus drivers, paper processors, etc. don't like the wages and benefits being served up in their public sector jobs, let them compete elsewhere.

Not hold the educations of aspiring schoolchildren hostage until they can bleed even more out of a system that needs the bleeding staunched -- today.

I'm not at all surprised economist Krugman doesn't get this. Not at all. (In fact, he pretends that the working class supports this government-class set of pampered workers, pushing for more, more, more ... We don't.)

Eventually, the Democratic lawmakers hiding in Illinois will come crawling back to the table. Their bad behavior won't be rewarded, nor will all those jumping, drumming, chanting and drawing funny signs about how bad they've got it.

The Gravy Train has left the station, folks...

Deal with it.




ADDED: Fire the sick/striking teachers; bring in educated "scabs" to teach; or begin forming hedgerow schools...

If they don't want to teach and can't appear for work at the jobs they have, take them up on the offer.

If this nonsense isn't making it obvious that we need taxpayer-financed VOUCHERS, where students and parents can choose alternatives to public ed and the "servants" who think they control the game, I don't know what will.

Competition, competition, competition. It's not just for students, anymore!

Sunday, February 20

Friday, February 18

Please tell me...

(1) that the Wisconsin Democratic lawmakers who have taken to hiding in Rockford, Illinois in an attempt to avoid a vote on the governor's proposed budget/public union slashing measures -- are not charging their rooms and expenses down there to the State taxpayers; (2) that if indeed they believe so strongly in this evasive measure that they are actually paying out of pocket (or via private donations even -- pass the hat) for their civil disobedience. (?)

Ditto all the teachers who -- in Madison -- have taken 3 straight days off, the schools closed down completely to allow their protesting and symbolic actions. Please tell me that they won't be receiving any pay for their teaching performances those days -- not straight up, nor drawn from their (comparatively generous) state employee benefits, ie/ sick and personal days.

Something just ain't right,
if taxpayers are indeed funding these "opt out for the day(s)" shenanagins, and there is no sacrifice whatsoever on behalf of those protesting.

( I also never quite understood why the professionals who receive the highest salary pay in compensation, are also the first to insist that their rooms, meals, entertainment, etc. be comped -- that they themselves don't have to pay for what they directly consume. Isn't that what the higher salary pay is for? )


Seems to me,
what these teachers especially are doing, after 3 days without classes -- the messages being sent to the aspiring students, and the families who work hard to get them to school and to take the daily work seriously -- is this:

"Stay home and read and calculate. Visit a library and challenge yourself to learn on your own. You really don't need us all that much, and look: we're kind of showing you where you -- the aspiring students -- fit into the equation. We're not really here to teach you, or care about your educations. It's about the $$$$$, and we only really need/care about you students to the extent that without you, we wouldn't have jobs with such generous perks in the first place."

( Remember when the Chicago Public Schools used to begin the school year with teacher strikes? Remember what it taught kids about the value of their educations? I worked summers for the Southtown Economist in 1987 and '88, covering the Chicago Vocational School (CVS) students sweating in classrooms without a/c in late June, making up the missed time the 19-day teachers' strike had stolen from them.* Still have the clips. This is forward progress?? )


Really, this too might be a blessing in disguise: open up the educational systems to innovative ways of teaching/learning and progressing/moving forward.

Locking students in, with a teacher with dubious motives for being there, for 6 hours a day, 5 days a week ... surely there's got to be a better way.

The teachers in Madison anyway, are showing how much they really are needed these past 3 days. Once parents, who need to work and have a place to put their school-aged children all day, have alternate-placement routines in place (other learning centers / educational experiences to compete with public schools), do you think they'll care where or how their children are educated, if indeed they are learning daily?


The Bloat is there, and I suspect Madison teachers are just volunteering us to puncture an educational system that might have worked well as agrarian societies transitioned to the 20th Century, but one which might just welcome a chance to again reform itself with all the 21st Century tricks of the trade now available to striving learners.

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*

Many parents, teachers, and politicians in Chicago recall a time when teacher strikes seemed like a regular part of budget and contract negotiations. In 1987, Chicago teachers stopped working for four weeks, throwing the school system into chaos.

Parent Joy Noven begged then-Mayor Harold Washington to resolve that labor dispute. In her plea, she said: "We have teachers who are dedicated to this system. Let them do their job. We have parents who want to do help their job and help the teachers. Let them do it. Get the kids in school. We've had enough of it."



Just a thought...