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"Dancing with the Stars" - Mya was the best, Donny got the Mormon vote.  It's all about demographics not style points.  Give me a break! 

CANADA INVESTS IN TRAINS!

    The above picture is a Via RR skier train at Jasper Station in the Canadian Rockies in Alberta.  The Canadian government and private sector are making major long term investments updating rail equipment and infrastructure for metro mass transit, long haul freight and transcontinental passenger service.  This is a strategy to produce high wage jobs, wise land use and economic and environmental sustainability. 

    The Obama administration has targeted money in this direction. However, when economic stimulus money has been spent what happens then?  If we insist on being the policeman of the Middle East we know the answer.  As in the Vietnam War era we will see home land investments diminish as the insatiable demands from the Pentagon continue as happened to LBJ's Great Society programs in the '60s.  We can't have both guns and butter.  We must make a choice. 

https://docs.google.com/a/easystreet.net/gview?a=v&pid=gmail&attid=0.1&thid=1248c7ad8766a225&mt=application%2Fpdf&url=http


HEADLINE COMMENTARY: 

Paul Krugman - "The Defining Moment" - in the health care debate

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/30/opinion/30krugman.html?adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1257012515-VF6MS5T1Z4P5UjkOoRGyS

 

Bill Moyers on bringing back the draft!


http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/10302009/watch3.html

 

Not again?  Can this generation's "best & brightest" win a four front war against the evils of terrorism?  Be careful what you wish for!  We might end up with a loss in Afghanistan, the breakup of Iraq, the destablization of Pakistan & the erosion of civil liberties on the home front.  After all no president, especially a Dem, wants to be considered "soft" on "evil doers" - commies in the '50s, terrorists now! 

 http://www.thenation.com/doc/20091130/schell

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/in-iraq-security-is-only-surface-deep/article1328566

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20091102/sanchez

Source of article links:  The Canadian Connection

 

MD's for Health Care Reform at the White House

Sign the petition below:

http://act.credoaction.com/campaign/obama_up_or_down_vote/?r_by=-2276355-tquYRrx&rc=confemail1


    Garrison Keillor on the health care reform debate:  "...The Founding Fathers intended the Senate to be a fount of wisdom flowing, but when you consider Saxby Chambliss and Jim Bunning, John Ensign, Jim DeMint, James Inhofe, who look as if they've been banged on the head too many times, and the moon-faced Mitch McConnell, your faith in democracy is challenged severely. Any legislative body in which 41 senators from rural states that together represent 10 percent of the population can filibuster you to death is going to be flat-footed, on the verge of paralysis, no matter what. Any time 10 percent of the people can stop 90 percent, it's like driving a bus with a brake pedal for each passenger. That's why Congress has a public approval rating of 25 percent...."

http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/garrison_keillor/2009/11/10/republicans

 

 http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2009/10/06/public_option/?source=newsletter

 

Big Lies about ACCORN, Socialized Medicine & Poor Little Rich People

 

 

    Forest Grove High School regarded as an "outstanding" high school now listed by the latest NCLB Report Card having "repeatedly missed targets" is on the federal government - "troubled list." 

    Except for math trend lines on reading, science and writing are either flat or down especially on writing the most important indicator for success in college.  Don't buy the "edu spin" that Oregon schools are succeding - they are not: 

    Please note that the measuring index used by NCLB inflates the test results for underachieving students so that the report card biases the results inflating test scores.  For more information go to the following link: 

http://schools.oregonlive.com

 

    Oregonian columnist Susan Nielsen's Sunday's op ed column "What tired Oregon teachers say" underscores the stress and strains classroom teachers face trying to teach children who come to them with parents who undermine their children's education, with increasingly larger classrooms and with a system focused on testing not teaching.  

    "...educators face huge pressures to get their school ratings up.  This worthy goal has a few unintended consequences.  Teachers feel like they spend half the year on testing and the other half on test prep.  And many teachers say administrators discourage them from holding students accountable for major disruptions, tardiness, absenteeism or late work.  Too many suspensions or failing grades can make a school look bad on paper..."   

http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/susan_nielsen/index.ssf/2009/11/what_tired_oregon_teachers_say.html

 

    

    Why does the richest nation in the world have the moral blight of homeless people?  If we can put a man on the moon, we ought to be able to help every American to have a "home of their own."


http://www.ahomeoftheirown.com/  


    Connecting the dots between homelessness, hunger & health care disparities in Oregon and Washington County: 

Homelessness:  

•    The faces of the homeless are families with children, single men and women, vets, and many who are impaired. It is estimated that in Washington County up to 56% of homelessness occurs to families.

Hunger:

•    Hunger is highest among single mother households (10%) and poor families (15%) as well as renters, unemployed workers and minority households. 

Heath Care Disparities: 

•    Adults in Oregon without insurance represent 22.3% of the state’s population compared to 19.7% of the nation.  In Washington County approximately 73,000 county residents have no health care insurance. 


              

 

 

   

   

      

 

 




 

 

 

RAD Lines

Phil Knight U fans voted the "worst" in the PAC 10!  Well duh!  But Arizona fans should get the boot for unsportmanlike conduct.  Go Beavs! 

 

 Oregon

 Alis Volat Propriius

[She flies with

her own wings]

 

"...Let's cut to the chase.  Oregon is boxed in by a devastated economy, a vacuous impotent governor and a self-defeating tax system..."  Steve Duin, Oregonian, Sunday, May 24, 2009. 

RAD:  Some very powerful interest groups in Oregon believe that taxing big business and the rich is bad public policy while at the same time they claim to support K-12 and higher ed funding.  They bankrolled the initiative effort to put the $733 million in new taxes on the rich on a January 26th ballot, Meassure 66 & 67.

If this well financed effort succeeds the legislature in February will be faced with redoing the '07-09 budget.  It will mean cuts across the board not unlike what happened this year in California.  If you want schools to close early, a reduction in police and fire protection and criminals on the streets sign the petition.  If not vote YES for Measures 66 & 67! 



For the those who think single payer is not the way to health care reform read this account:  

My Canadian friend played golf with a fellow and his wife from Edmonton, Alberta Canada.  The husband had a case of the flesh-eating disease, but they caught it early enough that despite two surgeries, etc he lived, even though it was close. 

Five months of paid leave from his company, two serious surgeries, intensive care unit for a week, home care to change dressings and all the rest and it didn't cost him a penny because of Canadian health care.  He was treated immediately because it was serious. 

RAD:  In the US who knows what would happen to this fellow and his family? 

  

 

You see things; and you say, 'Why?'

But I dream things that never were; and I say, "Why not?" 

George Bernard Shaw,

"Back to Methuselah" (1921)


Great is the guilt

of an unnecessary war

John Adams

2nd President of the USA

 

Taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society

Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.


Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; mere anarchy is loosed upon the world, the blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everwhere the ceremony of innocence is drowned; the best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity

William Butler Yeats


Why … should we have government? Why not each individual take to himself the whole fruit of his labor, without having any of it taxed away?”  

“The legitimate object of government, is to do for the people whatever they need to have done, but which they can not do, at all, or can not do, so well, for themselves – in their separate and individual capacities … There are many such things … roads, bridges and the like; providing for the helpless young and afflicted; common schools … the criminal and civil [justice] departments. 

Abraham Lincoln

 

Parliament is not a congress of ambassadors from different and hostile interests, which interests each must maintain, as an agent and advocate, against other agents and advocates, but Parliament is a deliberative assembly of one nation, with one interest, that of the whole... 

Edmund Burke


“Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”

George Santayana (1863–1952)

 

 “It is a maxim among these lawyers that whatever hath been done before may legally be done again, and therefore they take special care to record all the decisions formerly made against common justice and the general reason of mankind.  These, under the name of precedents, they produce as authorities, to justify the most iniquitous opinions.” 

Jonathan Swift 


 

 

 


 

 

  

 


  

 

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Friday
03Jul2009

TO AGITATE OR NOT TO AGITATE, THAT IS THE QUESTION

    Jim Hightower, Commentary, The Fourth of July Is a Celebration of Agitation, June 24, 2009
    Are you an agitator? You know, one of those people who won't leave well enough alone, who's always questioning authority and trying to stir things up.
    If so, the Powers That Be detest you — you ... you ... "agitator!" They spit the term out as a pejorative to brand anyone who dares to challenge the established order. "Oh," they scoff, "our people didn't mind living next to that toxic waste dump until those environmental agitators got them upset." Corporate chieftains routinely wail that "our workers were perfectly happy until those union agitators started messing with their minds."
    In each case, the message is that America would be a fine country if only we could get rid of those pesky troublemakers who get the hoi polloi agitated about one thing or another.
    Bovine excrement. Were it not for agitators, we wouldn't even have an America. The Fourth of July would be just another hot day, we'd be singing "God Save the Queen," and our government officials would be wearing white-powdered wigs.
    Agitators created America, and it's their feisty spirit and outright rebelliousness that we celebrate on our national holiday. I don't merely refer to the Founders, either. Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, James Madison, Ben Franklin and the rest certainly were derring-do agitators when they wrote the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, creating the framework for a democratic republic. But they didn't actually create much democracy. In the first presidential election, only 4 percent of the people were even eligible to vote. No women allowed, no African Americans, no American Indians and no one who was landless.
    So, on the Fourth, it's neither the documents of democracy that we celebrate nor the authors of the documents. Rather, it's the intervening two-plus centuries of ordinary American agitators who have struggled mightily against formidable odds to democratize those documents.
    America's great rebellion didn't end with the British surrender at Yorktown.  It was only getting started — and the rebellion has moved through such great forces of agitation as the abolitionists and suffragists, Sojourner Truth and Frederick Douglass, the Populists and the Wobblies, Fighting Bob La Follette and Huey Long, the Square Deal and New Deal, Mother Jones and Woodie Guthrie, Rachel Carson and Ralph Nader, Martin Luther King Jr. and Cesar Chavez — and on into today's continuing fight for economic fairness, social justice and equal opportunity for all.
    Without agitators battling in politics, on the job, in the marketplace, for the environment, on Wall Street, in education, for civil liberties and rights, and all across our society, democratic progress doesn't just stall, it falls back.
    The Powers That Be — especially America's overarching corporate and political forces (often the same) — give lip service to democracy, but tend toward plutocracy, autocracy and kleptocracy. They prefer (and often demand) that We the People be passive consumers of their economic and political policies. Don't rock the boat, stay in your place, go along to get along — be quiet, they urge.
    Be quiet? Holy Thomas Paine! How could freedom-loving, democratic citizens shrink into quietude, especially when the Powers That Be feel so entitled to run roughshod over us? Even a dead fish can go with the flow. We've got to be livelier than that.
    July Fourth is a time to enjoy fireworks, flags, hotdogs, ballgames and such — but it's also a time to remember who we are: agitators!
    It's not easy to stand against powerful interests. Sometimes it's lonely, and you get to feeling like the guy B.B. King sings about: "No one likes you but your momma, and she might be jiving you, too." It's not easy, but having those who dare to stand up is essential if our country is ever to achieve our ideals of fairness, justice and opportunity for all.
    And when the establishment derisively assails you as an agitator, remember this: The agitator is the center post in the washing machine that gets the dirt out.
    PS:  Remember the American revolution was started by "agitators" who scaled a ship in Boston Harbor to throw tea overboard in protest of the British Stamp Tax.  Being patriotic is not about flying the biggest American flag around or singing God Bless America at a baseball game - it's about a life lived trying to make the American Dream "real" for the least of us.  That requires telling the truth to power not sucking up to it.   

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