Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Stay Out Greenwich Point Beach

When Greenwich CT had to open their beaches to the public they had to quickly come up with a plan to keep the undesirables out. Going with the 'best defense is a good offense' strategy they concocted a two tier plan: first charge'em alot of money and two, if they have the money, make it a bureaucratic nightmare. The minimum cost for one person is $30 ($10 for a beach pass which must be purchased at town hall located several miles away and $20 for parking at the beach).

The Greenwich Times looked into the beach policy and discovered that the "Beach policy seems to keep outsiders out".
"We've had some grumbling, but usually we tell people how much it is and they come or they don't," said Craig Whitcomb, operations manager for the marine and facilities division of the parks department.
Sphere blog writer Tom Andersen, who also wrote a book on the Long Island Sound, questions whether Greenwich Point Beach is really all that special.

Take heed: Recently a 75 year old man dared to ride his bicycle into the park without paying the $10 fee. This dastardly criminal was apprehended by a police roadblock and issued a $92 ticket.

Monday, July 25, 2005

Ricky Martin protecting young Muslim males


Ricky Martin understands your pain. He knows people are ignorant and that you have to "ignore the ignorant". So as a UN spokeman (oops spokesperson) he will defend Arab youth. To show his solidarity he posed for pictures with a traditional Arab kaffiyeh headscarf with the slogan "Jerusalem is Ours" written on it. Hmm. I guess he's not defending the right of Israel to exsist.

Unions leave AFL-CIO, vow to organize Wal-Mart

When I was 8 I asked my father what that little blue book was with his name on it. He told me it was his Int'l Machinist Workers union dues book and that even though he worked for a nonunion shop he still paid his dues. My mother recounts her experience as an office worker in the 30's at a Brooklyn NY factory where the union rep always came on pay day and took money from the illiterate factory floor workers (mostly black) whom the union never helped.

The moral: unions are good and unions are bad.

Today the Service Employees Int'l Union (SEIU) and the Teamsters announced they are leaving the AFL-CIO. Several other unions including United Food & Commercial Workers may also leave the umbrella organization.

Before they left, they gave the AFL-CIO a chance:focus on organizing new workers by using the unions' money. D'uh. That makes so much sense I can't even think of anything witty to say. I have friends that moan and groan about how much they hate Wal-Mart because 'Wal-Mart treats their employees bad'. Okay. But where are the unions? Why haven't they tried to organize Wal-Mart, or Borders, or Lowes, etc? Wal-Mart would rather close a store than succumb to the union. Which is why the lone store strategy doesn't work. If there was a state wide effort to organize, Wal-Mart could not afford to leave the state. But the AFL-CIO would rather give all their money to Democrats and who knows what than organize new workers.

Of course there are other issues that need to be addressed but with a diminishing amount of union workers (only 8% of the workforce) these issues are moot.

I hope the split will see less union money going to democratic candidates who have done nothing for the unions. Imagine if all the money the unions spent on John Kerry were put to organizing: Wal-Mart would be a great place to work and my friends will have to look for something new to complain about.

Change to Win Coalition ; Money- Big Labor in Big Fight With Itself

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Molly Ivins - forgets to check the facts

Molly Ivins: She rants, she raves, she doesn't bother checking her facts. She hates George Bush, the republicans and hates Supreme Court justices who think it's not OK to take private property to build luxury condos.

Today, Ms.Ivins confesses that she never bothered to check the facts when she accused the USA of killing more Iraqi civillians than the mass murderer Saddam Hussein. She figured Saddam killed 20,000 people over 24 years which averages to 834 killings a year. (With such a low death count I'm not sure why she even opposed him). But alas, she confesses she never checked her figures and didn't realize Saddam killed closer to 1,000,000 people. Actually, she doesn't really say how she came to those numbers other than saying: Saddam's regime left 271 mass graves, with more still being discovered. That figure alone was the source for my original mistaken estimate of 20,000."

Ms. Ivins was so blinded by her hatred for America, Pres. Bush and the Republicans that she never saw how absurd it is to think Saddam killed only 20,000 people in 24 years. It's like Holocaust deniers who can't see the truth because they are so blinded by their hatred of Jews. That's not a fair comparison, Holocaust deniers don't have the resources that a national syndicated columnist and author of numerous books has. Maybe she outsources her fact checkers to France.

CROW EATEN HERE
This is a horror. In a column written June 28, I asserted that more Iraqis (civilians) had now been killed in this war than had been killed by Saddam Hussein over his 24-year rule. WRONG. Really, really wrong. The only problem is figuring out by how large a factor I was wrong. I had been keeping an eye on civilian deaths in Iraq for a couple of months, waiting for the most conservative estimates to creep over 20,000, which I had fixed in my mind as the number of Iraqi civilians Saddam had killed. The high-end estimate of Iraqi civilian deaths in this war is 100,000, according to a Johns Hopkins University study published in the British medical journal The Lancet last October, but I was sticking to the low-end, most conservative estimates because I didn't want to be accused of exaggeration.

Ha! I could hardly have been more wrong, no matter how you count Saddam's killing of civilians. According to Human Rights Watch, Hussein killed several hundred thousand of his fellow citizens. The massacre of the Kurdish Barzani tribe in 1983 killed at least 8,000; the infamous gas attack on the Kurdish village of Halabja killed 5,000 in 1988; and seized documents from Iraqi security organizations show 182,000 were murdered during the Anfal ethnic cleansing campaign against Kurds, also in 1988. In 1991, following the first Gulf War, both the Kurds and the Shiites rebelled. The allied forces did not intervene, and Saddam brutally suppressed both uprisings and drained the southern marshes that had been home to a local population for more than 5,000 years.

Saddam's regime left 271 mass graves, with more still being discovered. That figure alone was the source for my original mistaken estimate of 20,000. Saddam's widespread use of systematic torture, including rape, has been verified by the U.N. Committee on Human Rights and other human rights groups over the years. There are wildly varying estimates of the number of civilians, especially babies and young children, who died as a result of the sanctions that followed the Gulf War. While it is true that the ill-advised sanctions were put in place by the United Nations, I do not see that that lessens Hussein's moral culpability, whatever blame attaches to the sanctions themselves -- particularly since Saddam promptly corrupted the Oil for Food Program put in place to mitigate the effects of the sanctions, and used the proceeds to build more palaces, etc.

There have been estimates as high as 1 million civilians killed by Saddam, though most agree on the 300,000 to 400,000 range, making my comparison to 20,000 civilian dead in this war pathetically wrong. I was certainly under no illusions regarding Saddam Hussein, whom I have opposed through human rights work for decades. My sincere apologies. It is unforgivable of me not have checked. I am so sorry.

Saturday, July 02, 2005

Numbers of Civil Unions Declining

Saturday, July 02, 2005 2:27 p.m. ET

MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) -- In the last six months of 2000, when Vermont was the only state in the nation recognizing anything resembling marriage for gays and lesbians, 1,709 couples were joined in civil unions.

The popularity has waned every year since and has plummeted since Massachusetts began permitting same-sex marriages a year ago and several Canadian provinces did the same.
For all 12 months of 2004, 711 couples obtained civil unions "and we won't even come close to that this year," said Rich McCoy, chief of public health statistics at the state Health Department.

"I would say the primary reason is same-sex marriage in Massachusetts," McCoy said. "Many, many of our civil unions in the first couple of years were to couples in Massachusetts. Also ... the numbers we had coming from Canada dropped off. Now Connecticut has its own civil union law. We did get couples from Connecticut."

Civil unions have been most popular with out-of-state couples. Of the 7,549 couples who have had civil union ceremonies since July 1, 2000, only 1,137 have been Vermonters. There have been 78 dissolutions, or divorces. Slightly more than two-thirds of the couples have been women, McCoy said.

Elsewhere, California couples can register with the state and qualify for all the benefits of marriage except for the right to file taxes jointly. Oregon is close to becoming the third state to offer civil unions. [found on Wired News]

George W's Quagmire

George W’s Quagmire
Different war, same old complaints.

By Michael Graham

Philadelphia, the American Colonies, July 4, 1776 — Leaders of the self-described “American patriots” movement gathered in this Pennsylvania city today to sign an official declaration of their political intentions, despite widespread criticism of a failing war policy and complaints that their military action was launched under false pretenses.

“Here it is, July of 1776, and George W. and his lackeys are just now getting around to declaring what this war is supposedly all about?” complained Loyalist playwright Michael LeMoore. “Washington and his neo-congressionalists rushed us into war at Lexington and Concord, before anyone had ‘declared’ a single word about independence. Face it: George lied, and people died.”

LeMoore was referring to what patriots call “The shot heard 'round the world,” when colonial forces fired on British soldiers in violation of accepted international rules of military engagement.

Supporters of George Washington and the so-called “war for independence” dispute claims from the antiwar movement that their actions are unlawful, and they point to their formal “Declaration of Independence” as proof.

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights,” reads the Declaration in part, “that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” The document was reportedly written by Thomas Jefferson, a white, southern slave-owner, and one of the architects of the “patriot” movement.

Critics quickly noted the hypocrisy of Jefferson's reference to “unalienable rights” of liberty and the author's own record of slave-ownership.

“If they really believed in spreading ‘freedom,’ they would free their own slaves instead of killing the British and shelling innocent civilian Loyalist women and children in Boston and New York,” said Howard Deanne, head of the Loyalist National Committee. “And what of the recently uncovered Commonwealth Avenue memos, which would seem to indicate that those closest to Washington were planning for war after the Boston Tea Party back in '73? I'm telling you, the colonists of America have been misled into war!”

Though most colonists agree that King George III is a tyrant, polls consistently show that a minority of colonists support open military action against the British. Many pundits also question whether removing the monarchy will make any fundamental difference in the lives of Americans.

General Washington came to Philadelphia to report to members of the Continental Congress, and anonymous sources report he came under heavy fire over the actions of his army and the costs of the war.

“We lost 140 Americans at Bunker Hill, more than 600 killed or captured in our disastrous attacks on Canada, and there’s no end in sight,” said one congressional staffer who asked not to be identified. “People are asking, ‘When is this war going to end? What is our exit strategy?’ This is George W's war, no doubt about it.”

Indeed, as support for the war among the American colonists wanes, some Quaker antiwar activists are using the other “Q” word in colonial politics: quagmire. Some even suggest that the entire war was manufactured by Gen. Washington to settle a personal score with the British over perceived insults he endured during the French and Indian War.

“Washington was just looking for an excuse to go to war,” said prominent lady activist Rosalind O'Donnell. “Everyone knows little Georgie would be broke if not for his connections to major land speculators pushing out beyond Kentucky. This is just a land grab! No war for Ohio! No war for Ohio!”

Patriot leaders gathered in Philadelphia, however, were determined to ignore the mounting criticism and celebrate their unanimous adoption of the Declaration of Independence.

“I firmly believe that in the future, this day — July 4, 1776 — will be viewed as a great moment for America and for freedom around the world,” John Adams of Massachusetts told a handpicked audience of “patriot” supporters. But neither he nor any of the other speakers said anything new about the costs or justifications of this divisive war policy, returning instead as they often do to the broad themes of freedom and democracy.

The Declaration concludes by stating: “We, therefore…declare that these united colonies are, and of right ought to be free and independent states; And for the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor.”

“That's the kind of simplistic jingoism one expects to read in Fox's Daily Broadsheet, not in serious political discourse,” said Noah Chommsey, head of the political-science department at King’s College. “But the idea that the American colonists have come up with some superior form of self-government that is inherently more just than, say, monarchy or theocracy, is the height of arrogance.”

Meanwhile, the war effort continues. Loyalist supporters among the American colonists continue to support the British military, particularly in the South, and hopes are fading that a major European power will come to the aid of the Americans. Military analysts suggest that the American “War for Independence” could last another seven years and result in the death of up to one percent of the entire American population.

“Is a free, democratic America really worth such a price?” demanded playwright LeMoore. “I certainly don’t think so. The world shouldn’t look to America for leadership. They should look instead to courageous nations truly endowed with greatness. Like France.”

— Radio-talk host Michael Graham covers southern politics from his home in Virginia. He is an NRO contributor.