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Apr 12, 2009
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I never understood the Global Warming hype.
The exhaustion of fossil energy reserves, and certainly the human ecological footprint, the fact that we are destroying our planet, our rainforest, our sees, our animals,... is a much bigger problem.
And there's enough proof for that.
 
Mar 18, 2009
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Buffalo Soldier said:
I never understood the Global Warming hype.
The exhaustion of fossil energy reserves, and certainly the human ecological footprint, the fact that we are destroying our planet, our rainforest, our sees, our animals,... is a much bigger problem.
And there's enough proof for that.

Well put!! Can't disagree with that statement!!
 
Jul 23, 2009
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Bala Verde said:
Just read this article "States Lower Test Standards for a High School Diploma".

- So does every US High School student (aged 12-18?) take the exact same test(s) per discipline (math, history, physics, spanish etc)?
- Are there any schools in the age range 12-16/18? that offer vocational training (carpentry, masonry, electricity, metallurgy/welding?)

Some schools have these programs and some do not - one of the guys I ride is a retired high school metal shop teaching - his program was killed when the new principal decided that the school should focus on football rather than industrial arts > the former metal shop with all of the equipment is now a weight training room for the football team.
 
Jul 14, 2009
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Bala Verde said:
Just read this article "States Lower Test Standards for a High School Diploma".

- So does every US High School student (aged 12-18?) take the exact same test(s) per discipline (math, history, physics, spanish etc)?
- Are there any schools in the age range 12-16/18? that offer vocational training (carpentry, masonry, electricity, metallurgy/welding?)

No. Standardized testing was a big drum beat during the Clinton years. His vision was to redirect money where it was needed in failing schools(really failing students) but it never materialized. Most vo-tech type of class offerings are almost gone. Home-ec which gave you basics on sewing and cooking and other things that could have been parlayed into careers in fashion or culinary arts. Auto shop and wood shop are not included in new school construction and are offered at very few schools. Current logic is all things will be created while sitting in front of a computer.
 
Dec 22, 2009
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Sports Triangle: sportswear , swimwear and riding suit

Sports Triangle: sportswear , swimwear and riding suit
With the continuous development and progress of the society,fast-paced city life make people feel much pressure.Sports become their one of the best ways to relax themselves. As a kind of sport’s essential goods,a variety of sports apparel make people dazzling.

qixing.gif

As a city girl who love sports very much, of course,there are many beautiful sport clothing in my closet.I love jogging, swimming and cycling,so I have sportswear, swimwear and riding suit.I would choose the general sportswear with loose styles,the cotton suits are the best.And the swimwears have so much different styles and colors that I pocket the two-piece, three-piece and bikini altogether.However, I prefer The moving off superior products swimsuit with their good quality and low price.I think two riding clothes are enough,one is spring and summer’s and the other is autumn and winter’s.JAGGAD is my favorite!
Jogging in the park,or swimming in the pool,or riding around the city on a sunny morning is a good choice,isn’t it!
 
Jul 9, 2009
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CentralCaliBike said:
Some schools have these programs and some do not - one of the guys I ride is a retired high school metal shop teaching - his program was killed when the new principal decided that the school should focus on football rather than industrial arts > the former metal shop with all of the equipment is now a weight training room for the football team.

I just know that was not quite what you meant to say.:D
 
Jul 4, 2009
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Hugh Januss said:
I just know that was not quite what you meant to say.:D

That is the reason, I always read your posts. The devil is in the detail and you are great at finding it.:D
 
Jul 9, 2009
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CentralCaliBike said:
Ok - you got me, but I meant every word of the rest of the post.

If you are talking about the dumbing down of our educational system, we are probably pretty much all in agreement on that. We seem to be preparing our young people for careers in pro sports or reality shows.
 
Mar 11, 2009
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Cal, I think Buffalo said it best how I feel about environmental policies:
Buffalo Soldier said:
I never understood the Global Warming hype. The exhaustion of fossil energy reserves, and certainly the human ecological footprint, the fact that we are destroying our planet, our rainforest, our seas, our animals,... is a much bigger problem.
And there's enough proof for that.
When people say "climate crisis" I too see a red herring for the most part. The real crises are:

1. Long-term energy crisis in the US. We are way too addicted to oil and need to move much more aggressively towards electric everything. Build nuclear power plants, build solar and wind grids, build electric cars, mass transit, make electric heat efficient and inexpensive. And in the long term slowly phase out coal, and more research on tidal, blue-green algae, hydrogen fuel cell, nuclear fusion, superconductivity, etc.

2. Industrial pollution in developing nations. Growing pollution problems especially in China and India, and SE Asian industrial countries. This is not just greenhouse gasses, but all pollution.

3. Water is going to be a very serious problem for about a third of the US, and much of the rest of the world in this century. Prepare now.

All of this will help whatever problems there are associated with global warming.

Regarding lower standards. My father went to a tech high school, it got him a good career job with Western Electric (AT&T) after his Army stint. Sadly, due to budget cuts his school changed their programs, and admission standards about five years ago. Now, it's just a school like all others. It was bizarre who was supporting the change. You had the right-wing Bush people thinking the spending for the school programs was a waste of tax dollars, teamed up with the politically correct police crying that anyone should be allowed to go to the school on the same side.
 
Mar 11, 2009
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Huge event in US politics today, as Republican Scott Brown won the seat once held by Ted Kennedy over Martha Coakley. I'm not surprised at all. Not only did Coakley run a limp campaign based on nothing, there is a very real swelling of anger against the Democrats and Obama for promising so very much, and doing so very little. Obama got elected on hope and change. Since then, we had more bailouts, a huge stimulus that I haven't seen a penny of, and zero indication that it's even working. Then there's the big health care morass. A bill that by most every indication is so convoluted, and so corrupted, and written by the insurance industry. No wonder people don't want it. Plus, if the Democrats are the party of the working people they have a funny way of showing it. Anyone with an open eyeball will get a quick perception that the Dems are more connected to Wall Street than the Republicans are.

Going to be an interesting November.
 
Mar 18, 2009
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Alpe d'Huez said:
Huge event in US politics today, as Republican Scott Brown won the seat once held by Ted Kennedy over Martha Coakley. I'm not surprised at all. Not only did Coakley run a limp campaign based on nothing, there is a very real swelling of anger against the Democrats and Obama for promising so very much, and doing so very little. Obama got elected on hope and change. Since then, we had more bailouts, a huge stimulus that I haven't seen a penny of, and zero indication that it's even working. Then there's the big health care morass. A bill that by most every indication is so convoluted, and so corrupted, and written by the insurance industry. No wonder people don't want it. Plus, if the Democrats are the party of the working people they have a funny way of showing it. Anyone with an open eyeball will get a quick perception that the Dems are more connected to Wall Street than the Republicans are.

Going to be an interesting November.

I knew Obama's "change" would be a joke as soon as he started staffing his administration. He filled the positions with people from the Clinton administration, including Rahm Emmanuel as chief of staff. These are people who are completely amoral and don't give a damn about anything other than staying in power. Right there that told me he would go for a completely political approach and would not be willing to fight for anything, lest it upset a potential voter. It was going to be Clinton 2.0. It was a real laugh when he appointed Geithner as Treasury Secretary.

The signs were there when he caved on the FISA bill and gave the telecommunication companies immunity for violating the civil rights of Americans. If he had any balls he would have prosecuted Bush administration members for war crimes and cleaned house on Wallstreet. He should have stopped both wars cold, blamed the failure on Bush, which is true, and devoted the resources to American problems. He should have brought General Shinseki, the only honest man in the high command of the miliary during the Bush regime, out of retirement and made him Secretary of Defense. He should have played hardball with the TARP funds; any company that needs to be bailed out should have been forced to hand over large amounts of equity to the government and broad swaths of the management should have been fired for incompetence. Half the white collar workers at GM and Chrysler should be waiting in soup lines right now.

Instead what do we get? Credit card "reform" that results in the banks jacking everyone's rates in an environment were interest rates are effectively zero.
 
Jun 18, 2009
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Alpe d'Huez said:
Huge event in US politics today, as Republican Scott Brown won the seat once held by Ted Kennedy over Martha Coakley. I'm not surprised at all. Not only did Coakley run a limp campaign based on nothing, there is a very real swelling of anger against the Democrats and Obama for promising so very much, and doing so very little. Obama got elected on hope and change. Since then, we had more bailouts, a huge stimulus that I haven't seen a penny of, and zero indication that it's even working. Then there's the big health care morass. A bill that by most every indication is so convoluted, and so corrupted, and written by the insurance industry. No wonder people don't want it. Plus, if the Democrats are the party of the working people they have a funny way of showing it. Anyone with an open eyeball will get a quick perception that the Dems are more connected to Wall Street than the Republicans are.

Going to be an interesting November.

His "financial" team is all ex-wall streeters - mostly bankers. Any wonder that we've had no real reform of the banking system?

I also think Obama acts more like a Senator than a president. He's too quick to negotiate away what he believes in. He shouldn't be the first person to compromise. I must say I'm not surprised by a Senator who has no idea how to lead. I expected this.

I'm not sure the Republicans are offering much of an alternative though. The independents are still mad and now it's the dem's turn to take it. In Mass independents outnumber dems and republicans. Beware the angry voter (not a slam against those who voted against Coakley in mass).

I hope we can still get some form of health reform. Eliminating pre-existing conditions exclusions would be a good start.
 
May 6, 2009
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I just watched that Sicko documentary by Michael Moore last night. There are worse places to get sick then in Cuba.
 
Aug 3, 2009
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Alpe d'Huez said:
Huge event in US politics today, as Republican Scott Brown won the seat once held by Ted Kennedy over Martha Coakley. I'm not surprised at all. Not only did Coakley run a limp campaign based on nothing, there is a very real swelling of anger against the Democrats and Obama for promising so very much, and doing so very little. Obama got elected on hope and change. Since then, we had more bailouts, a huge stimulus that I haven't seen a penny of, and zero indication that it's even working. Then there's the big health care morass. A bill that by most every indication is so convoluted, and so corrupted, and written by the insurance industry. No wonder people don't want it. Plus, if the Democrats are the party of the working people they have a funny way of showing it. Anyone with an open eyeball will get a quick perception that the Dems are more connected to Wall Street than the Republicans are.

Going to be an interesting November.
Does Henry Paulson ring a bell?Bush' right hand man.One of the originators behind the credit default swap.The bank he was ceo of got the first bailout funds.Money goes to money.Barney Frank is another financial scum bucket.Party affiliation has nothing to do with corruption.
Its all about self interest and greed.My father taught me that 50 years ago,by George,he was right.
 
Aug 3, 2009
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BroDeal said:
I knew Obama's "change" would be a joke as soon as he started staffing his administration. He filled the positions with people from the Clinton administration, including Rahm Emmanuel as chief of staff. These are people who are completely amoral and don't give a damn about anything other than staying in power. Right there that told me he would go for a completely political approach and would not be willing to fight for anything, lest it upset a potential voter. It was going to be Clinton 2.0. It was a real laugh when he appointed Geithner as Treasury Secretary.

The signs were there when he caved on the FISA bill and gave the telecommunication companies immunity for violating the civil rights of Americans. If he had any balls he would have prosecuted Bush administration members for war crimes and cleaned house on Wallstreet. He should have stopped both wars cold, blamed the failure on Bush, which is true, and devoted the resources to American problems. He should have brought General Shinseki, the only honest man in the high command of the miliary during the Bush regime, out of retirement and made him Secretary of Defense. He should have played hardball with the TARP funds; any company that needs to be bailed out should have been forced to hand over large amounts of equity to the government and broad swaths of the management should have been fired for incompetence. Half the white collar workers at GM and Chrysler should be waiting in soup lines right now.

Instead what do we get? Credit card "reform" that results in the banks jacking everyone's rates in an environment were interest rates are effectively zero.
+1 Government needs to serve the people,not themselves.
 
BroDeal said:
I knew Obama's "change" would be a joke as soon as he started staffing his administration. He filled the positions with people from the Clinton administration, including Rahm Emmanuel as chief of staff. These are people who are completely amoral and don't give a damn about anything other than staying in power. Right there that told me he would go for a completely political approach and would not be willing to fight for anything, lest it upset a potential voter. It was going to be Clinton 2.0. It was a real laugh when he appointed Geithner as Treasury Secretary.

The signs were there when he caved on the FISA bill and gave the telecommunication companies immunity for violating the civil rights of Americans. If he had any balls he would have prosecuted Bush administration members for war crimes and cleaned house on Wallstreet. He should have stopped both wars cold, blamed the failure on Bush, which is true, and devoted the resources to American problems. He should have brought General Shinseki, the only honest man in the high command of the miliary during the Bush regime, out of retirement and made him Secretary of Defense. He should have played hardball with the TARP funds; any company that needs to be bailed out should have been forced to hand over large amounts of equity to the government and broad swaths of the management should have been fired for incompetence. Half the white collar workers at GM and Chrysler should be waiting in soup lines right now.

Instead what do we get? Credit card "reform" that results in the banks jacking everyone's rates in an environment were interest rates are effectively zero.

It just goes to show you that American democracy is firmly in the hands of the military-industrial block and the corporate lobbyists. Yet this was inevitable given the state of American capitalism and the nation's role as the only surviving superpower (at least for now).

The interesting thing is that, especially after Bush, Obama is loved by the majority of Europeans, because his ideological positions jive with those among the progressive-socialist democratic principles of most of the Euro proletariate and because he is not a unilateral warmonger. Bet they are obviously more concerned with US foreign policy than internal affairs. To them the healthcare issue, for example, is simply incomprehensible (as to why everyone isn't simply covered by the State like in any other civilized country). Yet they are not affected by it in the way for instance how the US handles the wars abroad it has begun, or the manner in which Washington will enforce new regulations over Wall Street, the finacial market that triggered the world wide recession. Whereas in the States he was welcomed by just about everybody that knew the nation needed to change direction after two terms of the neocons in power. However, most Americans seem to be rather decisive and unforgiving in their judgments (negative) on performence connected to maintaining electoral promises. And here Obama has failed in their eyes.

And I am by no means going to defend him, however, those who like yourself didn't bank on him being able to do so were simply living in reality. Because no US president, other than a neoconservative one who doesn't want to rock the interests of those mega-wealthy entities truly in command (and unwaveringly supports them like Bush did), will find it easy to govern, when govern means moving towards social justice. And this also because, for example on healthcare, not even all democrats can stomach the socialist option, to say nothing of the republicans who are almost universally against it.

In democracy nobody is Caesar, but this it seems most even well intentioned people forget when they expect someone to simply arrive on the scene and make their miserable lives better. Unfortunately it also seems, however, that because the conservative leaders have a much easier time side-stepping the entire social justice issue and are backed by the interests of the rich and powerful, they are able to govern with more decisiveness. Despite those on the opposite side of the ideological fence not being able to stand seeing their agendas pushed through government only because they are the least difficult to digest by those who have it good and don't want (or need) change. And then be praised for it by the conservative population, as if they had done something monumental.

Not the case with the democrats (or at least those truly interested in social justice and not their careers - now about 2), whose task is infinatley harder, and consequently destined to find more ferocious resistance (as is in Obama's case), because of the nature of wealth and power which never wants to give up any of its privledges while is able to defend them better than the millions upon millions who uselessly struggle to even moderately improve their own state.

Then Obama is the first black president (and with muslim faith in his family to boot), who, consequently, if he had tried to be as much of a hardballer as his reforms warrented, then the republicans (and many racially insecure democrats) would have used his minority status against him. Making him out to have been some who knows what kind of devious monster, an anti-American tyrannical reformer who threatens, by his very persona and background, the "true" national identity. Naturally such a notion is perverse and irrational, yet a large percentage of Amercans would be inclined to agree had Obama moved as forcibly as his predicessor had done.

Sounds to me the man lives with the classic, and lethal, political syndrome of "damned if you do, damned if you don't." Welcome to contemporary US politics. Next election, I'm voting for the radical athiest-socialist-nonpatriot-liberal-anti-imperialist-green-always ride your bike to work-party. I'm sure our block will get at least 0.0000009% of the vote. But my conscience will be at peace.
 
Jul 22, 2009
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Alpe d'Huez said:
Huge event in US politics today, as Republican Scott Brown won the seat once held by Ted Kennedy over Martha Coakley. I'm not surprised at all. Not only did Coakley run a limp campaign based on nothing, there is a very real swelling of anger against the Democrats and Obama for promising so very much, and doing so very little. Obama got elected on hope and change. Since then, we had more bailouts, a huge stimulus that I haven't seen a penny of, and zero indication that it's even working. Then there's the big health care morass. A bill that by most every indication is so convoluted, and so corrupted, and written by the insurance industry. No wonder people don't want it. Plus, if the Democrats are the party of the working people they have a funny way of showing it. Anyone with an open eyeball will get a quick perception that the Dems are more connected to Wall Street than the Republicans are.

Going to be an interesting November.

The economy is stabilizing while Dems found it falling off the cliff when they took over. They are at the edge of passing brave healthcare reform in the first year of this new power cycle. There is no way to do this sort of legislation quickly.

Fact of the matter is, there are enough Independents willing to listen to the Rush Limbaugh/Karl Rove talking points (scare tactics). The loss of Massachusetts is pretty devastating as Brown will make his maiden voyage all about filibustering the senate. Hard to believe the legislation so impassioned by Kennedy is going to threatened by his constituents. On we go with political life in the good old US of A.
 

ravens

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Nov 22, 2009
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scribe said:
The economy is stabilizing while Dems found it falling off the cliff when they took over. They are at the edge of passing brave healthcare reform in the first year of this new power cycle. There is no way to do this sort of legislation quickly.

Fact of the matter is, there are enough Independents willing to listen to the Rush Limbaugh/Karl Rove talking points (scare tactics). The loss of Massachusetts is pretty devastating as Brown will make his maiden voyage all about filibustering the senate. Hard to believe the legislation so impassioned by Kennedy is going to threatened by his constituents. On we go with political life in the good old US of A.

Dems need to keep pushing healthcare at all costs.
 
Jul 22, 2009
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They need to close the deal quickly and put this Republican fear-mongering to a rest and move on to the next item on the agenda.

War talk is settling, banks aren't on the edge of collapse anymore, and there are 3 years left on this presidential agenda. Hopefully, America will have the sense to steer clear of what happened during the last 2 presidential cycles.
 

ravens

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Nov 22, 2009
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They need to close the deal quickly and put this Republican fear-mongering to a rest and move on to the next item on the agenda.

War talk is settling, banks aren't on the edge of collapse anymore, and there are 3 years left on this presidential agenda. Hopefully, America will have the sense to steer clear of what happened during the last 2 presidential cycles.

Ram it through. Stick to your ideological base, bho. Dammn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead.
 
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