Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Towamensing Township residents protest PennEast pipeline

Yesterday at 3 p.m. over 40 Towamensing Township residents showed up at the Towamensing Township Supervisors’ meeting to request the Supervisors to pass a resolution against the PennEast pipeline.  Residents explained the environmental and safety problems inherent in a fracking gas pipeline, and questioned the use of eminent domain powers given to a private for-profit company.  

I was heartened by the unity of the crowd, which included people who were born and raised in the township and people who moved to the township just last year.  Men and women, old and young, conservatives and liberals--all were united in opposition to PennEast.  

I was also impressed that the group did not simply want the pipeline moved to a neighboring township.  This was not a “Not In My Back Yard” group.  This was a “Stop the goddamn thing in its tracks” group.


The Supervisors asked the residents to appoint a committee to prepare a resolution for their consideration.  The committee has already been formed; the goal is to have the resolution opposing the pipeline passed by the February meeting.  If the Supervisors reflect the opinion of their constituents, the resolution will pass unanimously.

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

What went right in 2014

We can all think of global and American problems, but it is time to review what went right.

Ebola:  This disease broke out in the poorest and least medically advanced part of the world, and, thanks both to international aid and heroic efforts by locals, the disease had been largely contained.  In the U.S., in spite of panic-mongering and Fox News, we had only one death.

The Affordable Care Act:  It’s working.  Millions of people are now covered by insurance, including stupid people like the woman in Kentucky who is having her teeth fixed because of the law, but says, “There are a lot of things about Obamacare that scare me.”  Probably one of them is that the policy can’t cure stupid.

Gas prices:  When gas prices were high, people blamed the President.  Now that they are low, let’s give him some credit.

The economy:  It’s doing really well.  See gas prices above.

The climate march:  Over 400,000 people marched in New York in September to draw attention to climate change.  Combine that with the U.S./China agreement to limit greenhouse gas emissions, and it feels like we are finally making some headway.

Tom Wolf’s election:  In an election that saw Republican yahoos winning across the U.S., the Wolf election was a bright spot.  Goodbye Corbett.  

Obama finds his sea legs:  After six years of frustrating his followers, the President has moved on both immigration reform and Cuban policy.  I think we will see more of the new Obama in the next two years.

The minimum wage:  When a state like Arkansas passes an initiative raising the minimum wage, you know that we’ll be seeing more action on this policy.


Gay marriage:  If you want an example of how quickly public opinion can change on an issue, look at gay marriage.  Ten years ago it was difficult to get support for civil unions, and now gay marriage is accepted by just about everyone.

Monday, December 29, 2014

A Carbon County environmental organization

Carbon County has three state parks, acres of state game land, trout streams, lakes, wetlands, a fairly large river, an Environmental Center on Lentz Trail and a nature center at Lehigh Gap.  What we don’t have is a county-wide environmental group working to preserve our environmental heritage.  


I think we need one to act on new threats like the PennEast pipeline and loss of farmland and old threats like acid mine drainage.  I know Carbon County is chock full of environmentalists, but we aren’t organized, and as individuals we don’t have much power.  I’m thinking that next year I might just work on an organizational structure to give all of us tree huggers some real clout. 

Sunday, December 28, 2014

Elizabeth Warren on unions

A Fighting Chance was not the most exciting book I’ve read this year (that would be a John Sandford police procedural), but it was the most profound.  Let me quote just one paragraph on unions, and you can see why Warren has made an impact.  In the section on her campaign against Scott Brown, she discusses how the union fight for better wages and shorter hours and retirement security benefited all Americans, not just union members.  


Often enough during the campaign, I would hear the phrase corporate and labor influence in politics, as if “corporate” and “labor” were somehow two sides of the same coin.  Really?  Does anyone believe that an army of lobbyists fighting for tax loopholes and special breaks for one corporation is the same as the unions fighting for Social Security and equal pay?  Does anyone believe that when corporations give money to take down unions and support so-called right-to-work laws, there are unions giving equal money to try to put companies out of business (and themselves out of a job)?  Does anyone think that for every billionaire executive who can afford to write a check for $10 million to get his candidate elected to office, there is a union guy who can do the same?  Give me a break.

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Four days, four movies

Dec. 24:  Night at the Museum, III
     Or was it #4.  If you saw either of the first two, you knew what to expect.  Most of this one takes place at the British Museum in London.  If you like Ben Stiller, enjoy peeing monkeys, or want to see Robin Williams in his last film, don’t miss it.

Dec. 25:  Into the Woods
In the previews no singing was evident.  How did I know this was made from a musical by Sondheim, with not one of the songs singable?  What I saw of the movie seemed rather clever (a mashup of mostly Grimm fairytales), but I really can’t judge, since I slept during most of it.  Linda, who did not sleep, did not like the film and is still angry at me for sleeping through it.

Dec. 26:  The Homesman
We saw this one in East Stroudsburg.  It stars Hillary Swank and Tommy Lee Jones, and it is a hard movie to watch.  The two main characters transport three insane women from Nebraska to Iowa in a mule-drawn wagon circa 1870 so the women can be shipped back east.  The lady who cleans up the popcorn told us the film was “intense,” and that is an understatement.  Great acting, great scenes, and both of us had trouble sleeping last night.

Dec. 27:  The Interview

Bruce, the manager at Mahoning Cinema, told me only nine theaters in PA had the film, and Mahoning was one of them.  I went out of a sense of duty to stick it to the North Koreans, intending to walk out if it got too gross.  Believe me, it does get gross--it is, after all, a Seth Rogan film--but I thought it was also pretty funny.  I did not fall asleep.

Friday, December 26, 2014

Car loan cheats

A good portion of Elizabeth Warren’s book A Fighting Chance concerns her fight to establish the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).  The banks fought her every step of the way, but the agency was approved and is functioning.  It has mandated more easily understandable mortgage and loan agreements.

During the approval battle, Warren wanted to include car loans in the CFPB’s purview, but all over the U.S. car dealers lobbied their members of Congress to take car financing off the table.

Today a front page article in the New York Times explained how car companies are using deceptive practices called “title loans.”  The average car buyer doesn’t read the small print and wouldn’t understand it if he or she did.  (Before you say that’s their fault, when is the last time you read the agreement for a computer program or a medical procedure?)

I don’t understand how title loans work even after reading the article, but they involve borrowers turning over the title of their cars in exchange for cash.  


It is always amazing to me how many vicious crooks inhabit the financial world.  As Senator Warren says, “The system is rigged.”

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Holiday message

I refuse to accept the view that mankind is so tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war that the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality.
--Dr. Martin Luther King

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Holiday Party

On Monday evening we went to a party with about thirty friends.  As part of the evening’s entertainment, I gave the party goers a quiz..  (I can’t help myself--it’s in my DNA.)

Here are just two of the questions:
Of the following, which group has given the most money to Hillary Clinton’s campaigns:
A.  IBEW.
B.  the Sierra Club.
C.  Goldman Sachs.
D.  the Koch Brothers.

Which of the following employs the most U.S. workers:
A.  typesetting.
B.  solar power.
C.  coal mining.
D.  canal boat maintenance.

An opinion question at the end asked whom the guests would like to see as the Democratic presidential nominee in 2016.  Elizabeth Warren came in first, followed by Hillary Clinton, followed by Bernie Sanders.  Jim Webb and Joe Biden received one vote each.  


Incidentally the answers to the questions above are C, Goldman Sachs, and B, solar power.

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Marco Rubio, optimist

I’m doing a year-end clean out, and I decided to toss a “Golden Press” paperback entitled The Southeast.  The copyright was 1959.  I was a junior in high school that year.

I happened to open the book to a section called Nearby Islands, which included the Bahamas and Cuba.  The description of Cuba noted some of the sites and said a ”car ferry” operated from Key West to Cuba.  The very last line of the Cuba section noted: “Cuba is now out of bounds for United States citizens.”


So, we had a policy at least 55 years old that has not worked, but Sen. Marco Rubio wants to continue it.  Maybe he thinks it will work next year.  

Monday, December 22, 2014

Ronald McDonald, Union Buster

The NLRB has charged over 75 McDonald’s franchise operations and the McDonald’s Corporation for retaliating against workers who participated in demonstrations for a $15 an hour wage.  

The McDonald’s Corporation says it is not a “joint employer” and has no responsibility for what its franchise operators do.


This is a company that is so proud of the fact that you can walk into any McDonald’s in the U.S.and get exactly the same quality french fries.  When you see those happy people on TV eating at McDonald’s, is the McDonald’s at the Mahoning Mall paying for that ad?  I don’t think so.  Of course McDonald’s bears a responsibility for its franchise operators.  

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Ohio as role model

On Wednesday the Ohio House approved a bill to draw state legislative district boundaries using a bipartisan process designed to make the districts more competitive.  

In 2012 Obama won Ohio, but the state legislature is overwhelmingly Republican, and Republicans hold 12 out of the 16 Congressional seats.

Since the Republicans have a majority, why would they support such a bill?  Two reasons.  First, some Republicans realized they may not always have a majority, and the Democrats could gerrymander when they get into power.  Secondly, the Republicans were worried about a proposed referendum that could have gone even further.  The current bill applies only to state legislative districts, not Congressional districts. 

Nonetheless, it’s a start.  Now if we could only get the Pennsylvania legislature to see the light.


Saturday, December 20, 2014

The National Film Registry

In the middle of all the gloom and bad news, a small ray of sunshine peeks through.  “The Big Lebowski” has been added to the National Film Registry.  


The dude abides.

Friday, December 19, 2014

Cuomo bans fracking in New York

Just think of that.  No toxic chemicals pumped into the subsoil.  No pads in state forests and parks.  No wells polluted.  No rivers running with toxic chemicals.  No pipelines tearing up the environment.  No fires.  No explosions.


New York had a moratorium on fracking until it was proven that the risks could be managed.  No proof has been forthcoming.  (In PA we don’t worry about such things.)

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Kim Jong-un, Movie Critic

Actually, the dude is half-right.  Seth Rogan has never made a decent movie.  

On the other hand, we need to change that slogan, “Home of the Brave, Land of the Free” to “Home of the Scared, Land of the Fraidy Cats.”

We went through this before when the Ayatollah issued a Fatwa against Salman Rushdie for the Satanic Verses.  Bookstores all over the U.S., including the Campus Bookstore at San Jose State, pulled the book, fearing reprisals.  I wrote a scathing letter to the bookstore, but like so many of my scathing letters, I don’t remember it having an effect.  

I did find a bookstore that stocked Satanic Verses, and I bought it in solidarity with Rushdie, although I never read it.  If “The Interview” is ever released, I’ll have to see it to just to thumb my nose at North Korea, but that’s the only reason I’ll go. 

Explanation for posting gaps:

Yesterday I had a pacemaker implanted.  I’ve been having a slow heartbeat, which caused a certain amount of breathlessness and fatigue.  Now if my heartbeat goes below 60 beats per minute, the pacemaker kicks in.  I’m not supposed to keep a cell phone near it; evidently the phone can mess up the signal.  That won’t be a problem.

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

White Rhinos

The world’s population stands at about 7.2 billion people.  The white rhinoceros population stands at five.  There were six, but one died yesterday.  The remaining five are in zoos, but not of reproductive age.

Rhinos are killed for their horns, thought to be an aphrodisiac by many people in the Far East.  


The rhino news was buried in the back pages of the Morning Call.  I would have run it on the front page with a very large headline.  We really need to wake up to what we are doing both to this planet and to each other.

Monday, December 15, 2014

Dick Cheney

If Dick Cheney had been Japanese, and if he had survived the Pacific War, and if he had been captured by the Americans, do you realize he would have been hung for supervising the kind of torture he is now defending?  

Cheney received all kinds of deferments to avoid Vietnam.  He lied about the reasons to invade Iraq, he said we would be greeted as liberators in Iraq, and he continues to poison the American political system with his defense of torture.


He doesn’t even have the old Nazi excuse of “I was only following orders.”  As Vice President he was helping to give the orders.  What a disgusting and evil man.

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Matt Cartwright does the right thing

A few days ago the House of Representatives passed a very bad bill.  The 1600-page bill funds the government throughout the middle of next year.  

It also loosens the banking regulations that were put in place to prevent crises like the one in 2008.  How is it that Congress can kiss up to Wall Street but not extend unemployment benefits?  How is it that Citibank gets a break, but not Wal-Mart workers?  Why would House Democrats vote for a bill will allow individuals to donate more millions in campaign contributions?

The bill was touted as a compromise.  Here is what compromise means in Washington.  The Democrats roll over.


I am pleased to say that my Congressman, Matt Cartwright, did not roll over.  He voted against the bill.  Thank you, Rep. Cartwright.

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Rep. Jerry Knowles


Last week Penn State President Eric Barron stood in solidarity with a group of black students in front of Old Main.  President Barron raised his hands in the air in a gesture associated with the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.  I participated in a number of demonstrations in the Sixties at Old Main, and the Penn State President, whose name I can’t remember, was nowhere near the place.  As an alumnus, I am quite pleased with President Barron.

Along comes Jerry Knowles (R), representative of Schuylkill County and Summit Hill, who, according to the Morning Call, stated, “I believe he should either issue a public apology to law enforcement officials, or step down as president of the university.”


I am often irritated or disappointed with my own representative Doyle Heffley, but then I pause and think, at least he’s not Jerry Knowles.

Friday, December 12, 2014

Dogs in Heaven?

Over the years people have approached me about running for various public offices in Pennsylvania, but I’m not allowed to.  The Pennsylvania Constitution says that people can’t be disqualified from running for office on the basis of religion as long as they believe in God “and a future state of rewards and punishments,” which I assume means you have to believe also in a heaven and a hell.  (See Article I, Section 4).


Now I read that the Pope told a little kid that heaven will admit dogs.  Just when I was starting to come around to thinking maybe heaven wasn’t such a bad idea, I find out that dogs would be there.  Pit bulls?  Rottweilers?  And if dogs, probably cats.  And what about my chickens?

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Back from California

We arrived home from a ten-day trip to California this morning at 2:00 a.m.  We were actually scheduled to fly out today, but we moved our departure up to avoid the monster storm.

There are so many things to like about California, but here’s a bad thing.  After California legalized marijuana use, Mexican drug cartels moved into the national forests to grow dope.  These are not the old hippies of Mendocino County who grew pot for their friends with a little on the side to sell.

These are people who use insecticides and herbicides, put plastic bottles of poison around their plants for bears to bite into, use large amounts of water in a state with major shortages, cut down acres of trees, and are dangerous to both hunters and backpackers. 


I know a number of people who voted for the marijuana initiative who wish they hadn’t.  Of course, one way to eliminate the cartels would be to legalize pot growing in every state.  If the price came down, the cartels would have no incentive to undertake their illegal and harmful activities.

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

The Torture Report


Yesterday we drove through Paskenta, a small town in Tehama County.  A substation of the Mendocino National Forest is located there, along with an interpretative sign explaining that Paskenta was on the route of a forced march of California Indians. U.S. Army soldiers moved the Indians from the Central Valley to the remote Round Valley Indian Reservation in 1863.  The marchers included women and children, over 100 of whom died along the way.

American history is full of terrible events.  The Trail of Tears, Japanese incarceration in World War II, the draft riots in New York, discrimination against Okies, and of course, slavery.  

What makes us different from many countries is that we don’t hide our blemishes.  We discuss them, put up interpretative signs, teach our students.

I understand that many Congressional Republicans wanted to keep the Torture Report secret.  Former President Bush has defended the CIA operatives who tortured or permitted it to happen.  On the other hand, Sen. McCain gave a heart-felt defense of the report and said torture “had stained our honor.”

I have three points to make:

1.  The information the U.S. authorities gleaned from tortured individuals was minimal.

2.  Even if the information had been vital, it does not justify torture.  The U.S. should not be emulating evil regimes.  Ever.  It is not what we do.

3.  We need to publicize what we have done.  One argument was that the report will lead to other groups or countries to torture Americans.  I’m pretty sure they already knew about what the U.S. has done.  What is important is that WE know what American officials have done in our name.  That way we can make sure it does not happen again.

Oliver! A Review


Dateline:  Chico, CA

The Hooker Oak Elementary School’s production of “Oliver!” featured fine acting, boisterous singing (some slightly off-key), and a large cast ranging in age from kindergarten to sixth grade.

The audience, consisting for the most part of parents, grandparents, and siblings, gave the performance a rousing round of applause.  The director, Brian Holderman, who is also the school principal, used the play as a fundraiser to improve the school’s theater, especially the lighting and sound capabilities.  The school was built in 1948.

Two actors were standouts.  The young woman who played Nancy sang a solo that brought a round of applause.  She also delivered a scream that rivaled Fay Wray’s in “King Kong.”

The other standout was Gavin Newkirk who starred in two roles--a workhouse boy and a shoeshine boy.  He didn’t just play those parts, he became a workhouse boy and a shoeshine boy.  I think young Newkirk could have a brilliant career on the stage.

Saturday, December 6, 2014

Jobs report


Last month the U.S. added 321,000 jobs.  It was the 57th straight month of job increases--a new record.

President Obama has been blamed for just about everything--Ebola, Benghazi, ISIS, Ferguson, etc. etc.

So when the economy is coming back, let’s give the guy some credit.  He deserves it.

Wheat v. rice



In yesterday’s Times, T. M. Luhrmann, a professor of anthropology at Stanford, discussed the different cognitive orientations of people who grew rice (context sensitive, more cooperative) vs. those who grew wheat (context insensitive, more individualistic). 

Rice farmers need complex irrigation systems and lots of community activity.  Wheat farmers simply depend on the rain.  Luhrmann examines a study of Chinese north and south of the Yangtze.  North of the river, wheat is grown; south is a rice growing area.

Now for yesterday’s question.  The rice growers (more holistic, more context sensitive) said that the train and the train tracks belong together because they work together.  The wheat growers (more analytical, less context sensitive) said the bus and train go together, because they both carry people.

Since I picked the train and the train tracks, my orientation is evidently more toward the community rather than the individual. I grew up on what was essentially a communal farm (three brothers working together, splitting the work and profits equally).  At least I think that’s a good explanation.

Friday, December 5, 2014

Which two?


Which two of these three belong together:  train tracks, a bus, a train?  Think about this.  

I’ll give you the answer tomorrow.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Dr. Ben Carson

Today I happened to see an interview of Dr. Benjamin Carson by Wolf Blitzer.  Carson said the Affordable Care Act was the worst thing that had happened to the U.S. since slavery.  Blitzer asked, worse than the Great Depression, worse than Vietnam, worse than 9/11?  Carson, who is African-American, said yes, since slavery.

An act that brought health care to millions is the worst thing since slavery.  I have heard that Carson is being mentioned as a Republican presidential candidate.  I'm not kidding.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Elizabeth Warren

I’m about a third of the way through Elizabeth Warren’s book entitled A Fighting Chance.  I’ll give you a full book report when I’ve finished, but just based on the first third, I would vote for this woman for President without any reservations whatsoever.  (I can’t say the same about Clinton.)


Warren is a person who understands that the game is rigged against the middle and lower classes, and she is not afraid to say it.  That’s why she will never be nominated.

Monday, December 1, 2014

Opening Day

When I was a kid, opening day of deer season was a big deal.  Our house usually served as headquarters for “the gang.”  In those days up to 15 men would conduct “drives.”  One group would stand quietly in a line, while the other group walked through the woods whistling and shouting, acting as beaters to drive the deer toward the standers.  You had to know what you were doing; otherwise someone would get shot.

I went out a few times, but I never liked it.  First of all, it involved getting up at 4:30.  You put on heavy clothes, and you had to go out into the cold woods while it was still dark.  I was also afraid I’d shoot somebody, so I never did fire, although I actually did see a deer one time.

Nonetheless, I heartily approve of deer hunting, and I wish there were more hunters.  We have way too many deer; they are destroying the habitat of other animals; and they are devastating quite a few farms.  They eat my vegetables.

They are also stupid animals, prone to run across the road in front of cars.  I know because I hit one on 209.  They have no natural enemies, and some people in the developments actually feed them.


So good luck to all the deer hunters.  And if you are reading this and you have bagged a deer, feel free to drop off some venison.  

Sunday, November 30, 2014

The pipeline

Today I attended a meeting in Jim Thorpe with a group of people intent on stopping the PennEast pipeline.  The group included people from quite a few of the jurisdictions in Carbon County--Kidder, Penn Forest, Towamensing, Lower Towamensing, and Mahoning townships, and Jim Thorpe and Lehighton boroughs.  

Some were Republicans, some were Democrats, but all were united in the belief that the pipeline will harm Carbon County’s environment and needs to be stopped.  Not rerouted, stopped.  

Task forces were formed, and people were recruited to attend the meeting of the Delaware River Basin Commission next week.  A number of people pledged contributions.  


I am fully aware that we are going up against some very rich companies who make some major campaign contributions.  Nonetheless, I think we have a shot at stopping this boondoggle.

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Stopping progress

A letter to the editor in today’s Times News equated the proposed PennEast pipeline with progress.  The letter writer continued with that old cliche “You can’t stop progress.”

I was reminded of a statement by the columnist Russell Baker:  “Usually, terrible things that are done with the excuse that progress requires them are not really progress at all, but just terrible things.”


That’s exactly what I think about the Penn East pipeline.

Friday, November 28, 2014

Voter Suppression in Russia

The Man Without a Face:  The Unlikely Rise of Vladimir Putin discusses how Putin rose to power and instituted a dictatorship, using some of the same voter suppression tactics we are currently seeing in the U.S.  

A book review, published in the latest issue of Ballot Access News, explains that a 2004 Russian ballot access law required parties to have a meeting of at least 500 people to nominate a presidential candidate.  Those 500 people first had to go before a notary to verify who they were.

That sounds a lot like the Kansas law mandating that voters must prove their citizenship before they can vote.  

Russian law also required parties to obtain 2 million signatures in a short time.  Signatures were also declared invalid if the signer signed St. Petersburg instead of Saint Petersburg or wrote apt. instead of apartment.  Pennsylvania’s third parties are familiar with those kinds of tactics as well.


The book’s author, Masha Gessen, lived in Russia when the book was published, but she has since moved to New York to escape possible prosecution.

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Contaminated moral environment

The opening essay in the latest issue of the New Yorker noted that a bust of Vaclav Havel was unveiled last week in a ceremony at the Capitol Rotunda.  Havel was the first President of Czechoslovakia after that country obtained its freedom from Moscow's rule

The essay quoted from Havel's first New Year's address to the Czech people.  He said that the years of oppression and tyranny had led the Czechs to live in what he called a "contaminated moral environment."

It occurs to me that describes the current condition in the U.S. very well.  Would you call Mitch McConnell moral?  Ted Cruz?  The Koch Brothers?  The House Republicans?

When people fear immigrants are bringing Ebola, when they would deny an abortion even if the woman dies, when they deride scientific evidence, they are living in a "contaminated moral environment.  And we don't even have the excuse of emerging from years of Communist tyranny.  We are doing it to ourselves.

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Ferguson

Of course there is a problem.  The investigative newsroom group ProPublica issued a study last month that said young black men are 21 times more likely to be shot than young white men.  Justice is not equal in this country, and I think most people, including most white people, understand that.

What is a real problem will obviously not be solved by looting stores.  I have always been dubious about any protest where widespread looting is involved.


Nor is the problem made better by tax cheat Al Sharpton showing up and spouting off.  What a charlatan that man is.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Atheist's lament

At times it is very difficult for me to understand.  Palestinians killing rabbis.  Israel screwing around with citizenship for non-Jews.  Buddhists in Malaysia killing Muslims.  Shiites killing Sunnis.  Hindus attacking Muslims.  All of this in the name of a non-existent being in religions which are fairy tales.  


Look folks, when you die, that’s it.  Remember how it was before you were born?  Of course you don’t.  You didn’t exist.  That’s how it will be after you die.  So behave yourself while you are alive.  Act in a decent manner.  Think rationally.  Quit being evil.  What you have here on earth while you are alive is the only time you have.  Use it well.

Monday, November 24, 2014

Jim Webb for President?

First of all, you should know I’ve backed quite a few losers running for President.  Eugene McCarthy, George McGovern, Morris Udall, Teddy Kennedy, Jesse Jackson, Al Gore, and John Kerry were among them.  My success stories are Jack Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson (first term), and Barack Obama.


Now former Senator Jim Webb is forming an exploratory committee for a presidential run.  I have great respect for Jim Webb, and I’m on board, provided Elizabeth Warren doesn’t run.  I just can’t get excited about Hillary Clinton.  I know she will probably be the Democratic nominee, and I will support her, but I really think we can do better.

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Sen. Mary Landrieu

The Democratic Party has been sending me appeals to donate to the Louisiana runoff campaign of Mary Landrieu.  This is a Senator who is pushing the Keystone pipeline, who is in the thrall of big oil, and who is so far to the right that she opposes legalizing marijuana for medical reasons, although her Republican opponent supports it.

I know she will be another Democratic vote in the Senate on organizational matters, but so what.  Doesn’t the Democratic Party stand for anything?  Perhaps some of the Democratic candidates lost because they ran from the Affordable Care Act, which has insured millions.  They ran from Obama’s policies that brought us out of the worst recession since the Great Depression.  Alison Grimes wouldn’t even admit she voted for Obama.  


Why settle for Republican light?  No wonder voters went for the real thing.  As for Mary Landrieu, I’m ok with you losing.

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Solitary confinement

In Louisiana in the United States of America we have kept a man in solitary confinement since 1972.  The man is named Albert Woodfox.  He is 67 years old.  For 23 hours a day he sits in a windowless cell.  He eats alone.  He has no access to the prison’s educational activities or religious services.


What is wrong with us?

Friday, November 21, 2014

Mockingjay Part I: Life Imitates Art

Tonight Linda and I saw the latest movie in the Hunger Games series at the Mahoning Theater.  The audience consisted mostly of teenage girls.

The rebels in the movie adopt three-fingered salute, which the government forces declare as subversive.  Anyone who uses the salute is summarily executed.

Now the government of Thailand, a military dictatorship that came to power last May, has announced that anyone using the three-fingered sign could be arrested.  Five students who wore shirts that said “ We don’t want the coup” flashed the sign during a speech by the Prime Minster.  The students were arrested and held for “attitude adjustment.”

Another student was detained for silently reading “1984.”


Where is Katniss when we need her?

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Moral Stand at Guantanamo

When a lowly individual defies authority for moral reasons, knowing that he or she will be punished for taking a stand, that person deserves both respect and support.  A 18-year Navy medical officer has refused to force-feed prisoners on a hunger strike at Guantanamo.  

The American Medical Association called force-feeding a violation of “core ethical values of the medical profession.”  The AMA noted that “every competent patient has the right to refuse medical intervention,” including measures to extend life.

Another word for force-feeding is torture.

The American Nurses Association wrote a letterer to Defense Secretary Hagel asking that no retaliatory action be taken against the Navy nurse.  I personally think the nurse should be given a medal.


Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Contentment Tinged

That’s the title of a poem I’ve had accepted in an online publication entitled “Attune Online Journal.”  Check it out at <http://www.attune-online.com> or Google “Attune Online Journal.”

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

PennEast Shuck and Jive

I went to the PennEast Pipeline “open house,” and it was even worse than I expected.  PennEast had about 60 employees, all in blue shirts, scattered around various tables in the Aquashicola Fire Company.  It was truly “divide and conquer.”

The meeting last night at the Penn Forest Fire Company with the two Penn State extension representatives was so much better.  Here is one small example.  When the pipeline goes through a farm, you can ask the company to pay for the ruined crop.  That is obvious.  What is not obvious is that you can also ask the pipeline company to pay for the reduced crop which will occur for the next four or five years because the soil has been disturbed.  I learned that at Penn Forest, and I am grateful to Doyle Heffley for setting up that meeting.

You would not have learned that tonight in Aquashicola.  There is no way the PennEast Pipeline people would tell you that.  Tonight’s meeting was all about P.R.

I did get some information from a table staffed by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and a cookie and a measuring tape and a button supplied by PennEast, but I left early in disgust.

I was also disappointed that a number of people from the Laborers’ Union showed up in orange shirts.  None of them were at tables asking for information, and I doubt if any of them were from Carbon County.  I’m sure that PennEast asked them in and probably promised them work on the pipeline.

If you are in the area, there’s a meeting at the Trachsville Firehouse this Thursday.  Maya Rossum of the Delaware River Keepers will speak on how to fight the pipeline, and Dory Hippaup of the Gas Drillers Awareness Coalition will also be available to answer questions. 


Remember, this pipeline has not been built yet.  There is still time to stop it.

Monday, November 17, 2014

Pipeline meeting at Penn Forest Fire House

Rep. Doyle Heffley sponsored a meeting tonight at Penn Forest Fire House.  The meeting featured Dave Messersmith, a Penn State Cooperative Extension representative, who gave an overview of pipelines in general and what land owners can expect when the pipeline comes through their property.

The second speaker was Carl Engleman, Jr., an attorney who specializes in environmental law and who had advice on how to get the most money from PennEast, the company that is building the pipeline through Carbon County.

I must say I was pleasantly surprised.  I know the Republican Party has received tons of money from the fracking companies, and I was expecting very biased speakers.  Both speakers simply gave information and tips.  

The news for the landowners is not good.  The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), set up during the Bush administration, rubber stamps all pipeline applications.  Less than 2% of the applications were not approved, but that was because they were withdrawn by the pipeline companies themselves.

Both speakers recommended that in negotiations with the pipeline company, the landowner should hire both an attorney and a financial advisor.  So in addition to losing property values, we need to hire staff.

Even though it is a long shot, a group called Carbon Pipeline Alliance is fighting the pipeline.  On Thursday that group is holding a meeting at the Trachsville Fire House with a speaker from Delaware River Keepers, a group opposed to the pipeline.


As for the meeting tomorrow night at the Aquashicola Fire House sponsored by PennEast, that is a joke.  They call it a workshop.  They will have tables spread around the room, and that way people can’t hear each other’s concerns.  You won’t be able to get them to say anything definite, since that could be used in comments to FERC.  It is a clever way to mislead the public, and it is done deliberately.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

The Elephant in the Room

In the various analyses of why the Republicans won the Senate and the House, I have read that the Democrats didn’t inspire the voters.  They weren’t able to turn out their supporters.  Obama acted as a drag on the Democratic candidates.  

While all of those things might be true, isn’t it time we also recognized that Democrats were outspent, especially in the last month before the election, especially by energy companies and the Koch Brothers, especially by secret contributions now made legal by the Republican Supreme Court?

If you want to bet on a political race and you can know only one thing about the race, ask who spends the most money and bet on the candidate who has the most money to spend.  You’ll do well.

I’m not sure the Democrats will ever win again.  The system of campaign finance is now completely stacked against them.  The gerrymanders are also stacked against them, and the U.S. Senate over-represents states like Kansas and Arkansas, and under-represents the liberal states like California and New York.  


The U.S. is no longer a democracy.  It is an oligarchy, and a few very rich people are pulling the strings.  Let’s recognize reality.

Saturday, November 15, 2014

Turnout

This past election had the lowest turnout since 1942, during World War II.  No state broke the 60% mark.  

Here’s an example of why turnout is so important.  In Colorado in 2013 two state legislators who supported restrictions on guns were voted out of office  and replaced by two pro-gun Republicans in a recall election.  Turnout is usually low in recall elections, and the N.R.A. celebrated its victory.

In this November’s election, both pro-gun legislators were easily defeated.  Democrats voted in larger numbers than in the recall election.  

Here’s a fact about turnout.  Republicans almost always vote, and they usually vote straight ticket.  Democrats sit home, drink beer, and watch TV unless they are really motivated.  When they do vote, they often split their ticket.  


I don’t know why that is, but as a Democrat, it is depressing and it is a reason we lose so often.  What we need is the Australian system, where you are fined if you don’t vote.

Friday, November 14, 2014

The Obama I voted for

Yes, the Republicans swamped the Democrats in Congress, but look what the President has done in the last week.  First he came out strongly in favor of Net neutrality.  Then he announced  the climate deal with China.  Now he will change immigration policy so that up to five million undocumented residents can stay in the U.S. without fear of deportation.


My faith is restored.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Alex Lee

A teenager from Frisco, Texas, rocketed to fame in just two weeks because of a picture of him posted on a Twitter account with the comment “YOOOOOOOOOOO.”  Now more than 2.3 people follow him on Instagram.

And, of course, he’s mentioned on this blog.  

Now Alex and his family have received death threats.  His family’s Social Security numbers, phone records, and bank account information have been posted.  What kind of a world do we live in where a teenager receives death threats from anonymous people who never even met him?

Rebecca Solnit in an essay in Harpers discusses a 1984 Superbowl ad in which a young woman runs into a room full of workers watching a giant screen.  She spins around with a hammer and launches it into the screen.  If you are old enough to have seen the ad, you haven’t forgotten it, though you may not remember that it was for the Apple Macintosh introduced days later.

Solnit writes that Apple, far from liberating us, is part of the problem.  Underpaid Chinese factory workers manufacture Apple products, probably looking much like the people in the ad.  Instead of watching one big screen, literally millions are glued to small screens.  Apple’s iPhones are trackable at all times.  

Solnit continues that the Internet and Apple “...will savage privacy, break down journalism as we know it, and create elaborate justifications for never paying artists or writers--an Internet that will be an endless soup of grim porn and mean-spirited chat and rumor and trolling and new ways to buy things we don’t need while failing to make the contact we do need.”


Of course, my very writing depends on this same Internet.  Nonetheless, I don’t think it is being used well.  In fact, it may be corrupting both our communities and our souls.

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Climate agreement between the U.S. and China

A few years ago, in her inimitable style, Sarah Palin said, “How’s that hopey-changey thing working out for you?”

Now the #1 (China) and #2 (the U.S.) carbon polluters have reached an accord to cut the amount of their carbon emissions.  This agreement should lead to a new global accord on carbon emissions, and we may yet save the planet.


My own take is that the agreement doesn’t go far enough, but it is a start.  That “hopey-changey” thing is working out pretty well.  

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

SB 76 and equal funding for schools

SB76, the bill to end property taxes in Pennsylvania, is a bad bill on a number of levels.  First of all, it will exempt huge corporations from paying any property tax.  Kovatch, a major contributor to Panther Valley School District, and Wal-Mart, a major contributor to the Lehighton Area School District, would pay no property tax.

Secondly, SB76 will raise the income tax.  In Pennsylvania, by Constitutional provision, taxes must be of equal percent.  Unlike the federal government, which has a graduated income tax, in Pennsylvania everyone pays the same percent.  If you make $2,000,000 a year, you pay the same percent as if you make $40,000 a year.  That is sometimes called a “flat tax,” but it actually regressive.  Who will have the harder time paying 3.07%--the millionaire or the $40,000-a-year guy?

Third, SB76 will raise the sales tax.  This is bad on three levels.  Sales taxes fluctuate wildly with economic swings, meaning deficits will be likely.  Secondly, the sales tax will apply to more items.  Finally, the sales tax is a regressive tax.  Poor people actually pay a higher proportion of their annual income in sales taxes than rich people pay.  If you don’t understand the reason for that, I’ll explain it in a later post.

Finally,and this is the big one, SB76 locks in the current spending in school districts.  Panther Valley, one of the poorer districts in the state, will remain a poor district.  Lower Merion, of course, will be funded at a high level.

But wait.  Six school districts are suing Pennsylvania.  The districts, which include Panther Valley, say the state has failed to meet its constitutional obligation to “...provide for the maintenance and support of a thorough and efficient system of equal education” for the state’s students.

An aside here:  In 1971 the California Supreme Court ruled in Serrano v. Priest that the state’s school funding law denied students in poor districts an equal education, and thereby violated the state’s equal protection clause.  A later case reaffirmed the decision and gave California six years to to equalize funding.

In 1973, in San Antonio School District v. Rodriguez, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that unequal schools did not violate the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause, saying that education was not a fundamental right.

That is why the Panther Valley case is using the Pennsylvania Constitution to challenge the funding formula.  Similar cases in the 1990s were dismissed because the Court had no basis on which to judge success or failure.  Now they do--the results from state-mandated testing are public, and in fact, were published in a recent issue of the Morning Call.  Panther Valley students compared poorly to the other school districts, but wouldn’t you expect that of a poor district?


For those legislators, such as Doyle Heffley and John Yudichak, who support SB76, heads up.  I believe the Court will rule that funding will have to be substantially equal.  That ought to pull the rug from the present method of school funding as well as SB76.  It’s about time.

Monday, November 10, 2014

St. Vincent--a review

I recognize that Bill Murray is a wonderful actor.  I also think the actor who played the kid was great, and Naomi Watts was outstanding.  The plot involves a curmudgeon who nonetheless manages to affect people’s lives in positive ways.

I didn’t buy it.  Look at the way Vincent treats the bank teller.  Look at the way he gambles thousands of dollars on a long shot at the track.  He drinks.  He smokes.  He’s irresponsible.  I don’t think he is cute--not one bit.  I wanted to slap him.  I really did not like this movie.


Linda, by the way, totally disagrees with me, but she’s wrong.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Do What You Can

Here’s what John Wesley, often considered the founder of the Methodist religion, said about doing good.

“Do all the good you can.  By all the means you can.  In all the ways you can.  In all the places you can.  At all the times you can.  To all the people you can.  As long as ever you can.”


Amen.

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Grading standards

A student at Lehigh University sued the school for $1.3 million because she received a C+ in a class instead of the B she needed to stay in the program.  Judges on the Superior Court upheld a lower court ruling denying the student any damages.  

The opinion stated:  “Courts lack the expertise to micromanage the complex and highly subjective endeavor of academic grading.  Attempting to do so would invite an increase in difficult and time-consuming lawsuits by students who are disgruntled over grades, courses, teachers or other academic requirements.” (Morning Call, Nov. 6. 2014, p. 6)

While I agree with the court’s decision, I do have sympathy for the student.  I never gave any points whatsoever for participation in my classes.  What happens if your student is a female Vietnamese who has been taught to respect elders and remain quiet, or a Latino student who is ashamed or his accent, or a blowhard who thinks he can get points by “participating” a great deal, although his contributions are nonsense?


My grades were based on quizzes, finals, and papers.  I am aware that some subjectivity is involved in those grades as well, but it is minimal compared to “participation.”  I had very few students question their course grades; they understood why they received the grade they did.  Grading on participation is simply not fair.  Had I been on the court, I would have added a long footnote chastising the professor.

Friday, November 7, 2014

Ain't whipped yit

When the Tuesday election results came in, I kept thinking of Wash Jones in Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom!  Wash kept telling Col. Sutpen, “Well, Kernel, they kilt us but they ain’t whupped us yit.”  


We ain’t whipped yit.  Knocked down four times, rising up five.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Boycotting the Boatyard

I have never understood why businesses would publicly support a candidate.  Why alienate part of your clientele?  It seems to me as a business, you have three choices.  One is to not put up a sign for either candidate (for example, Diggity Dog in Lehighton).  One is to put out signs for both candidates (for example, Central Lunch in Weissport).  

The third choice is to put out a sign for a candidate and irritate the opponents of that candidate.  The Red Castle in Lehighton, the restaurant in Little Gap, and the biker bar known as “the Boatyard” in Weissport all had signs supporting Heffley.  


I have been in all three establishments, but I can tell you I won’t patronize any of them in the future.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

A redeeming feature of politics

Yesterday I drove two people to the polls.  One was a resident of an assisted living facility.  It turned out she knew two of the four poll workers, the couple coming in to vote, and even the guy who was passing out Heffley literature.  She told me she hadn't received that many hugs in years, and she said it was the best day she had had for as long as she could remember.  

The second woman, from East Penn Township, lived in a remote area—the last house on a dead end road.  She used a walker, and wondered if I knew how to fold it.  I assured her I did, and we had a nice conversation on the way to and from the polling place.  


Both women were smart, interesting, and fun to talk to.  It was a reminder of why politics can be a community-building experience.  In a day of Koch Brothers contributions, Ted Cruz crowing, and Republican victories, it was just what I needed.

Congratulations to Doyle Heffley, Nice Guy

Congratulations to Doyle Heffley, who defeated Patti Borger in the race for the 122nd District seat in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.  By winning a third term, Doyle now qualifies for a state pension, which he so richly deserves for his fine representation of his constituents’ interests.

Actually, I’m no longer so sure about the “nice guy” label.  


Last week in a discussion with a Palmerton Council member, he called Patti Borger a “bitch,” and this morning, when the Mayor of Palmerton tried to shake his hand at the Ambulance Building on Delaware Avenue, he said “fuck you” to the Mayor—twice.  

Monday, November 3, 2014

Tomorrow's election

Four billion dollars spent on a midterm election.  Much of the money from secret PACs who need not report contributions.  Voter suppression in North Carolina, Texas, and other states.  A Supreme Court which has turned over elections to people like the Koch Brothers.  Republican senatorial candidates denying science and glorifying ignorance.

This is a broken system.  

Edward Bernstein was the founder of “democratic socialism.”  Bernstein believed that socialists could use the tools of bourgeois democracy, such as free speech, a free press and free elections, to achieve social reforms without a violent revolution.  


In Europe his “revision” of Marxism was successful.  England, France, Italy, and Germany have all had socialist governments that respected democratic values, contesting for power without violence.  What would have happened if those already in power had cheated on the elections, gerrymandered the districts, spent unlimited amounts of money, and had courts that approved these shenanigans.  What are people to do when the process is corrupt to its core?

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Government Health Care--Here to Stay

Ok, boys and girls, time for another poli. sci. lecture from Dr. Roy.

The hardest part of the policy-making process is “getting on the agenda.”  A problem may exist for decades but no bills are introduced, no action is taken.  At some point, the problem is recognized, but it may take additional years for the issue to become part of a public debate.

The problem of health care has long been recognized.  European countries led the way, but by the Truman administration, many U.S. politicians understood that health care in the U.S. was woefully lacking.  

Nixon took a shot at a health plan, as did Clinton, but it wasn’t until the Obama administration that the U.S. was able to enact legislation.  The Affordable Health Care act has many flaws, but literally millions of people, many of them young and poor, now have health care because of it.

This means that health care is firmly on the agenda.  I note that “Doc” Moylan, the Tea Party candidate running against Congressman Matt Cartwright, says he wants to replace the Affordable Health Care Act.  He wants to keep that part about existing preconditions.  He wants to keep that part about staying on your parents’ plan until 26.

Even Mitch McConnell, representing a state with dramatic increases in coverage, is now saying he does not want to repeal the law completely.


Congress may tinker with the program and may even take a symbolic vote to repeal it, but government-assisted health care is here to stay.  Get used to it.

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Doyle Heffley and Tom Corbett

This evening gubernatorial candidate Tom Corbett brought his campaign to the American Legion in Lehighton in a joint appearance with the candidate for the 122nd House District Doyle Heffley, also known as Corbett’s Mini-Me.

I thought about picketing the event with a sign saying “Thank you, Governor Corbett, for catching Eric Frein single-handedly,” which is the impression I got from Corbett’s news conference, but I decided that I’d rather watch college football than deal with those clowns.