Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Monday, August 06, 2007

20070806 CyberAlert

CyberAlert

Monday August 6, 2007 (Vol. Twelve; No. 133)


1. At Debate, GOP 'Dogma Against Taxes' Obstacle to Fixing Bridges

As a questioner, along with George Stephanopoulos, of Republican presidential candidates at the Sunday debate in Iowa carried on ABC's This Week, veteran Des Moines Register political reporter and current columnist David Yepsen pressed the candidates to raise taxes.

For the last question in the first hour of the 90 minute session from Drake University, Yepsen urged Mike Huckabee: "Is it time we raise the federal gas tax to start fixing up our nation's bridges and roads?" After Huckabee answered it was a matter of budget priorities, Yepsen turned to Rudy Giuliani: "In Minnesota, Governor Pawlenty, who vetoed an increase in his state gas tax, said now he may consider one. Is this Republican dogma against taxes now precluding the ability of you and your party to come up with the revenues that the country needs to fix its bridges?"

Giuliani suggested Yepsen's formulation presumed a "Democratic liberal assumption: I need money, I raise taxes."

2. CBS: 'Cash-Starved' Governments Must 'Collect...More Tax Dollars'

A night after CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric presumed taxes must be hiked to pay for infrastructure repair, CBS reporter Sharyl Attkisson ludicrously described federal and state governments as "cash-starved" as she relayed the expert view of just one person, a Democratic Congressman, whom she said blames the lack of courage to "collect" more taxes.

A nice euphemism for raising taxes.

Attkisson noted that out "of the $2.7 trillion federal budget, it's estimated only around $50 billion a year goes for infrastructure" while "experts say what's needed is $210 billion a year for five years."

After citing a couple of examples of misguided pork barrel spending for road projects when repair work goes wanting, Attkisson pointed out how "Congress only funds about 25 percent of the nation's infrastructure."

She then absurdly asserted that states and local governments which "pick up the rest of the tab" are "cash-starved too."

For her only expert assessment, Attkisson turned to Democratic Congressman Jim Oberstar, Chairman of the very committee which funnels the pork spending, described as "Congress's leading authority on infrastructure" who "says both Congress and the White House have traditionally had trouble making the tough decision to collect and spend more tax dollars on infrastructure."

3. Regret Lack of 'Will' to Hike Taxes as '$4K/Minute' Spent in Iraq

Time magazine veteran Margaret Carlson, now with Bloomberg News and The Week magazine, used the Minnesota bridge collapse tragedy as a fresh excuse to tout how the public really wants a tax hike while she regretted the lack of political "will" to raise taxes and that the government can't find more money for infrastructure but can afford "$4,000 a minute on the Iraq war."

Citing a poll conducted a decade ago when Democrat Ed Rendell was Mayor of Philadelphia, on Friday's Inside Washington aired on the DC PBS station, WETA-TV channel 26, Carlson claimed that "nearly 70 percent of people polled would pay more in taxes to actually know that they could cross the 14th Street bridge safely," a reference to a bridge between Washington, DC and Virginia.

"But," she fretted, "you can't get the will to do it. I mean, we certainly had the wake-up call in Katrina, everyone knows the situation, but can you really get it done when there's, by the way, very little money left?"

4. Olbermann Hails 'Sane, Reasoned' Discussions About Raising Taxes

On Friday's Countdown, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann charged that the "endless war and endless spending" had "crippled our ability to repair or just check our infrastructure," as he hosted Air America's Rachel Maddow in a discussion blaming the Minneapolis bridge collapse on Iraq war spending and unwillingness by conservatives to raise taxes.

Olbermann quoted Minnesota Democratic Senator Amy Klobuchar's charge of "messed up priorities" and New York Democratic Congresswoman Louise Slaughter's labeling of bridge collapse victims as "almost victims of war" because "perpetual war depletes the funds available to maintain our infrastructure."

Complaining that Republicans have "demonized" taxes, he saw a glimmer of light in how the Governor of Minnesota may agree to raise the gas tax: "Does the Governor's reversal tonight suggest maybe somebody is going to start having sane, reasoned discussions about taxes and when they're needed?" Maddow charged that America is "paying this incredible deadly price for a brand of American conservatism that hates and demeans government."

5. Newsweek Touts 'Gay Love' for Hillary with No Labels, Unlike GOP

Newsweek political reporter Jonathan Darman provided a preview of sorts to the August 9 Democratic debate on the gay Logo cable channel with an article on Democrats seeking votes on the gay left, playfully titled: "Show 'Em Whatcha Got: Conscious of their community's financial clout, gay activists want action on equality issues, not just talk."

Nowhere in Darman's story in this week's new issue is there a single ideological label that would place gay supporters of the Democrats on the left. But a June story on the state of the Republican presidential race after Jerry Falwell's funeral was studded with 12 uses of "conservative" or shifting "rightward" or "religious right."

6. WSJ Decline Blamed on 'Vitriolic Right-Wing Attack Editorials'

The decline of the Wall Street Journal, which allowed Rupert Murdoch's purchase of it, can be blamed in part on how advertisers "perhaps weren't enthralled" with the newspaper's "vitriolic right-wing attack editorials," Washington Post op-ed writer David Ignatius contended in a Thursday column.

In "The Path That Led to Murdoch," Ignatius, a former Wall Street Journal reporter who has held a variety of top positions at the Post since 1986, asserted that during the 1990s "the Journal's editorial page increasingly did its own reporting, with equal portions of journalistic hustle and ideological spin, and it often overshadowed the news side. I suspect that helped undermine the franchise. Advertisers, in the end, perhaps weren't enthralled with a newspaper distinguished by vitriolic right-wing attack editorials."

Check Out the MRC's Blog

The 2,460th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
8:35am EDT, Monday August 6, 2007 (Vol. Twelve; No. 133)

A usually-daily report, edited by Brent H. Baker, CyberAlert is distributed by the Media Research Center, the leader since 1987 in documenting, exposing and neutralizing liberal media bias.

The MRC's blog site, NewsBusters, "Exposing and Combating Liberal Media Bias," provides examples of bias 24/7. With your participation NewsBusters will continue to be THE blog site for tracking and correcting liberal media bias. Come post your comments and get fresh proof of media misdeeds at: http://www.newsbusters.org

Saturday, August 04, 2007

20070803 Sarkozy's Summer Place New Hampshire

Sarkozy's Summer Place: New Hampshire

Sources Say French President Will Spend Summer Vacation At New Hampshire Resort

CONCORD, N.H., Aug. 3, 2007

(AP) French President Nicolas Sarkozy will follow in the steps of several celebrities when he vacations this month at a resort town on New Hampshire's largest lake.

A source who was not authorized to speak about Sarkozy's private travels confirmed Thursday a report in Wednesday's Boston Globe that the French president planned to spend two weeks in Wolfeboro.

Current and past vacationers there include Drew Barrymore, Taiwan's Madame Chiang Kai-shek and presidential candidate Mitt Romney. The picturesque town is on Lake Winnipesaukee, about two hours north of Boston.

The source said the trip will be a private visit.

[…]

"We're going to have to get our French flags out, I guess," Town Manager David Owen said when asked about them last month.

A spokesman for New Hampshire Gov. John Lynch said officials knew Sarkozy was on his way.

More…

Friday, August 03, 2007

20070803 Quote of the day - Important date

Bonus quote of the day – Important date

Friday, August 3rd, 2007

“No date on the calendar is as important as tomorrow.”

Roy W. Howard (1883-1964) Publisher

Thanks TC - Fri 8/3/2007 2:56 PM

20070803 Quote of the day – The Early bird

Bonus Quote of the day – The Early Bird

Friday, August 3rd, 2007

I think we consider too much the good luck of the early bird, and not enough the bad luck of the early worm.”

Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945) U.S. President

Thanks TC - Fri 8/3/2007 2:57 PM

20070803 Quote of the day - The right thing

Bonus Quote of the day - The right thing


Friday, August 3rd


“You don't do the right thing because of the consequences. If you're wise, you do it regardless of the consequences.”


Jeannette Rankin (1880-1973) Activist and politician

Thanks TC - Fri 8/3/2007 2:55 PM

20070803 Quote of the day - Meaning what?

Friday, August 3rd, 2007

Quote of the day - Meaning what?

The struggle of people against their conditions, this is where you find the meaning in life.

Rose Chernin (1903-1995) Activist

Thanks TC

20070802 Welcome to the Outer Banks Grits Grill



Welcome to the Outer Banks Grits Grill

August 2nd, 2007

This is the “Grits Grill” I mentioned in my column published on August 1st, 2007 in the Westminster Eagle, “Song of the South: No grits, no glory.”

Mrs. Owl and I thoroughly enjoyed our grits-experience. The service was friendly and we enjoyed talking with our server. On one visit we talked with owner who beamed with pride about his food, the service, his restaurant and his grits – which I might add, were great.

Below is from the Grits Grill web site. The next time you are on the Outer Banks in North Carolina, we recommend that you and your family stop by – and have some grits, or sample some of the other great food they serve.

_____

Grits Grill

5000 South Croatan Highway, Milepost 14 The Outer Banks Mall

Nags Head, NC | Phone:252-449-2888 | Fax: 252-480-6302


gritsgrill365 AT msn.com

Welcome to the Outer Banks Grits Grill, a great place to meet & eat! Grits Grill has been a locals favorite for breakfast and lunch for many years. Located in the Outer Banks Mall in Nags Head, Grits Grill serves Krispy Kreme Doughnuts starting at 6:30 am, as well as hotcakes, steak & eggs, omelettes, various fresh egg dishes, classic southern favorites, great soups, salads, sandwiches and of course grits!

What are grits? Grits are tiny broken grains of corn, first produced by Native Americans centuries ago. There are two basic types, corn grits and hominy grits. Corn grits are made from dried, milled corn kernels. Hominy grits are made by soaking corn in lye water for several days and then dried. Come to Grits Grill and try them, we make the best!

Here are some of our specialties: Krispy Kreme Donuts fresh daily at 6:30 am, Newspapers from around the region, specialty coffees, breakfast served anytime, big orders not a problem, to go orders anytime, juice, milk, bottled drinks & water for easy take out, donuts & sandwiches available for business meetings.

We also have a wonderful gift shop featuring many wonderful Outer Banks souvenirs, click the map/gallery button above to see a sampling.
Take some Krispy Kreme doughnuts to go! Bring the family enjoy a great breakfast, or for lunch have a great fresh ground chuck Cheeseburger, a Philly Cheesesteak, a homemade Crabcake sandwich, a classic Reuben or one of our many other specialties and take home some souvenirs when you're done. Grits Grill, "Simply Southern".

On Saturdays from 9:00 am until 12:00 noon bring the family and come see "Steve The Dream" he will entertain you no matter your age. From Memorial Day to Labor Day.

Check out our additional listing in: Breakfast

Location & Views: Located In The Outer Banks Mall

Operation & Hours: Open All Year, Open 7 Days, Service Hours: (6:00 am Until 3:00 pm Every Day)

Payment Options & Additional Services: American Express, Discover, Visa, Mastercard, Travelers Checks Accepted, Gift Certificates, Gift Shipping

Dress Code: Coastal Casual

Family Considerations: High Chairs, Booster Seats, Children's Menu

Considerations for the Handicapped: Handicapped Accessible Facility (Yes), Handicap Accessible Restrooms (Yes), Wheelchair Accessible, Seeing Eye Dogs Allowed

Restroom Facilities: Restrooms Are For Patrons Only

Parking Information: Lighted (Yes), Parking Spaces (70+), Handicap Parking Available (Yes), Free Parking Available, Paved Parking Lot, Bus & Oversized Parking, Vehicle & Trailer Parking

Alcohol Policies & Information: No Alcohol

Smoking Policies: Non-Smoking Section, Smoking Section, Smoking At Bar Allowed

Security & Safety: Surveillance Camera(s), Parking Lot Patrol, Smoke Detection System, Fire Sprinkler System (Yes)

Restaurant & Food Information: Chef's Specials, Gift Shop (see sections below)

Breakfast: Entree: Average Price Range ($0-6) , Breakfast Hours Text : (6:00 am - 3:00 pm) , Take Out Available

Lunch: Entree: Average Price Range ($0-6), Take Out Available, Primary Cuisine (American)

Souvenirs & Logo-ed Merchandise: Beverage Coolers & Huggies, Hats, Sweatshirts, T-Shirts

Gift Shop Merchandise Types: Gifts & Souvenirs, Novelty & Toys

Entertainment: Occasional Live Entertainment

Biscuits Available: Plain Biscuits, Cheese Biscuits, Sausage Biscuits, Egg Biscuits, Ham Biscuits, Biscuits With Sausage Gravy

Breakfast Items: Bacon, Corned Beef Hash, Country Ham, Sausage Gravy, Sausage Patties, Scrambled Eggs, Steak, Pancakes, Cheese Grits, Hash Brown Potatoes

_____

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

www.kevindayhoff.net

E-mail him at: kdayhoff AT carr.org or kevindayhoff AT gmail.com

His columns and articles appear in The Tentacle - www.thetentacle.com; Westminster Eagle Opinion; www.thewestminstereagle.com and Winchester Report.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

20070801 News Clips


News Clips

Aug. 1, 2007

STATE NEWS


Balto. Co. charter change is sought

2 councilmen seek repeal of state job prohibition

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_county/bal-md.co.council01aug01,0,1442153.story?coll=bal_tab02_layout

Baltimore County Councilman Vincent J. Gardina worked for a quasi-state agency, then collected a six-figure legal settlement from the government when he challenged his firing.

Now Gardina, along with fellow Councilman John Olszewski Sr., want to place on the 2008 ballot a charter amendment to repeal a prohibition against council members holding state jobs.

Gardina and other county officials say they were unaware of the charter provision in 2003 when the councilman was a project manager for an agency create d by the state legislature. He and Olszewski say the prohibition is antiquated and unfairly restricts who can run for the council. But opponents contend that council members with state jobs hold the possibility of having too much influence, and would inevitably run into conflicts of interest.

Open Space purchase debated

Amid Shore deal, some question how state chooses, buys

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.land01aug01,0,2202039.story?page=1

Department of Natural Resources officials say the state ought to buy a 74-acre parcel at the northern tip of Kent Island - known as Love Point - because it is unique, offers deep-water access for boaters and has historical significance as the main docking point for a ferry that shuttled passengers between Baltimore and the Eastern Shore in the decades before the Bay Bridge opened. But others say the proposed $7.2 million deal for the Langenfelder Marine property - a dusty, industrial waterfront site - raises broader concerns about how the state handles land purchases under Program Open Space.

Company proposal

Kopp noted that the deal was proposed by the property's owners, Atchafalaya Holdings LLC, and did not originate with the state. Records show that company representatives approached Natural Resources officials in the waning days of Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.'s administration and that the proposal moved forward under O'Malley.

Del. Richard A. Sossi, a Queen Anne's County Republican, said the Kudner farm purchase appeared "odorous" but that he doesn't object to the deal for the Langenfelder site. "To me, it looks fine and legitimate," said Sossi, who serves on the House of Delegates Environmental Matters Committee. "I think it's a fair price. ... I have not seen or heard anything to cause me concern."

Franchot plans to block purchase of shoreline property

http://www.examiner.com/a-857211~Franchot_plans_to_block_purchase_of_shoreline_property.html

Comptroller Peter Franchot said Tuesday he will again attempt to block the state's purchase of 73 acres of shoreline property on Kent Island at the Board of Public Works meeting today. "I think it's an unfortunate choice for Program Open Space," he said.

Lawmaker: Flag teachers suspected of child abuse

http://www.examiner.com/a-857544~Lawmaker__Flag_teachers_suspected_of_child_abuse.html

School systems throughout the state wo uld be informed when teachers face allegations of sexual or violent crimes under a bill a state lawmaker plans to propose.

Sen. Nancy Jacobs, R-District 34, said the measure would prevent school districts from unknowingly hiring a teacher accused of these crimes.

"Children's safety in the classrooms should be a primary goal of the school systems in this state," Jacobs said in a statement. "We must not allow sexual predators to hide out in our children's classrooms." Jacobs' bill would include private schools that do not notify county superintendents of teachers under criminal investigation for alleged sexual, violent or child-abuse crimes.

Top official seeks to ban cancer-causing coal fly ash

http://www.examiner.com/a-857208~Top_official_s eeks_to_ban_cancer_causing_coal_fly_ash.html

The use of coal fly ash, which has been linked to well water contamination in Gambrills, may soon be illegal to use in Anne Arundel. County Executive John Leopold is drafting an emergency bill that would prohibit the material that has been blamed for leaching cancer-causing heavy metals into 23 wells in western Anne Arundel. "We're talking about an immediate halt in spreading the plume of carcinogens in our drinking water,” Leopold said.

Foes of Nuclear Expansion Find Few Allies

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/31/AR2007073101907.html

In a Maryland county where politicians roll out tax breaks for nuclear power expansion and residents feel so good about their existing plant that some fish next to the place, Bob Boxwell knows he's fighting an uphill battle.

The longtime environmentalist is among a tiny group of Calvert County residents known to be making a concerted effort to stop a proposed reactor at Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant in Lusby. The reactor would be Calvert Cliffs' third and could become the first project of its kind in the United States in about 30 years, underscoring the nation's renewed interest in nuclear power.

Garrett Co. crops could provide for areas suffering from drought

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/MD_DROUGHT_GARRETT_COUNTY_MDOL-?SITE=MDSAL&SECTION=STATE&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

Garrett County crops have not suffered as much from this summer's drought as those in neighboring counties, officials said.

"Our limiting fa ctor here for crops is temperature," according to Willie Lantz, who is agriculture and natural resources educator for Maryland Cooperative Extension for Garrett County. "The rainfall is seldom a limiting factor here. We are having a dry year here, but even though rainfall is less than normal, it's still enough for crops."Farmers in other counties have contacted the extension office to find Garrett County farms that will be able to provide hay and corn to feed their livestock in coming months, Lantz said.

EDITORIALS/OP-EDS

Doing the math

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.charter01aug01,0,2863177.story

Maryland's Court of Appeals has agreed with the State Board of Education that charter schools are entitled to a much larger sum of money th an school boards, particularly Baltimore's Board of School Commissioners, think is fair. The ruling could cost the city school system hundreds of thousands of dollars in compensatory funds. It may also inspire the General Assembly to come up with more realistic funding for charter schools.

In the meantime, a more practical solution might be for Baltimore's school board members and new schools CEO Andres Alonso to sit down with members of the state board and try to convince them that a recent funding formula offered to charter schools by the city school system is satisfactory even under the court's ruling.

Teaching the Constitution

Donald Devine

http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070801/COMMENTARY/108010024/1012

It is about time someone taught the Constitution to the professors, lawyers and journalists. In responding to President Bush's recent assertion of presidential control over U.S. attorneys, both a conservative newspaper editor and a progressive professor used the exact same word, "astonishing," to express disbelief that a president could do such a thing. Even most Americans would not recognize the reality of the Founders' Constitution. President Bush has provided a great learning experience by demonstrating executive power; but the Constitution is much more. It really is a miracle that it all works. No one in his right mind would divide power into so many parts if the idea were for the government to be the major decisionmaker for society. That is why the Founders also limited the powers of the national government and adopted the 10th Amendment.

When one branch pushes too hard, the others strike back. This is what happened with the U.S. attorneys issue recently and many times throughout American history. That is why the Constitution survives. It is flexible enough to take whatever comes.

Donald Devine was the director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management from 1981 to 1985 and is the director of the Federalist Leadership Center at Bellevue University and editor of Conservative Battleline Online.

Sketches keep state staffers on same page as legislature

By Tom LoBianco

http://www.washingtontimes.com/article/20070801/METRO/108010045/1004/metro

A drawing from 2001 represents the jet leased by Gov. Parris N. Glendening, dubbed "Air Parris," and from 2003 is Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.'s face on a slot machine. The images, often humorous and irreverent, appear in a collection of posters Maryland officials have kept in secret to chronicle the high and low points of each General Assembly session since 1980.

NATIONAL NEWS

Troubles mount for Shore farmers

Growers turn to crop insurance subsidies

http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070801/NEWS01/708010364/1002

This was supposed to be a year of good fortune where Lower Shore farmers wouldn't need support payments or safety-net insurance. Then in late May, the rain stopped, and the faucet has been relatively dry since. Local burn bans were enacted across the region.

A new five-year $285 billion Farm Bill was reauthorized by the U.S. House of Representatives on Friday, and more crop insurance subsidies are in the bill. U.S. Rep. Wayne Gilchrest, R-1st-Md., supported the bill, which passed 231-191, because it has reorganized some money to more conservation programs and pushed more dollars to cleaning the Chesapeake Bay.

The region has been identified as having historic agricultural importance, too. There are also additional support options for fruit and vegetable growers, which haven't been in previous bills. "I would say this Farm Bill is probably the most beneficial farm bill to Maryland and Delmarva than we have seen in the past," he said.

Candidate for Congress also eyes presidency

http://www.herald-mail.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=171435&format=html

Sounding off on topics such as immigration and pedophilia, congressional candidate Frank Nethken sat on the steps outside Hagerstown City Hall on Tuesday and spoke his mind.

He called it a press conference, but it was actually a monologue in front of a reporter and a videographer from The Herald-Mail.

Nethken, 76, a Republican challenging eight-term incumbent U.S. Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, R-6th, said he's also running an "exploratory" campaign for president. He said he checked with the Maryland State Board of Elections on how he should proceed.

Asked what Bartlett, 81, thinks of Nethken's candidacy, press secretary Lisa Wright quoted Bartlett as saying, "What matters is what voters think, not what I think."

Ethics Bill Faces Tough Senate Test

http://www.nytimes.com/cq/2007/08/01/cq_3200.html

After winning overwhelming passage in the House, a lobbying and ethics overhaul landed Tuesday in the Senate, where all sides are bracing for a fight. But while Senate Democrats urged swift passage, Republican leaders said they needed some time.

Joe L. Barton, R-Texas, said he voted against the bill in part because he believed it would expose members and their campaign committees to possible investigations if they make errors in the newly required paperwork. "It's setting people up to fail," Barton said. "My concern is that there is way too much bureaucracy in this legislation." "It's not a perfect bill. But it's a significant step forward," said Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer, D-Md.

House votes to give up many traditional perks

http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/nationworld/story/123060.html

The House on Tuesday overwhelmingly approved sweeping ethics rules that would require lawmakers to disclose the names of lobbyists who gather more than $15,000 in political contributions for them within a six-month period. The measure would also impose new restrictions on accepting gifts, discounted airfare and other long-held perquisites of office. The legislation, to be considered by the Senate later this week, also calls for greater disclosure of legislators' special projects, or earmarks, which are often shrouded in secrecy.

The most far-reaching element of the bill - and the one that caused the most contentious behind-the-scenes negotiations - was the provisions to require the disclosure of campaign contributions that lobbyists gather from clients and associates to give to political candidates and the parties' congressional campaign committees. The bill would require lawmakers and the committees to disclose the names of lobbyists who raise $15,000 or more within a six-month period.

"Trying to preserve those provisions was a sticking point in the negotiations all along," said Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, who led the push for them.

20070802 Carroll Co. Sheriff’s Office: New Windsor Union Bridge to host Night Out Against Crime

Carroll Co. Sheriff’s Office: New Windsor and Union Bridge to host Night Out Against Crime Tuesday August 7, 2006

Posted August 2nd, 2007

“Sheriff’s Office, Towns of New Windsor and Union Bridge to host Night Out Against Crime”

New Windsor & Union Bridge, Carroll County, Maryland, August 2, 2006 ----

Joining the national crime prevention effort, the Carroll County Sheriff’s Office and the Towns of New Windsor and Union Bridge will host a “National Night Out Against Crime” on Tuesday August 7, 2006.

Aimed at bringing local communities and law enforcement together, “Night Out” activities will begin at 7.00 pm on the New Windsor Fire Company’s Carnival Grounds and the Union Bridge Town Square.

Scheduled activities and static displays include; Refreshments, live music, Moon Bounce for kids, Police K-9 Demonstrations, Mobile Command Center, Bicycle Patrol, Armored Rescue Vehicle and more.

Additionally, Sheriff’s Deputies will be providing “DNA Child Identification Kits” that will aid in the recovery of missing children to the first 500 parents. The local Lions Club and Target Inc. of Westminster have donated refreshments, door prizes and program literature.

This year’s “Night Out Against Crime” marks the 24th anniversary of the national event, which serves to; heighten crime and drug prevention awareness, generate support and participation in local anticrime programs and, send a message to criminals that the community is organized in a policing partnership against crime. Last year more than 34 million people participated in the “Night Out” according to the programs founder, the National Association of Town Watch.

If you are unable to attend the “National Night Out Against Crime,” but still wish to support the effort, you may do so by lighting your front porch lights.

For additional information about this event, please telephone New Windsor Community Deputy Mark Tausen at 410-386-2900, or mtausen@ccg.carr.org; or Union Bridge Community Deputy John Light at 410-386-2900, or jlight@ccg.carr.org.

20070802 Quote of the day - At your best?

Quote of the day - At your best?

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

If your mind isn't clouded by unnecessary things, This is the best season of your life.

Wu-Men (c. 1183-1260) Buddhist monk

Thanks TC

20070730 NYTimes Op-Ed: A War We Just Might Win by O’Hanlon and Pollack

NYTimes Op-Ed: A War We Just Might Win by O’Hanlon and Pollack

July 30, 2007

Op-Ed Contributor

A War We Just Might Win

Related:

By MICHAEL E. O’HANLON and KENNETH M. POLLACK

By Michael E. O’Hanlon And Kenneth M. Pollack

Michael E. O’Hanlon is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. Kenneth M. Pollack is the director of research at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at Brookings.

Washington

VIEWED from Iraq, where we just spent eight days meeting with American and Iraqi military and civilian personnel, the political debate in Washington is surreal. The Bush administration has over four years lost essentially all credibility. Yet now the administration’s critics, in part as a result, seem unaware of the significant changes taking place.

Here is the most important thing Americans need to understand: We are finally getting somewhere in Iraq, at least in military terms. As two analysts who have harshly criticized the Bush administration’s miserable handling of Iraq, we were surprised by the gains we saw and the potential to produce not necessarily “victory” but a sustainable stability that both we and the Iraqis could live with.

After the furnace-like heat, the first thing you notice when you land in Baghdad is the morale of our troops. In previous trips to Iraq we often found American troops angry and frustrated — many sensed they had the wrong strategy, were using the wrong tactics and were risking their lives in pursuit of an approach that could not work.

Today, morale is high. The soldiers and marines told us they feel that they now have a superb commander in Gen. David Petraeus; they are confident in his strategy, they see real results, and they feel now they have the numbers needed to make a real difference.

[…]

How much longer should American troops keep fighting and dying to build a new Iraq while Iraqi leaders fail to do their part? And how much longer can we wear down our forces in this mission? These haunting questions underscore the reality that the surge cannot go on forever. But there is enough good happening on the battlefields of Iraq today that Congress should plan on sustaining the effort at least into 2008.

Read the entire Op-Ed here: A War We Just Might Win

20070730 NYTimes Op-Ed: A War We Just Might Win by O’Hanlon and Pollack

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

20070730 A better way of solving problems by Pocomoke mayor Michael McDermott



A better way of solving problems by Pocomoke mayor Michael McDermott

Monday, July 30, 2007



A better way of solving problems



I was happy to see that Pocomoke City mayor Michael McDermott has started a blog on all matters that are Pocomoke City.


The blog can be found at “Pocomoke City Forum” or: http://pocomokecity.blogspot.com/


He wrote, in part, in his introductory post:


Blogging is the latest method of communication being used by the public. I believe the experience can be positive even in dissent. There is no need for name calling and defamation to insure that your voice is heard. We can do better!


Mayor's Advisory Committee


The pages of this site will serve as a Mayor's Advisory Committee of which you can be a part…


Read the rest of the mayor’s introductory blog here: A better way of solving problems

20070730 O’Malley speech: DLC National Conversation

Democratic Leadership Council National Conversation

July 30, 2007 - Nashville, Tenn

Speeches by Governor Martin O'Malley

Thank you very, very much. Thank you all. Thank you very much. My Maryland people, thou wilt not cower in the dust. Thank you very much. Jack Markell, thank you very much for your leadership and thank you for that very gracious introduction. And Jack, I just want to make clear for the record, knowing that the Republican Party follows these proceedings very carefully, that that period of time 25 years ago, I actually was legal. In fact, I was 21 for five years while I played in my band.

You know, as we gather here in Music City, I am reminded of the sound advice that every stage mother gives their child. Never follow a dog act, never follow a kid act, and never follow Governor Brian Schweitzer. It is good to be with all of you, it really is. Governor Sebelius, Governor Bredesen, it’s great to return to the DLC’s National Conversation. I took a brief hiatus given the pressures and the time constraints of the campaign, but thank you, Al From, for your vision. Thank you for your untiring leadership and persistence and commitment to Democratic values. And thank you, Harold Ford, for stepping up and being our chairman and leading this important organization at an important time.

You know, I was reflecting a little bit about why I enjoy these things so much, and I think it’s the same reason that you do as well. It’s an opportunity to come together with people who actually believe we can make our government work. And the essence of what we derive from one another in coming together here…I think was summed up beautifully and eloquently, like so many things, by Bobby Kennedy when he captured this synergy between core values and effective programs when he said:

“Idealism, high aspirations and deep convictions are not incompatible with the most practical and efficient of programs. There is no basic inconsistency between ideals and realistic possibilities, no separation between the deepest desires of the heart and of the mind, and the rational application of human effort to human problem.”

That’s what we’re doing here. It is a timeless and important mission, and we’re also reminded as we come together here, of the things that unite us, not only as members of the DLC…not only as Democrats…but we’re reminded of the things that unite us as Americans:

A belief in the dignity of every individual, a belief in our responsibility to advance the common good, and an understanding that at the beginning and the end of our days, there is a unity to spirit and to matter, and that what we do in our own lifetimes does matter.

And because we’re united in those beliefs, we’re also united in the goals that we pursue as a nation, aren’t we? To strengthen and grow our middle class and our family owned businesses, to improve public safety and public education, and to expand opportunity to more people rather than fewer.

I’ve been asked to focus my remarks today on one of three overarching strategies that we’re following in Maryland, in post-9/11 Maryland. One of those strategies is workforce creation, another is sustainability, but the third one is security integration, specifically security integration – how we’re advancing that strategy in the post 9/11 Maryland.

What does it mean? It means protecting our people and our communities through ever-better coordination of effort, ever-more timely sharing of information and intelligence among multiple agencies and offices of government at all levels from local to state to federal and back. It means making that oxymoron known as the criminal justice system actually operate like a system instead of a collection of parallel data sets, intelligence and effort that rarely ever meet and even more rarely ever coordinate.

The integration has to be horizontal as well as vertical. It has to be intra-agency as well as interagency, intra-departmental as well as interdepartmental, intra-state as well as interstate. It means that task forces cross borders and become regional, become the norm of public safety rather than the rare exception.

You get the point, and the question is: Do our police chiefs? Do our fire chiefs? Do they get it? And what does this mean for homeland security? You know the sad thing about speeches about homeland security is that there’s been so little progress over the last six years that the speeches have changed very little. Maybe that’s also a reflection of how much work we need to do and how much more urgently we need to dedicate ourselves to it.

Six years after the attacks of September 11th, the people that all of us have the privilege to serve and to protect still want some basic answers to questions before they can intelligently rise to meet this new challenge of asymmetrical warfare that will be with us for the foreseeable future. And those basic questions are:

What are we trying to accomplish?

Who is responsible for accomplishing it?

And what opportunities might there be – beyond security, what opportunities might we create for our nation, our neighborhoods and our world if we were actually to get this job done? For without a doubt, this is going to call upon us as a nation to change world history by accomplishing great things.

In Washington, New York, Madrid and London, the ability to take human lives is part of the terrorist equation, but with 80 percent of our Gross National Product emanating from our metropolitan economies, disruption and economic costs are also what make our cities prime targets. So how do we make our metropolitan areas safer and thereby make our country safer? What are the security capabilities? What are the security deliverables, if you will, that we’re actually trying to create? In other words, if we actually improve security and preparedness, what would it look like?

First, every major metropolitan area would actually have complete vulnerability assessments.

Second, every major metropolitan area would have adequate personal protective equipment for their first responders, including HAZMAT teams and also the ability to diffuse bombs.

Third, every major metropolitan area would have interoperable communications – something we’ve all been saying for six years, and something very few of us have done.

Fourth, every metropolitan area would have real-time biosurveillance systems that monitor the various symptoms being displayed or presented to your emergency rooms, your paramedics, so that we can get that 48-hour jump if, God forbid, there’s a biological attack.

Fifth, every major metropolitan area should have a much more highly developed intelligence sharing capacity that allows data to go from the central office to the field instantaneously. If you can’t do that with your own Departments of Parole and Probation to your own county police department, then you’re not ready to do it with the federal government to prevent a strike by al Qaeda.

Six – every metropolitan area should conduct training and preparedness exercises, and you should plan for them and you should fund them, and you shouldn’t wait for manna to fall out of Washington in order to do it.

Seven – every major metropolitan area should be investing in closed circuit television camera systems, as we’ve seen London use to great effect. That is much more cost effective to protect infrastructure and can also be used to combat narcotics.

Eighth, transportation security – we need to make progress in securing our vulnerabilities in a very open transportation system. Not every state or even every city has a port, but you know what, cargo from those ports go through every city on rail or on trucks And the fact that we can’t inspect each and every one should not be license and excuse not to try to inspect more than we’re currently inspecting.

And ninth, we need to invest in hospital surge capacity, something that I think none of us have done.

So there it is. Something you will never, ever hear from George Bush: clearly articulated national security goals. So where’s the responsibility for getting these things done?

You know, mayors point to the president, the president points to governors, governors point to Congress, the senior statesmen declare solemnly you can’t possible protect every square inch of this vast continent, someone calls a break for lunch and we all go home, right? Why is that? I think it’s because what should be a flexible federal system that should allow us to adapt and to rise to this challenge has been tangled and jumbled up. It’s also been undermined by something which I believe, and I think you believe as well, is a belief not in keeping with the great traditions of our country.

Cities are central to improving homeland security. Command and control in the event of an emergency is a local function. You’ve heard it said time and again when people call 911, the phone does not ring at the White House and it does not ring at the State House. Command, control, maintenance, recruitment, training and coordination – these deliverables, deliverables like interoperable communications, biosurveillance, intelligence sharing, even vaccine distributions in the event of an emergency – they’re all local functions and we need to support them and not cut funding to them.

What is not paid for – what is not paid for even while local governments pay for the vast majority of those things – is the additional investment required for local governments to rise to the homeland security threat. States have an important role to play – important but different, but an important role to play in prioritizing, in regionalizing and actualizing: conducting after-action evaluations, evaluating levels of preparedness, setting standards and forcing timely updates of vulnerability assessments assuring that available dollars are actually used effectively instead of reverting to what I have called the Sharper Image catalogue-style of purchasing homeland security equipment, right?

You’ve all seen this happen in your own areas. Instead of investing in one of those nine core capacities, we all get together in a room and try to figure out what is it that we’re sure nobody has, and let’s buy one of those for everybody. That’s not how we meet those core capacities, and our states need to do a better job of reminding us of that.

But what of our federal government – you know, I want to share with you a wonderful article. Of course it was on page A2, as all good news is reported about working government, but you know, for the first time in five years, our federal government is actually set to invest more in those primary streams of funding for homeland security that comes to your states and your cities and your counties rather than cutting it again year after year as George Bush and the Republican Congress have done.

Get this – look at this wonderful headline fellow Democrats: “Congress approves homeland security bill in two strong votes.” What a wonderful thing. Let me read it again, it felt good. Congress approves homeland security bill in two strong votes. Elections do make a difference; it’s a big turnaround.

And the other thing that it gives to us is an opportunity to slip out of that false but very effective frame that’s been set up in the past by people like Mr. Norquist, that governing in America today is a choice between whether we have a small government or a big government. Not that any of us can ever remember or even conceive of Andrew Jackson pulling people together in that room not far from here to found the Democratic Party and saying: By gosh guys, we need to have a big government.

The choice isn’t between a big government and a small government. The choice is between a weak government and a strong government. It’s between a weak government and a strong government. And you know, were it not so tragic, it might remind us of Johnny Carson, right? How weak do you want it? You know, how weak is it?

How weak do you want your government? Do you want it so weak that our soldiers, when they’re deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, don’t have bulletproof vests and body armor?

Do you want it so weak that when they go there, they drag equipment from home that doesn’t have proper armor to defend them against the landmines?

How weak do you want it? Do you want it so weak that women, children, the elderly and babies die of dehydration in the heart of a great American city while they wait one, two, three, four, five days for their federal government to drop a pallet of bottled water on them? How weak do you want it?

It is not between small and big government. To govern is to choose, and our choice is between whether we want a strong government or whether we want a weak government.
And why shouldn’t the constitutional mandate of providing for the common defense extend to the currently uncovered margin that exists between what local governments can spend on public safety and what these new war exigencies demand?

Yes, to govern is to choose, my friends, and a free and informed people can make changes, and a happy optimistic point of history: they usually do make the right choices. Changes that can turn our challenges into opportunities, opportunities beyond terror or defense. Stated more boldly, we can create opportunities if we dare to accomplish great things in the face of this unprecedented threat.

Imagine if each of our metropolitan areas actually had watch centers to monitor hundreds of cameras protecting our critical infrastructure, and imagine what they might also be able to do to be a force multiplier for understaffed police departments. With the backbone of CCTV systems in place, cities could branch their networks out to free poor neighborhoods from the 24/7 occupation of drug dealers and the death grip that comes from the foreign chemical attacks of cocaine and heroine.

Imagine if every metropolitan area actually did share intelligence in a timely fashion – the lives that we could actually save. Imagine if we actually improved port and border security and were able to cut in half the supplies of illegal drugs that are coming into our country. Imagine the economic possibilities if our nation were actually to significantly invest in bio-defensive research and the development of vaccines, inoculations and cures.

Imagine the economic opportunities that would roll from that, and imagine something else as well, and that is to be able to unleash, in the words of Jeffrey Sachs, “the weapons of mass salvation” – to be able to prevent tuberculosis and malaria, dysentery, the things that are killing thousands of people around this planet, not to mention HIV/AIDS which is threatening to wipe out an entire continent.

We are a great country. We are still a great country. And while it is true that most of these things will not happen overnight, it’s also true that none of them will ever happen until we make a conscious decision to invest in our security.

As Americans, we have the opportunity to correct our course. The United States is capable of accomplishing great things, but fear alone has never been a sufficient fuel for our most noble ambitions as a people. When facing enormous challenges, when facing war and grave threats to our country’s survival, Americans find their motivation for greatness and their cause for sacrifice in higher things. Freedom, justice, the rights of man, liberation from the many faces of slavery and oppression – these are the values of our republic, what former Senator Gary Hart called the fourth power, that moral exponent of our military, economic and diplomatic powers. They are the ideas that appeal to a universal concept of a humanity loved by God and made in his image.

The struggle to secure our homeland security will be determined at the end of our days by whether the United States chooses not just to be a military or economic, but rather a moral leader among nations. And that leadership in this troubled and rapidly changing world will depend very much not on how many smart bombs we’re able to rain down on our enemies, but on how many strong, compassionate, educated, trained American hands we can extend to the most fragile of our neighbors around this globe. I dream not of utopia but of continuing the American Revolution. This is America’s challenge…this is America’s choice…and this is America’s opportunity. Thank you all.

20070801 Quote of the day from Lady Ella

Quote of the day from Lady Ella

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

“It isn't where you came from; it's where you're going that counts.”

Ella Fitzgerald (1918-1996) Singer

Thanks TC

20070731 Sinkewitz fired by the T-Mobile team after confession

Sinkewitz fired after confession

Published by BBC: 2007/07/31 15:46:08 GMT

Patrik Sinkewitz has been dismissed by the T-Mobile team after withdrawing a request to have his B-sample tested.

The German cyclist was suspended after it emerged during the Tour de France that he tested positive for elevated levels of testosterone on 8 June.

Sinkewitz revealed on Tuesday that he had used a testosterone gel in training and said he accepted the test result.

"It was a big mistake and irresponsible toward my team, colleagues, the sponsor and the whole of cycling," he admitted.

Sinkewitz, 26, said he had used the gel on his upper arm "without thinking, or simply in great stupidity, on the evening before the doping test".

More…

20070731 Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley’s July press releases

Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley’s July press releases

July 31st, 2007

July 31 Governor O'Malley Announces $15 Million Grant to University of Maryland from Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

July 30 Governor O'Malley Delivers Homeland Security Address to Democratic Leadership Council

July 27 Statement on Cal Ripken, Jr. by Governor O'Malley

July 26 Governor O'Malley Requests Federal Drought Assistance to Help Maryland Farmers

July 26 Governor O'Malley Declares La Plata, Maryland "Capital for a Day"

July 25 Governor O'Malley Hosts Maryland Energy Summit

July 24 Governor O'Malley Announces State's Success in Reducing DNA Backlog

July 16 Governor O'Malley and Lt. Governor Brown Spend Day in Frederick County

July 10 Governor O'Malley Cuts Over $280M from State Budget to Address $1.4 Billion Deficit

July 3 Governor O'Malley Announces Maryland Energy Summit

July 2 Governor O'Malley Announces New Energy Efficiency Goals for State Government

20070801 The allure of the game of golf

The allure of the game of golf

August 1st, 2007

I have often wondered why my brothers-in-law like the game of golf so much. Could this be the answer?

Hmmmm

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