DEAD AIR (News)
By: Chris Young - February 12, 2009
Comcast removes independent WBGN from its lineup
http://www.pittsburghcitypaper.ws//gyrobase/Content?oid=58808
Need a link to the petition.
As fit citizens, neighbors and running mates, we are tyranny fighters, water-game professionals, WPIAL and PIAA bound, wiki instigators, sports fans, liberty lovers, world travelers, non-credentialed Olympic photographers, UU netizens, church goers, open source boosters, school advocates, South Siders, retired and not, swim coaches, water polo players, ex-publishers and polar bear swimmers, N@.
DEAD AIR (News)
By: Chris Young - February 12, 2009
Comcast removes independent WBGN from its lineup
http://www.pittsburghcitypaper.ws//gyrobase/Content?oid=58808
Dangerously Irrelevant: "Parents are using online tools to push on schools
growingupassumingyoucanpublishThe Washington Post recently published a really interesting article on the ability of well-connected parents to influence the decisions of their local school districts (hat tip to The Science Goddess). The term ‘well-connected’ refers to parents’ abilities to use online tools to communicate and mobilize (rather than to their connections to people with power).
Old Stone Inn in West End nominated for historic status: "The Old Stone Inn in the West End, which is more than 200 years old, has been nominated for city historic status, stalling demolition plans.
The inn, at 434 Greentree Road, will have to go through hearings by Pittsburgh's Historic Review Commission. The prospective owner, Harris Masonry Inc., had applied for a permit to demolish the building and was expected to receive one within days when John DeSantis nominated the property for historic status last week.
The first hearing on the matter is likely to ...
New amphitheater to open at Station Square New amphitheater to open at Station SquareWhat about Sandcastle? What about the North Shore?
Technician - A team, a brotherhood After a swim-down and some words from coach Brooks Teal, the women's team exits the pool as the swimmers remove their pink swim caps and grab towels on the way to the locker room, but the men's team remains in the pool.Then comes the next quote in the article -- about taking a bullet. Wrong. Rather, the positive gang is a way to prevent bullet. The huddle in the middle of the pool is a way to change one's landscape and surroundings so as to be immune to flying bullets and senseless violence.
After the coaches have left, the men's team moves to the center of the pool, treading water long after the meet has ended as the seniors debrief the team. A loud chant announces the meeting is over, and the swimmers finally pull themselves out of the pool to get dried and dressed.
Such is the brotherhood of the men's swimming and diving team.
Some Mt. Lebanon residents ask for new high school: "A group of Mt. Lebanon residents last night asked the school board to consider building a completely new high school, a move that would require the community to approve a referendum on the matter.Perhaps they could buy Schenley High School. And, for good measure, we'll also air-lift them the Civic Arena as well.
Group members, who said their organization is called Build Our School Now, asked the board to vote for building a completely new high school rather than renovating the current structure and to put the issue to a referendum, which would be required under state law.
State formulas for debt limits hold Mt. Lebanon to spending no more than $110 million on the high school project without getting a referendum approved by the community. A new high school would cost about $150 million.
Build Our School Now representatives, including Kristin Linfante and David Brumfield, pledged to the board that they would knock on doors in the community lobbying people to approve the referendum.
Valentine's skates scheduled around the county
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Pittsburgh and Allegheny County have scheduled Valentine's Day skating events.
The annual Valentine's Day skating event Saturday at the Schenley Park Ice Rink, Valentines on Ice, starts at 7 p.m. and includes 2-for-1 admission, chocolates and hot drinks, picture taking, salsa dancing lessons, door prizes, a puck-shooting contest and a free rose for the first 200 women.
North and South Park ice rinks will host Sweetheart Skates on Saturday starting at 7:30 p.m. Couples skate for the price of one and receive a free carnation. Admission for skaters 13 to 59 is $5. Admission is $3 for seniors 60 and older and children 12 and younger.
Down to Dowd - Early Returns - post-gazette.com: "Down to Dowd"Unless one overlooks the women, the black women.
Citizen lawmaker: Ms. Smith goes to Grant Street: "Theresa Smith has spent years working to improve her city and her Westwood neighborhood, always from outside the government looking in."Well, that isn't true.
Olympic champion Michael Phelps was photographed taking a hit from a bong.
Amidst the media uproar that ensued, Kellogg's announced that it would not renew its sponsorship deal with Phelps.
Call Kellogg's now and tell them that if they dump Phelps we dump them
http://dpa.convio.net/site/R?i=uoHTEyF3QmqQCLb2Jv-svA ..
Like you, we're sick and tired of the public outings and forced apologies and recantations, which perpetuate this shameless hypocrisy.
More than 70 percent of Americans say that marijuana should be decriminalized and that no one should go to jail for its use.
We agree. Even the residents of Kellogg's home state of Michigan recently passed (by an overwhelming margin) a ballot initiative legalizing marijuana for medical purposes.
Dropping Phelps hurts the Kellogg's image far more than associating with someone who smoked marijuana. Call them to tell them what you think (you'll find helpful instructions and talking points if you follow this link to our website).
http://dpa.convio.net/site/R?i=5NqcyH2v4BvQxClyevHapw ..
Sincerely,
Ethan Nadelmann, Executive Director Drug Policy Alliance Network
P.S. You can also read my piece in the Huffington Post on this issue.
http://dpa.convio.net/site/R?i=066Uqk70AGF3vI2WSHXMDA ..
Homepage | Pittsburgh Twestival 2009: "Pittsburgh US Twestival 2009Anyone going from South Side?
12 February 2009, 19:00, Downey House , 6080 Steubenville Pike Mc Kees Rocks, PA 15136-1398"
Clairton, PA 15025, Email: Ference@icubed.com
Every day brings new evidence that we no longer live in a civilized and principled society. The worst part, it usually concerns another case of corruption involving a member of the PA Senate or House; a PA judge; law enforcement officer; District Attorney or some other Pennsylvania public servant. (I prefer, serpent). However, the latest news of wrongdoing in Pennsylvania involves what I call child trafficking at its lowest level.
As reported in the Associated Press, Pennsylvania President Judge Mark Ciavarella and Senior Judge Michael Conahan agreed to plead guilty to various federal charges (no state charges, PA politicians take care of their own) and face seven years in prison. Their crime, court documents said they took kickbacks for sending children to detention facilities run by PA Child Care in Luzerne County and a sister company in western PA. Altogether the judges took $2.6 million in bribes.
PA Child Care is owned by Gregory Zappala, a son of former Supreme Court Justice Stephen Zappala, Sr., and brother of Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen Zappala Jr.
As more and more cases of corruption — and cover-up — come to light, one begins to wonder whether Pennsylvania politicians should be considered any more trustworthy than, say, Saddam Hussein.
So — what should be done? Given the level of wreckage and anguish caused in the lives of so many people, it seems appropriate to look to the war on terror for a model strategy.
A first prong of attack might involve a Special Forces unit made up of highly skilled and trained military personnel capable of tracking down and obtaining confessions from any current or former owners of businesses that deal in child trafficking. Did more judges take kickbacks for sending innocent children to detention homes? How many dysfunctional Pennsylvania politicians, police officers and other scoundrels working for the state were involved?
If rights are violated, if military personnel sometimes go a little too far, so be it. Those incapable of civilized behavior shouldn’t expect the rights and privileges of civilization.
A deck of cards can be created to help identify the hard-to-find as well as the disgraceful political leaders who permitted, and in essence, condoned the incarceration of young children. Photos of the most deviant and reprehensible Pennsylvania officials accompanied by a list of their offenses will encourage us all to do our patriotic duty in helping the authorities track down suspected Pennsylvania politician/terrorists.
Another option would be to divide Pennsylvania into territories. A color-code warning system would be established, alerting parents about crooked judges, corrupt cops and district attorneys holding court in their respective regions. Depending on the designated color for a particular region, parents would know whether their children should attend a juvenile hearing or escape to a third world country where children are treated with more dignity and respect.
To aid this unique war on terror, a pool of money should be collected, not involuntarily from taxpayers, but voluntarily from those decent human beings who believe crimes committed against our children are sins that God takes very seriously. Some of the funds raised could then be turned into outrageously tempting reward sums for information leading to the capture of our targeted criminals. Once the rogue politicians have been imprisoned and forced to talk, I recommend that their confessions be given to someone like Steven Spielberg or George Romero. Hollywood writers and producers could create a blockbuster movie like Roots or Schindler’s List to serve as a bitter reminder that these crimes should never again be permitted to occur. Tom Savini could be hired to recreate the horror on the faces of child actors chosen to play parts.
Proceeds from the movie could go to victims of abuse and their families. And no matter how old the crime, compensation would be available. There should be no statute of limitations when the rights of children have been violated by those who lived much of their adult lives perched on a pedestal heightened by the trust of innocent and vulnerable residents of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. In fact, I would extend compensation to the second and perhaps even third generation of sufferers. It would certainly include siblings denied the experience of growing up with a brother or sister untraumatized by such abuse. And since crimes of abuse tend to echo, it would extend to the victims of the victims as well.
If all else fails, is it any less rational to declare war on the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania as part of a war on child abuse than it was to declare war on Iraq (which had nothing to do with 9/11 or Al-Qaeda and apparently had no weapons of mass destruction) as part of a war on terror? How many innocent children have been verifiably lost to this menace — and how many more will be lost if we don’t make a preemptive strike?
Child trafficking and those who willfully hid the crimes as far as I can see, this brings us much closer to the realm mortal sin. And the sinners include not just the judges who sentenced the children and took the money but also those who are staying silent because of concerns about a paycheck, a 401K, a pension, or a fear of standing up to the mobsters who orchestrated this crime. God has a place for everyone — and if you abuse children or protect the abusers of children, we can only hope that your place is called hell.