Rogge plans to discuss possible SAfrican bid with President
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) -- IOC president Jacques Rogge will discuss the possibility of a South African bid for the Olympics when he meets with South African President Jacob Zuma next month.
Read the full story at http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/more/06/23/south.african.olympics.ap/index.html
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Fw: Big Phone. Big Cable. Same $ellout.
From: "Josh Silver, FreePress.net" <info@freepress.net>
The Wall Street Journal just revealed that the FCC has been convening secret backroom meetings with phone and cable lobbyists to cut a deal on Net Neutrality. This is outrageous. The FCC can’t ignore the public's demand for Net Neutrality and then quietly give control over the Internet to a few massive corporations. President Obama pledged to "take a back seat to no one" in his support for Net Neutrality. To head the FCC, he appointed Julius Genachowski, the man who crafted his pro-Net Neutrality platform in 2008. But even after millions of people joined Obama’s call for Net Neutrality, FCC staff is huddling with industry lobbyists in secret to cut a deal that could leave the free and open Internet in jeopardy. This plot is all too familiar. We've seen it before, during the BP oil disaster and the subprime mortgage meltdown, when government officials put the interests of big business ahead of those of the public. Now, the same thing is happening to the Internet. We can’t let the one agency tasked with oversight of communications strike secret deals that undermine Net Neutrality. Sign our letter to President Obama and the FCC to end the secret meetings and guarantee that the public -- including the tens of millions of Americans who use the Internet every day and in every way -- is given a seat at the table. Thank you, Josh Silver President and CEO Free Press http://www.savetheinternet.com/ http://www.freepress.net/ P.S. Be sure to sign the letter to Obama and the FCC. Then forward this e-mail to your friends in Pennsylvania and share the action via Twitter. P.S.S. Check out our full-page ad protesting the secret meetings, which ran in today’s Washington Post. | ||||
Fw: College Opportunity for students ages 17-20 with a high school diploma or GED
From: Jacqueline Lyde
Dear Friends,
Do you know someone between the ages of 17-20 years old with a high school diploma or GED in Pittsburgh, PA who would like to go to college or could benefit to going to college. If so please contact Donielle Owen (donielleowen@aol.com) and/or Deborah Hayes (dhayes@cubm.org) at the the Center for Urban Biblical Ministries. There are approximately 10 spots available for interested students. The program starts on July 6th so contact them today!
Please share this information with other groups and organizations for which you are affiliated.
Thank you for your assistance.
God Bless,
Jackie Lyde
Minister Jacqueline Elisa Lyde, M.Div.
Associate Minister and First Lady
Baptist Temple Church
7241 Race Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15208
(412) 241-1624 - church
I invite you to visit Baptist Temple Church for our Sunday Worship Services at 7:45am and 10:45am! It is my hope that you will visit with us soon.
Public talk on bikes today at Point Park
Allegheny County will be looking at ways to enhance people powered transportation opportunities over the coming months.
Here's the information you need to participate: If you live, work, study or play in Allegheny County – or even just pass through the County, we encourage you to use your local knowledge to help us make the County a more accommodating place for pedestrians, cyclists, skaters and others.
See links below for more information.
Allegheny County has partnered with PennDOT's Bureau of Public Transportation to develop a comprehensive active transportation plan. The primary objective of the "Active Allegheny" Plan is to accommodate and encourage walking and biking as an integral part, and common means, of getting around Allegheny County.
To receive input from the public, the following public meetings will be held in open house format:
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 4:30—7:30 pm Point Park University Ballroom 201 Wood St., Pittsburgh, PA
Thursday, June 24, 2010 4:30—7:30 pm Carnegie Borough Building One Veterans Way, Carnegie, PA
http://www.activeallegheny.com/ http://bike-pgh.org/2010/06/your-input-is-needed-for-the-countys-active-allegheny-plan/
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
Here's the information you need to participate: If you live, work, study or play in Allegheny County – or even just pass through the County, we encourage you to use your local knowledge to help us make the County a more accommodating place for pedestrians, cyclists, skaters and others.
See links below for more information.
Allegheny County has partnered with PennDOT's Bureau of Public Transportation to develop a comprehensive active transportation plan. The primary objective of the "Active Allegheny" Plan is to accommodate and encourage walking and biking as an integral part, and common means, of getting around Allegheny County.
To receive input from the public, the following public meetings will be held in open house format:
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 4:30—7:30 pm Point Park University Ballroom 201 Wood St., Pittsburgh, PA
Thursday, June 24, 2010 4:30—7:30 pm Carnegie Borough Building One Veterans Way, Carnegie, PA
http://www.activeallegheny.com/ http://bike-pgh.org/2010/06/your-input-is-needed-for-the-countys-active-allegheny-plan/
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Public Schools' parents wary of realignment when Peabody closes - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
Public Schools' parents wary of realignment when Peabody closes - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review: "Kelly Howze is worried about how her sons will be affected by the Pittsburgh Public Schools' proposed reconfiguration of East End schools.My plan would 'fix' this objection. Do not force the kids to go anywhere. Allow the students and families to choose where to attend.
'We are strictly opposed to it. I don't think our children would survive in Westinghouse,' said Howze, 30, the outgoing president of the Lincoln K-8 parent-teacher organization.
The plan, presented to the school board yesterday, would relocate Pittsburgh Peabody students to Westinghouse High School or Milliones. Milliones, which houses the university preparatory magnet, is a 6-12 school."
If space is limited in the other schools -- then performance requirements might be necessary too.
If you don't do your homework at Allderdice, and there is a waiting list, then you'll be asked to leave to make room for students who are going to do their assignements.
If you want to get into a popular school and have missed 20 days of school in the 8th grade -- forget it. That school may not need to take you.
One of her sons is a sophomore at Peabody and the other is in seventh grade at Lincoln K-8. "I think it should have been thought out a little better when they forced us into K-8, and now they're turning around in less than five years (and) forcing us into another transition."
People do not like to be 'forced.' People don't like to be yanked around. And, when they see that happen to others, they vote with their feet. They depart. They leave the city. Or, they stay in the city and go to charter or private schools. Or, they don't move into the city.
If we had a new attitude of closing schools only over time and of giving all kids a choice of where to go to school -- the new pittsburgh pledge -- then we'd have hope of seeing more people keep their students within the PPS -- and even some to move here as well.
Some kids at Pittsburgh Obama, headed into grade 11 for the fall of 2010, will have attended three high schools (buildings) in their four years of high school. That's yank, yank, yank. That's reactionary. That's unpleasant.
So, the move to Peabody could occur in the fall of 2012 for their benefit.
And, end feeder patterns.
And, don't allow kids to enter Peabody as 9th graders in the fall of 2010 -- as they'll be another 'lost class.' Phase out the school starting as soon as possible.
End all FEEDER Patterns for High School Students in Pittsburgh
The PPS does not need feeder patterns any more. Let the kids and the families choose the school of their choice, as space permits.
City school board discusses high school reorganization: "Sherry Hazuda echoed Mr. Sumpter's sentiments as she proposed that the board consider extending open enrollment to all schools, which would allow students from any part of the city to attend any school in the city, if they meet the admission requirements."
Monday, June 21, 2010
Fw: [kayaking-129] Call for safety boaters - 2010 Search for Monongy1.2 & 2.4-Mile Open Water Swim
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
From: Mike Cornell <cornells@zoominternet.net>
Sender: kayaking-129-announce@meetup.com
Date: Mon, 21 Jun 2010 22:28:38 -0400
To: <kayaking-129-announce@meetup.com>
Subject: [kayaking-129] Call for safety boaters - 2010 Search for Monongy 1.2 & 2.4-Mile Open Water Swim
Date: Sunday July 11, 2010 9:00 AM
Location: Heinz Quay (North Shore @ Heinz Field)
OK 'yackers, time to put your paddling skills to work! Our Meetup group is going support an endurance swimming event - the 2010 Search for Monongy 1.2 & 2.4-Mile Open Water Swim. It's put on by the U.S. Masters Swimmers (USMS) Allegheny Mountain Masters chapter here in Pittsburgh. The course runs between Heinz Field and the Clemente Bridge on the Allegheny River. We will be part of the safety crew, monitoring the swimmers, keeping them from going off-course and calling in help if one of them has a problem.
No special skills or gear are required. All you need is your kayak, PFD, paddle, and basic paddling skills. We will meet at Heinz Quay, the same place as we launched for Paddle at the Point. Please arrive at 9:00 AM. This will give us time to stage our gear, and then meet with the safety coordinator for instructions. Swimmers start warming up at 10:00, and the first swimmers are off at 11:00. The last swimmers will be off the water by 1:30. There may be special perks for the safety boaters, details to follow.
I'm an endurance runner. I really appreciate all of the selfless volunteers that come out to support the trail races that I compete in. So I know how much YOU will be appreciated if you can help out for this event.
By the way, what is "Monongy"? Legend has it that Monongy, the man-fish lives in the river. There are records that go as far back as the French and Indian War that describe encounters between British soldiers and strange aquatic creatures. The local Indian tribes referred to this creature as "Monongy". There was even a Monongy craze in the early 1930's through the late 1950's. Sightings occurred on a weekly basis and the police department created a task force whose sole purpose was to investigate sightings of the creature. No evidence was ever produced to lend credence to the claims until May 12, 2003 when a privately owned fishing vessel was the first to take photos of the creature. The photos were available on line for a short time until they were inexplicably taken down. Speculation persists that the government has procured the photographs and are covering up the existence of Monongy. Crypto zoologists from around the world still frequent the Monongahela every year to catch a glimpse of the elusive water beast.
This Meetup listing will be updated as more details come available. I expect our group to have a big turnout, and I'm sure we'll have a great time. Hope to see many of you there!
For the full listing, see http://www.meetup.com/kayaking-129/calendar/13870986/?from=list&offset=0
--
This message was sent by Mike Cornell (cornells@zoominternet.net) from Pittsburgh Kayakers (ka-"yack"-ers).
To learn more about Mike Cornell, visit his/her member profile
To unsubscribe or to update your mailing list settings, click here
Meetup, PO Box 4668 #37895 New York, New York 10163-4668 | support@meetup.com
Fw: [Locals] Final questions?
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
-----Original Message-----
From: Steven Clift <clift@e-democracy.org>
Date: Mon, 21 Jun 2010 16:32:36
To: <locals@forums.e-democracy.org>
Reply-To: locals@forums.e-democracy.org
Subject: Re: [Locals] Final questions?
I'd definitely like to hear more experiences about online leading to
greater connections in-person. What works?!
This definitely happens across our network - particularly at the
neighborhood level-, but we really don't know if it is a once a month
rare occurrence or something we could design to make happen more
often. I often contemplate what the "Do Something" button might look
like or what tools we might offer/recommend for small groups to take a
discussion from the forum, get into a small online group, meet in
person or facilitate some lighter time effort mix of MeetingWizard
with FreeConference to make telephone group calls easier to promote
AND then importantly report back to the full forum on their progress,
need for larger group input.
Offline Connected Examples:
1. Community garden group launched from online discussion - interest
discovered online, people met offline many many times and reported
back online from time to time - See our recent webinar for story:
http://e-democracy.org/webinars
2. Powderhorn Park - Response to violence - No forum is better at
sharing written notes on public/neighborhood meetings. In response to
recent shooting and gang violence, folks used the forum to promote a
number of in-person gathering including some "Talking Circles":
http://forums.e-democracy.org/r/post/1ushRoG1XfIk3iQo3MhHJp
3. Event recruitment - The Experimental College group used our Cedar
Riverside forum to recruit new participants:
http://forums.e-democracy.org/r/post/40hpcLeboYobvykSRA8qF4
They even included a Somali version of their announcement. Someone
with their confirmed with me directly that a handful of new people
came based on the forum posting.
4. Regular gatherings - For the first six months of the rural Cass
Lake Leech Lake forum they had monthly get togethers to chat local
issues and celebrate the birthdays of the month. They even had their
own inaugural ball fostered by the forum:
http://blog.e-democracy.org/posts/189
This participant noted that because of the forum she was interacting
with more non-Native folks since moving to the reservation (this is a
major Native American area) over a decade ago:
http://blog.e-democracy.org/posts/509
5. Park Design Input - We used my neighborhood forum to encourage
people to attend a planning meeting on a new splash pad. When no one
reported the highlights, someone who went did and I tracked down the
presentation:
http://forums.e-democracy.org/r/topic/hVgJbedNeTPfdIHM9Hj7d
Steven Clift - http://stevenclift.com
Executive Director - http://E-Democracy.Org
Follow me - http://twitter.com/democracy
New Tel: +1.612.234.7072
Steven Clift
Ericsson, Minneapolis
Info about Steven Clift: http://forums.e-democracy.org/p/stevenclift
View all messages on this topic at: http://forums.e-democracy.org/r/topic/4gTh5Ee97rHKs43s0Q6jTi
-----------------------------------------
To post, e-mail: locals@forums.e-democracy.org
Use "Reply-to-All" via e-mail to post publicly.
To leave or for daily digest, type "unsubscribe" or "digest on"
in subject, then send to: locals@forums.e-democracy.org
More information about Locals Online - For hosts of neighborhood e-lists, placeblogs, and community social nets:
http://forums.e-democracy.org/groups/locals
E-Democracy.Org rules: http://e-democracy.org/rules
-----------------------------------------
Technical assistance thanks to our friends at http://OnlineGroups.Net
Join Locals Online from:
http://e-democracy.org/locals
Also follow via Twitter, Facebook, and Web Feed
-----Original Message-----
From: Steven Clift <clift@e-democracy.org>
Date: Mon, 21 Jun 2010 16:32:36
To: <locals@forums.e-democracy.org>
Reply-To: locals@forums.e-democracy.org
Subject: Re: [Locals] Final questions?
I'd definitely like to hear more experiences about online leading to
greater connections in-person. What works?!
This definitely happens across our network - particularly at the
neighborhood level-, but we really don't know if it is a once a month
rare occurrence or something we could design to make happen more
often. I often contemplate what the "Do Something" button might look
like or what tools we might offer/recommend for small groups to take a
discussion from the forum, get into a small online group, meet in
person or facilitate some lighter time effort mix of MeetingWizard
with FreeConference to make telephone group calls easier to promote
AND then importantly report back to the full forum on their progress,
need for larger group input.
Offline Connected Examples:
1. Community garden group launched from online discussion - interest
discovered online, people met offline many many times and reported
back online from time to time - See our recent webinar for story:
http://e-democracy.org/webinars
2. Powderhorn Park - Response to violence - No forum is better at
sharing written notes on public/neighborhood meetings. In response to
recent shooting and gang violence, folks used the forum to promote a
number of in-person gathering including some "Talking Circles":
http://forums.e-democracy.org/r/post/1ushRoG1XfIk3iQo3MhHJp
3. Event recruitment - The Experimental College group used our Cedar
Riverside forum to recruit new participants:
http://forums.e-democracy.org/r/post/40hpcLeboYobvykSRA8qF4
They even included a Somali version of their announcement. Someone
with their confirmed with me directly that a handful of new people
came based on the forum posting.
4. Regular gatherings - For the first six months of the rural Cass
Lake Leech Lake forum they had monthly get togethers to chat local
issues and celebrate the birthdays of the month. They even had their
own inaugural ball fostered by the forum:
http://blog.e-democracy.org/posts/189
This participant noted that because of the forum she was interacting
with more non-Native folks since moving to the reservation (this is a
major Native American area) over a decade ago:
http://blog.e-democracy.org/posts/509
5. Park Design Input - We used my neighborhood forum to encourage
people to attend a planning meeting on a new splash pad. When no one
reported the highlights, someone who went did and I tracked down the
presentation:
http://forums.e-democracy.org/r/topic/hVgJbedNeTPfdIHM9Hj7d
Steven Clift - http://stevenclift.com
Executive Director - http://E-Democracy.Org
Follow me - http://twitter.com/democracy
New Tel: +1.612.234.7072
Steven Clift
Ericsson, Minneapolis
Info about Steven Clift: http://forums.e-democracy.org/p/stevenclift
View all messages on this topic at: http://forums.e-democracy.org/r/topic/4gTh5Ee97rHKs43s0Q6jTi
-----------------------------------------
To post, e-mail: locals@forums.e-democracy.org
Use "Reply-to-All" via e-mail to post publicly.
To leave or for daily digest, type "unsubscribe" or "digest on"
in subject, then send to: locals@forums.e-democracy.org
More information about Locals Online - For hosts of neighborhood e-lists, placeblogs, and community social nets:
http://forums.e-democracy.org/groups/locals
E-Democracy.Org rules: http://e-democracy.org/rules
-----------------------------------------
Technical assistance thanks to our friends at http://OnlineGroups.Net
Join Locals Online from:
http://e-democracy.org/locals
Also follow via Twitter, Facebook, and Web Feed
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Plans for schools
Hi Mr. Roosevelt:
So, any update on getting our kids into our swim pool this summer?
My insight into the PPS changes for Monday news is:
Do open single gender high schools as distinct campuses and;
Westinghouse H S as an all city PUBLIC boys or girls school makes sense. And then use another building - such as Langley or Gladstone or Oliver or old Schenley or Reizenstein - as the school for the other gender.
Eliminate all feeder patterns for PPS high schools.
Do not force single gender public education nor prohibit other families from around the city to not have the option choose it as an alternative to Central Catholic / Oakland Catholic / Ellis. A forced single gender 6 - 12 is not ideal nor E4All-ish.
Mark Rauterkus
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
So, any update on getting our kids into our swim pool this summer?
My insight into the PPS changes for Monday news is:
Do open single gender high schools as distinct campuses and;
Westinghouse H S as an all city PUBLIC boys or girls school makes sense. And then use another building - such as Langley or Gladstone or Oliver or old Schenley or Reizenstein - as the school for the other gender.
Eliminate all feeder patterns for PPS high schools.
Do not force single gender public education nor prohibit other families from around the city to not have the option choose it as an alternative to Central Catholic / Oakland Catholic / Ellis. A forced single gender 6 - 12 is not ideal nor E4All-ish.
Mark Rauterkus
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Fw: Taking Back Government, One Politician at a Time!
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
From: "FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:" <alerts@restoretherepublic.com>
Date: Thu, 17 Jun 2010 09:42:15 -0400
To: Mark Rauterkus<mark@rauterkus.com>
Subject: Taking Back Government, One Politician at a Time!
Taking Back Government, One Politician at a Time!
By Debbie Morgan, Staff Writer, Take Back Washington, June 14, 2010debbie@bridgestonemediagroup.com
The early demise of Pennsylvania Democratic Senator Arlin Spector, Utah Republican Senator Bob Bennett, the Kentucky victory of Rand Paul and the recently faced run-off of Blanche Lincoln cannot be better news to those of us seeking "change we can believe in." Many other incumbents are facing increasingly difficult elections this year, as well. While pundits and other "experts" try to explain what is happening during these ever-increasing rounds of status quo political blows, the people are quite pleased. The obvious question to those in D.C. is "Can you hear us now!?!"
We-the-People, tired of waking up to more losses of liberty, never wanted this kind of "change" and are sending a very loud message to the buddy network at the federal level...Protect our rights or get out of our House! In a recent Washington Post/ABC Poll, only twenty-nine percent of Americans continue to support their present Congressional representatives. That says a lot about how Americans feel they are being represented (or misrepresented!), as it is an all time low for incumbent support. Bloomberg is reporting that a late-May Gallup poll shows that sixty percent of those polled would prefer a candidate that has never run before as opposed to the thirty-two percent of people who would like to see someone with at least some legislative experience.
A Washington Post article states, "This sour mood has made for nervous politicians, as candidates from both parties have tried to figure out what voters want -- and don't want." Really? That means that our REPRESENTATIVES are still not listening! In an effort to enlighten them, let us take a look at a few key things.
First, what does representative mean? The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines it as standing or acting for another especially through delegated authority, constituting a government in which the many are represented by persons chosen from among them usually by election. And to represent means to act in the place of or for usually by legal right, to serve especially in a legislative body by delegated authority usually resulting from election. The first line of the United States Constitution tells representatives whom they will be representing: We-The-People.
What incumbents need to know is that the people are fed up with their utter lack of representation. These politicians do not get elected to go to Washington DC so THEY can decide what is best for us and then cram it down our throats. Let me put it in plain English...Stop deciding for us and just go to DC and protect our rights! THAT is what we elect and pay you to do! Is that so hard to understand?
We know our representatives actually do understand us. The New York Times reported that Democrats are skipping Town Hall meetings this summer because their constituents are still fuming and they don't want another repeat of last year's devastating get-togethers. Why would their constituents still be angry? Because last year's Town Hall meetings saw irate voters livid over the Healthcare debate, and yet, our representatives passed the catastrophic healthcare legislation, anyway. They can be absolutely sure that we remember their lack of concern for our views. Now, is that representation?
The article says that Democratic Party leaders had advised their members to hold "controlled" events, do not engage in unscripted Q&A-type meetings, and get active in the community. The question for these Congressional representatives is, how are you going to know what the people you represent want you to do for them if you are not going to engage them in conversation? While a handful of these elected officials said they thought the meetings last year were informative, they are not repeating their Town Hall meetings this year.
So, what happens now? From the looks of it, the people may get some much-needed new representation in DC. Incumbents are finding it harder and harder to hold on to their seats, as those who have had enough of their Congressmen and women's do-what-we-will attitude are stepping forth and getting involved.
The new film, Don't Tread On Me, has become an invaluable tool to educate the masses as to the role government should play in our lives and the duties of our elected officials. Our country's Founding documents are clear, yet our Congressional representatives continue to let us down. Congress derives its power to govern from the people, not themselves. Their duty is simple...Protect and defend the Constitution against all enemies...ALL enemies. And, for those who may be unsure just who those enemies are, they would be any person or country who would deny us our unalienable right to life, liberty and our pursuit of happiness.
Just to be sure we understand what we are talking about, let us take a look at a few other important terms. Liberty, as defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary means "the quality or state of being free, the power to do as one pleases, freedom from arbitrary or despotic control and the positive enjoyment of various social, political, or economic rights and privileges." The root of the word simply means free. Life, in old English, comes from the word that means to live. Pursuit means the act of pursuing, and to pursue means to engage in. The obsolete definition of Happiness may be the most telling. Happiness used to mean good fortune or prosperity. The present meaning is still good for our purposes, though; the state of being content...well-being, to experience satisfaction or pleasure.
What does all of this tell us? It tells us that our Founding Fathers wanted the inhabitants of this new country to have the inherent right to be free to live our life in good fortune and to be able to experience pleasure and satisfaction or enjoyment in our social, political, and economic rights and privileges...to be content in our free lives. Simple enough!
We have all heard "Constitutional Experts" and others tell us that the Constitution, along with other founding documents, is unclear with regards to what our rights actually are. We have heard it over and over again, it just says you have these "rights," these "inalienable rights," that cannot be taken, but they are not defined. I beg to differ! The Declaration of Independence clearly states that we are given certain unalienable rights. What rights? "That among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." The Constitution says in the opening line that it's stated purpose is to "secure the Blessings of Liberty"...To whom? "To ourselves and our posterity." How much more clearly can this be made?
Since our infamous Congressional representatives cannot understand it, how do we achieve this? Our forefathers laid that out for us, as well...by limiting the central government and retaining as many rights as they could for the State governments and the individual people of the United States. Where can we find this bit of information? Don't Tread On Me poignantly points out that this most important information is listed in our Constitution and our Bill of Rights: most especially our Ninth and Tenth Amendment rights.
I am not Ivy League educated (maybe that is the problem!), but I can tell you this; it took me a couple of afternoons of reading through some of the debates during the writing of the Bill of Rights to understand exactly what our country's framers had in mind for their fellow countrymen and women. So what was that, exactly? To have a section of the world's population who is actually free to be happy and pursue their own interests, unencumbered by government intrusion. This bit of information coincides with the information in Don't Tread On Me, and has brought about a major shift in the consciousness of Americans who are frustrated with the utter lack of their Congressional representation.
The people are getting it as they are beginning to understand what has gone wrong and what it will take to make our country great again. They are forming new groups or joining others that have been around for a while. The Campaign for Liberty, the TEA Party and Restore the Republic comes to mind. They are getting involved with old groups, all in an effort to make a difference. They are paying attention to alternative news...they are waking up and getting involved!
In the face of harsh criticism on the federal level, Arizona Governor Jan Brewer has promoted legislation that will protect her state against the onslaught of illegal immigrants. Citing that the Federal Government would do nothing to secure the Arizona/Mexican border, she took matters into her own hands and asserted her state's right to take care of itself.
In Maine, the Republican Party, at the hands of many dedicated individuals, showed backbone this past May when they rewrote their political platform, returning their State Republican Party to it's Constitutional roots, with an emphasis on retaining its Tenth Amendment rights. Montana and Tennessee were among the first states to tell the federal government that guns manufactured in their respective states, with parts manufactured in their respective states, and that do not cross state borders, are off limits to federal gun laws. Many other states followed suit.
Many states, in fact, are seeing the benefit of asserting their Tenth Amendment right to govern in the manner to which they see fit, without federal strangleholds on the issues that their citizens find important. The Tenth Amendment Center reveals that several states are introducing or passing legislation to re-establish the Tenth Amendment on the state level. From the Firearms debate to Medical Marijuana to Health Freedom to Real ID to Cap and Trade and anything in between, the states are taking charge.
This election cycle is proving to be a very interesting one, as mainstream politicians are realizing that we do, indeed, want that illusive "change we can believe in" and that we were deadly serious during the Town Hall meetings back in 2009. Politicians better start representing the people they serve or they will face a loss of their lucrative little political careers or, for the newcomers, they better represent the people who chose them or their political careers will be VERY short-lived. Let it be known now that we, the people of the United States, will be watching every move you make, and if you plan on representing us, you had better know OUR Constitutional rights and protect them. After all, that IS what we elect you to do!
End Notes:
Don't Tread On Me
http://www.DontTreadOnMeMovie.com/
Voters' support for members of Congress is at an all-time low, poll finds
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/08/AR2010060800016.html?wpisrc=nl_headline
Lincoln Wins in Arkansas; Angle to Face Nevada's Reid
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a_4ex_PG3sMM&pos=8
All definitions are from the Merriam-Webster Dictionary
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary
Democrats Skip Town Halls to Avoid Voter Rage
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/07/us/politics/07townhall.html?nl=us&emc=politicsemailema1
Arizona Enacts Stringent Law on Immigration
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/24/us/politics/24immig.html
Platform of the Maine Republican Party
http://www.mainegop.com/PlatformMission.aspx
Tenth Amendment Center
http://www.tenthamendmentcenter.com/
http://RestoreTheRepublic.com
3149 Dundee Rd #176
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Fw: [Locals] Quality Online Engagement Brainstorm
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
-----Original Message-----
From: Steven Clift <clift@e-democracy.org>
Date: Fri, 18 Jun 2010 07:22:12
To: newswire<newswire@groups.dowire.org>; <locals@forums.e-democracy.org>
Subject: [Locals] Quality Online Engagement Brainstorm
Very useful list!
From: Susanna Haas Lyons to NCDD-DISCUSSION
Hi folks,
Last weekend at Vancouver Change Camp I hosted a session on what is
good quality online deliberation, inspired by the conversations we're
having here, the upcoming NCDD confab, and my ongoing work to explore
the use of digital engagement tools in public participation. (note, we
used engagement, deliberation and participation interchangeably while
also noting that they are very different things!)
Below are the bullet point notes from our session. Three top take aways:
* good quality online engagement has many of the same qualities of
face to face participation
* incorporate a tool to quantify degree of support (gradients) or
dislike to feed into ongoing participation and offline actions
* the question of anonymity, privacy, and legitimate public
representation are contentious and highly relevant to conveners and
participants (we had lots of discussion but nothing close to
resolution on this one!)
enjoy!
Susanna
http://vanchangecamp.wikispaces.com/
What is good online engagement?
* diversity of opinion and people
* star power, hook, reason to get involved
* ladders of engagement for people to be involved at different
time / commitment levels
* process is designed with end-product in mind; clear focus /
direction for the dialogue
* expectations are clear for how and why to participate, and what
to expect from reporting back / responses by conveners
* Designed technically and in structure for receiving / using input
* well organized, tagged entries to support easy navigation, avoid
duplications and facilitate building on each others' ideas
* set up for ongoing reporting and easy analysis at back end
* time to explore ideas before making decisions
* people feel heard
* good facilitation
* ground rules are clear
* value-add for participants, not just conveners
* collaborative
* low technical barriers to entry
* collaborative tone
How to improve online engagement?
* have tool to quantify degree of support (gradients) or dislike,
to measure feedback and feed into offline actions
* limit anonymity to certain levels of engagement (scale up based
on willingness to ID)
* need to protect privacy if want to identify contributor in some way
* need language that reflects people submitting ideas are not
usually those who are making decisions (dialogue, deliberation,
conversations?)
* use principles of adult learning
* geolocate attendees to ensure their voice should be counted as
reflective of community priorities
* have strategy to drive people to the dialogue
* have meaningful content
* be clear: what is your goal? Is it really dialogue?
* custom settings for privacy?
* Use software to collate input
* can't remove need for facilitator
* ensure the structure is iterative and responsive to the
dialogue, and allows branching
* people using forum should set boundaries for appropriate participation
* remember the digital divide – and that some people distrust govt
Tim Bonnemann Added:
Here's a couple of things I'd really like to explore further (maybe
starting with the upcoming Confab call):
* How can we enable participants to help with some of these
activities (e.g. outreach, learning, facilitation, content
synthesizing etc.)?
* How can we design online processes so as to better support the "low
commitment" participants?
Susanna Haas Lyons
Public Participation Consultant | AmericaSpeaks Network Associate
MA Candidate 2011, Institute for Resources, Environment & Sustainability, UBC
Board Member, Canadian Community for Dialogue & Deliberation
susanna.haas.lyons@gmail.com
twitter.com/zannalyons
Steven Clift - http://stevenclift.com
Executive Director - http://E-Democracy.Org
Follow me - http://twitter.com/democracy
New Tel: +1.612.234.7072
Steven Clift
Ericsson, Minneapolis
Info about Steven Clift: http://forums.e-democracy.org/p/stevenclift
View all messages on this topic at: http://forums.e-democracy.org/r/topic/3KsOxMO8KBD2y7bOo2CyuZ
-----------------------------------------
To post, e-mail: locals@forums.e-democracy.org
Use "Reply-to-All" via e-mail to post publicly.
To leave or for daily digest, type "unsubscribe" or "digest on"
in subject, then send to: locals@forums.e-democracy.org
More information about Locals Online - For hosts of neighborhood e-lists, placeblogs, and community social nets:
http://forums.e-democracy.org/groups/locals
E-Democracy.Org rules: http://e-democracy.org/rules
-----------------------------------------
Technical assistance thanks to our friends at http://OnlineGroups.Net
Join Locals Online from:
http://e-democracy.org/locals
Also follow via Twitter, Facebook, and Web Feed
-----Original Message-----
From: Steven Clift <clift@e-democracy.org>
Date: Fri, 18 Jun 2010 07:22:12
To: newswire<newswire@groups.dowire.org>; <locals@forums.e-democracy.org>
Subject: [Locals] Quality Online Engagement Brainstorm
Very useful list!
From: Susanna Haas Lyons to NCDD-DISCUSSION
Hi folks,
Last weekend at Vancouver Change Camp I hosted a session on what is
good quality online deliberation, inspired by the conversations we're
having here, the upcoming NCDD confab, and my ongoing work to explore
the use of digital engagement tools in public participation. (note, we
used engagement, deliberation and participation interchangeably while
also noting that they are very different things!)
Below are the bullet point notes from our session. Three top take aways:
* good quality online engagement has many of the same qualities of
face to face participation
* incorporate a tool to quantify degree of support (gradients) or
dislike to feed into ongoing participation and offline actions
* the question of anonymity, privacy, and legitimate public
representation are contentious and highly relevant to conveners and
participants (we had lots of discussion but nothing close to
resolution on this one!)
enjoy!
Susanna
http://vanchangecamp.wikispaces.com/
What is good online engagement?
* diversity of opinion and people
* star power, hook, reason to get involved
* ladders of engagement for people to be involved at different
time / commitment levels
* process is designed with end-product in mind; clear focus /
direction for the dialogue
* expectations are clear for how and why to participate, and what
to expect from reporting back / responses by conveners
* Designed technically and in structure for receiving / using input
* well organized, tagged entries to support easy navigation, avoid
duplications and facilitate building on each others' ideas
* set up for ongoing reporting and easy analysis at back end
* time to explore ideas before making decisions
* people feel heard
* good facilitation
* ground rules are clear
* value-add for participants, not just conveners
* collaborative
* low technical barriers to entry
* collaborative tone
How to improve online engagement?
* have tool to quantify degree of support (gradients) or dislike,
to measure feedback and feed into offline actions
* limit anonymity to certain levels of engagement (scale up based
on willingness to ID)
* need to protect privacy if want to identify contributor in some way
* need language that reflects people submitting ideas are not
usually those who are making decisions (dialogue, deliberation,
conversations?)
* use principles of adult learning
* geolocate attendees to ensure their voice should be counted as
reflective of community priorities
* have strategy to drive people to the dialogue
* have meaningful content
* be clear: what is your goal? Is it really dialogue?
* custom settings for privacy?
* Use software to collate input
* can't remove need for facilitator
* ensure the structure is iterative and responsive to the
dialogue, and allows branching
* people using forum should set boundaries for appropriate participation
* remember the digital divide – and that some people distrust govt
Tim Bonnemann Added:
Here's a couple of things I'd really like to explore further (maybe
starting with the upcoming Confab call):
* How can we enable participants to help with some of these
activities (e.g. outreach, learning, facilitation, content
synthesizing etc.)?
* How can we design online processes so as to better support the "low
commitment" participants?
Susanna Haas Lyons
Public Participation Consultant | AmericaSpeaks Network Associate
MA Candidate 2011, Institute for Resources, Environment & Sustainability, UBC
Board Member, Canadian Community for Dialogue & Deliberation
susanna.haas.lyons@gmail.com
twitter.com/zannalyons
Steven Clift - http://stevenclift.com
Executive Director - http://E-Democracy.Org
Follow me - http://twitter.com/democracy
New Tel: +1.612.234.7072
Steven Clift
Ericsson, Minneapolis
Info about Steven Clift: http://forums.e-democracy.org/p/stevenclift
View all messages on this topic at: http://forums.e-democracy.org/r/topic/3KsOxMO8KBD2y7bOo2CyuZ
-----------------------------------------
To post, e-mail: locals@forums.e-democracy.org
Use "Reply-to-All" via e-mail to post publicly.
To leave or for daily digest, type "unsubscribe" or "digest on"
in subject, then send to: locals@forums.e-democracy.org
More information about Locals Online - For hosts of neighborhood e-lists, placeblogs, and community social nets:
http://forums.e-democracy.org/groups/locals
E-Democracy.Org rules: http://e-democracy.org/rules
-----------------------------------------
Technical assistance thanks to our friends at http://OnlineGroups.Net
Join Locals Online from:
http://e-democracy.org/locals
Also follow via Twitter, Facebook, and Web Feed
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Arts festival spawns free-speech challenge
Arts festival spawns free-speech challenge: "After state rangers at Point State Park recently stopped two Green Party congressional candidates from soliciting petition signatures and twice told a balloon artist that he needed a permit, the American Civil Liberties Union wrote to the state claiming that it was violating First Amendment rights."
Open Bounties
The OpenOffice.org Documentation project and the OpenOffice.org Community Council are now offering bounties for some specific OpenOffice.org Development documentation projects. These bounties will cover tasks from collecting and sorting development information and documentation, to producing and publishing documentation detailing how you can contribute as an OpenOffice.org developer.Need a summer job?
For more information on what bounties are available and how you can apply for a bounty, please visit http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Documentation/Bounties
Southpointe sport fields fill growing local need
Nice for the suburban kids. Meanwhile, in the city, we get what?
Southpointe sport fields fill growing local need: "With World Cup mania at a fever pitch this week, local entrepreneur Matt Giglotti is thrilled that he decided to take the leap and start his own soccer-related business six months ago.
Mr. Giglotti, 32, of South Fayette, opened the Southpointe Fieldhouse in December after he saw the need for a large, indoor practice field to accommodate the burgeoning number of local soccer and lacrosse teams.
'There was nothing like this in the Pittsburgh area,' said Mr. Giglotti, a longtime boys lacrosse coach and former lacrosse player at Upper St. Clair High School and Penn State University."
East end invite.
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
-----Original Message-----
From: mark.rauterkus@gmail.com
Date: Thu, 17 Jun 2010 13:12:20
To: Tom Kawczynski<quantumquiescence@yahoo.com>
Subject: East end article
Join us for the East End Partnership Focus Group
Thise that live in the East End of Pittsburgh are invited to a discussion about what your neighborhood and community. Please join us for the East End Partnership Focus GroupProject. They want to hear what you have to say to get a sharper picture of how residents feel about the East End and how they identify themselves within the larger fabric of the neighborhoods. Seeking a diverse group of people who have something to say; all are welcome and encouraged. All races/ethnicities, ages, genders, and property holders (business owners, property owners, and renters) are expected.
The focus group will be held at the Penn Fairmont Apartment's 1st floor conference room (5461 Penn Avenue) at 6 pm on June 30 and July 1, 2010.
Food and refreshments to be provided. Contact Rebecca Adelsheim at 412-441-6147 x1 or r.adelsheim@gmail.com if interested in participating. The East End Partnership of Pittsburgh promotes more livable communities in Pittsburgh's East End through collaborative planning, programming, and investment. The Partnership is an alliance of non-profit community organizations that work in the East End neighborhoods of Bloomfield, East Liberty, Friendship, Garfield, and Lawrenceville.
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
-----Original Message-----
From: mark.rauterkus@gmail.com
Date: Thu, 17 Jun 2010 13:12:20
To: Tom Kawczynski<quantumquiescence@yahoo.com>
Subject: East end article
Join us for the East End Partnership Focus Group
Thise that live in the East End of Pittsburgh are invited to a discussion about what your neighborhood and community. Please join us for the East End Partnership Focus GroupProject. They want to hear what you have to say to get a sharper picture of how residents feel about the East End and how they identify themselves within the larger fabric of the neighborhoods. Seeking a diverse group of people who have something to say; all are welcome and encouraged. All races/ethnicities, ages, genders, and property holders (business owners, property owners, and renters) are expected.
The focus group will be held at the Penn Fairmont Apartment's 1st floor conference room (5461 Penn Avenue) at 6 pm on June 30 and July 1, 2010.
Food and refreshments to be provided. Contact Rebecca Adelsheim at 412-441-6147 x1 or r.adelsheim@gmail.com if interested in participating. The East End Partnership of Pittsburgh promotes more livable communities in Pittsburgh's East End through collaborative planning, programming, and investment. The Partnership is an alliance of non-profit community organizations that work in the East End neighborhoods of Bloomfield, East Liberty, Friendship, Garfield, and Lawrenceville.
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Fw: [FTL-Updates] Thinking Liberty Interviews Mark and Ian
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
-----Original Message-----
From: Free Talk Live <ian@freetalklive.com>
Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 19:44:37
To: FTL-Updates<ftl-updates@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [FTL-Updates] Thinking Liberty Interviews Mark and Ian
Last night we joined Bile, Tennyson, Bosco, and Darian on their show,
"Thinking Liberty" for an interview. Hear it here:
http://freetalklive.com/files/thinkingliberty2010-06-15.mp3
Also, Thinking Liberty is the newest show in our lineup on the Liberty
Radio Network, at http://LRN.FM Visit their website at http://thinkingliberty.net
Thanks for listening!
Ian
--
Want to help FTL? AMP at http://amp.freetalklive.com and shop with us at http://amazon.freetalklive.com !
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "FTL-Updates" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to ftl-updates+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://updates.freetalklive.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Free Talk Live <ian@freetalklive.com>
Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 19:44:37
To: FTL-Updates<ftl-updates@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [FTL-Updates] Thinking Liberty Interviews Mark and Ian
Last night we joined Bile, Tennyson, Bosco, and Darian on their show,
"Thinking Liberty" for an interview. Hear it here:
http://freetalklive.com/files/thinkingliberty2010-06-15.mp3
Also, Thinking Liberty is the newest show in our lineup on the Liberty
Radio Network, at http://LRN.FM Visit their website at http://thinkingliberty.net
Thanks for listening!
Ian
--
Want to help FTL? AMP at http://amp.freetalklive.com and shop with us at http://amazon.freetalklive.com !
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "FTL-Updates" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to ftl-updates+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://updates.freetalklive.com
Swimming skills lacking in minority communities | SCNow
Swimming skills lacking in minority communities | SCNow: "Their hair. Their skin. They weren’t allowed. They can’t. They’re black.This summer, again, I'll be teaching swimming at the Kingsley Association. We'll be making swimmers out of people!
There are many reasons — some stereotypical, others downright untrue — for the disparity between blacks and other cultures when it comes to the ability to swim.
A 2010 study conducted by the University of Memphis found that 70 percent of black children have no or very low swimming abilities compared with 40 percent of white children.
And it’s not only African-Americans. The study shows as many as 58 percent of Hispanic children have little or no swimming abilities.
Not knowing how to swim is not a recreational issue, but one of safety, said Sue Anderson, director of programs and services for USA Swimming, who commissioned the university’s swimming study.
USA Swimming partnered with black Olympic gold medalist Cullen Jones to offer the Make A Splash program, which aims to reduce the risk of drowning among minority children.
Statistics show three times more minorities drown than Caucasians, she said.
“Our whole thing is messaging. The first thing is making people aware that this is a huge issue. It’s sort of a silent epidemic,” she said. “Seventy percent — that’s seven out of 10.”
Lack of swimming skills among blacks is well known in the African-American community. But what isn’t widely known are the real reasons why.
Until the 1970s, many public pools were segregated and there were few or no ample facilities for blacks.
“I think we can definitely look back to a time in our history where minorities weren’t welcomed at swimming pools,” Anderson said. “And the best place to learn how to swim is in a pool. I think we have to look back and say, ‘What about all those years minorities weren’t welcomed at swimming pools?’”
Now that there are swimming pools available to everyone, there are still generations within families of people who don’t know how to swim.
Black and Hispanic children are six times more likely to be members of a family with no swimmers, according to the study.
“You can say that’s cultural, but it’s mostly because the parent’s never learned to swim, and so it keeps repeating itself,” Anderson said. “If you don’t teach your children how to swim, your grandchildren are at risk of drowning.”
Children with parents who don’t know how to swim often don’t get enrolled in swimming lessons, she said.
In white communities, it is customary and considered the norm for children to take swimming lessons, Anderson said. This, she said, is one of the reasons for the disparity between the groups.
But there are signs the tide is turning, Anderson said. USA Swimming works with competitive minority teams in Detroit, Anderson said.
Many of the team members have parents who cannot swim, but yet those same parents allow their children to take swimming lessons, she said.
“That was sort of bucking the trend, which is awesome. But I said, ‘You need to go talk to your brothers and sisters and your neighbors and make sure their kids can swim,’” Anderson said. “Parental encouragement is hugely important. Most kids don’t bring themselves to a pool for swimming lessons.”
Florence resident Josie Little doesn’t know how to swim, but has enrolled her 7- and 3-year-old children in swimming lessons at the Florence Family YMCA.
“I’ve tried swimming lessons as a child, but I always feared the water, so when I had my son, I felt the need for him to learn how to swim, just in case there’s a problem and I can’t save him. I want him to be able to take care of himself,” she said.
Statistics show fear is the main reason why many minorities never learn to swim.
“I think about (learning to swim) every summer, I’m looking at my son and I’m really impressed,” Little said. “I don’t know of too many African-Americans that can truly, truly swim in water.”
Anderson said there are other reasons besides fear, such as cost and pool availability and even hair, which many black women said is a huge factor.
In the study, many African-American’s said they never learned to swim because of their hair and skin.
Florence resident Krystle White, an African-American, agrees with the study’s findings.
“For black women, it’s not as easy. When we get our hair wet, it’s a long process … a lot of us don’t like going through that,” White said.
Sherry R. Bess, a hair stylist and cosmetology instructor, said many of her black clients have expressed concerned over swimming and their hair. Many black women choose to use a chemical process, called a relaxer or perm, to straighten their naturally tight curls.
“The chlorine and the relaxer don’t agree,” she said. “It can lead to dryness in the hair and damage.”
Each person’s hair is different, but spending just a few hours in a pool can adversely affect relaxed hair, Bess said. Taking regular swims will most certainly damage hair, she added.
“If you swim every day, you won’t have any hair to worry about,” White said
Bess said many black women believe exposure to water or sweat will cause the relaxer to leave their hair and their curls to return.
“I don’t know where that information comes from. You can’t sweat it out. Once it’s in there, it’s in there,” she said. “Some clients ask me after they get a relaxer when they can shampoo their hair. I tell them you can shampoo your hair today if you like. Your relaxer isn’t going anywhere.“
African-Americans who swim with their natural curls and no chemicals still have their own battle to fight.
Using flat irons and blow dryers daily to straighten curls after a swim is damaging, Bess said.
“I wouldn’t recommend applying heat daily. That’s like sitting out in the sun with no sunscreen. It’s too much heat,” she said.
Many blacks believe their hair is “different” from that of whites and somehow more delicate.
In general, that’s not the case, Bess said.
“Hair is hair. It’s all in how you take care of it,” she said. “If you want your hair to do right by you, you have to do right by your hair.”
Chlorine is no friend to hair, period, no matter the race, and it must be removed as soon as possible after swimming by washing, Bess said.
Many black women find this time-consuming and difficult, as many are in the habit of just washing their hair once a week, she said.
“I have clients who wash their hair every two weeks, and that’s really stretching it,” Best said. “Caucasians wash their hair every day and I recommend that my clients wash their hair twice a week.”
Bottom line, Bess said, if you swim, you must wash the chlorine from your hair, preferably with a shampoo and conditioner designed to remove chlorine.
No matter the reason, it is important for all children and adults to be taught how to swim from a certified swim instructor.
USA Swimming has partnerships with many agencies cross the country to bring reduce-cost swimming lessons to communities.
For more information on swimming safety, visit http://www.poolsafely.gov/ , and for more information on Make a Splash, visit http://www.makeasplash.org/.
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Work to begin on E. Liberty Target
Work to begin on E. Liberty Target: "The URA supplied $14.1 million for site development, including a $10 million U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development loan and a $2 million HUD grant."
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