LET US IN! Keep Big Money out of Government.

George Washington did not want to have political parties. He thought they would become divisive and corrupt and fail to
represent the will of the people. Well, that was before BIG MEDIA got involved. Owned by massive conglomerates, the
"news" is no longer objective and in-depth, but carries out the
message of its biggest owners.

The environment and the economic welfare of the American
people is in dire jeopardy, yet squabbling on one side and
cowardice on the other, have created leadership that will not
take a moral stand.

I hope to change all that. I encourage every ordinary, sensible,
thoughtful person to run for office- local, PTO, state level- it doesn't matter. Petitions won't create change. Demonstrations will be censored by the mainstream media. LET US IN!

Monday, October 31, 2011

Stop Bullying!

Get on the map! When you take the Stop Bullying: Speak Up pledge you are added to our “I Spoke Up” national map. Take the pledge now and spread the word: http://on.fb.me/nljOsM
Bullying hurts our kids. It can have a lasting and damaging impact on their lives – sometimes more than we realize. Our goal is to raise awareness of the simple, yet powerful actions that parents, kids, and educators can take to prevent bullying. We hope to inspire millions of bystanders to take action by speaking up when they see bullying and to grow a community committed to ending bullying.

Remember the millions of kids who walk through an endless gauntlet of teasing and bullying at school. But also remember that bullying is a reflection on our selfish and competitive culture, which is not one of cooperation, gentleness and empathy-but cut-throat selfishness. See our political system. Kids act out what they see.

Danger- Mercury! (even I have a high level)

www.change.org
  Mercury is a toxic substance that pollutes our environment through airborne releases from coal-fired power plants, cement manufacturers,...
 
 
From Rebecca Jim, LEAD organizer of the Tar Sands disaster site in Oklahoma, home to several native peoples.

CHRONIC ILLNESS is the National Health Crisis- 7 TRUTHS

1. Chronic disease is the #1 cause of death and disability

2. 75% of US national health care spending goes to caring for people with chronic illness--yet we only have emergency rooms, where chronically ill people languish for hours, even die, waiting for their "emergency", especially if they are on Medicare or have been to that ER before

3. The doubling of obesity from 1987 to today accounts for 25% of the rise of health costs

4. Most chronic cases could be much better managed

5. 45% of all American have at least one chronic illness

6. The overall cost, including loss of employment, is about $1 trillion annually

7. Modest changes in unhealthy habits could prevent 40 million of these chronic cases

KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE SCANDAL

act.credoaction.com
Fourteen Senators and Representatives just called for an investigation into the State Department's sham review of the Keystone XL pipeline, which has been wrought with improper ties, bias and conflict of interest. Sign the petition to help stop this crime in progress.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Banks had a Foreclosure Mill Party! Where is Justice Sold?

This is unacceptable. If you didn't already know the people involved in the mortgage foreclosure scandals were unscrupulous, just take a look at these photos. Millions have lost their homes. Thousands have been arrested in Occupy protests nationwide and not a singe banker has gone to jail for crimes that led to the financial crisis. In Oakland, an Iraqi vet was badly hurt by the police.
tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com
A New York Times opinion column from Joe Nocera out on Saturday tells the story of last year’s Halloween Party at the law firm of Steven J. Baum, a law practice outside Buffalo that the column refers to as a “foreclosure mill.” The firm thought that they would celebrate last Halloween by throwing a ...

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Tar Creek, Oklahoma and Tar Sands oil pollution-HUGE sources of polution

It's working! Pressure from CREDO activists who mounted a huge protest at the president's fundraiser in San Francisco Tuesday followed by Tar Sands Action activists who interrupted the president at an event in Denver is getting the attention of the White House.

Click LIKE if you would like Pres. Obama to take action to stop climate change and deny the presidential permit necessary to build the Keystone XL pipeline!
www.huffingtonpost.com
DENVER — President Barack Obama said Wednesday his administration has made no decision on whether a Canadian company can proceed with plans for a transnational oil pipeline to Texas. A protester during Obama's appearance at the University of Colorado Denver yelled out that the president should...

Americans is Massive Drug Users-Helped by their Banks!

‎4 years after the passage of the Merida Initiative, little progress has been made in tampering the flow of cross-border drugs, weapons, and — most importantly — money. “What I found was that it is coming into the United States, into the banking system,” says journalist Ed Vulliamy. Are big American banks the next targets of the war on drugs?
www.democracynow.org
With approximately $23 billion a year in illicit drug revenues coming from the United States, what do the Mexican cartels do with all that money? Democracy Now! spoke with Ed Vulliamy, author of “Amexica: War Along the Borderline,” who found it may be closer to home than most think.

Even in 1961, women banned from running distances

A Leading Pioneer

Christopher Capozziello for The New York Times
Dr. Julia Chase-Brand jogging last week. She will run the Manchester Road Race on Thanksgiving Day. “Finishing that race was a defining moment for me,” she said of the 1961 race.
NEW LONDON, Conn. — Except for a strategic bit of elastic that may be required, the blue running tunic, circa Smith College 1961, still fits. It will be worn again a half-century later, this time in celebration and tribute rather than defiance.
United Press International
Fifty years ago, Dr. Julia Chase-Brand defied the A.A.U., and convention, by running the famed Manchester Road Race.
On Thanksgiving Day, Dr. Julia Chase-Brand, 69, plans to run a 4.75-mile race in Manchester, Conn., where the presence of women will be plentiful and unremarkable. Fifty years ago, when she and two other women ran there the first time, it was a widely publicized act of civil disobedience that became a pioneering moment in female distance running in the United States.
In 1961, the Amateur Athletic Union prohibited American women from competing officially in road races. When sympathetic race organizers allowed them entry, their results did not count. Even in the Olympics, women were not allowed to run more than a half-mile lest, it was believed, they would risk their femininity and reproductive health. The most alarmist officials warned that a woman who ran a more likely chance to have her uterus fall out.

Monday, October 24, 2011

PORTLAND FARMERS MARKET SUPPORTS FOOD DAY

Food Day is committed to: 1. Reduce diet-related disease by promoting healthy foods 2. Support sustainable farms & cut subsidies to agribusiness 3. Expand access to food and end hunger 4. Protect the environment & animals by reforming factory farms 5. Promote health by curbing junk-food marketing to kids Find us on twitter @CSPI

Union of Concerned Scientists Support Local Food-Tell Congress!

Celebrate Food Day by Telling Congress to Support Local Food

3 Comments | Posted October 24, 2011 | 11:10 AM (EST)
2011-10-24-PingreeAtOrchard.jpg.JPG
In June, Maine Rep. Chellie Pingree (left) met with farmers in her state, including Jack and Ellen McAdam, the owners of McDougal Orchards in Sanford. (Photo courtesy of Rep. Pingree)

Saturday, October 22, 2011

ONE LESS BENGAL TIGER IS A GIANT LOSS FOR US

Re the wild animals in OHIO--It was appalling. And worse yet, it wasn't illegal. And other worse yet, the cops had
been there a million times and never shut him down! A Bengal tiger? Only 2,400 left in the world, one in this guy's sleazy backyard??
Alice James for Prez is not happy with these state laws or states with no laws to protect wild animals. If elected, I promise to increase supervision and care of all animals in our custody. For example, what has happened to our songbirds? As Public television states "Songbirds are the harbinger of our future. When they can no longer survive, neither can we."
Here's to an October that has been 5 degrees above average so far.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

GREEN COMPANIES, IBM first. OBAMA last.

When Newsweek ran its first Green Rankings two years ago, climate change was high on the agenda. The U.S. House had passed a cap-and-trade bill to put a price on carbon, and the world’s biggest economies were about to make history with an agreement to cut greenhouse-gas emissions.

Since then, green momentum has seriously stalled, at least in the public sector. The U.N. Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen at the end of 2009 ended without an agreement, and climate science in the U.S. has been politicized by Tea Partiers and others. A skeptical Congress, plus the on-going economic downturn, have made environmental regulations a tough sell. Elsewhere in the world, there is some movement—such as in Australia, where the lower house has just passed a carbon tax—but it’s slow.
If governments are hesitating, many of the globe’s big companies missed the memo. Top-ranked companies are approaching green projects with increasing tenacity, even in this weak economy. Corporate sustainability, it seems, is here for the long haul—it makes sense not just for the sake of the planet, but for business. “Big companies have decided that this is a long-term play,” says Thomas Lyon, a professor at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business.
For corporate executives, what matters is that waste cuts into profits, and that reducing wasted energy, for example, curbs greenhouse-gas emissions while bolstering the bottom line. We face a future in which resources that were once taken for granted—water, land, minerals, fossil fuels—will be limited and costly. Preparing now to succeed in—and even profit from—that difficult future could make all the difference. “We don’t expect a clear-cut policy in the U.S. any time soon,” says Mark Vachon, who leads the Ecomagination program at GE, No. 63 on the U.S. list. “But that doesn’t mean we ought to put our pencils down. In fact, having business lead in this space might be exactly what we should do.”
greenest-international-companies-tease

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Solar Panels can be built in your home this Winter! do it!

Solar Power

Solar PV rapidly becoming the cheapest option to generate electricity

58
For a long time, the holy grail of solar photovoltaics (PV) has been "grid parity," the point at which it would be as cheap to generate one's own solar electricity as it is to buy electricity from the grid. And that is indeed an important market milestone, being achieved now in many places around the world. But recently it has become clear that PV is set to go beyond grid parity and become the cheapest way to generate electricity.
Whenever I say this I encounter incredulity, even vehement opposition, from friends and foes of renewable energy alike. Apparently, knowledge of the rapid developments of the last few years has not been widely disseminated. But it's happening, right under our noses! It is essential to understand this so that we can leverage it to rapidly switch to a global energy system fully based on renewable energy.
Solar cells.A hundred solar cells, good for 380 watts of solar PV power.Photo: Ariane van DijkWorking on solar PV energy at Ecofys since 1986, I have seen steady progression: efficiency goes up, cost goes down. But it was only on a 2004 visit to Q-Cells' solar cell factory in Thalheim, Germany, that it dawned on me that PV could become very cheap indeed. They gave me a stack of 100 silicon solar cells, each capable of producing 3.8 watts of power in full sunshine. I still have it in the office; it's only an inch high!
That's when I realized how little silicon was needed to supply the annual electricity consumption of an average European family (4,000 kWh). Under European solar radiation, it would take 1,400 cells, totaling less than 30 pounds of silicon.
Of course, you need to cover the cells with some glass and add a frame, a support structure, some cables, and an inverter. But the fact that 30 pounds of silicon, an amount that costs $700 to produce, is enough to generate a lifetime of household electricity baffled me. Over 25 years, the family would pay at least $25,000 for the same 100,000 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity from fossil fuels -- and its generation cost alone would total over $6,000!

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Mine the Grand Canyon????

summitcountyvoice.com
Latest Republican public lands attack aimed at Interior Secretary Ken Salazar's efforts to protect Grand Canyon watershed By Summit Voice SUMMIT COUNTY — Republican lawmakers this week cont...
 
 
From Credo mobile....

Finally! A small US company gears up for green energy parts!

The U.S. wind market has lured auto parts maker ZF Friedrichshafen to Georgia to manufacture wind turbine gearboxes. http://ow.ly/6Y1om
ow.ly
ZF Friedrichshafen AG, a manufacturer of automotive transmissions, will build its first wind turbine gearboxes in Gainesville, Georgia.

BOYCOTT THE PIPELINE AND WHAT'S WRONG WITH OBAMA?

This essay was originally published on TomDispatch and is republished here with Tom's kind permission.
For connoisseurs, Barack Obama's fund-raising emails for the 2012 election campaign seem just a tad forlorn -- slightly limp reminders of the last time 'round.
Four years ago at this time, the early adopters among us were just starting to get used to the regular flow of email from the Obama campaign. The missives were actually exciting to get, because they seemed less like appeals for money than a chance to join a movement.
Sometimes they came with inspirational videos from Camp Obama, especially the volunteer training sessions staged by organizing guru Marshall Ganz. Here's a favorite of mine, where a woman invokes Bobby Kennedy and Cesar Chavez and says that, as the weekend went on, she "felt her heart softening," her cynicism "melting," her determination building. I remember that feeling, and I remember clicking time and again to send another $50 off to fund that people-powered mission. (And I recall knocking on a lot of New Hampshire doors, too, with my 14-year-old daughter.)
It's no wonder, then, that I'm still on the email list. But I haven't been clicking through this time. Not even when Barack Obama himself asked me to "donate $75 or more today to be automatically entered for a chance to join me for dinner." Not even when campaign manager Jim Messina pointed out that, though "the president has very little time to spend on anything related to the campaign ... this is how he chooses to spend it -- having real, substantive conversations with people like you" over the dinner you might just win. (And if you do win, you'll be put on a plane to "Washington, or Chicago, or wherever he might be that day.")
Not even when deputy campaign manager Jen O'Malley Dillon offered to let me "take ownership of this campaign" by donating to it and, as an "added bonus," possibly find myself "across the table from the president." Not even when Michelle lowered the entry price from $75 to $25 and offered this bit of reassurance: "Just relax. Barack wants this dinner to be fun, and he really loves getting to know supporters like you." Not even when, hours before an end-of-September fund-raising "deadline," Barack himself dropped the asking price to $3. God, have a little self-respect, man! Three dollars?
Here's the thing I'm starting to think Obama never understood: Yes, for most of us, the 2008 campaign was partly about him, but it was more about the campaign itself -- about the sudden feeling of power that gripped a web-enabled populace, who felt themselves able to really, truly hope. Hope that maybe they'd found a candidate who would escape the tried-and-true money corruption of Washington.
None of us gave $50 hoping for a favor. Quite the opposite. You gave $50 hoping that, for the first time in a long while in American politics, no one would get a favor. And the candidate, it must be said, led us on. His rhetorical flights were dazzling -- to environmentalists like me, he promised to "free this nation from the tyranny of oil once and for all," and pledged that his administration would mark the moment when "the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal."
Once in office, it was inevitable that he'd disappoint us to some degree. In fact, we knew the disappointment would come and braced ourselves for it. After all, our movement was up against the staggering power of vested corporate and financial interests. It's hard to beat big money. Still, we didn't mind thinking: Yes, we can. We'll work hard. We've got your back. Let's go!
What we completely missed was that Obama didn't want us at his back -- that the minute the campaign was over he would cut us adrift, jettison the movement that had brought him to power. Instead of using all those millions of people to force through ambitious health care proposals or serious climate legislation or [fill in the blank yourself here], he governed as the opposite of a movement candidate.
He clearly had not the slightest interest in keeping that network activated and engaged. Though we had brought him to the party, it was as if he didn't really want to dance with us. Instead -- however painful the image may be -- he wanted to dance with Larry Summers. (Fund-raising idea: I'd pay $75 to be assured I never had to have dinner with Summers.)
As the months of his administration rolled into years, he only seemed to grow less interested in movements of any sort. Before long, people like Tom Donahue, president and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, were topping the list of the most frequent visitors to the White House. And that was before this winter, when -- after they'd been the biggest contributors to GOP congressional candidates -- Obama went on bended knee to Chamber headquarters, apologizing that he hadn't brought a fruitcake along as a gift. (What is it with this guy and food? At any rate, he soon gave them a far better present, hiring former Chamber insider Bill Daley as his chief of staff.)
Now, his popularity tanking, Obama and his advisors talk about "tacking left" for the election. A nice thought, but maybe just a little late.
Increasingly, it seems to me, those of us who were ready to move with him four years ago are deciding to leave normal channels and find new forms of action. Here's an example: By year's end, the president has said he will make a decision on the Keystone XL pipeline, which would carry crude oil from the tar sands of northern Alberta to the Gulf of Mexico. The nation's top climate scientists sent the administration a letter indicating that such a development would be disastrous for the climate. NASA's James Hansen, the government's top climate researcher, said heavily tapping tar-sands oil, a particularly "dirty" form of fossil fuel, would mean "game over for the climate." Ten of the president's fellow recent Nobel Peace Prize laureates pointed out in a letter that blocking the prospective pipeline would offer him a real leadership moment, a "tremendous opportunity to begin transition away from our dependence on oil, coal, and gas."
But every indication from this administration suggests that it is prepared to grant the necessary permission for a project that has the enthusiastic backing of the Chamber of Commerce, and in which the Koch Brothers have a "direct and substantial interest." And not just backing. To use the words of a recent New York Times story, they are willing to "flout the intent of federal law" to get it done. Check this out as well: The State Department, at the recommendation of Keystone XL pipeline builder TransCanada, hired a second company to carry out the environmental review. That company already considered itself a "major client" of TransCanada. This is simply corrupt, potentially the biggest scandal of the Obama years. And here's the thing: It's a crime still in progress. Watching the president do nothing to stop it is endlessly depressing.
For many of us, it's been an overdue wake-up call, a sharp reminder of just who the president was really listening to. In midsummer, several leaders of the environmental movement, myself included, put out a call for nonviolent civil disobedience at the White House over the upcoming Keystone pipeline decision. And more people -- 1,253 in total -- showed up to be arrested than at anytime in the last 40 years. (One reason Obama's emails stink this time around: The guy who used to write many of them, Elijah Zarlin, not only isn't working for the campaign anymore, but got hauled off in a paddy wagon.)
Bare months have past and already that arrest record is being threatened, thank heavens, by the forces of #OccupyWallStreet, a movement that includes plenty more of the kind of people who rallied so enthusiastically behind Obama back in 2008.
Obama had mojo when he knew it wasn't about him, that it was about change. But when you promise change, you have to deliver. His last best opportunity may come with that Keystone Pipeline decision, which he can make entirely by himself, without our inane Congress being able to get in the way. So on Nov. 6th, exactly one year before the election, we're planning to circle the White House with people. And the signs we'll be carrying will simply be quotes from his last campaign -- all that stuff about the tyranny of big oil and the healing of the planet.
Our message will be simple: If you didn't mean it, you shouldn't have said it. If you did, here's the chance to prove it. Nix the pipeline.

Bill McKibben is founder of 350.org and Schumann Distinguished Professor at Middlebury College in Vermont. He also serves on Grist's Board of Directors.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Support Occupy Wall Street! Keep it going! LET US IN!

‎1) If a financial institution is too big to fail, it is too big to exist.
2) Put a cap on credit card interest rates to end usury.
3) The Federal Reserve needs to provide small businesses in America with the same low-interest loans it gave to foreign banks.
4) Stop Wall Street oil speculators from artificially increasing gasoline and heating oil prices.
5) Demand that Wall Street invest in the job-creating productive economy, instead of gambling on worthless derivatives.
6) Establish a Wall Street speculation fee on credit default swaps, derivatives, stock options and futures.
www.commondreams.org
The Occupy Wall Street protests are shining a national spotlight on the most powerful, dangerous, and secretive economic and political force in America. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT)

Prevent Coal Air Pollution!

This lawsuit against the Obama Administration is necessary and likely to be successful. Most of these same groups sued the Bush Administration for explicitly disregarding the advice of EPA scientists, and setting an easy standard for ozone that has cost tens of thousands of lives, but withdrew the suit after Obama promised tough standards.

Please click if you want ozone standards that protect public health.
www.earthjustice.org
Public health and conservation groups today filed a lawsuit against the Obama Administration for rejecting stronger ozone standards that scientists say are needed to save lives and prevent thousands of hospital visits. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed the stronger standards al...

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Job-cutting Malpractices!

First they came for the home health care aides. Then they laid off teachers. And now they want to replace firefighters with prisoners. Some governors and legislators simply have no sense of dignity or shame.


www.thinkprogress.org
Forcing prison inmates to work as unpaid laborers is not a new practice, but GOP-controlled states are increasing taking the idea to extremes as they face budget shortfalls and refuse to raise taxes. Under Gov. Scott Walker (R-WI) anti-collective bargaining law, at least one Wisconsin county replace...

Monday, October 10, 2011

BIKE IT UP!


Did You Know?
 
1964 -- 50% of U.S. kids rode bikes to school, obesity rate among children: 12%. 2004 -- 3% rode to school, obesity rate: 45% LOCATE BIKE-FRIENDLY TOWNS AND CAR-FREE ZONES!

Sunday, October 9, 2011

From--www.bycycling.com


America's Best Bike Cities
Five Up-and-Coming Bike Cities
New York City, Albuquerque, Long Beach, Cleveland and Miami are the wave of the future.
ByBicycling
Number 8: New York City

Typical Big Apple: It wants to be the best—now. In terms of bikeability, it's succeeding.

By Loren Mooney

How do you ensure safe bike travel on streets where drivers run more than one million red lights a day, pedestrians jaywalk like ants on a trampled hill, and cyclists—yes, we're at fault too—take signals, lane markings and one-way signs as mere suggestions?

You start over. "We are reengineering the streets," says Janette Sadik-Khan, commissioner of the department of transportation. The city is working on "perhaps the most ambitious scope and timeline ever" for creating bike-friendly streets, she says. Since 2006, the city has added more than 200 miles of bike lanes, nearly doubling what was there ("Portland has 200 miles total," Sadik-Khan notes); New York City also put in 6,100 racks and 20 bike shelters and distributed more than 23,000 free helmets. In 2007, Sadik-Khan's team set a goal of doubling the number of daily cyclists by 2015, but the rise has been so dramatic—up 45 percent in just two years—that it has moved the goal to 2012. "There are more bike commuters in Brooklyn alone than there are in the city of San Francisco," says Sadik-Khan, citing figures from the U.S. Census's 2008 American Community Survey.

Most significantly, the city added more than 4 miles of Copenhagen, Denmark-style protected bike lanes—where a curb on one side separates you from pedestrians and a curb or row of parked cars on the other protects you from traffic. "We saw a 50 percent reduction in bike and pedestrian accidents and injuries within a year of installing them," says Sadik-Khan. The lanes also prevent illegal parking and discourage jaywalkers.

Last fall, the city council passed a law requiring freight-elevator-equipped buildings to allow bike access, easing theft concerns. Next up: another 12-plus miles of protected lanes on the East Side, possibly by October. At this rate it won't be long before riding in New York City is, dare we say, easy.
RELATED CONTENT

Saturday, October 8, 2011

NYC Mayor is #12 on richest Americans list! OCCUPY Wall Street- LET US IN

No need to ask "Which side are you on?" NYC's Mayor Michael Bloomberg: Net Worth of $19.5 billion as of September 2011 and #12 on Forbes list of 400 richest Americans.
www.commondreams.org
The New York mayor, Michael Bloomberg, has accused the Occupy Wall Street protesters of trying to destroy jobs in the city.

I SUPPORT 'OCCUPY WALL STREET!'

Confronting the Malefactors

There’s something happening here. What it is ain’t exactly clear, but we may, at long last, be seeing the rise of a popular movement that, unlike the Tea Party, is angry at the right people.
Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
Paul Krugman

Related in Opinion

ROOM FOR DEBATE

Is It Effective to Occupy Wall Street?

The protesters are getting more attention and expanding outside New York. What are they doing right, and what are they missing?

Readers’ Comments

"Power to the people. The little people."
George Hoffman, Stow, Ohio
When the Occupy Wall Street protests began three weeks ago, most news organizations were derisive if they deigned to mention the events at all. For example, nine days into the protests, National Public Radio had provided no coverage whatsoever.
It is, therefore, a testament to the passion of those involved that the protests not only continued but grew, eventually becoming too big to ignore. With unions and a growing number of Democrats now expressing at least qualified support for the protesters, Occupy Wall Street is starting to look like an important event that might even eventually be seen as a turning point.
What can we say about the protests? First things first: The protesters’ indictment of Wall Street as a destructive force, economically and politically, is completely right.


Friday, October 7, 2011

PLAYING FOR CHANGE IS THE ALICE JAMES' CAMPAIGN SONG GROUP

RIP Steve Jobs, you helped make so much possible in our world, including this video, One Love http://youtu.be/4xjPODksI08
Consider the line by Bob Marley: Happy are those whose chances grow thinner, they know there's no hiding place from the great creator.
 "STAND BY ME" --remains my favorite

These women are so brave and humble--Inspriational! Loved Desmond Tutu's dance!

Amazing. Three women share this year's Nobel Peace Prize.
latimesblogs.latimes.com
Nobel Peace Prize: The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded to three women from Africa and the Middle East who symbolized the nonviolent struggle to improve their nations and advance women's rights throughout the world.