Uncategorized

I’m Running out of Good Names to Call These People

Gingrich:

GINGRICH: Well, I got a very funny e-mail from a retired military officer in Tampa who pointed out that most tire inflation is done at service stations and you pay for it. And it’s actually a higher profit margin than selling gasoline. So Sen. Obama was urging you to go out and enrich Big Oil by inflating your tires instead of buying gas.

Errr…I go down to the QuikTrip and they don’t charge me for air. Neither do the other places locally.  I’m sure somewhere they do, but Think Progress is over analyzing the whole thing. Newt Gingrich doesn’t know what the hell he’s talking about.  And when the do the safety checks here in Missouri, the put the air in as part of the check.

Discourse getting stupider….

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVZKbjfAGu4[/youtube]

Today’s Tosser: Shimkus

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RSJkd4llLA[/youtube]

You know, if drilling is good, drilling and mining is better. … It’s drilling and mining and using great resources like Illinois coal. You all follow the congressional baseball game. I wore this uniform proudly. It says, ‘The Miners.’ The mining industry and coal is part of the solution.

Drilling is not so good though. The reality is the US doesn’t have the reserves that nitwits like Shimkus try and claim we have.

The problem of claiming coal is the solution is that for it to be the solution, one would have to believe that electric cars are the future and the Republicans are insisting that we just need to drill more and fighting renewable incentives. Illinois relies on two basic forms of electrical power generation: coal and nuclear.  Coal has problems with global warming, air quality, and water quality.  Perhaps we can solve some of those problems with research. Nuclear has no where to put the waste as the day that Yucca opens, it’s full and we don’t have another spot.  This raises the question for Shimkus, of how this solves any problems whatsoever given the current Illinois economy is based on coal and nuclear and the only way to move more energy usage towards coal in terms of legislation is to promote alternative fuel and electric cars which the Republican minority is specifically rejecting.

The discourse keeps getting dumber.  If only people could do math.

Now, there are many problems with coal environmentally and it will be in the mix, but it’s not renewable and it’s not clean meaning it’s not sustainable in the long run.   If one wanted to put the money towards the best usage for a research dollar renewables make far more sense.

McCain Continues to Try and Privatize the VA

Why?  Duckworth responds

“John McCain has said that improving veterans’ health care would be his top domestic priority as President, yet he has repeatedly voted against increased funding for veterans health care.  And now he offers up an plastic card option that will lead to privatization of veterans health care. No one knows how to help and heal veterans like veterans — had I ended up in a regular hospital after returning from Iraq, I would lost my arm. McCain’s plan will only hurt the VA and our veterans more than they are already hurting.”

The urge to privatize is rather bizarre given the VA is able to specialize in common problems such as PTSD that don’t have enough cases in the general population for specialization.  The VA is the only institution well suited to caring for a large number of PTSD cases or other common injuries from combat.

Meeks Is Getting Better At This

Pretty much everything today is via Rich since I started there at midnight.

Kristin McQueary interviews him asking him questions from the feedback she received from her last column on Meeks and education funding.  She took some flack over at Capitol Fax for the tone of the questions, but she explicitly states she is using feedback from readers to shape the questions–a perfectly reasonable method:

Q: Why aren’t parents in low-income school districts taking more responsibility for their kids’ education?

A: These parents are also products of the same system. The system undereducated them. The system was not well funded when they went through it, so they received an inferior education and it reduced their life options. College was not an option. Now they’re in the workplace, and they have to be a waitress or some menial job that doesn’t pay much. That’s why they’re low income. That’s why they ain’t livin’ in Winnetka.

Q: But parents should be more responsible for their kids’ education.

A: That misses the point. Even if parents in New Trier had to operate on Chicago Public Schools’ budget, they would lose $31 million. They could not provide the same education today with a $31 million hole in the budget. Multiply that by 25 years and you get all the social ills we have. They couldn’t do it, even with two parents.

Q:Throwing money at the schools is not going to solve the problem.

A: I beg to differ. Ask Linda Yonke (New Trier’s superintendent) if she didn’t have that extra $7,000 per pupil, could she do the job she is doing today? She will tell you that money matters. Don’t let anybody tell you money does not matter. They have training coaches for kids taking the ACT test and ACT prep courses and 17 students in a class. When Thornton or Fenger high school students take the ACTs, that’s the first time students sat down with it. Money matters because they have a coach and aquatics and microbiology.

Also, the school that feeds into New Trier spends $21,000 per student. Those kids come prepared. They don’t need remedial courses. They are all (Advanced Placement) when they come there..

ACT Prep courses are quite important method to getting lower income students into college.  If a student is not familiar with the test and test taking strategies, they don’t do as well. Some kids in suburban schools have private tutors let alone ACT/SAT prep classes.  That’s a huge advantage and that’s only on a preparation class, not everything that comes before that.

Q: But back to the parents, do you admit they play a more important role than the school?

A: I am not going to let this discussion go in the way people are trying to take it. They’re trying to take this into family responsibility. We have two-parent families in our congregation, a mother and a father, who insist their kids do their homework; who take their children to school; who know who is on the local school council. But if the school doesn’t have the resources to do the job, it makes no difference the commitment level of the parent.

For people who want this argument to degenerate into a family argument is not right, and it’s not fair.

This is one of the dumber arguments. Even if parents do the best job they can, their kids aren’t in classes with kids as prepared as the well off suburbs.  That alone is a handicap as students tend to do better when surrounded by students well prepared by school.  This means that by accident of birth, some students get a better education by being around students better prepared.  Using money to overcome that disadvantage shouldn’t be that controversial.  It may not be smaller classes (only a marginal effect if one is talking between 17 and 30 students), but a student with fewer resources and parents who may be trying, but are less prepared can utilize extra tutoring and year around school.

For that matter, think about Duncan’s current idea to create boarding schools. The boarding schools would be designed to provide a stable safe environment for kids to attend school, have a structured life, and have positive role models.  What’s the hold-up?  Money.  Duh.

Emil Is Stepping Down

And the story breaks the night before my daughters first day in Kindergarten.

Anyway, go over to Rich’s and check out his stuff.

Initial thoughts–Ricky Hendon will never be Senate President.

Rich beat me to the 1981 reference of the Banana Republic.

The Governor has to be in full scale panic to not have Emil covering his backside for two years.

The Governor is probably delusionally trying to come up with a Banana Republic type scenario.  Of course, some people actually liked Jim Thompson.

When the Shields Known as Children Turn On Him

Rich has the video

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xW-hJJmRqGY[/youtube]

Not that a junior in High School is a child, but you get the picture.  Just a profile in courage that Governor is.

Last line:  “What’s the matter? Does everyone down here lie to you so you assume everything is a lie?”

I actually think the Blagojevich being confused with Daley story is at worst a bit of a tall tale and not something to worry about, however, the Governor has killed irony and run back over it with his truck.

Lucky To Have a Job

That’s the way to motivate the troops.

They later went to the Democratic rally, where many of them booed Gov. Rod Blagojevich as he began speaking. Blagojevich said the union workers “have nothing to worry about. They’ll get the health care they deserve.”

He then called on AFSCME to help get a capital bill passed that will create jobs.

“They’re lucky to have a job, and they have health care,” Blagojevich said of the state workers. “They’re going to keep their jobs and keep their health care. Now, start helping us create jobs for other people and provide health care to other people.”

I generally hate comparisons of government to business because government does the things business won’t do naturally.  That said, imagine a CEO saying that to his employees.

There is someone lucky to have a job and it ain’t the AFSCME members.