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What the Trib Says

They’ve got me on brevity

But the trading system has limits. On mercury, for instance, there are strong indications that it’s the wrong strategy. The Chicago area was identified last year in EPA estimates as a mercury “hot spot,” where nearly two-thirds of the pollutant comes from sources within Illinois. Since trading programs allow polluters to buy and sell the right to release mercury into the atmosphere, some utilities may decide to buy their way out of federal limits, thus helping to create a “hot spot” of more intense mercury pollution.

Clear Skies should adopt what Rep. Mark Kirk suggests: Stop industry from buying pollution “credits” to emit more mercury in the region.

It’s a good idea to give the industry more flexibility to meet pollution limits. But right now, this bill doesn’t go far enough and fast enough to reduce major pollutants. Unless Republican leaders are able to peel off a vote in committee, the bill will die. Unless they’re willing to make some concessions, it will deserve just that fate.

This doesn’t address the issue of Southern Illinois coal, but it fits almost exactly with my opinion of how to make the law acceptable.

Adding to the problem with the administration proposal is that the mistrust such proposals create for market based solutions. Many environmentalists distrust the idea because they have too often been used to reduce environmental protection. Moving towards a market based solution should entail reaching the same goal only doing it more efficiently. If you want to change the level of air quality, debate that and then debate the way to get therre.

Proposals to reduce monitoring also raise red flags because low levels of monitoring provide incentives for companies to shirk. Because of these problems in the past, environmentalists refuse to consider strategies that reduce pollution more efficiently, making the costs of regulation less and thus the resistance to regulation less.

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Madigan’s Conceal Carry Ploy

I don’t know what he’s doing, but I have an idea that its pretty devious. Madigan doesn’t let anything out of committee that is controversial unless he has looked down the decision tree and see how it benefits his Members.

A conceal carry bill just got out of Ag and Conservation in the House on a 12-1 vote. The Ag Committee roster shows a preponderance of downstate Dems who are generally opposed to gun control.

John Birch as the NRA ratings for the Lege Members on the committee. If you wanted to kill a bill like this you’d send it to judiciary and create an ad-hoc committee of three people who never meet. Madigan didn’t do that. It’s safe to say he has a plan.

Those Dems who voted on it just got good gun rights activist karma for moving the bill and innoculation in the next cycle on guns.

If it goes to the floor, downstate Dems can vote for it, upstate Dems vote against it and they both win. I haven’t thought through which Districts that might be in the middle and if any high priority races are in that category, but it puts Suburban Republicans in a hell of a position.

Regardless of one’s view on the merits, the policy has 68% opposition statewide according to a January 2004 poll. 56% of that opposition is strong opposition. 29% favor the legislation. In the greater Chicago area a Survey USA poll done for the Sun-Times and CBS-2 showed opposition of 75% in the area meaning if you are suburban Republican you don’t want to go on record on this issue. Part of your base is rabidly for it, but the average swing voter is rabidly against it.

The gun lobby is getting excited and thinks this might pass. They are deluding themselves. I doubt they have the votes in the House and Jones will either kill it or if he adopts a similar strategy to what I think Madigan is doing, Blagojevich will veto it. Contrary to claims that he needs downstate gun rights voters (he’s not getting them anyway), Blagojevich can use it like a hammer on an opponent with either suburban women who hate the law, or deflate any strong movement from gun rights activists to back a Republican who won’t support such a law. He probably wants this to come out so he can tee off on it. It also lets him go to the public and dismiss the Mayor’s criticism of his gun control record.

Wanna have some fun–ask these guys what they think of concealed carry

As an aside, one of the most annoying things about news stories is that they don’t include the Bill number. Why is that? Someone more motivated than me should ask Don Wycliff.

Confusing Teaching With Dogma

I’m highly critical of high school social science curriculum for a variety of reasons. Part of this is due to the way schools adopt curriculum and part is due to state requirements that make the adoption of a coherent curriculum pretty difficult. Sometimes the teachers are the problem, but in general, knowing studetns at the collegiate level who I also am familiar with their high school teacher, good teachers don’t always end up with bright well informed students.

Every year someone releases a survey on the pitiful level of knowledge the average high school student is aware of and tells us how it used to be better. The problem is there is virtually no evidence it used to be better other than people who insist they walked up hill both ways to school.

Since the 1950s when fairly large scale polling began and people were tested for political knowledge, it’s been pretty well understood that most people are quite content to hold contradictory beliefs and maintain a relatively low level of political knowledge, but everyone keeps talking about the dangerous low level of information of the kids today.

There’s just no strong indication things have changed much–and the most likely reason why has nothing to do with schools, but with parents who don’t talk about politics with their kids. If the parents aren’t interested, the kids won’t be either in most cases. While I’d like everyone to be more invovled in civic discussions, I’m not sure that the current state is all that awful. People in the US are generally happy and the decide what to spend their time on. I can’t say that is always good as Doctor Phil is still on the air, but I’ll live with it.

The challenge of high school history and government texts is to provide a framework to force students to think critically and develop skills that are not just applied to rote knowledge, but can be applied as the world changes around them.

One doesn’t make a good citizen by preaching to a high school student. One does encourage a high school student to think critically and given a reasonable base knowledge, one would expect that the conclusion that the United States, while imperfect, is a country that is an amazing place to live.

My rant here has a point, in that teaching patriotism isn’t about reading a creed and having students memorize it. It’s about making US History and Government relevant to students and allowing them to discover each of those things in the creed through critical thinking.

I often object to saying the Pledge of Allegiance in classes and not because of the religious portion (which a student can opt out of if they so wish–another important lesson on freedomn and liberty). I object because it is divorced too often from teaching the lessons that lead to the conclusions of the Pledge of Allegiance.

I remember saying it in class and I can not think of a worse tribute to freedom than a bunch of sixth graders shooting spitballs and gossipping while pretending to recite the Pledge with meaning.

But what really pisses me off about the column above, is that he doesn’t have the first clue about how many educators do a remarkable job allowing students to explore the meaning of America. I’ve pointed out a project by Stevenson High School students that is a remarkable effort before.

Allison Nichols, Brittany Saltiel, and Sarah Siegel began a school project that turned into a movement for justice in the case of the Civil Rights Workers in killed in the Mississippi Burning case.

Their teacher Barry Bradford didn’t have them recite a creed, he encouraged them to live it. Which is a better way to teach patriotism to you?

And by the way, yesterday was the

Below are Barack Obama’s remarks on the Senate Floor concerning the case

And yesterday was the fourtieth anniversary of Bloody Sunday in Selma.
Read More

A Very Good Social Security Column

From Lynn Sweet

She lays out the basic issues very well. One that hasn’t gotten a lot of attention is number 4.

4. Retirement ages are not written in stone, though any change would be politically unpopular. At present, limited benefits can start at age 62. Folks born between 1943 and 1954 have to work until age 66 for the full benefit. People born after 1967 have to work until age 67. Should we need to work longer in order to retire with full benefits? No way around it — upping the retirement age is a benefit cut.

And this is a question we need to grapple with that is very difficult. Can we realistically increase the age? I know in the case of both of my parents health would have prohibited reaching 70. My father climbed launch pads for a living and now at 66 he had to have his knee replaced. He retired with full benefits as it is, but what would he have done otherwise? He might have been able to do a desk job, but given the type of hands on work he did, that might not have been possible. He could have gone on disability, but that has societal costs too. One question I’ve never seen answered about this particular problem is that if the retirement age is 70, what about SSI benefits and state disability costs?

This is a serious question, has anyone estimated the costs of raising the age to 70? Because the gap matters between the extra disability and what is saved/added to the system. Certainly there would be a net pickup, but is that net pickup adequate?

Hale’s Communication to Parents Cut-Off

Chutzpah Defined

“I was just so stunned that I didn’t think to ask why,” he said. “It’s especially hard because we need him now and he needs us.”

Your son has been found guilty of trying to have a federal judge killed. His close associate went on a shooting spree of minorities. He ran the organization out of your house.

I’m thinking there might be some concern that, just maybe, you might be helping him run his organization from prison and even trying to send signals through you whether you know it or not.

Call me crazy.

$17,000 Later, I don’t Owe Them

While the Belleville paper didn’t specify, I’m assuming Centreville Township Candidate Curtis McCall said that with a straight face.

The documents show that as of Dec. 31, McCall had received $12,000 from Mike Ocello, national director of the PT’s chain of topless clubs, and $5,000 from Katrina Sanders, longtime companion of topless club operator and convicted felon Robert Romanik. PT’s, one of Ocello’s clubs, is located in Centreville and Sanders is the licensee for the Crystal Palace strip club in Centreville.

Sigh.