July 4 Sugarhouse Arts Street Festival

Yesterday I spent the July 4 holiday doing outreach for the Desert Greens Green Party of Utah at the Sugarhouse Arts Street Festival. It was a great day although a very welcomed rainstorm shut everything down at 5pm. Here are some photos:


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New Climate Issues Forum

Jen of Jen’s Green Journal has created a new community devoted to climate change issues.

The new community is Climate Crisis Action Team.

(Sources: Peace Buttons, War Resisters League, and the Peace Center.)

July 5

1894
During a strike against the Pullman Palace Car Company for having laid off about a quarter of its employees and drastically reduced wages, the 1892 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago’s Jackson Park was set ablaze, and seven buildings were reduced to ashes. The Pullman workers’ cause had been taken up by Eugene V. Debs, the leader of the American Railway Union helped organize a nationwide boycott of any train that included a Pullman car.

Pullman Street Strikers Statement


1935

The National Labor Relations Act became law, recognizing workers’ rights to organize and bargain collectively. The bill was signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on this day.

1989

Former National Security Council aide Oliver North received a $150,000 fine and a suspended prison term for his part in the Iran-Contra scandal. That was a secret arrangement directed from the Reagan White House that provided funds to the Nicaraguan contra rebels (in contravention of specific congressional prohibition) from profits gained by selling arms to Iran (at war with Iraq at the time) in hopes of their releasing hostages, despite Pres. Reagan’s claim that he wouldn’t trade arms for hostages.
The convictions were later overturned because evidence revealed in the congressional Iran-Contra hearings had compromised his right to a fair trial.

More on “Ollie”

Fasting for Peace – Virtual Hunger Strike

I am going to be “fasting from blogging” on this July 4th, in solidarity with Troops Home Fast and Kalyn Denny’s and Laura Rebecca’s Kitchen’s suggestion.

Since I will be fasting on July 4, I will be posting relevant articles on July 3. Look below this post for those entries.

Everyone have a safe July 4!

BRING THE TROOPS HOME! END THE IRAQ OCCUPATION!


Logo designed by Laura Rebecca’s Kitchen

Independence Day Special

Links to articles for July 4, 2006:

Seventh Generation has posted a Declaration of Interdependence, for this July 4, in its Non-Toxic Times Newsletter, offering “Ten Tenets: The Law of the Commons of the Natural World”

The Nation has a blog post entitled Energy Independence Day with lots of comments.

from TomPaine.com
Energy Independence Day – Jerome Ringo

Howard Zinn has a piece published in The Progressive entitled Put Away the Flags

Cindy Sheehan has written the piece for Common Dreams, Bombs Bursting in Air

Common Dreams has posted a Boston Globe Article by James Carrol entitled What We Love About America

John Nichols writes about Jefferson’s Fourth of July in The Nation

King George of America, This Letter is For You
by Beth Quinn

Desert Greens at Arts Festival in Sugarhouse July 4

I will be tabling with the Desert Greens Green Party of Utah at the Sugarhouse Arts Festival all day on July 4. We will be doing outreach on Green Values, our Candidates Campaigns, and continuing our recycling campaign and food bank drive.

Check it out!

Black Box Voting July 4 Announcement

———————————————————–
Black Box Voting : From BBV:: BBV – 4th of July Fireworks: Unredacted Hursti reports, photos released
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Posted by Bev Harris on Monday, July 03, 2006 – 02:54 pm:

States and local jurisdictions did not take sufficient action to
mitigate risks.

Black Box Voting has provided the following to VoterAction.org for its
litigation. This will become a public record via the litigation filed
by Lowell Finley. Because public officials who have received the
unredacted reports have failed to take this risk seriously and arrange
for appropriate mitigations, and because Black Box Voting believes
this information is of critical public interest for pending litigation
and citizen actions, we are releasing it publicly now.

HERE’S AN INFORMAL SYNOPSIS OF THE UNMITIGATED RISKS IN THE DIEBOLD
TSX:
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Walking the Talk – Sustainability

Tom and I have been growing a HUGE garden each year. We grow organically and enough for ourselves, our friends, and for giving away to people that need food such as indigenous communities. We also water via irrigation.

I keep a page of updates on our garden at: Tom and Dee’s Garden.

It’s hard work for two people given the size of our property(of our .67 acres, about .33 of it is worked in garden projects.

We grow the largest plot (out of 2) in the “three sisters” arrangement – corn, beans and squash interspersed throughout each row so that the beans grow up on the corn stalks. We also have planted about 10 rows of sunflowers (various varieties).

The icon photo I’ve used with this post is a milkweed that grows in our field (prolifically!).

Carnival of the Green #34

This week’s COTG is being hosted by Headway Youth.
There are lots of articles posted on Green Living and the Environment.

Happy Reading!

Middle School Magazine’s latest issue features pitch for the Army

This appeared in Common Dreams yesterday.  It speaks for itself.

Published on Monday, July 3, 2006 by the Boston Globe

Some See Army Pitch in Preteen Magazine
Editors of Cobblestone say that wasn’t intent
by Bryan Bender
 

WASHINGTON – What began as an attempt to educate middle-school students about the military has set off a string of complaints from parents and teachers that new learning materials designed by a New Hampshire publisher for 9- to 14-year-olds amount to little more than an early recruiting pitch for the Army.


(Photo/Cobblestone Magazine)

The latest issue of Cobblestone magazine, distributed nationwide to schools and libraries, is dedicated to the Army, a first for the popular periodical.

Titled “Duty, Honor, Country,” the issue depicts a soldier in Iraq manning a machine gun on its glossy cover and includes articles ranging from what it’s like to go through boot camp — “You’re in the Army Now” — to a rundown of the Army’s “awesome arsenal,” to a detailed description of Army career opportunities.

But most controversial has been the pair of teacher’s guides prepared in conjunction with the magazine, which is touted as meeting national middle school performance standards for English and language arts. The classroom guides suggest that teachers invite a soldier, Army recruiter, or veteran to speak to their class and poll students on whether “they think they might someday want to join the Army.”


“Some of the teachers were like `Holy cow, look at this,’ ” said Francis Lunney , a sixth-grade English teacher in Hudson who said he found a copy in his school mailbox in May and quickly lodged a complaint in a telephone call to Carus Publishing in Peterborough, N.H. “It looked exactly like the [official recruiting] material you get in high school. It didn’t seem to be that different the way it was packaged.”

The roughly dozen complaints come at a time when the military is struggling to meet recruiting goals and has undertaken more aggressive efforts to draw the interest of youngsters. For example, the Army has funded the development of video games to bring its message to teenagers across the country. But it has been criticized by some groups for its allegedly manipulative sales tactics, and has even faced attempts — unsuccessful so far — to bar recruiters from some high schools.

Cobblestone’s editors insist that the idea for the special issue was theirs alone, though they requested and received permission to use Army photos. They also received more extensive help from the chief historian of the Army Historical Foundation, Matthew Seelinger . The foundation, based in Arlington, Va., is a private, nonprofit organization and is independent of the military.

“We are not part of the government; we are not part of the Army,” said Seelinger. “They contacted us.”

Still, he said it was the first time the foundation had been asked to prepare learning materials for children. “I have never written for a children’s magazine before,” Seelinger said, adding that Cobblestone paid him about $500 for his contributions.

Cobblestone is one of a family of award-winning children’s magazines published by Carus. It was started by two teachers in 1979 to promote reading and history. It grew into six themed magazines that cover American history, geography, world cultures, world history, science and space, general studies, and reading.

The magazine “strives to educate and entertain through a creative mix of articles, primary source documents, photographs, and illustrations, as well as fun activities, puzzles, and cartoons,” according to its website. “Cobblestone Publishing works with consulting editors, writers, historians, professors, museum curators, teachers, and others who are noted authorities in their fields of study.”

Cobblestone has a national paid circulation of 30,000, but managing editor Lou Waryncia said its reach is far greater because one issue could be used by dozens of students — either in the classroom or in school libraries.

While previous issues of Cobblestone have dealt with the Civil War and other military conflicts, the recent issue is somewhat of a departure, said Waryncia, noting it is the first time that the Army was a focus by itself.

“We planned to do this well over two years ago,” Waryncia said. “It just happened to come out at a time when the country’s feelings are in a certain place” about the war in Iraq.

To some teachers and parents, the content appeared to be inappropriate for students who have yet to enter high school, where the military traditionally begins recruiting.

The issue includes an interview with Army Colonel Michael J. Davis , commander of the 52d Explosive Ordnance Disposal Group. He is asked questions such as “What made you decide to join the Army?”

The magazine discusses careers offered by the Army, including arts, media, computers, construction, engineering, intelligence, medical, aviation, legal, and transportation.

One of the teaching guides — written by Mary B. Lawson , a teacher in Saint Cloud, Fla. — goes much further, suggesting that a writing exercise be undertaken in which students “ pretend they are going to join the Army. Have them decide which career they feel they would qualify for and write a paper to persuade a recruiter why that should be the career.”

Some complaints have centered on the fact that little attention is paid to the combat role of the Army — its risks and sacrifices.

Waryncia said the magazine did not intend to recruit for the Army, but will reconsider future issues in light of the criticisms, which he said were greater than for any previous issue.

He said the magazine has not yet decided its lineup for 2008, but is considering issues dedicated to the Marines Corps, Navy, Air Force, and Coast Guard. He acknowledged that he would pay much closer attention to both the content and the teaching guides in light of the complaints.

Virginia Schumacher , a retired teacher and visitor services manager at the History Center in Ithaca, N.Y., who wrote another teaching guide, defended the issue.

“Joining the military is a career option for any child,” she said. “That doesn’t suggest they should or should not. Recruiters go into the high school all the time. Part of the curriculum in New York state is career options and how to make wise choices. In that magazine, I felt they gave a wonderful portrayal of jobs that are not what everyone thinks of when they think of the Army. It was not meant to meant to offend anyone.”

Copyright © 2006 Boston Globe