Today was our first significant snowfall of the season. I’m guessing we got about 5 inches at our house. There was probably more elsehwhere. I was just content to stay inside and clean out my closet!
Here are some photos:
Today was our first significant snowfall of the season. I’m guessing we got about 5 inches at our house. There was probably more elsehwhere. I was just content to stay inside and clean out my closet!
Here are some photos:
Saturday, December 10 – The California Peace Action is offering cards for sale for International Human Rights Day.
“Human rights education is much more than a lesson in schools or a theme for a day; it is a process to equip people with the tools they need to live lives of security and dignity.
On this International Human Rights Day, let us continue to work together to develop and nurture in future generations a culture of human rights, to promote freedom, security and peace in all nations.”
~ Kofi Annan, Secretary-General
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Occasionally I run across folks who, for whatever reason choose to criticize my skills in whatever area happens to be the issue. I’m not sure why this is because I go about doing what I do without public recognition (or at least without the intent of attracting such) for the good of humanity. These are typically folks who think that because of their expereinces they have the dominating knowledge over others and are the “experts” in their area(s) of skill and that no other person, particularly me, can ever do any good with my skill level in my area(s).
I am never above improving in any area, regardless of how much training or expereince I have had. In fact, I welcome new knowledge and perceptions.Just ask those who are close to me – I am the most critical of myself and the most open to learning. But when people who hardly know me start analyzing and criticizing me and my skills, I get defensive – not because I think I am more qualified but, rather, because these people have absolutely no idea what they are talking about.
Here are some skills of mine that have come into question by some “more highly skilled than I” (ahem!) folks I have encountered in my recent past:
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It’s no secret that I strongly advocate mass transportation, including light rail. I am happy to read into today’s Deseret News that most of those polled in a recent survey about light rail would gladly pay more taxes to expand the current system to include the major portion of the Wasatch Front.
Finally, people are increasingly catching on. No doubt that the rising fuel costs have some bearing on that awareness.
Transportation alternatives, including expanding commuter rail routes, can be viewed on the Utah Department of Transportation‘s website. A spokesperson quoted in the article encourages folks to look at the options and voice their opinion.
Elected officials are also encouraged to listen to their constituents on the issue. Now that’s a concept!
A fellow GPUS delegate posted this on the NC discussion list. It’s NY Times article about an exhibit on slavery in New York and how 20% of NYers were slaves during that period of U.S. History. The article focuses on the impact the exhibit has had on its visitors.
Since you have to have a password to get into the NY Times, I’ve pasted the entire article here. It is very thought provoking.
The Anger and Shock of a City’s Slave Past
By FELICIA R. LEE
The New York Times, November 26, 2005
They have the awkwardness of amateur home videos:
background noise, long silences, people looking away from the camera. But inside a booth at the New-York Historical Society, visitors to the exhibition “Slavery in New York” are recording their reactions, creating snapshot reflections on race and history in the nation’s largest city.
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In an obsucre article buried in the Utah section of today’s Salt Lake Tribune, Julian Hatch is mentioned regarding his challenge to U.S. Senator Orrin Hatch. This is the second time this paper has made mention of our Green Party candidate.
Still nothing, that I’ve seen, in the other major newspaper, the http://deseretnews.com/dn”>Deseret News.
D.C. Notebook: Hatch’s vocational memory slips
By Robert Gehrke and Thomas Burr
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, was full of righteous indignation the other day when, on the Senate floor, he angrily scolded Democrats backing a “windfall tax” on tens of billions in profits Big Oil earned in the past quarter.
As he railed, he tossed in this tidbit: “I used to be in the oil business. I know how hard it is.”
And again: “I have been in this business. I know doggone well what it takes and how much it takes and how much it costs to develop oil and gas.”
And then, when Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., said Hatch was mistaken about what oil companies do with their profits, Hatch put it most definitively: “No, it wasn’t wrong. I lived in this industry. I understand it.”
Um . . . not precisely.
His official bio mentions he was a lather, janitor, desk attendant at a dormitory, then a lawyer and a senator. No mention of hardscrabble days on the rigs drilling for black gold.
Turns out, “lived in this industry” may have overstated it a tad. His spokesman says the senator did some legal work for a small oil company 30-plus years ago when he was in private practice. He doesn’t remember the name of the oil firm.
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Greg Gerritt, a GPUS delegate from Rhode Island, sent out this article on the Buy Nothing Day event there. I had a lengthy conversation about the project with him this afteroon. It’s way cool, a great networking tool and benefits the community. This project has been going on Buy Nothing Day since 1997. It’s got my wheels turning!
Coat giveaway makes its own fashion statement
Buy Nothing Day, held on one of the busiest holiday shopping days, puts the spotlight on area’s needy.
BY BRANDIE JEFFERSON
Journal Staff Writer
PROVIDENCE — There were plenty of coats on sale at the Providence Place mall yesterday for 10percent 25 percent, even 50 percent off. But across the street, on the State House lawn, hundreds of people were
getting coats, sweaters, hats and books for an unbeatable price Free.
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Tagged Activism, buy nothing day, environmnet, gift giving, green, holidays, peace
It’s hard for me to believe that my daughter will be 16 in less than one week and my son will be 19 in a few weeks. (My oldest turned 21 in August). Despite all of our turmoils, setbacks and hardships we have all suffered in the past 10 years, the kids have turned out to be great.
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I am feeling better today (thankfully) and am looking forward to staying indoors for the rest of the weekend. Yesterday I began and got halfway through crocheting a poncho. I will also do some much needed housework, work on making family calendars (more on that to come), and take a nap!
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The “madness” is the priorities.
The Associated Press has published someFacts and Figures on Holiday Spending:
Has anyone noticed that gas prices has plummeted? Funny how this strageically happened now. It will be interesting to see the figures after this holiday season to see the comparison of shopping expenditures.
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Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Activism, buy nothing day, environmnet, gift giving, green, holidays, peace