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Live Journal experienced some significant problems that prevented me from posting for several days.  I have responded to the comment on my post on school vouchers (below) and will now continue posting on this journal!

School vouchers

I have posted on the school voucher issue here before.  I feel that a voucher system is proposed by wealthy people to be able to get public monies to fund their children’s private school education.  Additionally I feel that our public school system is often a victim of unfunded mandates and that there are much better solutions than vouchers, which is really not a solution at all.  I feel that vouchers are one more step by right wingers to privatize services in our country.  I agree with my green party colleague in Michigan who says “Most vouchers aren’t generous enough to enable any poor children to enroll at a different school, only to subsidize people who were going to send their children to parochial schools anyway.”

I was happy to see these items come across my desk  yesterday:

Utah State Board of Education Declines to Implement Vouchers Before November Vote

May 29, 2007

For Immediate Release

Contact: Mark Peterson, public relations director
(801) 538-7635 * mark.peterson@schools.utah.gov

SALT LAKE CITY – The Utah State Board of Education voted 10-4 today not
to implement a voucher program in Utah based solely upon the provisions
contained in House Bill 174, an amendment to the state’s original
voucher bill, House Bill 148.

The Board’s action came in response to a petition brought by Utah State
Reps. Sheryl L. Allen, R-Bountiful, Kory M. Holdaway, R-Taylorsville,
and Steven R. Mascaro, R-West Jordan along with Utahns for Public
Schools and Vik Arnold, director of Political Action & Government
Relations at the Utah Education Association. The petitioners asked the
Board to refuse to implement House Bill 174 as a stand-alone measure in
light of a recall ballot on House Bill 148, the original voucher
measure. Utahns will vote Nov. 6 on whether to recall House Bill 148.
The amending bill, House Bill 174, passed by a margin that precludes any
recall election.

Voting not to implement vouchers were Board Members Dixie Allen of
Vernal, Laurel Brown of Murray, Kim R. Burningham of Bountiful, Janet A.
Cannon of Holladay, Greg Haws of Hooper, Michael Jensen of West Valley
City, Randall Mackey of Salt Lake City, Denis Morrill of Taylorsville,
Debra G. Roberts of Beaver, and Teresa Theurer of Logan. Voting against
the measure were Board Members Mark A. Cluff of Alpine, Bill Colbert of
Draper, Thomas Gregory of Provo, and Richard Moss of Santaquin. Board
Member Richard Sadler of Ogden was excused from the meeting.

Mark Peterson
Public Relations Director
Utah State Office of Education
P.O. Box 144200
Salt Lake City, UT 84114-4200
(801) 538-7635
mark.peterson@schools.utah.gov

And this piece, by the director of the school where I teach, published in the Salt Lake Tribune recently:
Let’s focus our resources on improving the public schools

School vouchers: Two points of view
By Sonia Woodbury
Article Last Updated: 05/28/2007 08:03:42 PM MDT

We are fast approaching a public referendum on school vouchers.
 Paul Mero (/Tribune, /Opinion, May 20) raised one important point.
 South Carolina anti-voucher advocate Rev. Joseph Darby has ideas of great importance for Utahns to consider before they go to the polls.
However, Mero’s misguided embellishment on the words of this respected Southern leader to form a pro-voucher rationalization for Utah was very disturbing.
    Answering questions dealing with public policy issues, Rev. Darby suggested that in order to build a stronger society and boost everyone’s quality of life, “We need a progressive platform on education that affirms the worth of public schools, assures equitable funding for all public schools, acknowledges past inequities and sets forth steps in money, facility improvements and teacher recruitment to correct those past inequities.”
    This is a worthy blueprint for the improvement of education in Utah. A good education is the foundation of a citizen’s ability to participate
meaningfully in our democratic society. A good education should involve a challenging development of academic knowledge and skills.
Equally as important, a good education is expanded by its occurrence in a socially diverse setting where all children have the opportunity to make sense of civic, character and ethical issues together.
    In order to ensure that all Utah children have access to a good education we must affirm the worth
of public schools and make a good education available in every neighborhood school.
    The fallacy is to believe that vouchers will improve our ability to provide this type of good education. There is no direct correlation between
the choice to send a child to a private school and the improvement of our educational system.
    So far, the vast amounts of money, time and energy devoted for years to pursuing a voucher program have only served to highlight some public dissatisfaction and to help acknowledge inequities in our current system.
Imagine what a difference that same money, and especially time and energy devoted for years, could have made in the public education system by now.
    With vouchers, only parents who have the ability to research options, to supplement the difference between what a voucher would provide and the actual cost of a private school and to provide transportation to a private school would have some freedom to opt for a different school.
    Again, instead of helping to establish a good educational system that adapts to the interests of families and children, a voucher program would only provide for some families to choose another school.
    Rev. Darby offers a better solution to improving educational opportunities than vouchers. He advises that “Successful and enduring
movements for change require those in positions of power to share power and welcome new ideas, and we have miles to go in that regard.”
    Following this counsel, elected officials and representatives would do well to remember that their positions are about so much more than sharing power. Their power comes at the will of the people and it is their duty to
represent those people.
    Results of the upcoming public referendum should direct the future of vouchers in Utah. Secondly, district and school administrators could embrace the idea of sharing power with the parents and students of their schools;
they could welcome open dialogue about, and implementation of, new ideas.

    What is at stake in the school voucher debate is having our attention diverted from the real issue of providing every student in Utah with an
exemplary education. What parents deserve is not vouchers, but quality public schools in every neighborhood.
   


    * SONIA WOODBURY is executive director of City Academy, a secondary
public charter school founded in 2000.

Iraq Vets Take to the Streets of NYC

In this simulation of what soldiers do in Iraq, these vets of Iraq Veterans Against the War, portray a typical day on the streets of U.S. soldiers. Great counter recruitment tool. Thanks to Pat Elder for sending this.

It *was* an earthquake

Last night Tom, my son and I were sitting in our house when all of a sudden  we heard – and felt – a large boom.  We wondered if it was an earthquake.

It was.

In today’s news:

“Boom” is Attributed to Earthquake
Mild quake hits south Salt Lake Valley
Viewers Report Earthquake In Salt Lake County

Magnitude 2.3 – WASATCH FRONT URBAN CORRIDOR, UTAH

Cindy Sheehan’s Letter

Michael over on Common Circle has a commentary on Cindy Sheehan’s “Goodbye Letter”.  Like many other people, she is fed up  – especially with the Democrats – and is calling it quits.  She points out that when she first started her crusade to hold George Bush accountable for a war based on lies, she targeted the Republicans and Bush.  Then when she started holding the Democrats to the same standards, she began enduring slander from them as well as from the right wingers.   She explains her other conclusions, among them the most devastating for her:

The most devastating conclusion that I reached this morning, however, was that Casey did indeed die for nothing. His precious lifeblood drained out in a country far away from his family who loves him, killed by his own country which is beholden to and run by a war machine that even controls what we think. I have tried every since he died to make his sacrifice meaningful. Casey died for a country which cares more about who will be the next American Idol than how many people will be killed in the next few months while Democrats and Republicans play politics with human lives. It is so painful to me to know that I bought into this system for so many years and Casey paid the price for that allegiance. I failed my boy and that hurts the most.

Cindy says she is selling Camp Casey which has served its purpose and is “going home” to take care of her family and nurture the relationships she has had the fortune to maintain throughout her journey.

I feel fortunate to have been able to visit Camp Casey and meet Cindy Sheehan.   I developed some releationships of my own whiloe there that continue today.  I came away from Camp Casey with a little more motivation and enthusiasm, a little more conviction, and a little more hope.  While Cindy is stepping back from her crusade, I am hopeful that she will contribute in other ways as she deems appropriate.  

Our trip and great news

We spent the past several days in Maryland visiting my family and enjoying our grandson.  Greg (my son and father of Little  Greg) proposed to Carmen in front of the whole family!  Everyone is happy.  Here are some pics:

Abortion, Life, the planet, and human existence

Yesterday I received and email from someone (whom I had never heard of or met, to the best of my knowledge) asking me my position on abortion.  Here is how I responded:

I support a woman’s right to choose safe, legal abortion and believe that reproductive  and health issues must remain a medical matter between individuals and their health care  providers.

The questioner responded back to me with something to this effect:
I’m sorry.  I pray that someday you will live up to  “I pledge allegiance to all life and its interpendent diversity.” (referring to my “Pledge to Life” in my left sidebar)

My response, via this blog only (I have invited the person who emailed me to continue the discussion on this blog so that others may also join in – the person responded to that email, after requesting no further email communication, with I understand. The truth is not always easy.):

This person obviously has an egocentric and narrow-minded view of life – “all life”.  While entire species and habitats, upon which humans rely for its very existence, are being destroyed and becoming extinct, this person is concerned with only one aspect of life – human life.  People like this expend energy on addressing only human life as if it were the end all and be all of life.  If humans died off, the world would not be in jeopardy. Life would continue to thrive ( dare say it would also not only thrive, but would be better off without the destructive impact of the human species….).   If the blue green algae dies off, as one example, humans are doomed.

“Life” began before humans.  “Life” is being destroyed by humans.  I suspect that the possibility exists that “Life” will likely re-generate itself after the human species dies off because of the destructiveness to “life” it in which it engages.

I encourage people to take some time and view the video clips on life at Global Mindshift.

More Rocky Roast photos

Here are few more photos from the Rocky Roast the other night.
There are also some other posts and photos at Pom Poms Not Bomb Bombs Live Journal Page.
Links to news:
Rocky takes a couple of punches from his friends (Salt Lake Tribune)

Off the Agenda

The Salt Lake Tribune

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Posted: 7:34 AM- Rocky takes a couple of punches from his friends
    With a jazz band belting out the “Rocky” theme, Salt Lake City’s mayor was led into the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center by a troupe of “cheerleaders” waving orange pedestrian flags and wearing “Free-Speech Zone” T-shirts.
    On stage Friday night, Rocky Anderson pumped his fist as the booze-fueled crowd bellowed. Moments later, the mayor would turn red – and sometimes white – during a raucous fundraiser for the Salt Lake Acting Company billed simply as the “Rocky Roast.”
    Between roasts – the panel ranged from former Utah ACLU Executive Director Dani Eyer to Utah radio icon Tom Barberi – Anderson was serenaded by homegrown satirists, the Saliva Sisters.
    Here are some of the best zingers from early in the evening.
    From Eyer:
    Suggesting many Salt Lake City women must have a crush on the “passionate, articulate” Democratic mayor, she said she posed the following survey question to 2,000 women: “Would you have sex with Mayor Rocky Anderson?” The result: “67 percent of Salt Lake City women, when asked, responded ‘Never again.’
    “In 1999, we heard the funniest thing we’d ever heard of – Deedee Corradini was going to sell a block of Main Street to the Mormon Church. Ha, ha, ha. We laughed all the way to the 10th Circuit.  Rocky laughed along with us – for part of the way.”
    From showstopper Jim Braden, spokesman for Salt Lake County Mayor Peter Corroon:
    — “If it wasn’t for Rocky, Merrill Cook wouldn’t have won anything at all.”
    — “Rocky’s legacy: ‘You’re fired, you’re fired, you’re fired, nice tush, and you’re fired.’ ”
    — “Congratulations: being the best-known Democrat in Utah is like being the thinnest guy at fat camp.”
    — “If you can satisfy [House Speaker Greg] Curtis and [Sandy Mayor Tom] Dolan at the same time, you’re probably picking up the tab at the all-you-can-eat buffet.”
    — “I barely recognize him without all his Republican friends nattily draped in those cheesy soccer scarves.”
    — “If you spent more time debating [Real Salt Lake owner] Dave Checketts than Sean Hannity . . . No, no, no – they were robbing Peter [Corroon] to pay Tom [Dolan].”
    — “We know it can’t be easy auditioning to replace Rosie on ‘The View.’ ”
    From emcee Chris Vanocur of KTVX News:
    — “I need to sneak a peek over at the mayor and make sure he’s laughing or he might . . . fire me.”
    — “When Corroon came into office, he was a shy, stiff, bland politician. [But because of Braden. Corroon has magically been transformed into a shy, stiff, bland politician who hates soccer.”

Rocky ends up ‘well done’ in roast (Deseret News) – PPnBB mentioned!

By Natalie Hale
Deseret Morning News

      If Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson had been a Thanksgiving turkey at Friday night’s “Rockyroast” fund-raiser, he would have come out well done.

Rocky Anderson

Rocky Anderson

      The event, which parodied Dean Martin’s celebrity roasts of the past, was held to raise money for the Salt Lake Acting Company.
      Between laughs, while mingling with guests prior to the roast, Anderson said he felt “apprehensive” about the event.
      And who could blame him?
      Anderson agreed to have himself berated in front of more than 400 community members, not exactly something any person would sign up to do.
      He was escorted into the Rose Wagner Center by Salt Lake’s own nontraditional cheerleading group, Pom Poms not Bomb Bombs, whose members were wildly waving crossing flags. The crowd rose and roared loudly as Rocky entered to the song “Gonna Fly Now,” the theme from the movie “Rocky.”
      “I understand the mayor enters City Hall this way every morning,” emcee and ABC4 News reporter Chris Vanocur said.
      The two-hour roast featured Pat Bagley, a political cartoonist from The Salt Lake Tribune; Jim Braden, Salt Lake County Mayor Peter Corroon’s public information officer; Dani Eyer, a lawyer and former director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Utah; Tom Barberi, Utah’s radio broadcaster; Babs DeLay, a planning and zoning judge; and a surprise appearance by Anderson’s son, Luke.
      No portion of Anderson’s life during his past seven years of service was safe.
      Jokes targeted Anderson’s policies on local transportation, pedestrian-crossing flags, the banning of water bottles, his constant firings of employees, his stance on international politics, his campaign to impeach President Bush, ugly neckties and his personal relationships.
      But all in all, the cynical attempts to roast Anderson came out warm and fuzzy. Each “roaster” thanked him for his dedication, time and service to the community.As Anderson was escorted to the stand by “Gayle Godzika,” a rapping drag queen, for his final words, the crowd again rose, clapping and cheering. Shouts of “Rocky! Rocky!” bounced off the walls.
      As Anderson stood there, contemplative before the crowd, he impatiently waved off the music. Then, turning to the roasters, he said, “I wish I could hire each one of you and fire your —!”
      Anderson then graciously thanked everyone for their participation and support of SLAC and for their support during his time in office.
      Anderson’s second term as Salt Lake City’s mayor ends in early 2008.


E-mail: nhale@desnews.com


Roastin’ Rocky

Last night our radical cheerleading squad, Pom Poms Not Bomb Bombs performed at the Rocky Roast put on by the Salt Lake Acting Company.  It was great fun and everyone loved us!  I will be posting for photos later today or tomorrow, but here is a photo of us with Rocky (I am to Rocky’s left!):

Costa Rica withdraws from School of the Americas

I was so glad to have the news item below come to my email box yesterday, about Costa Rica withdrawing from the  School of the Americas,  the terrorist training camp at Ft. Benning, Georgia.  Costa Rica joins the ranks of three other countries which have withdrawn their participation in this institution which trains military personnel from Latin America who then are used by oppressive regimes in various countries to inflict human rights abuses, including torture and murder, on its own citizens.  The School of the Americas Watch has been fighting for years to get the SOA closed down. 

Costa Rica to Cease Training at the SOA/WHINSEC!

Costa Rican President Oscar Arias announced Wednesday that Costa Rica will cease to send police to train at the U.S. Army Ft. Benning facility after citing its history of involvement in military coups and human rights abuses throughout Latin America.

(Photo: President Oscar Arias)

Arias, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, made the decision after talks with a delegation of the School of the Americas Watch, including the Rev. Roy Bourgeois and Lisa Sullivan Rodriguez. The human rights advocacy group has campaigned since 1990 for the closure of the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (WHINSEC), formerly known as the School for the Americas (SOA), located at Fort Benning, Georgia.


Costa Rica has no army but has sent approximately 2,600 police officers over the years to be trained at the school. Minor Masis, leader of Costa Rica’s former “Comando Cobra” anti-drug squad attended the School in 1991 and returned to Costa Rica, only to serve a 42-year jail term for rape and murder committed during a 1992 drug raid. Costa Rica currently has three policemen at the center.

“When the courses end for the three policemen we are not going to send any more,” Arias said.

Costa Rica is the fourth country to announce a withdrawal from the SOA/WHINSEC. In 2006, the governments of Argentina and Uruguay announced that they would cease all training at the school, becoming the second and third countries to announce a cessation of training. In January of 2004, Hugo Chavez announced that Venezuela would no longer send troops to train at the school.

Costa Rica’s withdrawal from WHINSEC is a great victory for human rights in Latin America. With this major breakthrough, Costa Rica adds its name to the list of countries who are rejecting the destructive approach of institutions such as the SOA/WHINSEC. Combat training and military spending as a means to “solve” social problems do not bring peace and democracy.

Read More about this Breaking News!

Read More about the Latin America Project