Dec 10 2008

If they could see us now

Imagine if Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and Benjamin Franklin had been offered a ride in a time machine back in 1789 when they were working on the text of the Constitution of The United States of America. What if they had been given an opportunity to travel to the present day to see how their efforts had paid off? They would discover how, over the last 220 years, we have interpreted their thoughtful words, and how we have applied them to govern our lives.

These American icons would see how we have permitted millions of illegal aliens to enter our country and partake of our limited resources without benefit of citizenship, and how we seem willing to just forget how they got here, and welcome them as citizens. They would see how we applied the Constitution to same sex couples to marry each other, and how we found constitutional support for the discretionary killing of our offspring when to raise them is not an acceptable option. They would see how the rights they so carefully articulated have been interpreted to mean that we should give up our guns, and forfeit our real property to local government to give to someone else whose use would increase tax revenues. They would discover how we have allowed the judiciary to make laws, and how the federal government has used taxpayer money to purchase significant assets of many of this country’s major private companies. The key framers of America’s Constitution would see how political correctness, partisan politics, overzealous ideology, special interest groups and big money have come to determine over time, what our Constitution means, and they would hardly recognize what they had written.

After this discouraging trip to the future, I think Jefferson, Madison and Franklin would return to their own time in Philadelphia completely demoralized and angry. Likely they would tell their colleagues that future generations of Americans are going to so badly distort and disintegrate this Constitution beyond recognition, that they might just as well burn the document. I’m afraid they would feel betrayed.

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Nov 21 2008

Baby It’s Cold Inside

Published by Kalae Chock under Morning Madness

       You know in the , how it’s bitterly cold outside and you walk into a building and the heat instantly rushes over your body and it feels so good? Aaaaaaaaaaaahh. Lovely.

       Well, it doesn’t happen when I walk into the studios at 3:30 in the morning. Instead, I walk in to find our producer with a blanket draped over her shoulders. Our associate producer, a man from Minnesota… from Minnesota I say… a man used to bitterly cold winters, with a hooded sweatshirt tied tight up over his head and ears, rubbing his hands together, blowing into them to keep warm. I kid you not. That really happens. As the morning goes on, people file in exclaiming the typical mantra we’re used to hearing during these months “It’s cold in here”. There are mornings when more than one person says “I can’t feel my fingers”. Seriously. I’m not even kidding. Mike Gonzalez has found a creative way to keep warm. He holds his hands in front of the printer, to catch the warm air as our scripts are printed off. Holding the papers themselves when they’re ‘hot off the press’ is another good way to warm up those hands. You can even hold them to your face for a quick warm up.       We asked last year about getting the heat turned up for us morning folk who work over night or come in early. I think the reason we got turned down was because the studio lights come on at 5AM. They allegedly heat the space and create a hot environment for people sitting under the lights. I haven’t run into that problem though.

       Now that has rolled around again, we find ourselves in the same predicament. Brrrrr. Freezing. I did talk to one of the powers that be about the cold temps and he said “Cold hands? Shake em’ out”. Haha. Thanks or the sympathy. Looks like I’ll be wearing my long johns until .

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Nov 11 2008

Happy Mattress Sale Day

Published by Rob Kauder under dotcom

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I got an e-mail from a buddy of mine this morning who served with 2nd ANGLICO in Vietnam who lamented that while he and I were both working in our respective offices today, professors at Berkeley were enjoying their day off.

I guess that’s the way it goes.

For many today isn’t a commemoration of the armistice that brought an end to the first of two of the 20th Century’s worldwide cataclysms. No for many Americans, today is just a day off. It’s a paid holiday to spend raking leaves or relaxing in the warm comfort of hearth and home. It’s a mattress sale, a car sale, a 20-percent off at your favorite retailer. It’s a political photo op at the American Legion.

Here’s the true meaning of today.

Today is a day of remembrance for the doughboys who huddled in muddy trenches in France with dirty faces, muddy boots and impeccably clean Springfield ‘03 rifles waiting for the next German advance.

Today is a day to remember the sailors who hefted powder bags from the magazines and into the breeches as they fervently prepared for another broadside across Ironbottom Sound.

Today is a day to remember the airmen who braved flak, fighters and the bitter cold five miles up over occupied Europe.

Today is time to recall the Marines that dug ever deeper into the red clay on Hills 881 North and South as ordinance fell down like steel rain around them.

Today is about honoring the servicemen for helping preserve our union, to protect retailers’ rights to have their discount sales, to protect the politicians who legislate whether or not our veterans get decent health care benefits, and to make sure that those who protest against the military will continue to enjoy that freedom which is offered up the Bill of Rights but defended by the very people they detest.

To everyone who has served, in war and peace, thank you for your service. I for one am grateful for the millions of you who have stood watch while the rest of America peacefully slumbered.

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Oct 14 2008

Hispanic Business Professional Association Growing

Published by Mike Gonzalez under Nuestra Comunidad

This is an interview with Lily Baldwin, the president of the Hispanic Business Professional Association. She told me that the position is an opportunity to connect with the community. The following is a conversation we had via email. For more information on getting involved with HBPA you can email Lily at baldwin0951@msn.com

Entrevista realizada a Lily Baldwin, Presidente de La Asociacion de Profesionales Hispanos y de Negocios, de .  Lily menciona que es una buena oportunidad para conectar a la comunidad, a travez de esta Asociacion.
A continuacion la entrevista via correo electronico hecha a Lily.  Si desea mas informacion de como participar e involucrarse mas con esta Asociacion de Profesionales Hispanos, porfavor dirijase a Lily al correo electronico  @ baldwin0951@msn.com


How long has The Hispanic Business Professional Association been in existence?

As of this year the Association has been in existence for 13 years.

How did it get started?

A group of six Hispanic professionals from the area began meeting at lunch and talking about the need for forming a group that would provide a network for Hispanics in the area. Some of the founders were Rick Mendoza, Michael Fernandez, Marta Reyes, Luis Cerna and Amelia Laue. Then in 1995 HBPA was officially formed. It was at this time I (Lily Baldwin) joined the Association.

Where are you from originally?

I was born in Cuernavaca, (the city of eternal ) Morelos, Mexico. I moved to in 1989. I consider myself a bi cultural and bilingual person. I have spent half of my life in Mexico and half in the U.S.

How did you get to ?

I married a gringo from .

 

What’s the function of the organization?

The HBPA is a non-profit association of area Hispanic Professionals, Businesses, educators and other community members interested in business and civic issues. Our purpose is to promote and serve Hispanic cultural, business and professional interests in the greater Community.

How did you become president and what’s your role in that position?

I was elected the HBPA President in 2008 for a term of two calendar years. My role is to preside at the meetings of the Association, to lead and coordinate the Board of Directors and committees of the Association. The President ensures that no officer or member of this association has any authority, actual or implied, to represent this association verbally or written, without the approval from the Board of Directors of the association. The President enforces the laws and rules of the association.

At the most recent meeting it was brought up that the group should take a more active role in helping Hispanic business grow in . Do you think that’s true and are you trying to be more visible for Hispanic businesses?

Since the inception of the HBPA all members have made efforts to support and promote Hispanic business in and the Inland Northwest. After becoming president I have invited different speakers to the monthly meetings that have offered information and advice for developing minority businesses, offering different job opportunities for Hispanics and bilingual employees. The HBPA organizes and promotes several annual events which give opportunities to professionals and business owners to educate the public about their services. Recently, in September, HBPA joined the Association of State Hispanic Chambers of Commerce. Our goal is to support and foment Hispanic-owned businesses, as well as improving higher education access and success for Latinos.

How do you attract new members?

We attract new members by “word-of-mouth”. Active members invite people from their place of business or the community. We reach potential members through local news publications, such as La Prensa Bilingue, The Fig Tree, and the Spokesman Review. As the new president I have the opportunity to invite people from other Latino associations and agencies in the Community. We have active members who are not Hispanics.

What’s the biggest challenge for Hispanics in our area?

Our biggest challenge is to overcome social and economic barriers and promote educational advancement. We need to eliminate the educational gap between Hispanics and mainstream members of our community, and to improve and support business entrepreneurship. This is why we sponsor the annual Hispanic Graduation and Recognition Ceremony, support and promote Hispanics in business, professional and leadership positions. We have established a foundation that raises money for Latino scholarships for young people who are pursuing higher education.

What are some of the community activities the group is involved in?

In February we sponsor the “Viva Vino” event for the purpose of raising funds for the scholarship foundation. In May we provide for the Hispanic Graduation and Recognition Ceremony and for the presentation of scholarships. In September we organize the Hispanic Heritage Festival that promotes Hispanic culture in our community. In December we support the Christmas Tree Elegance Event for raising money to support the Symphony. In August we participate in the Unity In The Community event. During the year we network with other community entities to support their programs, such as the reception for Chilenian students who are involved in a special ESL program at Eastern University.

Tell us what’s going on with HBPA on the state level?

We are a member of the State Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. We are in the initial phase of creation and restructuring of an organization that would better serve the interests of Hispanic small business owners and professionals in State. As HBPA President I have met with the General Attorney of State for the purpose of addressing the problems that Hispanics face in the State of in relation to health care, education, social services, employment security and business promotion.

What’s your hope for the future of HBPA?

It is my hope that the members will play an active role in advancing diversity efforts, continue supporting Hispanic students in their pursuit of higher education, and promote Hispanic business and culture in the greater Community.

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Sep 03 2008

15-40-27

Published by Dave Erickson under KXLY 4 News @ 5

     No, it’s not the combination to my high school locker.  That’s the amount of time it’s been taking me to finish each activity of my triathlon; 15 minutes to swim 1/2 mile, 40 minutes to ride 13 miles and approx. 27 minutes to run 3.1 miles.  So, for about 90 minutes I’m burning about 800 calories.  Not bad, right? 

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(3 down… 27 to go)

     When I get home I usually make a fruit smoothie as an after workout meal.  I get out the blender and drop in 1/2 cup of non-fat vanilla yogurt, 2-3 cups of frozen mixed fruit, 1/2 cup of apple juice, 1/2 cup of mixed berries juice and then a scoop of whey protein.  It’s very filling.  Once blended it makes about 32 ounces.

     Great news, the Lance Armstrong Foundation has gifted me 500 Livestrong wristbands to give as ‘thank you’s’ to participants who buy a “30 in 30″ t-shirt!  The t-shirt is yours with a $30 donation on Cancer Patient Care’s website.    You can also make a donation at their office.  After you make an online donation, call CPC at 509-456-0446 and confirm your transaction (they will send you a confirmation e-mail too) and schedule a time when you can come in and pick up your shirt and Livestrong wristband.  CPC’s address is 1507 E Sprague in .

      Participants interested in taking part in my “30 in 30″ triathlon challenge or “30 minutes of exercise a day for 30 days” challenge, just go to any Oz Fitness location and sign up.  As a special offer during September, Oz Fitness is allowing “30 in 30″ participants a one month membership for only $60.  All money goes directly to Cancer Patient Care.  A one-time visit is only $20.  It’s $10 for each additional visit.  Every paid participant receives a “30 in 30″ t-shirt and Livestrong wristband!

     Send me an e-mail directly for additional questions:  davee@kxly.com

     Thank you and just keep livin’

=============

Here’s your healthy meal idea of the day:
15 Minute Salmon

Ingredients:
2 6-oz. salmon steaks (a normal portion size for meat and fish is 3 oz.)
Butter or vegetable oil cooking spray or fat-free canola cooking spray

Directions:
Preheat the broiler. Cover the broiling pan with aluminum foil and lightly grease the foil with butter or vegetable oil cooking spray.
Place the steaks on the pan and broil the salmon for 5 minutes. Turn the steaks carefully and broil the other side for 4 to 5 minutes or until the fish is firm but still springy and a bit translucent in the center.  Serve immediately topped with the sauce of your choice.

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Sep 01 2008

September: the fast-track to Fall

Published by Kris Crocker under Kris' Forecast Focus

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Does it seem like it takes FOREVER for the warm to finally arrive in the , but in the , the cool air just barges-in out of nowhere? It’s not just your imagination. The temperature change is much more dramatic from September through November (climatological ), than it is from March through May (climatological ).The average high in on September 1st is 78 degrees. Three months later, on November 30th, the average high is only 35 degrees. That’s a 43 degree drop! It seems like we should find a similar swing in temperatures in the months, but that is definitely not the case. On the first day of March, when most Inland Northwesterners are really craving some warm , the average high is 44 degrees. That number only climbs 26 degrees over the next three months. The average high on May 31st is 70 degrees. Our average high continues its slow climb through the end of July/beginning of August before the free- begins.

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Aug 22 2008

Leaked bumper sticker points to Evan Bayh as Obama Veep?

Published by Rob Kauder under dotcom

That’s the word from Kansas City this afternoon … KMBC in KC is reporting that a company there is printing up Obama - Bayh bumper stickers.

Obama, who has tried to keep word of who he tapped for Vice President a secret until now, was planning on holding a rally in Springfield, Illinois to announce his running mate at the same time he text messages the announcement.

Everyone’s keeping mum in the Democratic camp so far … but since we didn’t find out about the story from KMBC but from the front page announcement on Drudge Report this announcement does two things:

1. Bayh or no Bayh, it takes the wind out of Obama’s sails for his big Saturday announcement.
2. Changes tonight’s news cycle with the potential ’scoop’ of the identification of Bayh as Obama’s running mate.

It also proves once again that the second you post something online the story will spread like wildfire.

Note: If the story’s true Producer Chris Cargill just pointed out that Indiana just lost itself a Senator. Bayh - obviously - is a Democrat, while the man who would appoint his successor is Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels … a Republican.

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Aug 14 2008

Is the sizzle starting to fizzle?

Four in 10 voters still haven’t made up their minds about who to support in this November’s presidential election. A recent Associated Press-Ipsos poll reveals that 43 percent of registered voters surveyed have not made a final decision about who to vote for, and are therefore still in play. 15 percent of those undecided voters are leaning toward , while 16 percent tentatively support . Another 8 percent say they are undecided, and 4 percent say they will back third-party candidates Ralph Nader or Bob Barr, although the poll shows they are not strongly committed.

Meanwhile an early August poll by the non-partisan Pew Research Center suggests that just three in 10 adults say they are following the campaign very closely. Another poll early this month by CBS News suggests that only 18 percent of so-called uncommitted voters say they have been paying attention to the race over the last few weeks. What this data means is that this contest is still very much up in the air and the campaigns have not yet resonated with a significant number of voters.

Given the meteoric rise of ’s popularity this past , one might expect that he would be 18-20 percentage points ahead of McCain, but he isn’t. In fact yet another poll shows that 30% of Democrats, and nearly 50% of independents have grown tired of all the press fawning over Obama, and enthusiasm for the upstart candidate is declining.

Pundits says all this boils down to one key factor. Whether voters like or not, they know, or think they know what they’re going to get if he becomes president. Whether voters like Barack O’bama or not, they really do not know what they’re going to get if he becomes president. That alone has an unsettling effect upon people, and that is the barrier Obama must clear if he is to be the next president of the United States. The polls show he isn’t gaining sufficient momentum to clear that barrier at this time.

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Aug 13 2008

“Boys and Girls Club” taking the “30 in 30″ challenge

Published by Dave Erickson under KXLY 4 News @ 5

     I’m very excited to tell you about my “30 in 30″ fitness / fund raising challenge that kicks off on September 1st.  This afternoon, I spoke to the kids at the Boys and Girls Club at 544 E. Providence in

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     Many of them are joining my challenge to perform “30 minutes of exercise a day for 30 days” starting on (9/1).  We’ll be awarding prizes to the kids who raise the most money and complete the most days of exercise for the month of September. 

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    The charity we’re focusing on is Cancer Patient Care.  Its website has information on how you can donate to my month-long fund raising effort.  For my part, I’ll be doing 30 triathlons during this same period.  Our goal is to raise $30,000.  It’s a lofty effort but something I believe we can reach together.

    I’ll continue to give you updates right here on my blog as well as mentions during KXLY4 HD News at 5.  Thanks for supporting Cancer Patient Care.

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Jul 31 2008

Great Careers with Long Vacations

Published by Dave Erickson under KXLY 4 News @ 5

Teachers and School Administrators

The notion that teachers have the entire off is a myth. They work after the students leave to complete grading, additional training, and class preparation. However, many American teachers have ten paid holidays, and breaks, and at least a month off in the .

Career training begins by earning your bachelor’s degree, then completing either a teaching credential or master’s degree program. You can do it all through online colleges, too. Secondary school teachers earn on average $52,450 a year, but time off is invaluable.

Holistic Health Professional

Alternative medicine is rapidly becoming part of mainstream health care. Holistic health care professionals typically join an existing practice or manage their own business, which means that you may work hard, but you also work smart, setting your own hours. Prepare for a rewarding career by taking online courses in natural health, nutrition, or massage therapy. There are associate, bachelor’s, and graduate degrees available.

Love the tropics? Holistic health pros often organize retreats or workshops at spas, resorts, and on cruises. Team up with other body workers, nutritionists, or natural healers to cover your client appointments while you enjoy extended leave. The national average wage for health care practitioners in 2007 was $65,020.

Freelance Game Designer

As many a game designer will tell you, game development companies only produce a few titles a year. A production may take four months to complete, with work piling up at burn-out levels as the game advances deep into the production schedule. That’s why companies find it advantageous to hire designers on a freelance basis. Do the job and you’ll be asked back again when another idea hits the table.

That means plenty of time between gigs to relax at the beach. Train for this career through a computer science or graphic design program, earning an associate or bachelor’s degree. Multimedia artists earned on average $61,010 last year.

Business Consultant

Business management consultants belong to one of the fastest-growing, highest-paying career groups. It’s a great profession for entrepreneurs who want to work on a freelance basis, taking on strategic clients, conducting corporate research, or delivering workshops on topics such as process flow or change management.

Consider adding an MBA to your existing business or computer science credentials. Focus on human resource, financial, technical, and administrative management. Business management professionals averaged $96,150 a year in 2007. Combine business and pleasure by conducting training workshops at hotels and resorts. Play golf. It may be tax deductible.

Convention and Tourism Planner

If you can’t take time for a vacation, why not pursue a career where your job is actually an extended tour in paradise? Hotel managers and convention planners help corporate clients book long business meetings at luxurious accommodations in resorts and spas. Your work will seem like a juggling act, but you’ll be ideally situated to get the most of your off hours and long weekends. When the dust settles from a major booking, you can use compensation time for swimming and tanning.

(Source of article)

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Jul 26 2008

Analysis: U.S. now winning Iraq war that seemed lost

Published by Chris Cargill under Sound Off Central

A new analysis from the Associated Press’ top reporters in . Very interesting read. The irony is the fact that Sen. McCain’s strategy worked, plays into Sen. Obama’s view that now is the time we can start withdrawing troops. Sen. McCain, too, has said the reason we’re able to talk about drawing down troops is because of the success. But mark my words, if we start withdrawing even before an ‘Obama Administration’ were to take office, Sen. Obama will get the credit, even though he probably shouldn’t.

Curious about your thoughts after you read it:

- - - - - - - - - -

Analysis: US now winning war that seemed lost

By ROBERT BURNS and ROBERT H. REID, Associated Press WritersSat Jul 26, 10:45 PM ET

 

The United States is now winning the war that two years ago seemed lost. Limited, sometimes sharp fighting and periodic terrorist bombings in are likely to continue, possibly for years. But the Iraqi government and the U.S. now are able to shift focus from mainly combat to mainly building the fragile beginnings of peace — a transition that many found almost unthinkable as recently as one year ago.

Despite the occasional bursts of violence, has reached the point where the insurgents, who once controlled whole cities, no longer have the clout to threaten the viability of the central government.

That does not mean the war has ended or that U.S. troops have no role in . It means the combat phase finally is ending, years past the time when President Bush optimistically declared it had. The new phase focuses on training the Iraqi and police, restraining the flow of illicit weaponry from Iran, supporting closer links between Baghdad and local governments, pushing the integration of former insurgents into legitimate government jobs and assisting in rebuilding the economy.

Scattered battles go on, especially against al-Qaida holdouts north of Baghdad. But organized resistance, with the steady drumbeat of bombings, kidnappings, assassinations and ambushes that once rocked the capital daily, has all but ceased.

This amounts to more than a lull in the violence. It reflects a fundamental shift in the outlook for the Sunni minority, which held power under Saddam Hussein. They launched the insurgency five years ago. They now are either sidelined or have switched sides to cooperate with the Americans in return for money and political support.

Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in , told The Associated Press this past week there are early indications that senior leaders of al-Qaida may be considering shifting their main focus from to the war in Afghanistan.

Ryan Crocker, the U.S. ambassador to , told the AP on Thursday that the insurgency as a whole has withered to the point where it is no longer a threat to ’s future.

“Very clearly, the insurgency is in no position to overthrow the government or, really, even to challenge it,” Crocker said. “It’s actually almost in no position to try to confront it. By and large, what’s left of the insurgency is just trying to hang on.”

Shiite militias, notably the Mahdi of radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, have lost their power bases in Baghdad, Basra and other major cities. An important step was the routing of Shiite extremists in the slums of eastern Baghdad this — now a quiet though not fully secure district.

Al-Sadr and top lieutenants are now in Iran. Still talking of a comeback, they are facing major obstacles, including a loss of support among a Shiite population weary of war and no longer as terrified of Sunni extremists as they were two years ago.

Despite the favorable signs, U.S. commanders are leery of proclaiming victory or promising that the calm will last.

The premature declaration by the Bush administration of “Mission Accomplished” in May 2003 convinced commanders that the best public relations strategy is to promise little, and couple all good news with the warning that “security is fragile” and that the improvements, while encouraging, are “not irreversible.”

still faces a mountain of problems: sectarian rivalries, power struggles within the Sunni and Shiite communities, Kurdish-Arab tensions, corruption. Any one of those could rekindle widespread fighting.

But the underlying dynamics in Iraqi society that blew up the U.S. military’s hopes for an early exit, shortly after the of Baghdad in April 2003, have changed in important ways in recent months.

Systematic sectarian killings have all but ended in the capital, in large part because of tight security and a strategy of walling off neighborhoods purged of minorities in 2006.

That has helped establish a sense of normalcy in the streets of the capital. People are expressing a new confidence in their own security forces, which in turn are exhibiting a newfound assertiveness with the insurgency largely in retreat.

Statistics show violence at a four-year low. The monthly American death toll appears to be at its lowest of the war — four killed in action so far this month as of Friday, compared with 66 in July a year ago. From a daily average of 160 insurgent attacks in July 2007, the average has plummeted to about two dozen a day this month. On Wednesday the nationwide total was 13.

Beyond that, there is something in the air in this .

In Baghdad, parks are filled every weekend with families playing and picnicking with their children. That was unthinkable only a year ago, when the first, barely visible signs of a turnaround emerged.

Now a moment has arrived for the Iraqis to try to take those positive threads and weave them into a lasting stability.

The questions facing both Americans and Iraqis are: What kinds of help will the country need from the U.S. military, and for how long? The questions will take on greater importance as the U.S. presidential election nears, with one candidate pledging a troop withdrawal and the other insisting on staying.

Iraqi authorities have grown dependent on the U.S. military after more than five years of war. While they are aiming for full sovereignty with no foreign troops on their soil, they do not want to rush. In a similar sense, the Americans fear that after losing more than 4,100 troops, the sacrifice could be squandered.

U.S. commanders say a substantial American military presence will be needed beyond 2009. But judging from the security gains that have been sustained over the first half of this year — as the Pentagon withdrew five brigades sent as reinforcements in 2007 — the remaining troops could be used as peacekeepers more than combatants.

As a measure of the transitioning U.S. role, Maj. Gen. Jeffery Hammond says that when he took command of American forces in the Baghdad area about seven months ago he was spending 80 percent of his time working on combat-related matters and about 20 percent on what the military calls “nonkinetic” issues, such as supporting the development of Iraqi government institutions and humanitarian aid.

Now Hammond estimates those percentage have been almost reversed. For several hours one recent day, for example, Hammond consulted on water projects with a Sunni sheik in the Radwaniyah area of southwest Baghdad, then spent time with an Iraqi physician/entrepreneur in the Dora district of southern Baghdad — an area, now calm, that in early 2007 was one of the capital’s most violent zones.

“We’re getting close to something that looks like an end to mass violence in ,” says Stephen Biddle, an analyst at the Council of Foreign Relations who has advised Petraeus on war strategy. Biddle is not ready to say it’s over, but he sees the U.S. mission shifting from fighting the insurgents to keeping the peace.

Although Sunni and Shiite extremists are still around, they have surrendered the initiative and have lost the support of many ordinary Iraqis. That can be traced to an altered U.S. approach to countering the insurgency — a Petraeus-driven move to take more U.S. troops off their big bases and put them in Baghdad neighborhoods where they mixed with ordinary Iraqis and built a new level of trust.

Col. Tom James, a brigade commander who is on his third combat tour in , explains the new calm this way:

“We’ve put out the forest fire. Now we’re dealing with pop-up fires.”

It’s not the end of fighting. It looks like the beginning of a perilous peace.

Maj. Gen. Ali Hadi Hussein al-Yaseri, the chief of patrol police in the capital, sees the changes.

“Even eight months ago, Baghdad was not today’s Baghdad,” he says.

___

EDITOR’S NOTE — Robert Burns is AP’s chief military reporter, and Robert Reid is AP’s chief of bureau in Baghdad. Reid has covered the war from his post in since the U.S. invasion in March 2003. Burns, based in , has made 21 reporting trips to ; on his latest during July, Burns spent nearly three weeks in central and northern , observing military operations and interviewing both U.S. and Iraqi officers.

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Jul 23 2008

A welcome moment of judicial lucidity

A federal appeals court has ruled that South Dakota doctors must- tell women seeking abortions that the procedure ends a human life. In a 7-4 decision by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals says doctors must tell women “that the abortion will terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being.” Doctors must also inform women that they have a right to continue a pregnancy and that abortion may cause women psychological harm, including thoughts of suicide.

Planned Parenthood attacked the state law that requires these disclosures, claiming that the law violates doctors’ free-speech rights by forcing them to tell women things the doctors might not believe.

The 8th Circuit did not agree.

The court ruled that Planned Parenthood has failed to show that the information to be given to women seeking abortions is untruthful, misleading or irrelevant to the woman’s decision. In other words, the court recognized in a rare judicial statement, that the fetuses are a separate persons, and that recognition of them as such is scientifically sound, overwhelmingly supported by biological evidence, and not some kind of ideological notion. This bad news for those who prefer that women not know the truth about what they are choosing.

Pro-life advocates think this decision is a big victory for women, who now must be given accurate information in order to make a decision not only for the child, but also for themselves. Opponents insist that it is not about providing information to women. It is about intruding in the doctor-patient relationship.

Whichever side you support on this matter, intellectual honesty demands that we recognize the realities involved in the choice to abort one’s offspring. Myths and mis-truths are no longer going to suffice. It’s time we tell it like it is, not like we prefer it to be. I hail this important decision with enthusiasm.

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Jun 26 2008

Geraldo Rivera and Spokane City Hall: Profiles in courage

Published by Rob Kauder under dotcom

Welcome to today’s episode of Profiles in Courage, where we’ll highlight great people doing heroic deeds.

Geraldo RiveraGeraldo Rivera. Now there’s a guy who’s got some serious courage. The guy has taken on skinheads, black activists, Al Capone’s secret vault, Satanism … but he showed his true courage taking on the U.S. recently.

During the war in in 2003, Rivera made the crazy stupid mistake of filing a report live from the field while embedded with the “Screaming ” of the 101st Airborne Division. During a broadcast he began speaking in detail about an upcoming operation and then drew a map in the sand to show the folks back home what was going to happen.

And, of course, Geraldo forgot that Saddam Hussein was a big Fox News fan at the time.

Needless to say Geraldo became “un-embedded” and heroically advanced the story on the war in from his new posting … in Kuwait.

So why is he so courageous? Geraldo is courageous because he recently went tandem skydiving … with the U.S. Army’s “Golden Knights” Parachute Team. Yes he jumped out of an airplane with an paratrooper - similar to the thousands whose positions he gave away during the march to Baghdad - strapped to his back.

“You just feel like you’re an eagle up there,” Rivera told News14 in Raleigh. “You feel like you could do anything, feel like you could soar anywhere. It’s almost a disappointment when the chute opens.”

I’ll leave it to the Screaming to add the punchline to that sentence.

City Hall. Now there’s courageous leadership right there. Yes, I’ve lamented their leadership in the past … Mayor proclaiming “It’s just a little snow” Week last and then “It’s just a little water” Week this . Now, after John Langeler’s look at Spokane’s never-ending pothole problem the city is finally taking responsibility for the dilapidated state of the roads around the Lilac City.

“The reality is that we wouldn’t typically pay on damage from a pothole unless we had prior knowledge the pothole existed,” City spokesperson Marlene Feist said.

… seriously?

“We all have a responsibility when we drive to avoid hazards,” Feist explained. “Just like if something fell off the truck in front of you, you have a responsibility to drive around it.”

Really?

Note to Police Chief Anne Kirkpatrick: Please tell your officers in the Patrol Division that when they arrive on the scene of a head-on collision involving my SUV and the car in the oncoming lane, I was following my responsibility - as recommended by city leadership - to drive around all of the potholes in my lane and was looking for some pothole-free asphalt in the oncoming lane.

OK … seriously … some of the potholes around here look like bomb craters. Baghdad’s streets weren’t this bad, and their potholes are created by bomb craters.

Telling people it’s their own fault that they don’t navigate around potholes is ludicrous. If the city isn’t going to accept responsibility for the roads, just go the full distance and completely margainalize city residents’ concerns.

When it starts snowing this tell the people that everyone will be safe from the potholes as they’ll all be filled up with snow. When people complain about the city’s lackluster response to plowing the streets, tell the people you’re being proactive in protecting them from the potholes by keeping them filled with snow.

Then substitute the word “snow” for “water” or “fire” or “protesters demonstrating against fur / police brutality / gas prices” as needed. That may not be the courageous response, but at least it’ll be an honest one.

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Jun 24 2008

Two car collision blocking Highway 292

Published by Rob Kauder under Breaking News

The State Patrol is responding to a two car collision that’s blocking all lanes of Highway 292 at Milepost 5 between Loon Lake and Springdale.

There are reports of multiple injuries and emergency responders have requested Medstar launch a medevac helicopter to airlift casualties from the scene.

Update: Three people have been injured in a two car head-on collision on Highway 292 at Milepost 5 between Loon Lake and Springdale.

The accident was reported at 4:30 p.m. and blocked all lanes of Highway 292 for about an hour.

Emergency responders requested a Medstar helicopter to transport one of the persons involved in the crash to the hospital. Two other people in the crash were evacuated by ambulance from the scene.

Highway 292 was reopened at 5:30 p.m.

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