3 Ocak 2013 Perşembe

Talking guns

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Sam Smith -Barack Obama was fortunate that the Newtown massacre occurred in December rather than, say, in September, since the reaction to it by his liberal supporters might easily have alienated enough voters to lose his election.

Once again, liberal leaders have responded to a problem by demonizing large numbers of citizens whose support they need for all sorts of other issues. If you own a gun, oppose abortion or take the Bible literally, you are beyond redemption even if you are a registered Democrat, have just been fired, can't afford your health bills or are facing foreclosure.

This isn't politics, it's religion. And it's not even evangelical religion seeking to convert, but rather just narcissistic self-righteousness. As long as one believes the right thing, that's all that matters. The Maybes, Don't Knows and Can't Figure It Outs aren't worth the bother.

In real politics you try to win over the other folks. Today's liberals just make them angry.

Of course, liberals are not alone in this. Much as popular music has reduced itself to the most simplistic chords, rhythms, dynamics, and melodies, so we seem to have developed a sort of three chord politics in which performers rely on exaggerated moves, screams, exploding smoke and flashing lights to replace what was once a tune. Rachel Maddow and Sean Hannity play to their fans and to hell with those not present and cheering in the audience.

The problem with this, for liberals, is that, according to Gallup, only about 21% of Americans call themselves such and, of these, only six percent describe themselves as very liberal. Perhaps most stunning is that only 28% of those under 30 call themselves liberal, just 12 points more than among those 65 and older.

This is the modern America that liberals helped to build as they deserted the economics based policies of the New Deal and Great Society. This drift allowed for the creation of a bipolar subset known as Reagan Democrats. In fact, neither party was helping the working class but Reagan at least pretended that he was.

Puritans vs. libertarians

As liberals became more of an elite demographic rather than a political movement, their contempt for the lower end of their former base grew. Increasingly, their view of liberty also became more the one that has its roots in Puritanism. As Albion's Seedlings notes,
[Historian David Hackett Fisher in his examination of the differences between early American settlers] calls the New England idea "ordered liberty" (freedom to determine the course of one's own society), at worst exemplified in the stifling, moralistic conformism that we still associate with the word "Puritan", at best in the strong town-based democracies (and suspicion of anything but local power) still evident in parts of northern New England. The Virginia idea was that of "hegemonic liberty" (freedom to rule and not be ruled), at worst exemplified in the hierarchical "slaveocracy" that valued freedom for those at the top but not for poor white trash or black slaves, at best in the aristocratic excellence of men such as George Washington. The Quaker idea was that of "reciprocal liberty" (freedom for me and for thou), at worst exemplified in the pacifistic pursuit of commerce without regard for nation or principle, at best in a quite modern-sounding respect for all human beings to pursue their own fulfillment. The frontier idea was that of "natural liberty" (a freedom without restraints of law or custom), at worst exemplified in the violent and often-emotionalistic chaos of life beyond the reach of civilized norms, at best in eternal vigilance with regard to the sovereignty of the individual.
To understand what is going on in the current debate, it helps to see how the conflict is between the puritanism of the gun control advocates and the natural liberty of the gun advocates.

In easing the strains between these views of liberty, it is the approach of reciprocal liberty - I can't have my liberty unless you have yours - that offers the most hope of resolving the most conflict.

As the product of a Quaker education, I have little problem with reciprocal liberty, but have also learned how increasingly alien it is to many Americans on both the left and right. The liberals want guns abolished as fiercely as the conservatives want abortion done away with and so forth.

And, of course, you do this through laws. In an article in Huffington Post, Amanda Terkel spells out a revealing liberal assumption:
As 2012 comes to a close, the 112th Congress is set to go down in American history as the most unproductive session since the 1940s. . . .The 104th Congress (1995-1996) currently holds the ignominious distinction of being the least productive session of Congress… Just 333 bills became law during that two-year period, meaning the 112th Congress needs to send nearly 100 more bills to Obama's desk in the next few days if it wants to avoid going down in history.
The idea that progress is measured by the number of laws passed not only ignores the conflict between good and bad laws, but puritanically assumes that the quality of life is caused by regulation rather than what we fund, create, value and encourage.

Consider that Harpers recently noted that Congress created an average of 56 new federal crimes a year. If that had been true over the past century, it would mean there would be over 5,000 things we can't do today that were perfectly legal in 1912.

Or consider that in the back of my car is a plastic mail box I have to return to the post office that states in large print that any misuse of this box could result in a $1000 fine or three months in prison. The box is probably worth less than five bucks.

The liberal and conservative puritan approach is also not a healthy one in a diverse land that claims to honor freedom.

This doesn't mean that there isn't a difference in the sort of issues that come up. For example, whether someone has an abortion or marries a gay is not only none of my business but doesn't affect me one way or another.

Guns are different. Guns kill quite a few people and while the right to own a gun is embedded in our constitution that doesn't mean there isn't a need for all to be involved in the problems that guns create.

At the same time, both the data and the politics of the situation strongly suggest that these issues could be resolved better in a spirit of civil discussion rather than self-righteous puritanism or indifferent libertarianism.

Further, any discussion needs to be based on a clear understanding that, while part of a social problem, guns are only one manifestation of that problem. Thus making the guns and their owners the villains makes no more sense than blaming climate change only on a few easy to spot problems, such inefficient lighting and heating, while ignoring the much larger factor of population growth.

Factors that get downplayed


Here are a few items that deserve at least as much attention as guns:

  • Noah Smith, writing in the Atlantic notes: "A 1994 Department of Justice report suggested that between a third and a half of U.S. homicides were drug-related, while a recent Center for Disease Control study found that the rate varied between 5% and 25% (a 2002 Bureau of Justice report splits the difference). . . Ending the drug war would involve reducing all of these incentives to murder. Treating addicts in hospitals and rehab centers, instead of sticking them in prisons, would reduce demand for drugs, lowering the price and starving gangs of income while reducing their incentive to wage turf wars. Decriminalization would relieve pressure on our prison system, allowing us to focus on keeping violent people off the streets instead of pointlessly punishing drug users for destroying their own health. And full legalization of recreational marijuana -- which is already proceeding quickly among the states, but is still foolishly opposed by the Obama administration -- is an obvious first step."

  • According to the FBI, 37% of female victims (where the relationship was known) are killed by their husbands or boyfriends. Obviously, a fantasized elimination of 300 million guns might reduce that number, but knives, bats, and strangulation would still be readily at hand. Similarly 53% of victims in murders (where the relationship was known) are killed by someone they knew and 25% of victims were killed by family members. Even now, 32% of murders don't involve guns, a number bound to increase if guns are less common.

  • Our perfectly legal culture of violence has grown dramatically in recent decades. For example, thirty years ago baseball and football were virtually tied in popularity. Today the much more violent football is far ahead. Where before TV, the young read comic books and listened to radio programs in which reality turned into fantasy, our advanced technology in video games and movies has allowed fantasy to be turned into extreme realism. Or consider childrens' books like the Hunger Games in which one character says, "The real sport of the Hunger Games is watching the tributes kill one another." And later: "About a dozen or so tributes are hacking away at one another at the horn. Several lie dead already on the ground. . . .I can see the muscles ripple in Cato's arms as he sharply jerks the boy's head to the side. It's that quick." The choice to use a gun violently comes from someplace and such are some of the places.

  • Violence is a major priority of our government policies including pointless wars, torture, drone attacks, record expenditures for government violence, military style police attacks on public demonstrations, mass solitary confinement and incarceration of citizens for minor offenses such as drug possession. Our governments celebrate violence as a solution to problems. What do citizens learn from that?

  • Our concern over violence is dramatically affected by class. For example, over 200 children, at some point under prior care by the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, were slain between 2000 and 2011. That is almost precisely the equivalent in annual child deaths as occurred one time in Newtown. As the Chicago Tribune reported, "their family histories [were] darkened by poverty, mental illness, violence and drugs. They had something else in common, too. The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services had been warned about possible abuse and neglect, but the staff assigned to protect them ultimately failed, according to state officials and records obtained by the Tribune… The facts rarely were made public, largely because of confidentiality laws. Meanwhile, the median family income in Newtown is about $119,000, more than double the national average. In Columbine, the family median income is about 70% greater than the national average. Columbine and Newtown shock us; Chicago gets ignored.

  • Mental health services have been been badly hit by the squeeze on public spending. For example state funding for mental health outpatient facilities has declined $1.6 billion since 2009. According to the Alliance for Health Reform there are 11 million adults who lack adqueate mental health services.

  • For all the talk about ending violence,experts in non-violence - mediators, alternative court systems and so forth - get short shrift. Just as violence is the product of formal and informal education, so its opposite requires serious conscious attention to have an effect. How many classes has your child had in dispute resolution and conflict avoidance? It's a question we don't even ask.
So while guns clearly play a role in violence, to perceive the solution overwhelmingly as a matter of prohibition is naïve at best, deadly at worst.


A plan that doesn't work

Then there is also the problem that gun prohibition - like other such attempts with alcohol and drugs - often doesn't work. A few reasons:
  • The legal system goes under the table. Already some forty percent of guns are not purchased from gun stores. This figure would soar with excessive prohibition.

  • As the Economic Policy Journal points out, "There are not many murders in the United States that are committed with rifles or shotguns. Combined, it is under 1,000 per year---more people are murdered with knives. FBI data shows that most murders are done with handguns. Random killings are very rare, most are between people who know each or rival gang members.

  • DC offers a striking history of how murders are independent of gun laws. From less 100 such deaths a year in the 1960s, as the 1968 riots approached, annual murders soared to nearly 300, without any new access to fire arms. In the mid 1970s, after the murder rate had already dropped back under 200, a strict gun law was imposed and for the next few years nothing much happened one way or the other. Then Reagan escalated the drug war and in about five years - despite the new gun restrictions - murders climbed to nearly 500. As the drug market became less anarchistic (many killings had involved a conflict over turf), as the population of young men declined and with better policing, over the next twenty years the murder rate declined until it was close to the 1960s level. . More recently, the rate has fallen even lower yet when the Washington Post offered an explanation, strikingly absent was change in gun laws.

  • Also missing from many analyses of urban crime: the effects of gentrification. As gentrifier-in-chief Richard Florida wrote recently: "My analysis found gun-related homicides to be lower in metros with higher levels of human capital, more knowledge-based economies, and greater concentrations of high-tech industry. On the flip side, I found gun-related murders to be higher in metros with higher poverty levels, higher levels of inequality, more blue-collar working class economies…" In other words, get the poor and minorities out of town.

  • Culture play a huge role in all of this, hence the far lower murder rates in high gun owning New Hampshire compared to, say, Chicago. This is true throughout the country as shown in this chart comparing states with right to carry laws compared to other

What do we do about it all?

To change things we have to turn our national values in a direction, opposite to ones in which the abuse of guns is only a marker not the cause,opposite to one that generically celebrates violence.

Until we make nonviolent resolution of problems - from the international to the intramarital - a major priority, we're just kidding ourselves. There are simply too many other ways to kill people even if you don't have a gun.

We also need to avoid the very sort of simplistic categorizations of others that makes such a change possible. A good place for liberals to start is to take another look at gun owners.

While they rage against the NRA, it would be more helpful to understand, for example, that, according to a recent Luntz poll, 74% of its members support criminal background checks before the purchase of a gun.

Further, gun owners do not fit the liberal stereotype, as John Sides in the Washington Post recently reported:
In December, 2011, the survey firm YouGov interviewed 45,000 Americans and asked whether they or someone in their household owned a gun and whether they were members of the NRA. About 22 percent of the sample reported owning a gun, 13 percent said that someone else in their household owned a gun, and 59 percent reported not owning a gun. The remaining 6 percent were not sure. Thus, about 35 percent of Americans had a gun in their house-a number, incidentally, much lower than in an October, 2011 Gallup poll [Gallup says 47% are owners] but more in line with data from the General Social Survey.

About 7 percent of this sample reported being an NRA member. Among gun owners, the number was 24 percent. Among those who lived in a household with a gun, it was 4 percent. Among those without a gun, it was 1 percent.

NRA members were also different politically even from gun owners who weren't in the NRA. For example, 70 percent of gun owners who were NRA members called themselves "conservative" or "very conservative." Only 44 percent of gun owners who weren't NRA members said that. And while gun ownership has become increasingly confined to Republicans, there are still big differences in terms of party identification even among gun owners. The vast majority of NRA members (73 percent) identified with or leaned toward the Republican Party. But among gun owners who weren't in the NRA, only 49 percent were Republicans; more than a third (35 percent) were actually Democrats.
Consider ...the standard survey question asking whether gun laws should be more strict, less strict, or unchanged. A majority, 54 percent, of those who did not own a gun or belong to the NRA said "more strict." ... But while most NRA members (54 percent) wanted to make gun laws less strict, only 25 percent of gun owners who were not NRA members felt this way. The plurality of them (45 percent) wanted no change; 25 percent even supported stricter laws.
Some measures attracted nearly universal support (keeping guns from the mentally ill) or opposition (banning the sale of handguns). Requiring a five-day waiting period was also very popular. Even half of NRA members supported that.
What these poll results show is that the coalitional politics of gun control is more complex than you might think ...This is not a world with gun owners on one side and those who do not own guns on the other. Two of the policies most discussed in the wake of the Newtown shootings-a ban on assault weapons and a limit on the size of magazines-will attract support not only from those who don't have a gun in their house but from those who do, especially if the gun isn't theirs and also if the gun is theirs but they are not NRA members.

Gun owners do not speak with one voice about gun control...
What this means is that if liberal political and media leaders would step outside of their gated cultural communities they would find allies in many more ways than they presently can imagine. And perhaps could begin to rebuild a politics that crosses cultural and economic boundaries and thus can actually work.

Some comments of the day

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The most underreported fact from the cliff

Of course they carefully don't identify "payroll tax" as being the lesser-known name of "social security tax", the "cut" having been the first step in killing the program.

This should bother me, but till they stop cutting payouts of SS while having working people and employers pay less money in, I just can't mind. They won't lift the cap. They're trying to get rid of this program and I was infuriated when they used the FICA tax as the source of relief. How about increasing wages, reducing CEO pay, tear up trade agreements... Now I'm just getting silly, I know. But a lot of older people just aren't making it on the low end of SS scale without help from families unless they managed to secure other assets along the way in their lives. I know you know what I mean; I know you know it's a dilemma. I just want them to leave this program alone.

Fiscal cliff

"Praising Congress for the fiscal cliff deal is like giving an arsonist an award for putting out his own fire"Or giving Henry Kissinger the Nobel Peace prize for ending the Vietnam War!

The real problem with race: it doesn't exist
Homo sapiens sapiens is everyone on the planet. Scientifically there would have to be Homo sapiens neandertalensis on the planet alive today for there to be two races of human. So i am with Sam, ethnicity, or any other useful word more accurately describes human variability on the planet today than sub species nomenclature.
More recent chasing of a marker in the Y-chromosome has shown that both Europeans and Mongoloids are descended from a group, presumably herders, that migrated from Africa to central Asia. Europeans are not descendants of Mongoloids, nor are Mongoloids descendants of Europeans. The Caucasoids are not "hybrids", instead they are a common ancestor. Australians were first out of Africa which is why they are least related to Africans. Except for the last 150 miles they could walk it, because the sea level was much lower, Of course there's no purity anywhere. There's been far too much history for that.Researchers go to absurd lengths to avoid the conclusion that the European DNA in American Indians came across the Atlantic, maybe in ancient fishing or whaling boats, maybe kayaking and walking along the edge of an ice sheet. In historical times, Africans have drifted from the Congo to Brazil in two weeks in an open boat. I would venture to predict that a genetic marker in Brazil will be
Chile, Mexico, Turkey only developed countries more economically unequal than U.S.The US is not a developed country. It is an undeveloping country, at an accelerating rate.

Rock stars die young
Rock 'n Roll is here to stay but not its exponents. This wave instability suggests that it may become a lost art in a few decades, like Guy Lombardo. At the same time, old folk and classical traditions find no shortage of replacement talent when radical innovation is removed. This process is noticed in jazz, which was essentially retired by Miles Davis in 1969 to live on only as fused to other emerging forms. As bebop died with its stars rather quickly, it could be that youthful innovation makes survivors obsolete at a young age. Those who refuse retraining like Louis Armstrong or George Jones deepen the replicable traditions.  Global crop production stagnating in some areas
Sterilization surgery is invasive and has many problematic and sometimes dangerous side effects. Vasectomies can harden the arteries and tubal ligation can create obesity in some people. It also means that if the first child dies, then parents could not have a second, which is pretty harsh punishment if they lost the first child through no fault of their own.Better success in lowering birthrates to .5 per person would be made by education, free and available birth control and abortions, and changing the tax code. Instead of giving a tax break for every child in a family, only give a tax break for the first born, or the results of the first live birth, like twins. After the first child tax break, that tax break goes away with the second child from a second live birth. After the second child an overpopulation tax kicks in and taxes increase with each child added to the family, the rates increasing with each additional child. So while the overpopulation tax on three kids might be.

Time Warner blacks out Al Jazeera

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CNN - Pioneering Arab broadcaster Al Jazeera has acquired Current TV, and will use the network's wider distribution avenues to launch a new U.S.-based channel.

The takeover will provide Al Jazeera with access to millions of U.S. households, a lucrative market the Qatar-based broadcaster has long coveted. The deal also means the end of Current, the low-rated channel co-founded by former Vice President Al Gore.

Al Jazeera said it will shutter Current and create a New York-based network. Al Jazeera, which is financed by the government of Qatar, said it plans to expand its presence in the U.S., opening new bureaus and doubling its staff to 300 employees...

But if Current was acquired to provide access to more households, there were signs of trouble on that front Wednesday, as Time Warner Cable immediately moved to drop Current following the takeover announcement. "Our agreement with Current has been terminated and we will no longer be carrying the service," the cable provider said in a statement.

Why you don't want Jane Harman as CIA director

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Jeff Stein - Even in a town with memory holes as deep as dark space, the persistence of Jane Harman’s name near the top of lists for CIA director is a mystery.

Apparently, Harman’s role in an Israeli intelligence influence operation has been forgotten by Washington's Great Mentioners.
As I reported in 2009:
“Rep. Jane Harman , the California Democrat with a longtime involvement in intelligence issues, was overheard on an NSA wiretap telling a suspected Israeli agent that she would lobby the Justice Department reduce espionage-related charges against two officials of the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee, the most powerful pro-Israel organization in Washington.
“Harman was recorded saying she would ‘waddle into’ the AIPAC case ‘if you think it’ll make a difference,’ according to two former senior national security officials familiar with the NSA transcript. In exchange for Harman’s help, the sources said, the suspected Israeli agent pledged to help lobby Nancy Pelosi , D-Calif., then-House minority leader, to appoint Harman chair of the Intelligence Committee after the 2006 elections, which the Democrats were heavily favored to win.
“Seemingly wary of what she had just agreed to, according to an official who read the NSA transcript, Harman hung up after saying, ‘This conversation doesn’t exist.’
No hard evidence emerged that Harman did, in fact, lobby Bush administration officials on behalf of the AIPAC defendants, although The Washington Post reported that she called the White House on their behalf.

The New York Times and other media organizations corroborated my original reporting.

If that weren’t enough, California Democrat’s administrative record should be.  Harman has never run anything bigger than the Woodrow Wilson Institute, and during her eight terms in Congress, her office churned with turnovers.
MORE

Word: The deficit

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Dean Baker,  Counterpunch - The leadership of both parties has elevated the budget deficit to be the top and virtually only issue in national economic policy. This means ignoring the downturn that continues to cause enormous amount of unnecessary suffering for tens of millions of people. But fears of big deficits are preventing us from giving the same sort of boost to the economy that got us out of the Great Depression.

The explanation is simple: Profits have returned to pre-recession levels. This means that from the standpoint of the people who own and run American businesses, everything is pretty much fine. Moreover, they see the deficits created by the downturn as providing an opportunity to go after Social Security and Medicare.

The Campaign to Fix the Debt, a nonpartisan organization involving many of the country’s richest and most powerful CEOs, sets out to do just that. It has become standard practice in Washington for Wall Street types and other wealthy interests to finance groups to push their agenda. The Campaign to Fix the Debt involves the CEOs themselves directly stepping up to the plate and pushing the case for cutting Social Security and Medicare as well as lowering the corporate income tax rate.

...There is no easy way for the private sector to replace this demand. Businesses don’t invest unless they see demand for their products, regardless of how much love we might shower on the “job creators.” In fact, if anything, investment is surprisingly strong given the large amount of excess capacity in the economy. Measured as a share of GDP, investment in equipment and software is almost back to its pre-recession level. It is hard to envision investment getting much higher, absent a major boost in demand from some other sector.

This is why it is necessary for the government to run large deficits. Ideally, the money would be spent in areas that will make us richer in the future: education, infrastructure, research and development in clean energy, etc. There is just no way around a large role for the government given the economy’s current weakness.

Robert Reich, Truth Out -  In fact, federal deficits are dropping as a percent of the total economy.

For the fiscal year ending in September 2009, the deficit was 10.1 percent of the gross domestic product, the value of all goods and services produced in America. In 2010, it was 9 percent. In 2011, 8.7 percent. In the 2012 fiscal year, it was down to 7 percent.

The deficit ballooned in 2009 because of the Great Recession. It knocked so many people out of work that tax revenues dropped to the lowest share of the economy in over sixty years. (The Bush tax cuts on the rich also reduced revenues.) The recession also boosted government spending on a stimulus program and on safety nets like unemployment insurance and food stamps.

But as the nation slowly emerges from recession, more people are employed — generating more tax revenues, and requiring less spending on safety nets and stimulus. That’s why the deficit is shrinking.

Yes, deficits are projected to rise again in coming years as a percent of GDP. But that’s mainly due to the rising costs of health care, along with aging baby boomers who are expected to need more medical treatment.


2 Ocak 2013 Çarşamba

United Kingdom and Ireland Records

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Uncover the different generations of your family in census records from England, Scotland, Wales, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man, covering every decade from 1841 to 1901. Plus, see their original records in our high-quality scans. The exact information varies from year-to-year, but you’ll discover fascinating details such as names of all the family, their ages, birthplaces, occupations and relationships. You can use these facts to delve further into their lives, using birth, marriage and death indexes, immigration records, occupation documents and much more. Our latest addition is the 1911 England & Wales Census Summary Books — we’ll be adding the rest of the 1911 Census over the next few months...

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Early Quaker Records in Virginia

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This is an exact transcription of genealogical data in the oldest Quaker records in Virginia, the so-called Chuckatuck Record. It is mainly birth, marriage, and death records in Nansemond and Isle of Wight counties, beginning in 1673, although a few entries relate to events of an earlier date. The birth and death records provide the usual names and dates, while the marriage records have the names of the parties to the marriage, the date, parents' names, and the lists of witnesses, many of whom were relatives of the bride and groom...

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Pallot's Marriage Index for England: 1780 - 1837

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Pallot's Index to Marriages is essential for researchers with London ancestry, as it covers all but two of the 103 parishes in the old City of London. The dates span the time from 1780 to the onset of General Registration in 1837. The more than 1.5 million marriage entries come mainly from London and Middlesex, but also include entries from 2500 parishes in 38 counties outside of London-many not available in other sources. 

Also included are several records from counties in Wales. With indexing begun in 1813, several of the registers transcribed in Pallot's index no longer exist, having been destroyed or lost in the time since.The index slips were handwritten on paper, and indexing continued regularly over a period of more than 150 years. Each slip identifies the church or chapel in which the marriage was celebrated, the names of bride and of groom, whether spinster, bachelor, widow or widower and sometimes other detail along with the date of the event. 

The original paper slips of the Pallot Index are owned and held at The Institute of Heraldic and Genealogical Studies, Canterbury, England. The Institute may have access to fuller details that may have survived among the original parish records. (www.ihgs.ac.uk) The Institute is a not-for-profit educational organization and researches in the records themselves can be arranged. Please visit their website for additional information about the services they provide...

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Family Reunion Idea

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Looking for a great family reunion idea? Use that shared time with relatives to do some research on your family tree. Gather facts, tell stories, and share your research with your family members. Uncles, aunts, and cousins will all agree that it's a great way to spend time together at a family reunion.

To make the best use of your genealogy research time, share the family reunion idea with your relatives beforehand. Six to eight weeks before the reunion, send them a letter or email outlining your ideas. Here's a sample:
Since we'll all be together, let's work on building our family tree. Please bring all your favorite stories of our family, along with copies of any old pictures or documents you may have. With your help, I can put together one great family history. Next year at the family reunion, I'll share the results of my new research. I hope you like my family reunion idea.
Then list the various specific items you need:

  • dates and places for family events such as birth, marriages, divorces, and deaths 
  • family pictures, letters, and memorabilia 
  • any remembered details of ancestors' lives 
  • family Bibles or other treasured records 
  • family customs, games, recipes, or other things that make your family specialA week or so ahead of time, you may want to send a reminder email. You could even include a form to be photocopied and filled out, or downloaded and printed.

If you're looking for an even broader family reunion, go to OneGreatFamily.com. Home of the original online global family tree, OneGreatFamily.com can help you find your family's place in the world. A single new link can help you discover thousands of ancestors and entire new lines.


Family Reunion

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Today more than ever, American families are scattered to the wind. Yet perhaps for this very reason, families have also been getting together for reunions in unprecedented numbers. 

Planning a reunion is a pleasurable but complicated undertaking that requires foresight and planning, and here to assist is Family Reuinion, an indispensable guide and sourcebook that shows how to organize and conduct four basic reunions: a Backyard Barbecue for siblings and cousins, a Homecoming Weekend, an Extended Family Reunion, and a Family Camp, which typically lasts a week and gathers up to 100 participants. 

Accessible and packed with ideas and information, the book shows how to create a workable timetable (18 months before a large reunion is not too soon to start planning), organize a committee, and set up a fund for expenses (and to help less-well-off members attend). There are chapters on location, including little-known church camps and family resorts; on scheduling activities for kids and adults, day and evening; on genealogy; on recording the event; and even on etiquette, including how to handle black sheep, in-laws, and stepchildren. With case studies of real-life reunions and duotone photographs throughout, this is the book that helps us connect...

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1 Ocak 2013 Salı

Box Boy's Biggest Deal Ever!

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If the Truthers think we insult their intelligence (and we do!) check out Gage's latest offer.

AE911truth must grow and change in order to create and handle the realities of the forthcoming critical mass of public awareness.
That’s why we are inviting you to play a key role by becoming a valued Member of AE911Truth today.
 He's created a dozen different levels of membership; from the Student Level at $30 a year to the Diamond Circle of Torchbearers at a whopping $50,000 per annum.  In return, he's giving out lots of goodies, like a Tee shirt, a coffee mug, and a signed copy of one of his posters.  At the higher levels, you also get Plaques of Appreciation, and the privilege of picking up the phone and dialing Richard, or one of the board members.  Such a deal!

I particularly like the neato graphic that Gage included to demonstrate the "tipping point":

You can tell this is a serious organization dedicated to the lives we lost on 9-11.




New Scam Targeting Seniors' benefits

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"...In a new scam targeting seniors and the disabled, identity thieves are fraudulently rerouting Social Security benefits to their own bank accounts and prepaid debit cards.

It's pretty straightforward: Identity thieves get their hands on the personal information they need, like a full name and bank account number. Then they contact the Social Security Administration and request that payments be rerouted to their own accounts..."

Read more at money.cnn.com

North Dakota Oil Production Sets Records in July, Monthly Output Exceeds 20m Bbls. for First Time

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The “Economic Miracle State” of North Dakota pumped another record amount of crude oil during the month of July at a rate of more than 674,000 barrels per day, according to data released today by the state’s Department of Mineral Resources. Oil production during the month of July exceeded 20 million barrels for the first time in state history, establishing a new record for monthly oil output. Here are some other highlights of North Dakota’s record-setting oil output in July: 

1) The state’s oil production in July was 59% above a year ago, and followed annual increases of 71.1% in June and 75.5% in May. 

2) North Dakota produced 62% more oil than Alaska in July, marking the fifth consecutive month that North Dakota has out-produced Alaska. The Peace Garden State surpassed Alaska’s oil production for the first time in March to become the country’s new No. 2 oil state, behind only Texas now. 

3) The number of oil wells in North Dakota increased to 7,303 in July establishing a new state record for active wells. Over the last year through July, an average of almost seven new oil wells were put into production every business day, and each of those new wells is the equivalent of adding a new $8-10 million business to the state’s economy, see recent CD post for more details. 

4) The amount of oil produced per active well in North Dakota increased to 2,861 barrels during the month of July, which was almost 20% above the oil output per well during July last year, and likely reflects the increased efficiency gains from advanced drilling technologies like “pad drilling” that are gaining popularity. 

As a result of the state’s oil boom, North Dakota continues to lead the nation with the lowest state unemployment rate at 3% in July, and more than five percentage points below the national average of 8.1%. There were ten North Dakota counties with jobless rates below 2.0% in July, and Williams County, which is at the center of the Bakken oil boom, continues to boast the lowest county jobless rate in the country at just 0.7%. The exponential growth in North Dakota oil production has fueled exponential growth in the state’s oil and gas jobs, which have tripled in less than three years. Overall employment throughout the entire state has increased 6.8% over the last twelve months, almost five times the tepid 1.4% pace of job growth nationally during that period. 

Bottom Line: July’s record-setting oil production in North Dakota continues to make it the most economically successful state in America, with record levels of employment and income growth, the lowest state jobless rate in the country, a state budget surplus of $1 billion, the lowest home foreclosure rate in the country, strong housing and construction markets, and jobless rates in ten of the state’s counties below 2.0%. North Dakota’s economic success, job creation, and energy-based prosperity is being driven by the development of the state’s vast energy resources, especially the ocean of shale oil in the state’s Bakken region. It’s an economic model that could easily spread energy prosperity elsewhere if more domestic energy resources were opened up to greater exploration and drilling for oil and natural gas.

Upcoming Documentary on America's Longest War: The War on Drugs, "A Holocaust in Slow Motion"

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The soon-to-be-released documentary "The House I Live In" is an inside look at America's longest war, The War on Drugs, from executive producers Danny Glover, John Legend, Russell Simons. From the film's website:

"Filmed in more than twenty states, THE HOUSE I LIVE IN tells the stories of individuals at all levels of America’s War on Drugs. From the dealer to the narcotics officer, the inmate to the federal judge, the film offers a penetrating look inside America’s criminal justice system, revealing the profound human rights implications of U.S. drug policy."
 
Here are some quotes from the trailer above: 

"The Drug War is a holocaust in slow motion." 

"The Drug War is a war on all Americans." 

"You have to understand that the War on Drugs has never been about drugs."

From a review by US News:

Two years after he was elected president in 1969, Richard Nixon first used the phrase "war on drugs," in a tough speech on drug policy. Four decades and more than 40 million drug-related crimes later, the war on drugs is still simmering.

And now, just months before the presidential election, a new documentary "The House I Live In" explores the ways in which that war could be rethought. The film also implicates President Barack Obama, who promised a compassionate drug policy while running for president but requested $25.6 billion for drug enforcement in 2013—the highest yearly total ever.

A reviewer from The Boston Globe says "I'd hate to imply that it's your civic duty to see "The House I Live In" but guess what - it is."   

The movie will be in theaters on October 5.  

Fire: Environmentalist's Way to Thin the Forests

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From Terry Anderson's editorial in today's WSJ "Environmental Protection Up in Smoke": 
Environmental laws since the 1970s require public input into federal land-use decisions including logging on national forests. This has led to lawsuits challenging efforts by the U.S. Forest Service to prevent forest fires by thinning out trees (most of which are dead or diseased) and brush by machines and carefully controlled burns. This dead wood is the fuel that feeds catastrophic wildfires. 

Removing the fuel reduces the likelihood of fires, and if fires do break out, makes them easier to fight. Meanwhile, the suppression of fires costs the federal government nearly $2.5 billion annually. 

A fuels-management project to log and thin 4,800 acres in the Bozeman, Mont., watershed exemplifies the problem. This project has been held up since 2010 on grounds that the environmental-impact assessment did not adequately protect the habitat of the Canadian lynx and the grizzly bear, both listed as threatened species. 

Now a wildfire threatens the watershed, burning over 10,000 acres and costing more than $2 million to fight. As one firefighter put it, "fire is the environmentalist's way of thinning the forests."