Thursday, January 30, 2014

School seizes lunches from students and throws them away

School seizes lunches from students and throws them away - New York News:
"The district says that the problem is that children are served lunch before they get to the computer for payment. 
The children who didn’t have enough money in their accounts had their normal food trays seized from them and were given the fruit and milk.
The food was thrown away because once it has been served it can not be served to someone else."

Rachel Maddow boils over GOP Rep’s insult: ‘Did you just call me a cheerleader?’

Rachel Maddow boils over GOP Rep’s insult: ‘Did you just call me a cheerleader?’ - BizPac Review:
"“We need more answers there. We need answers about a lot of things. This administration promised to be the most transparent in history, Rachel, and I think if you would stop being a cheerleader and be a journalist, you’d recognize we’re not getting those answers.”

Maddow looked at him in disbelief and said, “Did you just call me a cheerleader?”

“I don’t know, maybe you had that history,” Huelskamp responded.

Maddow was not amused, but Huelskamp continued.

“You’re a cheerleader for the administration,” he said. “You’re not being a journalist when you’re not willing to look at the facts. If it was Bush, you would be jumping and screaming.”

Watch the short clip here via Real Clear Politics:"

Remember the Panama Canal?

Remember the Panama Canal?
This year marks the 100th anniversary of the canal’s opening, and you would be forgiven if you were unaware that billions of dollars in U.S. business is riding on its expansion.
Control of the canal was turned over to the Panamanians under a 1979 treaty signed by President Jimmy Carter, and until recently, nobody seemed to care very much about what was going on there.  
Now, however, there is good reason to pay attention. The canal holds the key to the export of U.S. natural gas – and possibly crude oil -- to markets in Asia.  This is a big deal, with a lot at stake for U.S. energy companies.
The point, of course, is that as the export of U.S. energy resources goes, so goes America – only even more so, a point driven home by the latest data showing that the United States is already the world’s biggest producer of natural gas and is expected to surpass Saudi Arabia as the world’s top producer of crude oil by next year.  
Because it cannot accommodate large tankers, the Panama Canal is being expanded to about three times its present capacity. This involves widening and deepening channels along the 50-mile canal route and creating new sets of locks on both the Atlantic and Pacific ends.
The expansion is about three-quarters complete, but the cost of the project has increased from $5.2 billion to more than $7 billion, and construction has fallen behind schedule. An international consortium led by a Spanish construction company is building the new locks, and it says it won’t continue work unless the Panama Canal Authority pays about $1.6 billion in cost overruns. The dispute is now in arbitration.
Currently only about 6 percent of the world’s LNG tankers can pass through the canal.  After the expansion, it will accommodate about 90 percent of the tankers.
Without the canal expansion, LNG tankers from the US would have to pass around the Cape of Horn at the bottom of South America for deliveries to Asia, adding thousands of miles and increased shipping costs to the journey. 
Costs for LNG matter.  U.S. natural gas is cheap when used for domestic purposes, but has to be frozen to a liquid, then piped onto tankers and transported across the ocean to international markets – all of which costs more than the gas itself.
Unless the dispute is resolved soon, America’s gas-export plans might well take a hit. As matters now stand, there is a very real possibility that Japan, India and other Asian countries will look elsewhere for their natural gas supplies – at least in the near term, if LNG tankers carrying natural gas from U.S. ports are forced to take the longer route around the Cape of Horn. 
The dispute over the canal’s expansion is likely a contributing factor in the slow pace of the Department of Energy’s licensing of new LNG export terminals.  All of which suggests that the Obama Administration’s failure to help resolve the dispute could have big negative consequences for U.S. commerce.
There are potentially many big losers if the completion of the canal is delayed, namely U.S. businesses that are counting on export markets to sustain domestic drilling and pay for the construction of LNG terminals and tankers. If the Administration doesn’t move quickly, the consequences would extend to thousands of American families whose jobs are tied to energy production.
Something else: Japan is in urgent need of natural gas supplies. Since the Fukushima nuclear disaster three years ago, Japan has been importing large amounts of energy at high prices and is desperate for U.S. natural gas. 
The Panama Canal’s importance isn’t limited to its role in sustaining world trade.  Without access to natural gas, Japan, India and other energy-consuming countries will need to burn more coal for electricity production, which will increase carbon emissions globally. 
So a lot hinges on the Panama Canal expansion.  America’s interest clearly lies in an expansion of the canal, and we should not sit on the sidelines while the dispute over the project’s cost continues. The Obama Administration should help resolve the dispute. The time for action is now.

Man catches state-record white perch in Muskegon Lake

Aaron Slagh of Holland holds his state-record white perch, caught Jan. 21, 2014, on Muskegon Lake. The fish weighed 1.93 pounds and measured 13.25 inches.Man catches state-record white perch in Muskegon Lake | Detroit Free Press | freep.com:
"The Michigan Department of Natural Resources has confirmed the catch of a new state-record white perch.
Aaron Slagh of Holland caught the fish at 11 a.m. Jan. 21 on Muskegon Lake in Muskegon County.
The fish weighed 1.93 pounds and measured 13.25 inches. Slagh was ice fishing with a spoon.
... The previous state-record white perch was caught by Kyle Ryan of Reese on Lake Huron in Tuscola County on July 13, 2002. That fish weighed 1.88 pounds and measured 13.25 inches."

Lake Macatawa (Holland, MI)

11 Facts About The Minimum Wage That President Obama Forgot To Mention

11 Facts About The Minimum Wage That President Obama Forgot To Mention:

During his annual State of the Union address before Congress, President Barack Obama made a big deal about the need to increase the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour. The move followed months of promises and rhetoric from the White House about how important it was to the economy to increase the minimum wage.
Back in August, the White House Twitter account even posted an infographic claiming that 15 million workers would “directly benefit” from a minimum wage increase and that “nobody who works full-time should live in poverty.”
And in December, both the White House and the president’s labor secretary publicly expressed support for nationwide strikes by hourly workers demanding higher pay (because nothing says “I deserve a raise” like refusing to show up to work).
Unfortunately for the White House, many of its claims about the minimum wage are divorced from reality. Here are 11 facts about the minimum wage that Barack Obama forgot to mention during his State of the Union address.

1) Only 1 Percent Of The U.S. Labor Force Earns The Minimum Wage

Cop Comped- Pepper sprayer hits the jackpot

Pepper sprayCop Comped - Reason.com:
In November 2011, Lt. John Pike, a police officer at the University of California, Davis, was caught on video pepper spraying nonviolent protesters in the face. In October 2013, the Division of Workers' Compensation awarded him $38,055 for the suffering he is said to have endured following the incident.
The footage of Pike attacking the protesters, who were sitting on a sidewalk during a demonstration against tuition increases, quickly went viral, serving as fodder for many memes and parodies. Following the incident, Pike reportedly lived at various locations. He received thousands of angry emails and text messages after the hacking group Anonymous leaked his contact information. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Pike was suspended with pay and earned $119,067 in 2011. He left the force in July 2012.
Earlier in 2013, after settling a federal lawsuit, the university paid a total of $1 million to the 36 people who were sprayed. Pike therefore received more compensation than each of the protesters he assaulted.

The era of the textbook cartel and $300 textbooks is ending, as the ‘college textbook bubble’ shows signs of deflating

The era of the textbook cartel and $300 textbooks is ending, as the ‘college textbook bubble’ shows signs of deflating | AEIdeas:

books

World risks deflationary shock as BRICS puncture credit bubbles

World risks deflationary shock as BRICS puncture credit bubbles - Telegraph:

World risks deflationary shock as BRICS puncture credit bubbles
As matters stand, the next recession will push the Western economic system over the edge into deflation"Half the world economy is one accident away from a deflation trap.

The International Monetary Fund says the probability may now be as high as 20pc.
It is a remarkable state of affairs that the G2 monetary superpowers - the US and China - should both be tightening into such a 20pc risk, though no doubt they have concluded that asset bubbles are becoming an even bigger danger."

WeMOG-Palmer Park, Monday Feb 3

Monday, February 3 ski Palmer Park.   (about 15 minutes south of downtown Grand Rapids)

Palmer Park has beautiful groomed trails. Half in the woods and half on a gentle rolling golf course.   There is a heated lodge with modern clean bathrooms.  You can buy hot drinks and snacks.  Trail fee is $2.00

Meet at 1:30 pm at the lodge where we pay our trail fee.  Ski about 1.5 to 2 hours, afterwards gather in lodge for drinks and snacks.     

Directions: 
In Grand Rapids, take 131 South and exit at 44th street.  Turn right and immediately left onto Clyde Park.  Drive south about one mile  on Clyde Park.  Look for sign “KAUFMAN GOLF COURSE”  (4807 Clyde Park, Wyoming)  Go down the drive way and turn left for the parking lot.    Meet in the lodge.

Ski rental is available in the lodge.


--

History for January 30 - On-This-Day.com

History for January 30 - On-This-Day.com
Birth anniversary of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882-1945).


Happy Birthday!  Dick Cheney, Gene Hackman, Boris Spassky


1862 - The U.S. Navy's first ironclad warship, the "Monitor", was launched. 


1894 - C.B. King received a patent for the pneumatic hammer. 


1933 - Adolf Hitler was named the German Chancellor. 


1948 - Indian political and spiritual leader Mahatma Gandhi was murdered by a Hindu extremist. 


1960 - The women’s singles U.S. figure skating championship was won by Carol Heiss. 


1962 - Two members of the "Flying Wallendas" high-wire act were killed when their seven-person pyramid collapsed during a performance in Detroit, MI


1968 - The Tet Offensive began as Communist forces launched surprise attacks against South Vietnamese provincial capitals. 


1995 - The U.N. Security Council authorized the deployment of a 6,000-member U.N. peace-keeping contingent to assume security responsibilities in Haiti from U.S. forces. 


2002 - Slobodan Milosevic accused the U.N. war crimes tribunal of an "evil and hostile attack" against him. Milosevic was defending his actions during the Balkan wars. 



Wednesday, January 29, 2014

In case you missed the SOTU last night




How to Easily Find Full-Length Movies on YouTube

How to Easily Find Full-Length Movies on YouTube:
"Itroducing Zero Dollar Movies, a new site for movie buffs that will help you find and discover movies that are available on YouTube for free.
These are full-length movies and there are no trailers or partial uploads.
 The catalog includes a collection of 15,000+ movies, organized by their year of release, and new titles are getting added every day.
You can find movies in English, Hindi (Bollywood) and few other regional languages."

Pension Costs Mean Tighter Budgets For Classrooms, Taxpayers

Pension Costs Mean Tighter Budgets For Classrooms, Taxpayers [Michigan Capitol Confidential]:
Images from 
Pension Costs Mean Tighter Budgets For Classrooms, Taxpayers
"Livonia Public Schools Superintendent Randy Liepa says his district will pay just under $30 million for its employee retirement pension and health care costs this year.

The district has to spend the money to cover the costs of the state retirement benefits plan, which has an estimated unfunded liability of $24.3 billion."

Time to Sequester Air Force One Vacation Flights

State of the Union: 5 things president failed to tell Americans

State of the Union: 5 things president failed to tell Americans « Watchdog.org:

"The American people, though, should care about what the president didn’t say.
The commander-in-chief spoke at length about income inequality, gender fairness, entrepreneurship and increasing federal spending.

But he failed to mention how disastrous some of his policies could be for jobs, civil rights and education.
Here are five things the president didn’t say in his 2014 State of the Union speech: 

 1. Raising the minimum wage will kill jobs"

Read 'em all.
And fear for our children's future!

Detroit suburbs balk at spinning off water works to help city

Detroit suburbs balk at spinning off water works to help city | Crain's Detroit Business:
"Upgrading pipes, basins and pump stations may cost as much as $7 billion, said Gerald Poisson, chief deputy executive of Oakland County, which borders Detroit to the north and has a AAA rating from Standard & Poor's.

Suburban customers are leery, said Robert DiMella, co-head of MacKay Municipal Managers, which oversees about $7.5 billion of local debt, including Detroit water and sewer bonds, in Princeton, N.J.

"They don't want their rates to go up four- or five-fold just simply to bail out Detroit," DiMella said. 
"They want to know that if it gets refinanced, certain dollars don't go directly to Detroit to help their current cause, but it's used for maintenance.""

"Let them eat cake......"

9 Violent Criminals Who Paid Less for Bail Than ’2016′ Filmmaker Dinesh D’Souza

9 Violent Criminals Who Paid Less for Bail Than ’2016′ Filmmaker Dinesh D’Souza | TheBlaze.com:
"On Friday, conservative scholar Dinesh D’Souza pleaded not guilty to charges that he violated campaign finance laws.
The filmmaker behind the anti-Obama documentary “2016: Obama’s America” was released on $500,000 bond, which some — even in the legal community — argue was excessive.

We looked into these claims and uncovered a number of violent and disturbing offenses that resulted in bail amounts less than D’Souza was required to put up. 
While it’s not a comprehensive list by any means, here are nine cases where violent suspects had to put up less for bail than D’Souza:"