One of the questions many of us are asking, is what can I do to express my support or my opposition to what is going on in Washington D.C. now. I found a site that lists all upcoming legislation, gives an unbiased summary of the proposed legislation and a simple way to let your Congressman or Senator know your position on the bills. It will also give an up to date poll of what other users are supporting or opposing, by congressional district, state, or nationwide. I was shocked at all the gun control legislation already being proposed. This is only a few of them.
Popvox is an interesting site. I had no idea so much legislation was already being proposed. This gives us all the opportunity to easily educate ourselves and make our opinions known to our elected officials. It also tells us how often our representatives and senators voted for and against our wishes. Clicking on any of these buttons will take you directly to the site's page where you can learn about specific bills and contact your representative.
Showing posts with label senate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label senate. Show all posts
Saturday, February 2, 2013
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Sing Along!
Cathy did some babysitting today. My friend, Mike, left his little girl with us for the morning. Taylor is not a year old yet, but she already has a favorite television show. Her favorite is Yo Gabba Gabba. When the music came on, her face lit up and she started leaning to the side to see the tv. Mike said she has favorite episodes already. This was not one of them. The robot and fuzzy monsters started singing a song about not playing in the street. Like Mike said, if adult humans told a kid not to play in traffic, they would just ignore the advice. But a big fuzzy monster sings a song about the street being "for trucks, cars, buses, and other dangerous things" and it's gospel to a kid. Cathy suggested that all lessons in school should be set to music.
That made me start thinking about what my generation learned from music, especially music on television. How about Coke teaching "the world to sing in perfect harmony?" Or McDonald's telling us that we "deserve a break today." Tab letting us know that it's "a beautiful drink for beautiful people." My favorite, "aye, aye, aye, I am the Frito Bandito!" "You're in good hands with Allstate." And "like a good neighbor, State Farm is there." And finally, "when you say Budweiser, you've said it all."
Saturday morning cartoons had Schoolhouse Rocks public service ads. They taught grammar with Conjunction Junction. One taught that breakfast is the most important meal and that "a peanut butter and jelly sandwich any time of day, is a treat." The one that needs to be brought out of retirement is How a Bill Becomes a Law.
Our congressmen missed out on the first part of the video where "the whole process starts with ... the folks back home decided they wanted a law passed." The idea doesn't start with the president, unions, or radicals from Columbia University. It starts with "folks back home."
I'm sure the song was edited to fit into its allotted time. Because it never mentions giving billions of dollars in deals to the senators from Nebraska, Louisiana (sorry, it wasn't put in for only Louisiana. Any state that suffered a major natural disaster in 2005 would be eligible. At least as long as their state capitol rhymed with patton luge), and Connecticut. Then let's turn on the water for a couple of drought-stricken California districts to get their votes. Still not enough to pass. Okay, tell the representatives that don't believe we should pay to kill babies that we'll take that part out later. Really, we promise. I think all that was in the original version of the song. It just had to be edited out.
The best part though? The animated version of the bill was a one page document rolled like a scroll. That, of course, is just for television though. The bill that created medicare was 28 pages, the one that created the interstate highway system was two pages, and the Constitution was four pages, six if you count the letter of transmittal and the Bill of Rights. That many pages wouldn't look good on television. It might look fishy, like they were trying to sneak something in. Like maybe a takeover of something important, oh, say the student loan program for grins. So how suspicious would a 2,700 page pile on the steps of the capitol look? What could you possibly sneak into a 2,700 page mess? Pretty much anything you wanted. Just to be fair, post it on the internet three days before the vote, so congressmen, the media, and the public have a chance to read it and respond.
Sing along, I'm just a bill, I'm only a bill...
That made me start thinking about what my generation learned from music, especially music on television. How about Coke teaching "the world to sing in perfect harmony?" Or McDonald's telling us that we "deserve a break today." Tab letting us know that it's "a beautiful drink for beautiful people." My favorite, "aye, aye, aye, I am the Frito Bandito!" "You're in good hands with Allstate." And "like a good neighbor, State Farm is there." And finally, "when you say Budweiser, you've said it all."
Saturday morning cartoons had Schoolhouse Rocks public service ads. They taught grammar with Conjunction Junction. One taught that breakfast is the most important meal and that "a peanut butter and jelly sandwich any time of day, is a treat." The one that needs to be brought out of retirement is How a Bill Becomes a Law.
Our congressmen missed out on the first part of the video where "the whole process starts with ... the folks back home decided they wanted a law passed." The idea doesn't start with the president, unions, or radicals from Columbia University. It starts with "folks back home."
I'm sure the song was edited to fit into its allotted time. Because it never mentions giving billions of dollars in deals to the senators from Nebraska, Louisiana (sorry, it wasn't put in for only Louisiana. Any state that suffered a major natural disaster in 2005 would be eligible. At least as long as their state capitol rhymed with patton luge), and Connecticut. Then let's turn on the water for a couple of drought-stricken California districts to get their votes. Still not enough to pass. Okay, tell the representatives that don't believe we should pay to kill babies that we'll take that part out later. Really, we promise. I think all that was in the original version of the song. It just had to be edited out.
The best part though? The animated version of the bill was a one page document rolled like a scroll. That, of course, is just for television though. The bill that created medicare was 28 pages, the one that created the interstate highway system was two pages, and the Constitution was four pages, six if you count the letter of transmittal and the Bill of Rights. That many pages wouldn't look good on television. It might look fishy, like they were trying to sneak something in. Like maybe a takeover of something important, oh, say the student loan program for grins. So how suspicious would a 2,700 page pile on the steps of the capitol look? What could you possibly sneak into a 2,700 page mess? Pretty much anything you wanted. Just to be fair, post it on the internet three days before the vote, so congressmen, the media, and the public have a chance to read it and respond.
Sing along, I'm just a bill, I'm only a bill...
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Sunday, March 14, 2010
Wolverines in the Closet
When Raelynn was about two and a half years old, she visited her MeMe for a couple of days. MeMe taught her to pretend. When she got home, Raelynn was talking to imaginary friends, having teas, and doing all those things that little kids do. One of her favorite books was about animals in the forest going to a bear's house during a storm. We made up more parts of the story with gophers and wolverines. For some reason, Raelynn really got into the gophers and wolverines. Soon she was chasing imaginary gophers around our house in Amarillo.
One day, our landlord, a really nice man in his 60's, was over working on the plumbing under our bathroom sink. Raelynn ran into the bathroom, and very excitedly asked if the gophers had run through there. The wolverines chased them out of the closet! Mr. Frost pulled his head out from under the sink and asked me, "did she say gophers?" I said, "yeah, the wolverines chased them out of the closet."
Kids naturally have imagination. Play helps develop it. And so do good toys. Old fashioned toys like dolls, blocks, tinkertoys, Lincoln logs, and yes, even toy guns. Our toys have become so advanced, that imagination is no longer required. Even the toy guns that we sold at Alco make the shooting noise for you. No more yelling POW as you shoot. The end of the barrel lights up with a red light and the gun makes noise for you.
Imagination is harder to teach as kids get older. Ego gets into the way. Don't want to look stupid in front of your friends. But still good teachers in elementary and middle school use imagination and pretend. Raelynn's teacher in 6th grade taught a section on the Renaissance and gave titles to everyone (he was Duke), and they had a night where they even cooked dishes from the era. And in one section, they put Columbus on trial for genocide. I guess imagination can be both used and mis-used.
Imagination is the first step in the invention and innovation process. Imagine it, plan it, then create it. It's also the first step in defense. You have to imagine what the bad guys will do. The 9-11 commission said that the biggest reason the attacks were successful was that America had a "failure of imagination." No one could imagine that the hijacking of airliners could be a suicide mission. The crews of airliners were trained to cooperate with hijackers and let negotiators take over when the planes landed. It was never imagined that the planes would be used as a weapon and the hijackers weren't planning to survive the attack. We never imagined that eleven men with boxcutters could kill 3,000 innocent Americans and bring down the two tallest buildings in the country.
I am fearful that our imaginations might be failing us again. Like I said before, I never thought that candidate Obama was dangerous. In order to be elected, he would have to be, at the very most, just a little off-center of the beliefs of the majority of Americans. And to be re-elected, he would have to reflect the beliefs of the majority. But, like the terrorists, he and his followers (or leaders) are not thinking like traditional politicians. They are not looking to be re-elected. Just as they promised in their campaign, they are trying to fundamentally change America. Mainstream America did not imagine that that fundamental change meant taking over banks, auto makers, and the entire health care industry - and everything that could possibly be lumped into health care. Fortunately, America woke up and made a lot of noise protesting the health care takeover. Some of the congresspersons are realizing that the President's agenda is more than they had bargained for. Unfortunately, some are either in agreement with him, or still not able to imagine what he really has planned.
Not only is there talk about being able to get the bill signed into law by the President without even going to a Senate vote again, but also adding everything possible that would not be able to be passed separately. Government takeover of the student loan program, gun control, abortion policy, and any environmental policy are all being rumored to be added to the bill. Actually public funding of abortions is already in the bill and they can't take it out without risking the failure of the bill when it is presented to the Senate again. So it will stay in and be taken out in future modifications, they promise!! And of course, our first response is that all these stories are just nut-job conspiracy theories. No president or congressman, or senator would be so stupid. They would never get re-elected! That's the point, they are suicidal politicians, they don't care about being re-elected. One of my senators, Michael Bennett, said as much on one of the Sunday morning political talk shows. He said that even if it meant not being re-elected, he would work to pass the current health care takeover. He would do the right thing for his constituents! Just to show how well our representatives listen: I did something I had never done before, I wrote to Mr. Bennett protesting his position. Now I get weekly updates by e-mail telling me how hard he is working to pass this legislation for me!
Americans no longer trust their imaginations. We just can't believe that our elected leaders could be doing this. In this case, there really are wolverines in the closet!
One day, our landlord, a really nice man in his 60's, was over working on the plumbing under our bathroom sink. Raelynn ran into the bathroom, and very excitedly asked if the gophers had run through there. The wolverines chased them out of the closet! Mr. Frost pulled his head out from under the sink and asked me, "did she say gophers?" I said, "yeah, the wolverines chased them out of the closet."
Kids naturally have imagination. Play helps develop it. And so do good toys. Old fashioned toys like dolls, blocks, tinkertoys, Lincoln logs, and yes, even toy guns. Our toys have become so advanced, that imagination is no longer required. Even the toy guns that we sold at Alco make the shooting noise for you. No more yelling POW as you shoot. The end of the barrel lights up with a red light and the gun makes noise for you.
Imagination is harder to teach as kids get older. Ego gets into the way. Don't want to look stupid in front of your friends. But still good teachers in elementary and middle school use imagination and pretend. Raelynn's teacher in 6th grade taught a section on the Renaissance and gave titles to everyone (he was Duke), and they had a night where they even cooked dishes from the era. And in one section, they put Columbus on trial for genocide. I guess imagination can be both used and mis-used.
Imagination is the first step in the invention and innovation process. Imagine it, plan it, then create it. It's also the first step in defense. You have to imagine what the bad guys will do. The 9-11 commission said that the biggest reason the attacks were successful was that America had a "failure of imagination." No one could imagine that the hijacking of airliners could be a suicide mission. The crews of airliners were trained to cooperate with hijackers and let negotiators take over when the planes landed. It was never imagined that the planes would be used as a weapon and the hijackers weren't planning to survive the attack. We never imagined that eleven men with boxcutters could kill 3,000 innocent Americans and bring down the two tallest buildings in the country.
I am fearful that our imaginations might be failing us again. Like I said before, I never thought that candidate Obama was dangerous. In order to be elected, he would have to be, at the very most, just a little off-center of the beliefs of the majority of Americans. And to be re-elected, he would have to reflect the beliefs of the majority. But, like the terrorists, he and his followers (or leaders) are not thinking like traditional politicians. They are not looking to be re-elected. Just as they promised in their campaign, they are trying to fundamentally change America. Mainstream America did not imagine that that fundamental change meant taking over banks, auto makers, and the entire health care industry - and everything that could possibly be lumped into health care. Fortunately, America woke up and made a lot of noise protesting the health care takeover. Some of the congresspersons are realizing that the President's agenda is more than they had bargained for. Unfortunately, some are either in agreement with him, or still not able to imagine what he really has planned.
Not only is there talk about being able to get the bill signed into law by the President without even going to a Senate vote again, but also adding everything possible that would not be able to be passed separately. Government takeover of the student loan program, gun control, abortion policy, and any environmental policy are all being rumored to be added to the bill. Actually public funding of abortions is already in the bill and they can't take it out without risking the failure of the bill when it is presented to the Senate again. So it will stay in and be taken out in future modifications, they promise!! And of course, our first response is that all these stories are just nut-job conspiracy theories. No president or congressman, or senator would be so stupid. They would never get re-elected! That's the point, they are suicidal politicians, they don't care about being re-elected. One of my senators, Michael Bennett, said as much on one of the Sunday morning political talk shows. He said that even if it meant not being re-elected, he would work to pass the current health care takeover. He would do the right thing for his constituents! Just to show how well our representatives listen: I did something I had never done before, I wrote to Mr. Bennett protesting his position. Now I get weekly updates by e-mail telling me how hard he is working to pass this legislation for me!
Americans no longer trust their imaginations. We just can't believe that our elected leaders could be doing this. In this case, there really are wolverines in the closet!
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