" /> Where there's a Will, there's a way: May 2011 Archives

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May 31, 2011

Illinois legislature helps Shimkus stay in Congress

I'm glad the legislature drew a new Congressional district which includes Springfield, Champaign, and Decatur. The new 13th isn't as monstrously misshapen as the old central Illinois districts and it can be won by either party.

But, I can't understand why the legislature would change it to give Shimkus a free ride, and make it more likely that Republicans win the new 13. Shimkus was at first drawn into 13 but is now in the safely Republican, rural 15th district.

Moderates in college towns like Champaign and Bloomington aren't going to tolerate Shimkus' increasingly extremist, anti-science crusade. Having Shimkus as the Republican nominee in 13 nearly guarantees a Democratic victory. Instead, the legislature drew Tim Johnson into 13. Johnson sounds more moderate and has already won elections in Democratic Champaign/Urbana.

Why does the legislature want to keep John Shimkus in Congress and why do they want to increase the odds of the new marginally Democratic 13th district being won by a Republican? I'm baffled.

May 30, 2011

To my friends who work for/with the General Assembly

I've heard and read a number of complaints from friends and others about having to work over the holiday weekend because the Illinois legislature is still in session.

Here's the problem. The rest of us in Springfield all know that the legislature is normally in session only three days a week for 8 or 9 months of the year, with plenty of weeks off in between.

We also know that some of the bills you're considering will screw over state workers and others who have to work weekends all the damn time.

Consequently, no one has any sympathy for you. Quit your bitching, shut the fuck up, and do your job.

Refrigerator art at Springfield Earth Fair

Anyone who attended Springfield's Earth Fair on May 7 was impressed by the "Refrigerators on Parade" contest. Fridges were decorated in honor of CWLP's 100 years of operation and the contest also promoted the energy-saving Refrigerator Roundup program.

I finally got around to uploading my pictures to flickr today.

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Tom Irwin was on hand to preform.


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I'm biased toward this one that celebrates wind and solar power.


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100 years ago the voters of Springfield had the anarcho-socialist notion that we should own and operate our own local utility for the benefit of the people. Today, even conservative bankers at the Chamber of Commerce are forced to acknowledge CWLP as the crown jewel of Springfield. CWLP how lower rates, more reliable service and cleaner power than other Illinois utilities.


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One fridge focused on extinct and endangered species.


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I like the smokestack pinwheels on this one.

Springfield's Earth Fair was held at the new Southwind Park. It has a number of sustainable features including solar panels, a wind turbine, a LEED certified building, a hydrothermal heating/cooling system in the park's lake, and native plants.


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The new wind turbine towered above SUVs and minivans parked at the event.

A good time was had by all.

Happy Memorial Day from John A. Logan and Frederick Douglass

Happy Memorial Day!

I was reading that Memorial Day has its origins in Decoration Day. The Grand Army of the Republic, led by Illinois politician and union general John A. Logan, made it a national holiday to decorate the graves of civil war soldiers.

In Logan's time, Decoration Day was an occasion for speeches that would be considered politically incorrect today. Logan's Decoration Day proclamation made it clear which side of the Civil war armies was being honored.
"Let no vandalism of avarice or neglect, no ravages of time testify to the present or to the coming generations that we have forgotten as a people the cost of a free and undivided republic."

General-Logan

Frederick Douglass was more explicit in an 1894 Decoration Day speech.

"Fellow citizens: I am not indifferent to the claims of a generous forgetfulness, but whatever else I may forget, I shall never forget the difference between those who fought for liberty and those who fought for slavery; between those who fought to save the Republic and those who fought to destroy it."

Today the nation honors Americans who died in any war, on any side, regardless of whether the cause they were fighting for was a just one, or whether the war they died in was popular. Even deceased white confederate soldiers can be the beneficiaries of political correctness.

May 29, 2011

Gil Scott-Heron

I wondered why so many facebook friends were posting about Gil Scott-Heron this weekend. I wish I had gotten the chance to see him perform before he passed on.




May 27, 2011

Letter censored by the Canton Daily Register

Have you ever heard of a letter to the editor being removed from a newspaper's website for being too controversial? Apparently, that's what happened at the Canton Daily Ledger, a paper owned by Gatehouse Media.

Canton Area Citizens for Environmental Issues (CACEI) blogs that a letter by their President was published on May 4. They write: "In a meeting with the Ledger editor on May 12th, 2011, she explained that the Canton Daily Ledger pulled letter because it was too controversial, and furthermore that the paper would not publish anything on the North Canton Mine until something “official” came from IDNR or the mine."

Really? WTF!

CACEI is working to stop a surface coal mine near Canton Lake. I'm used to Illinois newspapers kowtowing to the coal industry but this level of subservience surprises me. Citizens needs to know the truth about what's being proposed in their area.

The controversial letter is preserved on the CACEI blog. I'll do my part to keep it from being thrown down the memory hole by re-posting it here as well. I can understand why the letter's factual arguments make coal industry boosters uncomfortable.

Many times when I am around town people ask how the mine issue is going. Our attorney and members have been busy working on the issue to challenge the North Canton Mine permit for the past four years. Now we have some news!

Canton Area Citizens for Environmental Issues, Canton Lake and Its Watershed’s legal challenge to North Canton Mine’s Permit #385 is moving forward. We have received word that the Illinois Department of Natural Resources administrative review hearing we requested is now scheduled for October 11-14th at the Illinois Department of Natural Resources Building in Springfield. This step is a huge financial undertaking for our group but we are unwavering in our desire to protect the Canton Lake and its watershed, the environment and the health and safety of the residents in Canton, Orion and Canton Township.

The mine application was submitted by Capital Resources Development to IDNR in 2006 with a public hearing in October 2006. The proposed mine site is approximately 1 ½ miles from State Rt North 78 going east on Brereton Road or about 2 miles from North 78 going east on Cypress Road. Canton Lake is 1 ¼ miles from the mine site. The site covers 1084.5 acres of farm land, forests and Copperas Creek and Middle Copperas Creek flows through the acreage. These creeks, streams and aquifers are part of the Copperas Creek watershed which feeds into Canton Lake.

Although most residents of Canton are not familiar with the area, it is home to many residents in Orion and Canton Townships. Many farm homesteads and lake homes are in the area along with many newly-built homes and small horse farms. Documented historic areas are located within the proposed mine site which includes Mitchell-White Farm site, Cooper-Motsinger Cemetery, and the underground railroad (Indian Trail Rd).

Development to this section of the county has occurred since the mine was proposed in early 2006. Along with new subdivisions and busy established companies, there are several new businesses along N. Highway 78 including Bank of Farmington, State Farm Insurance Office, and Herbst Landing. Fulton County Supervisor of Assessments Rick Regnier was quoted in an article published April 9, 2011 that Canton Township property would be assessed first “because it’s the biggest and fastest growing” in the county. One has noticed this growth as it seems to have caused an increase of traffic on N. Main St. and SR 78 North.

With hundreds of heavy loaded coal trucks (approximate total weight 80,000 lbs) using State Highway 78 and Rt. 9/24 traveling through the downtown of Canton in almost convoy fashion, the Main St. corridor will become a safety issue for other vehicle traffic and a health issue(diesel fumes, coal dust) for students, pedestrians and residents. It is one thing to have commercial traffic flow through town but to have heavy industrial traffic is altogether different.

Jobs are important to the community. There is an economic downside to having coal mining within an urbanized area. This proposed mining operation encompasses a water resource, a recreational area, and agricultural industries. Consideration has to be given to the loss of tax dollars, space for growth of residential and business development, loss of tourist dollars, the loss of farm dollars spent in the community and the real possibility of pollution and destruction of creeks, streams, aquifers that feed Canton Lake, and then one has to add in the human cost of due to health problems associated with unclean air. Also, there is the loss of natural beauty and tranquility to the whole area surrounding the proposed site.

During the month of May, CACEI members will be contacting residents to answer questions or provide information concerning our challenge to North Canton Permit #385. CACEI has registered with the City Attorney and City Clerk.

Thanks to the generosity of area residents and the tireless, brave work of members, Canton Area Citizens for Environmental Issues, Canton Lake and Its Watershed has been able to proceed with their rightful legal challenge to the granting of this permit.

- Brenda Dilts, CACEI President

Proposed Congressional map provides opportunities for downstate Illinois Democrats

The legislature passed an incumbent-protection map for Illinois members of Congress in 2000. In contrast, the proposed map released this morning could mix things up. I found the google maps version at Capitol Fax. Let's take a look at the central and southern districts.

Unsurprisingly, Jerry Costello maintains his strongly Democratic district in Southwestern Illinois. The addition of Mt. Vernon looks like the most significant change.

The new 15th district includes most of the rural, Republican areas currently represented by Republicans Tim Johnson and John Shimkus. If either of them want to run in a safely Republican district then they'll have to fight over this one.

Most of Tim Johnson's home town of Urbana is drawn into the new 13th district with areas he hasn't represented before. It includes Decatur, most of Springfield (minus the Republican west end), Bloomington, Democratic Macoupin county, and John Shimkus' home in Collinsville. This area is currently represented by four Republican Congressmen but doesn't clearly belong to any of them. It also looks like a district Democrats can win.

Shimkus' hometown base of support in Madison county is split between three districts. He'll have to 1) Run in a rural Republican 15th district that includes little of his home base and much of Tim Johnson's territory, or 2) Run in what appears to be a Democratic-winnable 13th district that includes many voters who are new to him.

As was rumored, Peoria is drawn into a district with Rock Island/Moline that should be heavily Democratic. This virtually guarantees that tea party Republican Bobby Schilling becomes a one-term Congressman. The same 17th district includes parts of Rockford, the home town of Republican Don Manzullo, and most of Peoria, home of Aaron Schock.

Schock lives in the new 18th district that stretches across central and western Illinois from Bloomington/Normal to Quincy. It includes little of his old state representative district in the Peoria area but looks strongly Republican.

Illinois Democrats will have a good year in 2012 with Obama at the top of the ticket. There will almost certainly be a new Democrat from the Rock Island/Moline - Peoria - Rockford 17th district. There's a reasonable chance of a new Democrat from the Decatur - Springfield -Champaign/Urbana 13th district.

If Republicans Schock, Johnson, and Shimkus want to run in a heavily Republican district then they'll have to introduce themselves to new voters in a district that won't include most of their hometown base. It will be interesting to see how the Shimkus/Johnson face-off is resolved.

May 25, 2011

The more things change in Springfield...

I acquired a copy of "The Golden Book of Springfield" by Vachel Lindsay. The back jacket describes it thusly:

In The Golden Book, the coffee houses, movie theaters, streets and parks of Springfield in the "Mystic Year" 2018 are the setting of a valiant struggle to transform a village dominated by shady politicians, lynch-mobs, commercialism and cocaine into a new paradise.

Well...at least we haven't had any lynch-mobs in a while.

May 24, 2011

Downstate Democrats lose in proposed IL state representative map

I wasn't going to write about redistricting but I'm surprised that news outlets are missing this story. The proposed district map for Illinois state representatives would unnecessarily limit the number of downstate Democrats and cede most of rural Illinois to Republicans.

In several areas that could support two Democratic leaning districts, the proposed map instead creates one super-Democratic district. These districts will be very easy to defend, but at the cost of keeping the downstate Democratic legislative caucus small and impotent for the next ten years.

The most obvious example is in the Quad cities, which has traditionally elected two Democratic state Representatives. Drawing two districts that are over 55% Democratic would be simple, but the most Democratic areas of Rock Island/Moline are lumped into one district instead.

The same thing happens in Decatur and Springfield. Decatur can support its own Democratic House district. A new Democratic leaning district that doesn't include incumbent Republican Raymond Poe could have been created in Springfield as well. Instead, the most Democratic parts of both towns are drawn together, and a new Republican district would be created in southwestern Sangamon county. There would only be one oddly-shaped, heavily Democratic district where there could be two.


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It looks like the same pattern was followed for Peoria and Champaign/Urbana.

Several news outlets have pointed out that some Republican legislators will be drawn together. That's true and it will inconvenience those Republicans. But that doesn't equate to drawing new Democratic districts.

One could argue that several of these areas went Republican in 2010. But, that was an unusually Republican year that can't be taken as an indicator of long term trends. 2012, with Obama on the ballot, will be entirely different. Redistricting provides a prime opportunity for Democrats to pick up new seats in what will be a strong Democratic year. In central and western Illinois, the proposed map fails to seize that opportunity.

I can only guess why Democrats would propose limiting themselves in the central and western parts of the state. There has been talk of creating more districts with a larger proportion of minority voters. This map may do that. It's also possible that party leaders would prefer to spend less time and money defending competitive downstate districts.

I don't know the motivations, but I know that if I were a downstate representative I would vote against this map if I cared about having Democratic allies from outside the Chicago region. Downstate Republicans should be perfectly happy.

May 23, 2011

Illinois Congressmen spread EPA conspiracy theories

I enjoyed Kate Sheppard's article at Mother Jones, "The Right's Top 5 EPA Conspiracy Theories." It was less enjoyable to remember that I've heard several of these conspiracy theories spread by Illinois members of Congress and the Farm Bureau.

My favorite is that EPA will regulate dust from driving down dirt roads. John Shimkus spread this conspiracy during a House committee hearing, and in speeches to constituents, he even claims that EPA will require the paving of all rural dirt roads.

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Illinois news outlets that covered Shimkus' fear-mongering didn't let their readers know about EPA administrator Lisa Jackson's statement that they have no plans to regulate dust. One reason why Shimkus always wins re-election is that local reporters don't challenge his misleading statements.

Another conspiracy theory that sounded familiar is EPA regulation of cow farts and human breathing. When I brought up pollution from coal power plants with Congressman Bobby Schilling after his forum he changed the subject to regulating methane from cows because that's another source of global warming pollutants. I'm not entirely sure what point he was trying to make.

In fact, regulation of CO2 is only being proposed for major sources, such as coal power plants.

Most of these conspiracy theories have a common theme. The actual proposed regulations would apply to major sources of pollution, mostly in the coal, oil and gas industries. What these conspiracies do is imagine far-fetched ways that regulation of major polluters will harm farmers and others in rural areas.

It's an attempt by the fossil fuel industry to use rural Americans as their pawns, even as those companies are polluting the air and water in rural areas. Farmers are already some of the first victims of climate change as unpredictable severe weather patterns, including heavier spring rains, delay the planting and harvesting seasons. The Illinois Farm Bureau isn't doing its members any favors by playing the fossil fuel industry's game.

May 19, 2011

Pekin an unhealthy place if you like to breath

Pekin officially has the highest levels of sulfur dioxide (SO2) in Illinois. That's bad news for people living in Pekin who enjoy having active lives and engaging in activities such as breathing the air.

Even short term exposure to SO2 triggers "an array of adverse respiratory effects including bronchoconstriction and increased asthma symptoms. These effects are particularly important for asthmatics at elevated ventilation rates (e.g., while exercising or playing.)" In other words, SO2 likes to attack asthmatic children at play.

The Pekin Times tells us why SO2 is attacking the health of their community.

Power plants and ethanol manufacturers are big emitters of sulfur dioxide, said Rob Kaleel, manager of the air quality planning section at IEPA. He said Aventine Renewable Energy is the largest emitter, but that does not necessarily mean they exceed current regulations placed on industry.

The new standard is 75 parts per billion measured over one hour. The IEPA measured Pekin at 235 parts per billion over one hour.

“We’re way over,” Kaleel said. “I know that’s the highest in the state by far.” He said Pekin barely met the old U.S. EPA standard.

I find it ironic that an ethanol manufacturer with the word "renewable energy" in their company name is the largest SO2 polluter in the area. Nice greenwash. So much for the notion that ethanol is a clean fuel.

But, we know that in Illinois, as with the nation, coal power plants are the top source of SO2 pollution. That includes the nearby Powerton plant, which the Pekin Times points out, is currently being sued for clean air act violations. It's time for Midwest Generation to invest in major pollution control upgrades, or simply shut the dinosaur down.



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When Pekin's major polluters are finally forced to clean up their act I suggest they make one extra investment: A donation to area hospitals for respiratory care and free asthma inhalers. The community has been forced to bear that expense for too long. Let these companies pay for their true costs of operation instead of passing the expense onto the families of Pekin.

SJR article on Sierra Club high speed rail meeting

The State Journal-Register has a nice blurb letting people know about the Sierra Club meeting coming up on Tuesday, May 24th, 6:30pm, Lincoln Library Carnegie Room.

The Sangamon Valley Group of the Sierra Club has scheduled a public forum for Tuesday on ways high-speed trains could benefit both local businesses and the environment, said Will Reynolds, who also is chairman of the Illinois Sierra Club.

“Other cities are using high-speed rail to develop their downtowns,” said Reynolds. “We want to focus on how that could be done in Springfield.”

I feel like the economic development potential of high speed rail hasn't been part of the discussion often enough. So I'm excited about the excellent speakers we have coming.

May 18, 2011

Suits invade Springfield Farmers Market

Earlier today a ribbon cutting and jazz band launched Springfield's downtown Farmers Market for the season. Mayor Mike Houston and Lt. Governor Sheila Simon spoke briefly to the crowd.

The chair of Downtown Springfield Inc talked about the market bringing people to downtown. Simon mentioned supporting local food systems and farmers. The crowd also included a number of other elected officials, including State Senator Dave Koehler and Representative LaShawn Ford, who have been legislative advocates for Farmers Markets.


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The market expanded this year to include an additional block and it was still crowded from end to end. The number of business suits and Chamber pins suggests that the tree-hugger crowd will have to get used to the market's growing popularity. Hopefully it will continue to expand without losing sight of why local, sustainable food systems are important to our environment and economy.

Bobby Schilling forum sounded like tea party rally

I only caught the tail end of a public forum hosted by freshman Congressman Bobby Schilling. A screening of The Billionaires' Tea Party was the same night, so after the movie, I rushed over for the last 10 minutes of Schilling's forum.

It felt like the movie never stopped. Hearing Schilling was no different than clips of speakers at tea party rallies. Except that Schilling had a calm crowd of about 20 people, half of which were suit-and-tie clad staffers for various Republican politicians.

One audience member asked Schilling why he supports high speed-rail. Schilling responded that he doesn't favor it at this time because there's not enough money. He argued that Amtrak isn't profitable and that we should instead be spending money on bridge and highway projects.

That got a lively response from another audience member who asked if he opposed funding for a new Amtrak line from Chicago to Rock Island/Moline. Schilling became a little defensive and tried to engage the audience member in debate. "So, you're an Amtrak supporter? Why do you think we need it?"

The guy in the audience said it's a good economic development opportunity for the Quad Cities and asked if Schilling really favored walking away from the investment that has already been made on the rail line. Just when things started to get interesting a staffer said they were out of time (7 minutes early) and cut off discussion. In any case, it's clear that Schilling opposes any new spending on passenger rail, despite the jobs and economic development benefits it would bring to the two largest communities in his district.

Since I didn't get the chance to ask a question I decided to introduce myself afterward. I let him know that I had recently moved into his district from John Shimkus' territory, and that I hope he won't join Shimkus on the lunatic fringe of anti-environmentalists.

He started to talk about climate change he told me that "for every scientist who says it's a problem, you'll find another who..." I think he trailed off because he could see I wasn't buying it. I responded that it was something more like 1 scientist who claims it isn't a man-made problem for every 1,000 who do. Although it may be more like 10,000 to 1. Even the few prominent skeptics have been backtracking lately.

He next claimed that he was probably more green than me. We didn't get into the specifics of what makes his house green but he did brag about driving a car that uses E-85 ethanol. I didn't bother to tell him that no one other than ADM still claims that corn-based ethanol is green. When I mentioned pollution from coal power plants he deflected by bringing up methane from cow farts.

I was hoping to have a new Congressman who could at least carry on a reasonable discussion about environmental issues. It's not looking good.

Maybe he'll come around. For now, he sounds like he'll join Shimkus on the climate-denier fringe. A recent USA Today editorial put those who still deny the scientific evidence of the climate crisis, "in the same position as the "birthers," who continue to challenge President Obama's American citizenship — a vocal minority that refuses to accept overwhelming evidence."

I guess that's what makes the tea party so fascinating and frightening. Whether it's Obama's birth certificate, climate change science, or the imagined government takeover of health care, we have a very vocal group who holds onto irrational beliefs which cannot be swayed by any amount of evidence. How on earth do you deal with that, especially when news organizations give them nearly unlimited, uncritical coverage?

May 15, 2011

The Billionaires' Tea Party

The next Liberty Brew & View movie is The Billionaires' Tea Party, Tuesday, May 17, 7:00pm at Capital City Bar & Grill.


The Billionaires' Tea Party (trailer) from (astro)turf wars on Vimeo.


Synopsis

The Tea Party movement has taken American politics by storm. But is this truly a populist uprising or one of the greatest feats of propaganda ever seen?

Seeking to find out, Australian filmmaker Taki Oldham embeds himself in the Tea Party uprising. From men sporting tri-corner hats in Louisville Kentucky (the movement takes name from a key event in the American revolution) to 100,000 placard waving patriots in Washington D.C. ‘taking our country back’ from Obama’s ‘communist’ regime. But who are generals of this army?

Enter brothers Charles and David Koch. Oilmen, billionaires 20 times over and on a mission to create a privatized America. For three decades they’ve unwritten a propaganda war, funding fake grassroots groups (branded ‘astroturf’ by opponents) to dupe citizens into protesting on behalf of some of Americas most powerful people and corporations. As Taki infiltrates one such group, Americans For Prosperity, he captures David Koch beaming as operatives report running Tea Party events all over the country.

Weaving together commentary from propaganda experts and political insiders with unprecedented footage, The Billionaires’ Tea Party follows astroturf groups Americans For Prosperity and Freedomworks coopting the movement from day one. As the Koch’s extreme vision of free market capitalism is woven into that cherished American spirit of individual freedom, the patriotic Tea Partiers are guided to oppose key elements of the Obama agenda. Witness hysterical scenes as a proposed Health Care bill is reframed as Soviet style ‘socialised medicine’. Follow industry-funded spin doctors and scientists dismissing Obama’s climate bill a liberal conspiracy to control peoples lives and destroy the economy. See the cosy relationship between Koch operatives and Fox News. Come undercover as Tea Partiers are indoctrinated into equating their own interests with those of corporate America. Finally, see the stunning culmination at the 2010 elections as fully 1/3 of those elected are Tea Party endorsed candidates out to make Koch’s dream a reality.

With America now facing a new era of budget-slashing union-busting politics, The Billionaires’ Tea Party is both a journey through a unique moment in American history and chilling portent of the corporate takeover of democracy.

Coal industry jobs

It's true. The coal industry does create jobs. Especially for respiratory nurses. Treating asthma for children and black lung for miners is a multi-billion dollar industry.

May 7, 2011

Letter to the editor on Shimkus

This week's Illinois Times includes a letter to the editor I submitted:

I often appreciate the statements Congressman John Shimkus makes to area news outlets about the environment. He speaks in favor of protecting public health and supporting real science when developing environmental policies. He sounds sensible when he’s back home in the district. That’s why it’s so disappointing to read national blogs and press outlets which report on what Congressman Shimkus actually does while in Washington, D.C.

Although he speaks in favor of science while in Illinois, he has become known as an anti-science extremist in Washington. One congressman even had to ask why Shimkus didn’t include any actual scientists in committee hearings about climate change. He rhetorically supports public health while in Illinois, but in Washington, his attacks on environmental regulation would threaten the lives of thousands of adults and children. He claims to support agriculture in Illinois, but in Washington, he refuses to acknowledge the terrible impact climate change will have on Illinois farmers. How do we get the extremist Shimkus in Washington to start acting more like the sensible-sounding Shimkus I read about back home?

Will Reynolds
Springfield

May 6, 2011

Journal-Register ducks the issue again

The State Journal-Register editorial today suggests not re-building in flood plains along the Mississippi. It ended with this:

Following what has come to be known as the Great Flood of 1993, the federal government took steps to guard against a repeat of the destruction on some of the worst hit and most vulnerable areas. In Monroe County, the entire town of Valmeyer was moved to higher ground.

If any good is to come of the current disaster, the federal government must take similar action. This would not involve moving a town, but instead would emphasize the purpose of the New Madrid Floodway and discourage rebuilding there. Like the 1937 emergency that forced the last intentional levee blast, the current hardship easily could fade into oblivion if another 74 years passes before the floodway must be used to save towns upriver.

Fair point but is there any other reason why we might want to prepare for more catastrophic flooding? Perhaps some indication that it might happen more often and be more severe than in the past? Maybe a warning from the world's scientific community that we won't have to wait another 74 years this time? A reason to think that even saving the city of Cairo is a lost cause in the long run?

I understand that any local news outlet which makes the connection between the series of recent 100-year weather events and climate change will be inundated with angry cries of "liberal bias." Reality can be controversial. But there's a point when refusing to acknowledge the connection scientists have made is misleading and irresponsible.

Two blogs had me thinking about this before reading the SJR's editorial.

First, from Think Progress: Top Climate Scientist On The Monster Tornadoes: ‘It Is Irresponsible Not To Mention Climate Change’

Dr. Kevin Trenberth, one of the world’s top climate scientists, who has been exploring for years how greenhouse pollution influences extreme weather, said he believes that it is “irresponsible not to mention climate change” in the context of these extreme tornadoes.

Carl Pope's latest blog post points out the obvious trend.
Last year we had floods the size of England in Pakistan, drought and heat that burned more than 300,000 acres and destroyed the entire wheat crop in Russia. Observers called it "the Year of Extreme Weather." Now, in the spring of 2011, it's America's turn. The odds that we are having three different "once-in-a-century" weather disasters in the same region in the same month would be incredibly small -- unless, as climate scientists have been warning, these extremes are no longer "once-in-a-century."

The U.S. weather system has now been bulked up by climate pollution like an athlete on steroids, so that it can unleash what were previously very rare hyper-weather events on a regular basis. A warmer climate does not just raise the thermometer; it also stores more energy, which kicks up extreme winds and carries more water vapor to power bigger storms. Just as a pot of sauce gets violent when it boils, we are seeing the weather do the same.

The politics of confronting climate change is made more difficult when regional news outlets fail to point out relationships and refuse to acknowledge the real issue. Mississippi River towns and Midwestern farmers will suffer just as much as coastal cities and perhaps sooner than many realized. We need newspapers to be honest about that.

Illinois gets extra rail money. Durbin delivers high speed reality check.

Are you ready for national train day this Saturday? It's good timing for Illinois since we just received a share of Florida's federal high speed rail money!

In case you forgot, the Governors of Wisconsin and Florida made themselves poster-children for how foolish, ideologically-driven decision making can harm states that elected tea party candidates. Projects in both states would have created thousands of jobs and provided long term economic development benefits. Their loss is now Illinois' gain.

I searched for this story at the State Journal-Register. They ran a shortened AP story which barely mentioned any benefits of the project. Other articles around the state included more of the statement from Senators Durbin and Kirk.

“Illinois will be able to use this funding to upgrade an important segment of the Chicago to St. Louis corridor,” said Durbin, a Co-Chair and founding member of the Bi-Cameral High- Speed & Intercity Passenger Rail Caucus. “Improvements to this route will improve on-time performance, increase travel speeds and create jobs that our state badly needs.

“This project will create nearly 6,000 direct and indirect jobs, decrease delays and improve performance,” U.S. Senator Mark Kirk said. “High speed rail projects like this one will ensure that Illinois remains at the center of the nation’s infrastructure network, attracting more jobs and making us more economically competitive.”

It's good to see that our new Republican Senator, Mark Kirk, isn't taking the tea party position of rejecting high speed rail money.

But, will the city of Springfield? Anyone who missed it should read Dick Durbin's reality check for Springfield published in the State Journal-Register. My interpretation of the Op-Ed is that local leaders have been blowing a lot of smoke, our options are limited, and we need to make the best decision based on our realistic choices. Just because the county is attached to their idea for an 11th street multi-modal center doesn't mean we're likely to get funds for rail line consolidation.

Let me repeat one of several crucial lines in the editorial. "Because the 10th Street corridor will primarily serve freight trains it is not likely to qualify for high-speed rail funds."

And: "Union Pacific and Canadian National have already said they will not pay to move their trains to the 10th Street corridor and they cannot legally be required to do so."

And thanks to our new tea-party-controlled Congress, there's not likely to be major new funding for passenger rail infrastructure improvements.

As Durbin pointed out, the 3rd Street corridor has had two tracks before. It didn't destroy downtown and historic structures didn't fall apart.

It's time for local leaders to stop presenting worst case scenarios and start working on our own 3rd street mitigation plan that's the least objectionable option. We need a realistic conversation about how high speed rail can be used to improve our city center, no matter which corridor is used.

May 4, 2011

The Rolling Stones are officially the greatest rock band of all time

There can no longer be doubt that the Rolling Stones are the greatest rock band of all time. Why?

You could argue that it's their ability to release quality hit records and still put on an amazing live show in six different decades. You could argue that it's producing some of the most recognized riffs, clever lyrics, and memorable live shows in the history of rock. But it really comes down to one thing.

The Rolling Stones are now the only band with two different pinball games released 30 years apart! Game over.

I was expecting the early 80's classic when I was told that Floyd's might get a Rolling Stones pinball game. I played it once while they had it at CP Pinball. The artwork is impressive but the outdated game play didn't make much of an impression.



So I was surprised when I saw that Floyd's has the completely new Rolling Stones pinball that was released earlier this year. After my first play I'm very impressed. The moving Mick Jagger target and a few other features remind me of the new Batman. That's fine since Batman is the best game I've seen released in years.



Like Elvis pinball, it plays songs during the game and one of the goals is to collect hit records that play when you score them. There was a lot of background noise when I played, but so far it doesn't sound as repetitive as the Elvis game could be.

So, you may ask, what about The Who? Pete Townshend wrote the Pinball Wizard anthem, after all. Well, I've played their Tommy pinball game and all I can say is that The Who can suck silver balls. Rolling Stones are the rock 'n roll kings of pinball now!

Here's a video from their Bridges to Babylon tour DVD filmed in St. Louis, which also happened to be the first time I saw them in concert. When I was tired of standing for two hours Mick was still strutting back and forth across stage.


May 3, 2011

New facebook fan page for Liberty Brew & View

Facebook is making changes to the groups feature and archiving old pages. Consequently, I'm finally creating a new fan page for Liberty Brew & View. I'll use this page to send out notices and info about movies from now on. Please like and share!


Liberty Brew & View

Promote Your Page Too


The next movie will be "Billionaires' Tea Party" on May 17. I plan to announce a guest speaker by the end of the week.

Sybia lands at Edwards Mansion

I caught glimpses of a new sculpture while driving by the Springfield Art Association next to Edwards Place. Today I decided to get a closer look.

sybia1


Local sculptor Travis Taylor calls it Sybia.


sybia2


I've been told that neighbors objected when it was previously in his front yard. I can't imagine why. :)


sybia3


I love it. Springfield needs more public art.

May 2, 2011

Let America be America Again

The title of Langston Hughes' famous poem is stuck in my head. I think about the nightmare of the last decade and wonder if we can turn it back now that bin Laden is dead. Can we erase years of fear, propaganda, and a war founded on lies by a tyrant who stole more of our freedoms than any terrorist ever could? Can we go back to being what America should be?

Then I read the poem just now and remembered the point: America never was what it should be. But at least we can go back to trying. We can try to be America, instead of whatever we were trying to be for the last decade.


Langston Hughes - Let America Be America Again

Let America be America again.
Let it be the dream it used to be.
Let it be the pioneer on the plain
Seeking a home where he himself is free.

(America never was America to me.)

Let America be the dream the dreamers dreamed--
Let it be that great strong land of love
Where never kings connive nor tyrants scheme
That any man be crushed by one above.

(It never was America to me.)

O, let my land be a land where Liberty
Is crowned with no false patriotic wreath,
But opportunity is real, and life is free,
Equality is in the air we breathe.

(There's never been equality for me,
Nor freedom in this "homeland of the free.")

Say, who are you that mumbles in the dark?
And who are you that draws your veil across the stars?

I am the poor white, fooled and pushed apart,
I am the Negro bearing slavery's scars.
I am the red man driven from the land,
I am the immigrant clutching the hope I seek--
And finding only the same old stupid plan
Of dog eat dog, of mighty crush the weak.

I am the young man, full of strength and hope,
Tangled in that ancient endless chain
Of profit, power, gain, of grab the land!
Of grab the gold! Of grab the ways of satisfying need!
Of work the men! Of take the pay!
Of owning everything for one's own greed!

I am the farmer, bondsman to the soil.
I am the worker sold to the machine.
I am the Negro, servant to you all.
I am the people, humble, hungry, mean--
Hungry yet today despite the dream.
Beaten yet today--O, Pioneers!
I am the man who never got ahead,
The poorest worker bartered through the years.

Yet I'm the one who dreamt our basic dream
In the Old World while still a serf of kings,
Who dreamt a dream so strong, so brave, so true,
That even yet its mighty daring sings
In every brick and stone, in every furrow turned
That's made America the land it has become.
O, I'm the man who sailed those early seas
In search of what I meant to be my home--
For I'm the one who left dark Ireland's shore,
And Poland's plain, and England's grassy lea,
And torn from Black Africa's strand I came
To build a "homeland of the free."

The free?

Who said the free? Not me?
Surely not me? The millions on relief today?
The millions shot down when we strike?
The millions who have nothing for our pay?
For all the dreams we've dreamed
And all the songs we've sung
And all the hopes we've held
And all the flags we've hung,
The millions who have nothing for our pay--
Except the dream that's almost dead today.

O, let America be America again--
The land that never has been yet--
And yet must be--the land where every man is free.
The land that's mine--the poor man's, Indian's, Negro's, ME--
Who made America,
Whose sweat and blood, whose faith and pain,
Whose hand at the foundry, whose plow in the rain,
Must bring back our mighty dream again.

Sure, call me any ugly name you choose--
The steel of freedom does not stain.
From those who live like leeches on the people's lives,
We must take back our land again,
America!

O, yes,
I say it plain,
America never was America to me,
And yet I swear this oath--
America will be!

Out of the rack and ruin of our gangster death,
The rape and rot of graft, and stealth, and lies,
We, the people, must redeem
The land, the mines, the plants, the rivers.
The mountains and the endless plain--
All, all the stretch of these great green states--
And make America again!

May 1, 2011

Shimkus, Emerson see their Congressional districts hit by climate disaster. Will they admit there's a problem?

Catastrophic flooding stories have become more routine for anyone living in the Mississippi river valley. The latest one is setting up a battle between Cairo Illinois and Missouri farmlands. The St. Louis Beacon summarizes the conflict well.

This week, the corps has been considering what it has avoided doing for 74 years: busting a gap in the Birds Point levee to flood as much as 130,000 acres and relieve some of the flooding expected when the swollen Ohio River crests near Cairo, Ill., this weekend and surges into the Mississippi at the rivers' confluence.

They haven't been forced to do this in seventy four years. Rainfall and flooding in the area is matching and breaking old records. But that's a story we're used to hearing every year now, isn't it? It may not always be the same region but a "historic" flood disaster is now part of the annual weather report.

This is a point when scientists on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and others get to say "I told you so." More frequent flooding and catastrophic weather events are exactly what they warned us about.

The areas being impacted right now are represented in Congress by modern day Neville Chamberlins who are doing their best to ensure that we don't confront the problem. John Shimkus is touring Illinois flood sites. Yet, as chair of the House Environment and Economy Subcommittee he has become one of the nation's most visible deniers of the science behind climate change. Will he see the connection?

The Missouri side of the river is represented in Congress by Jo Ann Emerson. Earlier in April she bragged about supporting a bill that would bar the US from funding scientific study on climate change by the IPCC. That's the same group which warned that heavy, unpredictable rains would lead to delayed planting seasons and more frequent flooding in the Midwest. Maybe she should have paid more attention to their last report. Her press release stated: "I don’t feel the U.S. taxpayer should be asked to shoulder this burden in addition to the economic damage their policy recommendations would inflict on us.”

At this moment, her constituents are shouldering the burden her anti-science policies would inflict on them into the future. Refusal to deal with climate change will only result in more frequent catastrophic flooding and all of the economic damage that goes with it. Does she want to invest in more clean energy jobs for Missouri or does she want to keep paying even more for flood relief?

Ironically, she doesn't mind asking U.S. taxpayers for help when it's time for the Corps of Engineers and FEMA to deal with the impacts of flooding. I wonder if Emerson and Shimkus are ready to apologize for voting in favor of the Paul Ryan budget that cut emergency disaster funding. It's a shame that people in these districts have to face the consequences of the extremist anti-science, anti-government ideology of their Congressional Representatives.

Happy May Day!

I'm looking forward to Springfield's third annual Haymarket festival this afternoon in Douglas Park!