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Sam Garchik - Mon 02 Jun 2008 10:10 AM CDT
atomburke - Fri 23 May 2008 03:49 PM CDT
salman - Fri 23 May 2008 06:28 AM CDT
megelso - Sun 11 May 2008 09:10 AM CDT
no4gman - Tue 29 Apr 2008 01:07 AM CDT
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Wednesday, November 30

Commericalization of our National Parks
by
Caroline Vernon
on Wed 30 Nov 2005 06:46 PM CST
Commercialization of our National Parks
From Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).
The
National Park Service is getting ready to adopt new policies that would
dramatically increase the commercialization of our National Parks.
Under the new plan, the Park Service would aggressively seek corporate
sponsorship of park projects and facilities. In return for financial
sponsorships, the plan will give corporate donors naming rights to park
facilities (but not the parks themselves) and allow use of National
Park symbols and personnel in advertising.
Please
take a moment to tell the Park Service not to pollute our national
treasures with advertising and corporate sponsorships. Comments should
be sent to partnerships@nps.gov. Please act today – the deadline for comments is December 5.
NATIONAL PARKS TO SEEK CORPORATE SPONSORSHIPS — Corporate Funds Will Alter Park Landscapes and Sway Policies
Washington,
DC — In a quiet but far-reaching change, the National Park Service is
poised to adopt a new policy of aggressively seeking corporate
sponsorship of park projects and facilities. In return for financial
sponsorships, the plan will give corporate donors naming rights, use of
National Park symbols and personnel in advertising and much greater
influence over park managers, according to public comments filed today
by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).
“This
starts a slow motion commercialization of the national park system,”
stated PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch. “What will be allowed stops
just short of licensing ads for ‘The Official Beer of Yosemite’ or ‘
Old Faithful, Brought to You by Viagara.’”
The Park
Service has put forward a draft directive encouraging active pursuit of
potential financial donors and repealing the agency’s current passive
posture of merely accepting donations. Public comment on the plan
closes this week. Interior Secretary Gale Norton has hailed the plan as
an “exciting” new approach for broadening the funding base for national
parks.
Park managers would be encouraged to offer packages that attract big corporate donors, including –
Liberalized
naming rights for trails, benches, rooms and other facilities (but not
parks themselves), as well as display of logos and slogans on park
literature, computer screens, and plaques; Exclusive
media advertising rights to the official NPS Arrowhead symbol, the term
“Proud Partner” of the National Park Service and the use of uniformed
park employees in ads; and Flexibility to negotiate customized recognition deals that “meet the needs of individual donors.”
The plan
jettisons bans against accepting or soliciting donations from vendors,
concessionaires, permittees and others doing business with a park.
Alcohol, tobacco and even gambling companies would also be eligible
park sponsors. The only up-front review of major gifts would be a
subjective “totality of circumstances” test applied by top officials to
determine whether the donation is “appropriate.”
The plan
is designed so that private donations develop into a much more
significant factor in overall park budgets, as well as high-profile
capital projects and improvements. Currently, the Park Service raises
an estimated $17 million from outside sources each year.
“This is
a thinly disguised scheme to subject the public commons to corporate
branding campaigns,” added Ruch, pointing to related effort by both the
Bush administration and House Republicans to sell naming rights of
certain park facilities, as well as some parks in their entirety. “Will
anyplace be off-limits to the Nike swoosh or the McDonald’s arches?”
Read the PEER comments on the proposed donation solicitation policy
Compare the proposal with current restrictions
Monday, November 28

The Week in Media
by
Arron Wings
on Mon 28 Nov 2005 11:00 AM CST
The Week in Media
Men.Style.Com/GQ
Sinclair Broadcast Group receives another lengthy review. If you haven’t yet read the great piece from Le Monde, you should. Now, GQ provides another view of the same phenomenon.
By Wil S. Hyton
Chances
are you’ve never heard of Sinclair Broadcast Group. Sure, it might be
the largest independent owner of television stations in America, an
empire of sixty channels spread across thirty-seven cities with a
signal that reaches nearly a quarter of the TV-watching public, but
even if you happen to receive that signal and watch it every night,
getting your Sinclair news and Sinclair weather and Sinclair commentary
from a Sinclair station, chances are you’ve still never heard of
Sinclair and have no idea you’re watching it.
You won’t see the word Sinclair on your screen, and you’ll probably
just think you’re watching ABC or CBS or NBC, whichever network you
thought you tuned in. Right there on the screen, you’ll see the old
familiar logo—a peacock, an eye, the ABC bubble—and the anchors will
look the same as ever, and the fact that the station has been purchased
by Sinclair will be no more apparent than the fact that twenty or
thirty minutes into the program, the real news will suddenly fade to
black and Sinclair’s news will take over.
It may be a glowing interview with a defense contractor or a fiery
commentary on the evils of the French, something brief and punchy
lasting two or ten or fourteen minutes, then slipping back into the
regular news as quietly as it came. Not so much as a blip or a bleep to
let you know that what you just witnessed was not the local NBC or CBS
broadcast but just a little insert from the guys who own the station.
That’s the goal at Sinclair: to be seen without being seen.
(click here to read the entire article)
(Click here to listen to the latest FreePress Media Minute)
(Click here to find out if your station is owned by Sinclair)

Click here to sign our petition to the FCC

Iowans for Better Local TV: The Time To Act Is Now
by
Trish Nelson
on Mon 28 Nov 2005 04:00 AM CST
Iowans for Better Local TV:
The Time To Act Is Now
IBLTV.Org
Iowans for Better Local Television, Iowa's grassroots media reform group, is now leading an effort to ask the FCC to hold a hearing to review whether Iowans
are being well-served by our Sinclair-owned station KGAN. This
year, all of Iowa's TV stations are up for license renewal which
provides a rare opportunity for the public to have input. We must
act now, because the next license renewal is eight long years away.
IBLTV
has spent the past year getting organized and taking action.
After joining with the successful , nation-wide Sinclair advertiser
boycott last fall, IBLTV co-sponsored the successful FCC Town Meeting on the Future of Media in October which drew over 500 Iowans. IBLTV has also met with Congressman Leach,
published columns in newspapers, made appearances on radio and
TV, and has even drawn the attention of national media with a feature
story in the broadcast industry publication, Broadcasting and Cable magazine.
Here is what we are asking you to do:
(1) Sign our on-line signature petition asking the FCC for a meaningful license review. Just click here: "Sign the IBLTV Petition." If everyone takes this quick, simple action, it will help us enormously to demonstrate citizen support for this effort.
(2) Please let us know if you have a personal anecdote that illustrates
an example of how you feel our Sinclair-owned station has not served
the public interest.
P.S. Like all organizations we need members and financial
support. It is not a condition of your participation in this
project. But if you are able and willing please consider joining IBLTV.
Our group is focused on ACTION, not sitting around and
complaining. If you would like to get more involved in
media reform, there are many oopportunities available. Bring your
ideas! You can sign up to be on IBLTV's online discussion group
by contacting us at feedback@ibltv.org.
Even small contributions help. You can make checks payable to: IBLTV, PO BOX 578, Iowa City, Iowa 52242. (Donate $25 and receive a bonus gift, the DVD Outfoxed while supplies last)!
IBLTV would like to thank you for your concern about media issues and
we appreciate whatever you can do. Please feel free to contact us
at: feedback@ibltv.org.
Sunday, November 27

Why the Campaign to Change Walmart is so Important
by
Caroline Vernon
on Sun 27 Nov 2005 04:50 PM CST
Why the Campaign to change Walmart is so Important
by Caroline Vernon
The last time I shopped at Walmart was about a year ago. I remember
thinking how wonderfully convenient it was that I could purchase my
groceries, my household items and get my film developed in one full
swoop, and get a bargain to boot! But then something happened that
really burst my bubble... I got a crash course in Walmart Economics.
The more I learned about Walmart’s philosophy and business practices,
the more concerned I became, and ultimately, the more committed I chose
to be toward sharing all that I’ve learned with as many people as
possible.
As a person of conscience, there came a time when I was forced to
reconcile all that I had learned and accept responsibility for it. That
meant taking a stand... and that meant standing on the principal, “do
unto others as you would have them do unto you”. It’s really as simple
as that.
As a single mom on a fixed income, with three children at home, I full
well know the importance of being as frugal as possible but I do not
what to be responsible for the grief that someone else has to endure as
a way of life in order to make ends meet in my own life. How anyone can
justify this is beyond my understanding.
The truth is, Walmart can afford to offer some of the low prices that
they do because they are paying sweat shop wages, sometimes as low as 3
cents an hour, to manufacture the same goods that were once
manufactured here at home. The effect of this has resulted in the loss
of good paying jobs at home as well as a lowering of a work standard
and ethic that had once made America great. Rather than raising
standards throughout the rest of the world, Walmart is systematically
lowering standards at home - all this in the name of the almighty
dollar, with no regard to the impact that such detrimental practices
have on individuals, families, and communities throughout, not only
this country, but the world.
Walmart currently has 3700 stores throughout the country and has
ambitious plans to raise that number to 6,000 within the next 5 to 6
years. Is this in line with your vision of America? Where Walmart is
the only place to shop... where the nostalgia of our historic downtown
communities no longer exist because Walmart intentionally sets out to
annihilate all competition? Where Walmart is one of the few places left
in our communities to work? Where our brothers and sisters are denied
good benefits, a decent living wage, respect and dignity on the job,
and the right to organize and form a union?
How can we forget the sacrifices of our forefathers who gave their
lifeblood to ensure our way of life? Yes, we live in a capitalist
society but does that mean that everything we are, everything we
believe, must be reduced down to the “bottom dollar?” Is this not the
same as worshiping mammon? Does the bible not warn us against the “love
of money?” At what point do people matter more than profit? What
happened to “we are our brother’s keeper?” These are the many questions
that continue to make my head spin and my heart ache and I for one,
cannot ignore them.
This philosophy of profit at any cost, is undoing America, and every
one of us who chooses to turn a blind eye to what is happening right
under our noses, is partly responsible for the harm that is being done.
As the largest corporation in the world, Walmart has the power to do
right, and to do good, and sometimes they do, but all things
considered, when you step back and look at the big picture, Walmart is
responsible for doing far more harm than good. It seems strikingly
apparent to me that The Walmart Corporation chooses to live by the old
adage, “he with the most gold make the rules”, and given the millions
of dollars they spend lobbying for subsidies and other favors, it seems
they are well on their way to doing exactly that. Other small
businesses don’t get subsidies so why should Walmart? Isn’t America
supposed to represent fairness, equality, freedom and justice for ALL?
We should have a fair and level playing field with everyone being held
to the same standard.
America may be financially wealthy, but if we allow corporations like
Walmart to continue to choose profit over people, what does that say
about the wealth of our collective spirit? We can no longer afford to
rationalize unto ourselves at the expense of others, here at home or
abroad. As a matter of principal, we can no longer allow greed to trump
need. Wake up America! Wake up Walmart!
www.wakeupwalmart.com
www.walmartwatch.com

A SLAUGHTERHOUSE AND CONFINEMENTS WITH AMMONIA AND HYDROGEN SULFIDE COMING TO A LOCATION NEAR YOU
by
Molly Regan
on Sun 27 Nov 2005 11:00 AM CST
A SLAUGHTERHOUSE AND CONFINEMENTS WITH AMMONIA AND HYDROGEN SULFIDE COMING TO A LOCATION NEAR YOU
Today a press conference was held in Moline, IL. It was to notify
the press that TWO PUBLIC MEETINGS WILL TAKE PLACE NEXT SATURDAY,
DECEMBER 3RD.
The meetings (ONE IN MOLINE AND ONE IN ELDRIDGE, IOWA) are to
INFORM THE PUBLIC THAT A HOG SLAUGHTEHOUSE IS PROPOSED CLOSE TO
BARSTOW, IL ON A FLOODPLAIN. The site is on land that this year
was annexed by the city of East Moline, IL.
If the slaughterhouse is built, word is that 16,000 HOGS A DAY OR OVER
4,000,000 HOGS A YEAR… THAT'S RIGHT 4 MILLION… ARE EXPECTED TO BE
KILLED. THIS MEANS AN EXPLOSION OF HOG CONFINEMENTS IN EASTERN
IOWA AND WESTERN ILLINOIS COUNTIES WILL FOLLOW.
THE PUTRID AIR THAT EMINATES FROM LARGE HOG CONFINEMENTS (ALSO KNOWN AS
"FACTORY FARMS") CAUSES AN INCREASE IN ASTHMA RATES, DISORIENTATION,
LOSS OF MEMORY, UNCONSCIOUSNESS, AND DEATH.
THE IMPACTS DO NOT JUST AFFECT THE RURAL COMMUNITIES IN OUR COUNTIES,
BUT MUST ALSO BE CONSIDERED BY MEDIUM AND LARGE URBAN AREAS SUCH AS THE
METRO QUAD CITIES. Just last Wednesday while I was in Moline, the
strong winds from the north (over 40 mph) brought the smell of manure
from somewhere out there.
So, our ENVIRONMENTAL/SUSTAINABILITY/ENERGY group of the PROGRESSIVE
ACTION FOR THE COMMON GOOD (PACG), thought it was time for more
citizens to be informed.
The morning meeting on Saturday, December 3rd will be held in Moline,
IL at Riverside United Methodist Life Center, 2420 41st St. from 10AM
-12 Noon.
The afternoon meeting the same day will be held in Eldridge, IA in
Scott County in the Eldridge Public Library/First Amendment Room from 2
- 4PM.
Speakers will be KAREN HUDSON AND TERRY SPENCE of GRACE (GLOBAL
RESOURCE CENTER FOR THE ENVIRONMENT). They are part of a national
organization that helps others who may not have the funding to educate
others on the hazards of CAFO's (CONFINED ANIMAL FEEDING OPERATIONS).
Come if you can and tell others about the meetings. Get active in
your county and keep track of what is going on. As I said in an
earlier article, once you step outside and are slapped in the face with
the stench, it will be too late.
So check these web sites to gain further knowledge: www.farmweb.org
And www.thenation.com by searching for "Meatpacking" where you will
find "The Shame of Meatpacking" by Karen Olsson and "Bad Meat" by Eric
Schlosser.
Keep up the good work you all do in helping to CPR…CONSERVE/PARTICIPATE/RECYCLE
Saturday, November 26

How Things Work in Washington
by
Trish Nelson
on Sat 26 Nov 2005 11:00 AM CST
How Things Work in Washington
Consortium News
It
is sadly ironic that Bob Woodward, who in his early career was a
role model for investigative journalists, appears now to have been
corrupted by power and Washington politics.
By Robert Parry
In his book, Secrecy & Privilege,
Robert Parry tracks how the Washington press corps changed from the
Watergate/Vietnam era of the 1970s, when journalists took some pride in
challenging the powerful, to the Iraq War, when many national news
outlets cowered and fawned before a White House that equated skepticism
with disloyalty.
This
gradual but unmistakable shift in the ethos of Washington journalism
marked a hard-fought victory for conservatives who invested billions of
dollars over the past three decades in building a media/political
machine for gaining as much control as possible of the information
flowing through the nation’s capital to the American people.
Journalists
who bucked the trend confronted ugly attacks from right-wing media
“watchdogs,” almost inevitable betrayal by news executives, and dashed
careers. Journalists who played along were rewarded with fame, money
and access.
Today, no
journalist personifies this transformation more than Washington Post
assistant managing editor Bob Woodward, who made his name unraveling
Richard Nixon’s Watergate cover-up but now has been caught misleading
the public while protecting the Bush administration’s cover-up of a
scheme to smear an Iraq War critic.
(click here to read the entire article)

Sign our petition to the FCC
Sign now...Time is running out!
Tuesday, November 15

PACG SUMMIT II/PART II
by
Molly Regan
on Tue 15 Nov 2005 04:00 AM CST
Progressive Action For The Common Good Summit II/Part II
We were hungry for knowledge, we were hungry for a new direction, we
were hungry for action. The atmosphere was wide open with the
charged energy of minds willing to learn and contribute. This
describes the mood of the nearly 250 who attended the PACG Summit II.
Head organizer Cathy Bolkom encouraged all those who ever marched or
stood on a street corner protesting to stand. She asked for all
of those who ever spoke in front of their City Council or Board of
Supervisors to stand, as well as anyone who volunteered their time to
address an envelope for the common good. Eventually all in the
room were on their feet. This helped charge up the group.
It was a day when new faces and regulars came together with a
commitment to change things in their community.
We listened as keynote speaker David Osterberg, executive director of
the IOWA POLICY PROJECT, described how pay inequity has become
detrimental to so many people. The national minimum wage has not
changed in 16 years. Wages have not kept up with inflation.
Too many IOWANS still suffer from low wages. According to IPP's
report, THE STATE OF WORKING IOWA 2005, …"IOWA's nonfarm job base
fell by over 22,000 between 2000 and 2004. Over the same span,
the unemployment rate grew from 2.6 percent to 4.6 percent…
" 'Unemployment' captures only those who are not working, but are
actively looking for work at the time surveyed; it does not capture
those who are working fewer hours than they would prefer, who would
like to work but cannot arrange child care, or who have become
permanently discouraged from looking for a job."
To fully read the report, go to
www.iowapolicyproject.org
The attendants then chose their favorite workshop. For example,
one group watched George Lakoff's CD about reclaiming the language of
progressivism. We must all learn to use more consistent, precise
terms that are simple to explain. We do not need to spend 5
minutes explaining something that should have taken 30 seconds.
(That goes for windy writers, too.)
So, let's keep it simple: that is what I got out of watching it when I
first saw it. In the meantime, I will be waiting for more reports
coming in from the other workshops.
Don't forget to CPR…CONSERVE/PARTICIPATE/RECYCLE
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