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Samuel Adams

American Patriot & Politician

1722 - 1803

If ye love wealth greater than liberty, the tranquility of servitude greater than the animating contest for freedom, go home from us in peace. We seek not your counsel, nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you; May your chains set lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen.
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Hot Issues From Linn County Iowa
Monday, 5 November 2007
All Politics Are Local

 

It has been said that all Politics are Local. The same can be said about Issues. While it is true there may be some Local Issues here in Linn County that do not affect the State of Iowa or the Nation at Large, it is equally true that what does affect the State of Iowa or the Nation at Large also affects us here. For all Politics are Local. It is for this reason that this website is named as it is. Not "Hot Issues IN Linn County", but "Hot Issues FROM Linn County". We desire this to be a Forum for the presentation of those Issues which have an effect on our lives. Those that galvanize the most attention. Your reasoned comments are not only encouraged but needed. Please, however, try to keep them on the level of Principles rather than Personalities and bear in mind, this is a public forum and a responsible quality of language will be expected. This Statement of Principles will remain at the top of the website. Today in American History:
Apri 4,1873 Have women citizens the right of suffrage under the Constitution of the United States?


Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 12:01 AM CST
Updated: Tuesday, 6 November 2007 8:49 AM CST
Post Comment | View Comments (4) | Permalink | Share This Post

Wednesday, 8 August 2007 - 8:45 AM CDT

Name: "jeremy cobert"
Home Page: http://www.thecoberts.com

a current hot issue for me:

 

i heard that the Iowa GOP will charge $184,000 if a campaign wanted to verify a paper count of the coming Iowa straw poll.

 

 Today, on the Dale Williams radio show, Mr. Benton said there will be a manual electronic count of the Iowa poll results.  What Mr. Benton did not explain, as exposed in a previous National Expositor Article, “it is commonly known that this manual count” with Diebold machines “would only consist of spot checks of the voting machines for device calibration purposes. This does not constitute a verifiable check of the accuracy from either an engineering or statistical perspective.”

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  In what amounts to extortion, the Iowa GOP is telling candidates they must pay an excessive amount of money to manually verify the results in this weeks’ poll. Both Florida and California have recently decertified the same electronic Diebold voting machines that will be used in Iowa. The validity of the upcoming Iowa straw poll should not rest on one campaign but is the responsibility of the Iowa GOP.

we should let the Iowa GOP know that we disaprove of the use of decertified Diebold electronic voting machines and nothing short of a verifiable manual paper ballot would be acceptable for the Iowa straw poll this week. 

This is a call to action, anyone who wants a verfiable election must call the Iowa GOP and demand a back up paper count.  Iowa Republican Party - (515) 282-8105

Wednesday, 5 September 2007 - 9:09 AM CDT

Name: jeremycobert
Home Page: http://www.thecoberts.com

Judge Orders a Web Site Selling Tax-Evasion Advice to Close

By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON

Published: August 30, 2007

A Web site that sells materials stating that individuals can legally stop paying taxes has been shut on the order of a federal judge.

Judge Thomas J. McAvoy, a senior judge in the Northern District of New York who issued the order on Aug. 9, wrote that the First Amendment did not protect the two organizations that operate the Web site, or their founder, because the site incited criminal conduct. Judge McAvoy ruled that some people who went to the Web site stopped paying taxes, causing the government harm.

Judge McAvoy also ordered that the names, addresses, telephone numbers, e-mail addresses and Social Security numbers of every person who received materials on how to stop paying taxes be turned over to the government.

This information would make it easy for the Internal Revenue Service to identify people who followed the illegal advice and for the Justice Department to prosecute them for tax crimes.

The civil court order is one of at least 245 permanent injunctions obtained by federal prospectors that prohibit individuals and organizations that deny the legitimacy of the tax laws or who sell tax evasion schemes from marketing their wares.

Robert L. Schulz of Queensbury, N.Y., the founder of both organizations behind the Web site — the We The People Foundation for Constitutional Education and the We The People Congress — posted the court order at the Web site givemeliberty.org, and closed the rest of the site even though he said yesterday that the order did not specify that he do so. He also said he had filed an appeal with the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

His organization rose to prominence with a series of full-page newspaper ads, starting in 2001, asserting that the government tricks people into paying taxes. The ads solicited donations, which it said were fully tax-deductible.

Judge McAvoy, quoting from a declaration that Mr. Schulz sent to the court, said that Mr. Schulz wrote that he started “operation stop withholding” as “a national campaign to instruct company officials, workers and independent contractors on how to legally stop wage withholding.”

In a 25-page decision, the judge wrote that “undisputed evidence” established that Mr. Schulz and his organizations “knew, or had reason to know, that their statements were false.”

He said that because Mr. Schulz was taking $20 payments for a package of materials that supposedly showed how to legally stop paying taxes, the Web site could be shut down as commercial speech that urged criminal conduct.

Even if the Web site was not commercial in nature, Judge McAvoy said, it could be shut because people who followed the advice at the Web site engaged in criminal conduct.

“The First Amendment does not protect speech that incites imminent lawless action,” the judge wrote, citing a 1969 Supreme Court decision.

Because Mr. Schulz and his organization “are not merely advocating, but have gone the extra step in instructing others how to engage in illegal activity and have supplied the means to do so” the judge added, “their speech may be enjoined.”

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This is a bit scary to me. Imagine a website advocating that people buy a handgun for their protection getting shut down in gun controlled cities. If we allow this to stand, eventually all websites that criticize the government can come to an end.

  The first amendment specifically protects speech that is against the government.

 

Friday, 21 September 2007 - 8:22 AM CDT

Name: "jeremy cobert"
Home Page: http://www.thecoberts.com

another hot-issue for me, Chuck Grassley out of touch with Iowa



Senator Chuck Grassley pleaded and begged and cried and bayed and groveled in front of President Bush,

http://www.dmregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070921/NEWS09/709210388/1001

asking him not to veto a bill which would provide health insurance to poor families earning up to $83,000 a year and covering children up to 25 years of age.

You see, that's what happens when you live on Planet DC for too long. You start thinking that poor people are earning into the low $80s and that children include 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, and 24 year olds.

The Des Moines Register's Jane Norman

http://www.dmregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070921/NEWS09/709210388/1001 

can't mention the $83,000 a year thing until the 17th paragraph of the story. Norman also quotes Grassley as saying "I'm frustrated for the kids of Iowa" but fails to mention that "kids" in this bill also include 24 year olds.

I don't know what they call this in the journalism world, but in the medical world they call intentionally leaving out such details malpractice.

Thursday, 1 November 2007 - 8:37 AM CDT

Name: "jeremy cobert"
Home Page: http://www.thecoberts.com

What do Islamofacism, methamphetamine production, tort lawyers, and homemade fireworks have in common? The answer is that they are all part of the seemingly inevitable process of destroying the childhood Chemistry Set. A.C. Gilbert, in 1918 was titled the “Man who Saved Christmas” with his innovative ideas of packaging a few glass tubes and some common chemicals into starter kits that enabled a generation to learn the joy of experimentation, and the basis for the scientific method of thought.

Chemcraft Chemistry Set Gilbert Chemistry Set

Some of Gilbert’s original sets included such items as sodium cyanide, radioactive samples (complete with a Geiger counter), and glass blowing kits. I will freely admit that one of the first things I did with my chemistry set was to attempt to make an explosive. I remember mixing up chemicals that evolved free chlorine gas and having to evacuate the house. I remember mixing potassium nitrate and sugar to make rocket engines and quickly evolving to higher specific impulse fuels. I remember the joy of finally obtaining some nitric acid which allowed me to nitrate basically everything in the house (cotton for gun cotton, glycerine and alcohol for nitroglycerine). So yes, I have to admit that there is a risk involved. But this is how people learn. Sometimes knowledge comes with pain — one-shot induction.

Today however, the Chemistry Set is toast. Current instantiations are embarrassing. There are no chemicals except those which react at low energy to produce color changes. No glass tubes or beakers, certainly no Bunsen burners or alcohol burners (remember the clear blue flames when the alcohol spilled out over the table). Today’s sets cover perfume mixing and creation of luminol (the ‘CSI effect’ I suppose).

In some States, you need a FBI criminal background check to purchase chemicals. Some metals, like lithium, red phosphorus, sodium and potassium, are almost impossible to purchase in elemental form. This is thanks to their use in manufacturing methamphetamine. Sulphur and potassium nitrate, both useful chemicals, are being classified as class C fireworks (here is a good precursor link). Mail order suppliers of science products are raided. Many over-the-counter compounds now require what is essentially a (poor) background check. Even fertilizer (ammonium nitrate) is under intense scrutiny. Where does this trend end? Ten years from now, will the list include table salt, seawater and natural gas — precursors to many industrical chemicals?

Then there is the liability issue. Of course some people buy into the lets be safe at any cost and assert that much chemistry can be done without explosions and stinky fumes. If a ladder manufacturer is under a constant barrage of liability suits, imagine the torrent of litigation directed to those giving a child a set of potentially dangerous chemicals. Its a CHILD, for God’s sake. [Oh, I’m sorry, for a minute there I was waxing Democrat.]

Yet there is still a little hope. Although Thames and Kosmos can’t ship their sets with the full range of chemicals needed to perform their listed experiments, at least they provide a list of sources from which to acquire them (assuming the appropriate permits, licenses, fees, FEES, background checks, and did I mention fees.) What is at stake here is no less than the future of America’s competitiveness and the innovation the make the United States the magnet for international entrepreneurs and scientists. Without the chemistry set, will we have scientists and innovators, or just a country of rock stars, political commentators and movie idols.

[Author’s Note: This article is primarily a result of my frustration in trying to acquire a few hundred grams of potassium carbonate for an electrolyte solution.]

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