Monday, November 30, 2009

Another "take" on the Honduran presidential election of PepeLobo

ESTA ES SU CASA--DECEMBER 2009


ESTA ES SU CASA--DECEMBER 2009

Habemus Pepe

Finally! Elections in Honduras!

And the winner is...Pepe Lobo, the National Party candidate, by a landslide, over the Liberal Party candidate Elvin Santos, the empty suit I called an Elvis impersonator in my dispatches last year when he won the nomination. Pepe Lobo is no empty suit--I won’t say what he is full of, but I call him Pepe Lodo, which means ‘mud,’ or a similar substance. It was to be expected, since Mel Zelaya, the president ousted in a coup last June 28, was a Liberal. Elvin saw it coming, he had to have, as he tried desperately to distance himself from Mel’s disgrace, even though he had started out as Mel’s vice-president till he quit to run for president himself. Oh, you’re gonna love Pepe, he makes Sarah Palin look like Ralph Nader. It’s Mel’s ultimate revenge--You guys didn’t want me to let me be president for life, well, four years of Pepe will seem like an eternity!

Miguel, a long-time friend lives in Honduras, having retired from teaching in Saint Louis.

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

A call to Catholics. "Pink" Sunday: a modest proposal of true obedience in response to the Catholic bully pulpit please RT

As many of you know, the third Sunday of Advent is traditionally known by Roman Catholics as Gaudete Sunday or Rose Sunday. The idea is that we change for one Sunday of Advent, from the purple of penitence to the rose of joy and celebration. I propose that “Pink” Sunday 2009 be observed with a boycott of funds to the Catholic Church in order to call our church leaders to repentance for their misuse of church funds in support of political agendas which do not reflect our faith and mission.

Please join me on Sunday, December 13, 2009 in making your statement of repentance from being used and your finances being improperly used. The Church’s bully pulpit and financial clout come from us, the parishioners. Next Sunday, let’s send a clear message to the hierarchy that we want a return to the traditional mission of the church and to support the traditional Works of Mercy.

The traditional enumeration of the corporal works of mercy is as follows:

  • To feed the hungry;
  • To give drink to the thirsty;
  • To clothe the naked;
  • To harbor the harborless;
  • To visit the sick;
  • To ransom the captive;
  • To bury the dead.

The spiritual works of mercy are:

They do not include contributions to political campaigns, nor holding the poor hostage as indicated in my previous posts on this subject.

How can we send a clear message of repentance? Withhold financial contributions from control by diocesan officials who have departed from what we believe. Instead, use your offering envelope or other means of putting a note in the offering basket that you have diverted your usual offering to a true Work of Mercy in your community. Each parish in the Saint Louis Archdiocese pays a two percent “tribute” or “tax” to the diocese on the Sunday collection. In some cases, “restricted gifts” to your parish are exempt from this tax and thus from a percentage of them being used to contribute to causes with which you do not agree. Talk to your priest about how to resist the “tax” without harming your local parish.

What do you think? Please let me know if you are “in”. Perhaps we could produce an offering plate card that would replace our usual donation. Help anyone?

Peace,

Mike Baldwin

Posted via email from michaelbaldwin

Catholic Diocese of DC threatening to reduce or eliminate social services unless...

From the Washington Post

Catholic Church gives D.C. ultimatum
Same-sex marriage bill, as written, called a threat to social service contracts

By Tim Craig and Michelle Boorstein
Thursday, November 12, 2009

The Catholic Archdiocese of Washington said Wednesday that it will be unable to continue the social service programs it runs for the District if the city doesn't change a proposed same-sex marriage law, a threat that could affect tens of thousands of people the church helps with adoption, homelessness and health care.

Under the bill, headed for a D.C. Council vote next month, religious organizations would not be required to perform or make space available for same-sex weddings. But they would have to obey city laws prohibiting discrimination against gay men and lesbians.

Fearful that they could be forced, among other things, to extend employee benefits to same-sex married couples, church officials said they would have no choice but to abandon their contracts with the city.

"If the city requires this, we can't do it," Susan Gibbs, spokeswoman for the archdiocese, said Wednesday. "The city is saying in order to provide social services, you need to be secular. For us, that's really a problem."

Read more: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/11/AR2009111116943_pf.html

Peace,

Mike Baldwin

314-974-7432

1538-A N. 17th Street

Saint Louis, MO 63106

Follow me on Twitter

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My Biz

From: Posterous (mlbaldwin) [mailto:post@mlbaldwin.posterous.com]
Sent: Sunday, November 29, 2009 5:09 PM
To: mlbaldwin@charter.net
Subject: Posterous | Re: Rally at the Saint Louis Cathedral Basilica

Posted via email from michaelbaldwin

Archdiocese's campaign donation draws protesters - STLtoday.com

Archdiocese's campaign donation draws protesters
Rally outside the St. Louis Cathedral Basilica
Nov. 29, 2009 -- More than 150 people took part in a rally outside the St. Louis Cathedral Basilica protesting the archdiocese's financial support of a campaign to overturn a gay marriage law in Maine. (Emily Rasinski/P-D)
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

St. Louis — More than 150 people took part in a rally Sunday outside the St. Louis Cathedral Basilica protesting the archdiocese's use of $10,000 in "private gifts" in a campaign to overturn a gay marriage law in Maine.

Participants argued church dollars have no place in political campaigns, and local needs should have higher priority.

"Are the Catholic dollars placed in the offering basket behind us not private? Do you tell the donors what you are doing with them?" organizer Ed Reggi of Show Me No Hate told the crowd. "Why not fund love, archbishop?"

I concur that this is a misuse of church funds.

I plan to design a collection plate card that parishioners can fill in to indicate where they have diverted their usual contribution until the Archdiocese pulls back from funding political action such as this. Any help would be appreciated.

I envision a bright pink card that has a fill-in-the-blank for how many dollars the parishioner has diverted to another charity. This card could be sent by the parish to the diocesan office when they send their usual "tax".

I started diverting donations years ago, when I suspected my money was being used to defend and cover-up clergy sexual abuse cases. I stepped up when our previous Archbishop thwarted control of Catholic Charities. I will not give to the Archdiocesan appeal, nor any other charity officially tied to the Archdiocese of Saint Louis. Instead, I give directly to those groups and individuals who are independent of the Archdiocese. I encourage others to do likewise.

I have heard also, that one may make a restricted gift to their parish and it does not get counted toward the Diocesan "tax' of two percent of the collections that each parish is obligated to pay each year. Something to investigate with your local parish priest and administrator.

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Virginia + Maryland's Governors Are Catholic. And They're Furious With the Church's Threats / Queerty

Virginia + Maryland's Governors Are Catholic. And They're Furious With the Church's Threats

169864

Even some high profile Catholics can't believe their own Church is going after the gays in the nation's capital. Like Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine and Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley, who are livid the Catholic Archdiocese of Washington D.C. is threatening to cancel its social services programs if gay marriage passes.

"I'm Catholic, and I think it's wrong," Kaine told radio listeners yesterday. "I don't think you take your ball and go home."

But that's exactly what the Church is threatening to do, complaining that gay marriage will so infringe on their right to discriminate that they'll have no choice but to end their homeless and adoption programs.

Kaine, for one, can't believe the Church is engaged in such bullying: "I think the strategy of threatening to pull back, it doesn't seem like the church I've come up in." Same goes for Maryland's O'Malley either: "I don't understand how they can possibly do this. I have a hard time believing that the nuns and priests who taught me about the Corporal Works of Mercy would agree that this is an appropriate response for the church."

Yeah, where is that love and compassion thing we hear so much about?

The Catholic Church is regressing further from its mission in order to bully politicians into compliance. Now some bishops are threatening to use the homeless and poor as bargaining chips in their political agenda.

My own archbishop of my home archdiocese (Saint Louis, MO) spent $10,000 to fight Marriage Equality in the State of Maine. This is an inappropriate use of donations, IMO. I will be working with others who agree with me on this. Details to come.

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Sunday, November 29, 2009

News coverage of the Demonstration outside St. Louis Catholic Basilica | ksdk.com | St. Louis, MO

KSDK - Catholics attending Mass at St. Louis' Cathedral Basilica Sunday were greeted by demonstrators.

They were protesting a recent decision by St. Louis' new Archbishop to use church funds to support a political campaign against gay marriage in the state of Maine.

"This is a church that does stand up for the marginalized or depressed! Who would not say Mother Theresa's order did not stand up for the poor? Amen?," shouted one demonstrator calling for church leaders to, "remember who the church is called to be".

Starting at 7:30am Sunday, what grew into a crowd of both Catholic and non-Catholic gay marriage supporters, all demonstrated against Archbishop Robert Carlson's recent decision to use ten thousand donated church dollars to fund an anti-gay marriage political campaign out of state.

Many felt the money could have been better used by Catholic Charities.

"Ctholic schools are facing budget cuts, we just feel that that money could have helped so many more people here in St. Louis," said rally organizer Ed Reggi.

At the height of Sunday's demonstration - during the middle of the Basilica's noon Mass a crowd of well over a hundred-fifty people stood outside.

"Seems to me an interference of religion in the political sphere and I think if the church wants to do that I think it should be taxed like other political action groups, " says Stephen Houldsworth, who thinks the church should lose its tax-exempt status.

Although some in the crowd came carrying anti-Catholic signs, organizers said this was not a rally against the church itself.

Meanwhile there was a mix of reaction from Catholic churchgoers.

Basilica Parishoner Eleanor Janson told us, "I thought it was a very good way of spending that money. Yes. I was all for it."

Another Catholic churchgoer, Dorothy White said, "Money should be spent in the city. We have poor here. We have people who are sleeping in boxes. We have much better things to spend our money on, I don't appreciate sending the money to Maine."

And another Catholic Cathedral Member, Ben Janson, said, "Well its in defense of marriage between men and women and its highly appropriate."

Meanwhile St. Louis' Archbishop was out of town Sunday, but did issue the following statement:

STATEMENT REGARDING PROTEST OUTSIDE CATHEDRAL BASILICA
From Archbishop Robert J. Carlson, Archbishop of St. Louis

"In June of this year, Archbishop Richard Malone of Portland, Maine sent a letter to all U.S. bishops asking for financial support for issues the church considers moral issues. I approved a donation for $10,000 which was charged to the special needs fund. This fund has traditionally been the Archbishop's for discretionary spending, not for formal operations, and is funded by private gifts. These funds were already available when I arrived in St. Louis. Archbishops of St. Louis have made donations in the past to help other dioceses around the world for various causes ranging from disaster relief to pro-life issues.

The ballot measure asked voters if they wanted to reject the new law that allows same sex marriages and allows religious groups to refuse to perform these marriages. The voters in Maine supported this measure despite the fact that, according to the state of Maine, groups who believe in same sex marriage raised more than $5.2 million to defeat the amendment, while those who believe in the sanctity of marriage raised about $3.3 million.

The Catholic Church always tries to follow the teachings of Jesus in welcoming all people. The Church does not believe in discrimination. The Church was in the forefront of the Civil Rights movement in this country which sought to end racial discrimination. In the Archdiocese of St. Louis, we are currently the largest private funder of Doorways (www.doorwaysmo.org) an organization the late Archbishop John May help found in the 1980's. Doorways provides affordable, secure housing and related supportive services to people living with HIV/AIDS. Another example of our support is the Courage/Encourage ministry, which is a worldwide ministry that has a chapter in the Archdiocese of St. Louis, and is made known to Catholics every week in the Archdiocesan publication, the St. Louis Review. This ministry works with homosexuals and their families.

Supporting homosexuals does not mean we can change Christ's teaching on the nature of marriage. As recorded in the Bible, Jesus says a marriage is between a man and a woman. As Catholics, we believe marriage is a Sacrament, given to us by Christ and witnessed by a priest. We do not have the ability to change the Sacrament of marriage.
That being said, we do have the obligation as Catholics to carry out Christ's teachings, whether in the privacy of our own home or in the public square. Separation of church and state means that the government cannot favor a particular faith. It does not mean that faith-filled people lose their right to speak out publicly and engage in the political process. In fact, the Catholic Church was in the forefront of the civil rights movement, and that was a political issue as well.

Following Christ's teaching on marriage does not mean we neglect the poor. In fact, no other private institution in the world does as much for the sick and the poor as the Catholic Church. In the state of Missouri, Catholic Charities is the largest private provider for social services. In the Archdiocese of St. Louis, we spend millions of dollars helping the homeless through Catholic Charities (St. Patrick Center and Catholic Charities Housing Resource Center) and Father Dempsey's Charities.

It's not an either/or choice when it comes to Christ's teachings. As Catholics, we are called to teach and live them all."

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Rally at the Saint Louis Cathedral Basilica

Today, hundreds rallied outside of the Saint Louis Cathedral Basilica. We questioned Bishop Carlson’s use of $10,000 in discretionary funds to help oppose Marriage Equality in Maine.

I have already curtailed my giving to any Catholic cause or organization which is controlled by the Archdiocese of Saint Louis. I will ask my pastor what, if any portion of my giving to my parish goes to the Archdiocese. If so much as a penny goes to the diocesan control, will quit giving to my parish. I believe the Bishop and his staff are misusing funds when they spend them in this manner. It is especially egregious in the current economic climate when the Archdiocese has been laying off employees and freezing pay, to be sending political contributions, and particularly out-of-state. What do you think?

Peace,

Posted via email from michaelbaldwin

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Disingenuous at best: Dobbs Reaches Out to Latinos, With Politics in Mind

By PETER WALLSTEN

Former CNN anchor Lou Dobbs, pondering a future in politics, is trying to wipe away his image as an enemy of Latino immigrants by positioning himself as a champion of that fast-growing ethnic bloc.

video

 

News Hub: Lou Dobbs Offers Latinos Olive Branch

1:57

Former CNN anchor Lou Dobbs reaches out to the Latino community, possibly ahead of a political run. WSJ reporter Peter Wallsten says Mr. Dobbs is even for legalizing the undocumented now.

Mr. Dobbs, who left the network last week, has said in recent days that he is considering a third-party run for a New Jersey Senate seat in 2012, or possibly for president. Polls show voters unhappy with both parties, and strategists believe Mr. Dobbs could tap populist anger over economy issues just as Ross Perot did in the 1990s.

First, though, Mr. Dobbs is working to repair what a spokesman conceded is a glaring flaw: His reputation for antipathy toward Latino immigrants. In a little-noticed interview Friday, Mr. Dobbs told Spanish-language network Telemundo he now supports a plan to legalize millions of undocumented workers, a stance he long lambasted as an unfair "amnesty."

Associated Press

Lou Dobbs, shown appearing on NBC's 'Today' show last week, is working to repair his reputation for antipathy toward Latino immigrants.

Lou Dobbs, shown appearing on NBC's 'Today' show last week, is working to repair his reputation for antipathy toward Latino immigrants.

Lou Dobbs, shown appearing on NBC's 'Today' show last week, is working to repair his reputation for antipathy toward Latino immigrants.

"Whatever you have thought of me in the past, I can tell you right now that I am one of your greatest friends and I mean for us to work together," he said in a live interview with Telemundo's Maria Celeste. "I hope that will begin with Maria and me and Telemundo and other media organizations and others in this national debate that we should turn into a solution rather than a continuing debate and factional contest."

Mr. Dobbs twice mentioned a possible legalization plan for the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants in the U.S., saying at one point that "we need the ability to legalize illegal immigrants under certain conditions."

Mr. Dobbs couldn't be reached Tuesday. Spokesman Bob Dilenschneider said Mr. Dobbs draws a distinction between illegal immigrants who have committed crimes since arriving in the U.S. and those who are "living upright, positive and constructive lives" who should be "integrated" into society. He said Mr. Dobbs recognizes the political importance of Latinos and is "smoothing the water and clearing the air."

After a career as a broadcaster and Internet entrepreneur, Mr. Dobbs turned himself into a populist firebrand, campaigning against labor outsourcing, free trade and immigration.

Mr. Dobbs left CNN saying he wanted to become an advocate. Immigration advocates, including Ms. Celeste, had long called for his ouster; critics in particular cite a 2007 report on his show that cited erroneous data suggesting illegal immigrants were tied to a spike in leprosy cases in the U.S. Mr. Dobbs told Ms. Celeste the report was a mistake, and blamed a reporter ad-libbing on the air.

Frank Sharry, who heads America's Voice, a group that advocates for legalizing undocumented immigrants, said Mr. Dobbs's conversion isn't credible, given his history of opposing efforts to liberalize immigration policies.

Jim Gilchrist, founder of the Minuteman Project, which seeks strict border enforcement and opposes legalization, said he admired Mr. Dobbs and will "watch him for several months before drawing a conclusion."

Political strategists, however, aren't dismissing the potential power of a Dobbs run. Ed Rollins, a Republican consultant who advised Mr. Perot, said Mr. Dobbs has two big factors in his favor: name recognition and a turbulent economic time that can help a populist, third-party figure.

During his Telemundo appearance, Mr. Dobbs was both defensive and conciliatory as Ms. Celeste ticked off what she said were the Latino community's grievances about Mr. Dobbs. "Many Hispanics consider you to be the No. 1 enemy of Latinos," she told him. "Do you think that the community is somehow misjudging you?"

"Oh, not somehow. Definitively, absolutely," Mr. Dobbs responded. "By the way, I don't believe for a moment that the Latino, Hispanic community in the United States believes that of me at all. It has been the efforts of the far left to characterize me in their propaganda as such."

Mr. Dobbs's relationship with Latinos will be crucial if he chooses to run against Sen. Robert Menendez (D., N.J.), the Senate's lone Hispanic. In response to the possibility, Menendez spokesman Afshin Mohamadi said: "I'm sure that he would relish eventually having an opponent from so far out of the mainstream who has never delivered a thing to the hard-working people of New Jersey."

—T. W. Farnam and Nomaan Merchant contributed to this article.

Write to Peter Wallsten at peter.wallsten@wsj.com

Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A6

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Gladdie on her "throne"--from today

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

More pics of Gladdie sorry folks, I know most of you don't care. repeat due to bad edit.

Peace,

Posted via email from michaelbaldwin

More pics of Gladdie sorry folks, I know most of you don't care.

Peace,

Mike Baldwin

314-974-7432

1538-A N. 17th Street

Saint Louis, MO 63106

Follow me on Twitter

LinkedIN

My Biz

From: Posterous (mlbaldwin) [mailto:post@mlbaldwin.posterous.com]
Sent: Tuesday, November 24, 2009 7:05 PM
To: mlbaldwin@charter.net
Subject: Posterous | Re: Saw this badge on Facebook: “I support the separation of church and hate.”

Posted via email from michaelbaldwin

Watching my dog, Gladness (Gladdie) slowly slip away is breaking my heart

We discovered that our dog, Gladdie, has cancer a few months ago. The alternatives were a radical surgery removing her lower jaw (mandible). Even with that, the vet could not guarantee that the cancer had not already spread. We decided for her quality of life, not to have the surgery. It would have meant that her prime activities of chewing, playing ball, etc would have been over. It would have required us to hand feed her all of her meals. And it may have required follow-up chemo. This would have greatly diminished her quality of life. And at a time when so many people are still without health insurance and healthcare, we could not contemplate spending those resources for medical care for our dog, whom we dearly love.

We thought she would live quite a while longer, but the signs are, she will not. She has started hesitating at the top of the stairs. Teka has actually carried her down, other times we have had to coax her down. She is slipping away fast. Gladdie is only 9 years old. She is a black Lab-mix that Teka, Becky (our friend and next door neighbor) and I adopted at the Humane Society of Saint Louis, back in 2001. She was so full of energy that Teka hesitated to agree to us taking her home. I immediately fell in love with her. At the Humane Society, she was called Nelly. Becky, quickly renamed her Gladness. I had other names for her like “terrorist”, “Osama”, etc. She is a great dog and has brought many years of joy and gladness to us.

Gladness (a.k.a.Gladdie), besides her talent at getting everyone who lives here or stops by to visit, to pet her; she was also a super soccer dog. Hours of kicking the soccer ball for her to “fetch” meant she would chase it down and handle the ball like a soccer player to bring it back to us. Recently, she has begun running to the ball and barking at it to move on its own, since she is no longer able to run it back to us the way she once did. I know we made the right choice about the surgery and aftercare, but my heart is sad that so quickly, her favorite past times are already a thing of the past.

I will be leaving for KC on the train tomorrow, worrying about her and hoping she is still here to greet me when I get home. If you met Gladness, or never met her, enjoy the photos. She is accompanied by our other dog, Dopey, in several of the photos.

Peace,

Posted via email from michaelbaldwin

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Saw this badge on Facebook: “I support the separation of church and hate.”

Posted via email from michaelbaldwin

St. Louis Globe-Democrat - returns 12/8/09

The Globe-Democrat returns December 8, 2009

After a 23 year hiatus, the St. Louis Globe-Democrat will once again serve the people of St. Louis. The Globe-Democrat will provide St. Louis with a news and information portal unlike any other. It will utilize the latest technology to provide the best news experience utilizing all electronic formats.

In today's world, news has become abundant. You have many choices to discover what is happening in St. Louis. The new St. Louis Globe-Democrat will deliver your news with greater speed and depth. We pledge to be the number one digital source for breaking news and develop the reputation for being the first with the big stories. We will provide you with the opportunity to contribute and add personality to our coverage utilizing the latest technologies to deliver your news the way you want it.

In addition to news, the new St. Louis Globe-Democrat will provide thought provoking analysis, conversation, community and trust. We will engage and inform you and stay with topics as they unfold. Our goal is to provide a portal to make your user experience richer to improve the quality of the content for the more casual reader.

To learn more about our launch, features and site design, sign up for our Alerts to receive more details about the people and technology that will be used to make the St. Louis Globe-Democrat the number one website in St. Louis for news and information.

My Uncle wrote for them in the 50's and early 60's, later the Sporting News and finally the AP. I vistited him once at work. Came on the train to STL with another family member--obviously, since I was a wee lad.

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Huge Denver redevelopment highlights potential, limits of McKee's NorthSide proposal - STLtoday.com

Huge Denver redevelopment highlights potential, limits of McKee's NorthSide proposal
Located about 15 minutes from downtown Denver, which can be seen in the distance, Stapleton is a 4,700-acre planned community of 30,000 residents built on the site of Denver's Stapleton International Airport.
Located about 15 minutes from downtown Denver, which can be seen in the distance, Stapleton is a 4,700-acre planned community of 30,000 residents built on the site of Denver's Stapleton International Airport. The airport was founded in 1929 and in 1964 officially changed its name to Stapleton International Airport. (Handout)
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

DENVER — You don't get many chances to remake a big chunk of an old city. But at an abandoned airport on the east side of Denver, they're doing just that.

It's called Stapleton, and although only half completed, it is already the largest urban redevelopment project in the United States. When finished, it will have 10,000 new homes spread across seven square miles. Vast parks. New jobs. A walkable, sustainable community for the 21st century, stitched seamlessly into the tired, troubled blocks around it. Sound familiar?

Indeed, Stapleton is Model A for what developer Paul McKee says he wants to do in St. Louis, where he has reached a deal with city officials to rebuild a Forest Park-sized chunk of the near north side. From architecture to green space to the mix of jobs and housing, the Denver project is guiding plans for NorthSide, McKee said. He has even hired one of Stapleton's chief visionaries as his lead planner.

"It's the closest pattern we can find anywhere in the country to what we're doing," McKee said

For those of you who hadn't read this yet. And those who have, feel free to comment here or at stltoday.com

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Will you refer to "IT" as I-64? St. Louis Beacon - 'I survived Project I-64': Businesses prepare to celebrate Highway 40 reopening

Posted 11:25 a.m. Tues., Nov. 24 - Suzanne Ford can't wait for Dec. 7. That's the day Highway 40 reopens and her small business instantly becomes more accessible to drivers.

peace to the highway

ford300suzanneyoga.jpg

Photos by Elia Powers | Beacon staff

But Ford, co-owner of the Pilates and Yoga Center of St. Louis , isn't waiting until that Monday morning to celebrate. The day before the official opening for motorists, she and roughly 30 of her friends are planning to roll out their mats on some freshly laid pavement.

Yup, it's yoga on Highway 40.

"We thought we'd bring peace to the highway, thank it for opening again," Ford said. "It's our lifeline."

She is one of many business owners in Richmond Heights, Maplewood, Clayton, Dogtown and Brentwood who are thankful this holiday that the final stretch of the interstate to undergo repairs will soon be ready for use.

HARD TIMES FOR BUSINESSES

During the highway shutdown between Kingshighway Boulevard and Interstate 170, businesses along the busy mid-metro corridor have been hurting. Having access cut off at a time when the recession was in full force didn't help, either.

Ford said her business is down 50 percent from this time last year, when U.S. Highway 40/Interstate 64 was still open at Skinker Boulevard. Her center, at 1015 McCausland Ave., is within earshot of the Skinker exit.

While private clients, and Pilates and yoga die-hards still came to the studio during the construction, Ford said many people who normally would drop in for a class decided it was too time-consuming to navigate the detours.

Perhaps no cluster of businesses was put at a greater disadvantage than those straddling Highway 40 at Big Bend Boulevard. Not only was the interstate closed, but this summer and fall so too was the overpass on Big Bend that connects drivers from Manchester Road to Clayton Road. (The overpass re-opened on Friday).

Bud Starr, owner of Starr's  wine, beer and foods, which is located between Clayton Road and the overpass, estimates that his business is down at least a third compared with two years ago, largely due to the highway closure.

"We were cut off in three directions -- Kingshighway, Brentwood and from the south," Starr said. "We knew [business] would be bad, but we didn't know it would be this bad. It was pretty much a dead corner -- and we had three empty buildings around us. No one was driving by."

In retrospect, Starr said he wishes he would have budgeted more money for advertising and put more information on his company's website.

zx300stationbigbend.jpg Across the street, business at Fowler's ZX convenience store and gas station has also been down, said co-owner Jason Fowler. He said he couldn't estimate exactly how much profits suffered because of the highway closure. "We tried to keep our heads high and we told ourselves more than likely the business will return eventually," he said.

Debbie Colombo, manager and horticulturalist at the Garden Heights Nursery  on Big Bend between Highway 40 and Manchester Road, said it's hard to say how much business she has lost because of the closure. A significant portion of customers are typically people driving by on the way to the highway, Colombo said.

"We know we've been missing out on those people," she said. "Plus, the economy has been off."

Colombo said a customer on Friday told her that she hadn't been to the store since the Big Bend overpass closed. That closure, she said, hurt even more than the highway shutdown. (Though she said she felt fortunate that the overpass was still open last spring during the store's busiest season).

Joe Finn, co-owner of Pat's Bar and Grill, which is located on Oakland Avenue across from the St. Louis Zoo, said that even though more cars passed by his street because it was a Highway 40 detour, business has dropped by roughly 20 percent since the highway closure. He said the lack of parking is one reason more passersby didn't come inside the bar.

"I think of us more as a destination" than a place where people decide to go on a whim, he said. "People are already grumpy about traffic. The last thing they want to do is make an hour stop-off."

PLANS TO CELEBRATE

A slew of celebrations is in the works because the owners are confident that business is about to pick up again.

pats300onoakland.jpg The Missouri Department of Transportation is marking the Highway 40 reopening  from noon to 4 p.m. on Dec. 6 by opening the westbound lines to pedestrians and the eastbound lanes to bicyclists between Hanley Road and Kingshighway. (No cars are allowed on either side.) A ribbon-cutting ceremony is scheduled for 3 p.m.

That Sunday, Big Shark Bicycle Company is sponsoring cycling time trials that run from Kingshighway to Hanley and back. Racing starts at 7:30 a.m. On the other side of the highway, the St. Louis Track Club  is hosting a 5K run  beginning at 8 a.m.

Finn said plans are in the works for a block party on his street that will run concurrently with the other Sunday festivities. It's being called the "Highway 40 Dogtown survivor party." He said the idea is to have live music and food booths from noon to 5 p.m. Several restaurants in the area are planning to have food stands.

"We're doing our best to make sure that people who were used to seeing the Budweiser sign (that adorns his business) driving down Highway 40 haven't forgotten us," he said.

To commemorate the highway opening, Fowler's ZX printed T-shirts that had their logo on one side and "I survived Project I-64" on the other. Store employees wore the shirts on Friday, and Fowler said more than a dozen customers requested them. So he is ordering another run of the shirts.

The day after the Dec. 6 highway yoga session, planned for 2 p.m., the Pilates and Yoga Center of St. Louis is offering free classes all day at the McCausland location. As a flyer about the event says, "We're so darned excited the highway is re-opening that we're throwing open the doors." From 4-8 p.m., the center is holding a happy hour   with wine, tea and food and free hand massages.

As part of the highway celebration, the center is also allowing anyone to attend one free drop-in class until December 31.

Garden Heights Nursery is extending what usually is a one-day holiday open house on the first Saturday in December to a two-day event (10 a.m. to 5 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday) because of the highway opening. Colombo said Santa will be on hand, and the store will offer some discounts and giveaways that weekend.

Starr's is planning to hold a series of dinner events and wine tastings in January. An additional reason for celebration, Starr said, is that an extra highway exit has been added nearby. Still, he is tempering his enthusiasm for now. "All this new access is exciting, but people still have to get used to these routes being open," Starr said.

Store manager Tom Leith isn't holding back. "We wanted to go up onto the [Big Bend] bridge and open a bottle of champagne" when the overpass opened, he said. "We'll want to open an even bigger bottle when Highway 40 opens."

Contact Beacon reporter Elia Powers.

 

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Right and Left Join to Oppose Government in Criminal Cases

WASHINGTON � In the next several months, the Supreme Court will decide at least a half-dozen cases about the rights of people accused of crimes involving drugs, sex and corruption. Civil liberties groups and associations of defense lawyers have lined up on the side of the accused.

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Doug Mills/The New York Times

Edwin Meese III, a former attorney general, once referred to the American Civil Liberties Union as part of the �criminals' lobby,� but on this issue, he says, he is willing to work with the group.

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But so have conservative, libertarian and business groups. Their briefs and public statements are signs of an emerging consensus on the right that the criminal justice system is an aspect of big government that must be contained.

The development represents a sharp break with tough-on-crime policies associated with the Republican Party since the Nixon administration.

�It�s a remarkable phenomenon,� said Norman L. Reimer, executive director of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. �The left and the right have bent to the point where they are now in agreement on many issues. In the area of criminal justice, the whole idea of less government, less intrusion, less regulation has taken hold.�

Edwin Meese III, who was known as a fervent supporter of law and order as attorney general in the Reagan administration, now spends much of his time criticizing what he calls the astounding number and vagueness of federal criminal laws.

Mr. Meese once referred to the American Civil Liberties Union as part of the �criminals� lobby.� These days, he said, �in terms of working with the A.C.L.U., if they want to join us, we�re happy to have them.�

Dick Thornburgh, who succeeded Mr. Meese as attorney general under President Ronald Reagan and stayed on under President George Bush, echoed that sentiment in Congressional testimony in July.

�The problem of overcriminalization is truly one of those issues upon which a wide variety of constituencies can agree,� Mr. Thornburgh said. �Witness the broad and strong support from such varied groups as the Heritage Foundation, the Washington Legal Foundation, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, the A.B.A., the Cato Institute, the Federalist Society and the A.C.L.U.�

In an interview at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative research group where he is a fellow, Mr. Meese said the �liberal ideas of extending the power of the state� were to blame for an out-of-control criminal justice system. �Our tradition has always been,� he said, �to construe criminal laws narrowly to protect people from the power of the state.�

There are, the foundation says, more than 4,400 criminal offenses in the federal code, many of them lacking a requirement that prosecutors prove traditional kinds of criminal intent.

�It�s a violation of federal law to give a false weather report,� Mr. Meese said. �People get put in jail for importing lobsters.�

Such so-called overcriminalization is at the heart of the conservative critique of crime policy. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce made the point in a recent friend-of-the-court brief about a federal law often used to prosecute corporate executives and politicians. The law, which makes it a crime for officials to defraud their employers of �honest services,� is, the brief said, both �unintelligible� and �used to target a staggeringly broad swath of behavior.�

The Supreme Court will hear three cases concerning the honest-services law this term, indicating an exceptional interest in the topic.

Harvey A. Silverglate, a left-wing civil liberties lawyer in Boston, says he has been surprised and delighted by the reception that his new book, �Three Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent,� has gotten in conservative circles. (A Heritage Foundation official offered this reporter a copy.)

The book argues that federal criminal law is so comprehensive and vague that all Americans violate it every day, meaning prosecutors can indict anyone at all.

�Libertarians and the civil liberties left have always had some common ground on these issues,� said Radley Balko, a senior editor at Reason, a libertarian magazine. �The more vocal presence of conservatives on overcriminalization issues is really what�s new.�

Several strands of conservatism have merged in objecting to aspects of the criminal justice system. Some conservatives are suspicious of all government power, while others insist that the federal government has been intruding into matters the Constitution reserves to the states.

In January, for instance, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in United States v. Comstock, about whether Congress has the constitutional power to authorize the continued confinement of people convicted of sex crimes after they have completed their criminal sentences.

Then there are conservatives who worry about government seizure of private property said to have been used to facilitate crimes, an issue raised in Alvarez v. Smith, which was argued in October.

�A joint on a yacht, and the whole thing is forfeited,� said Paul Cassell, a law professor at the University of Utah and a former federal judge appointed by President George W. Bush.

Some religious groups object to prison policies that appear to ignore the possibility of rehabilitation and redemption, and fiscal conservatives are concerned about the cost of maintaining the world�s largest prison population.

�Conservatives now recognize the economic consequences of a criminal justice leviathan,� said Erik Luna, a law professor at Washington and Lee University.

The roots of the conservative re-examination of crime policy might also be found in the jurisprudence of Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas. The two justices, joined by liberal colleagues, have said the original meaning of the Constitution required them to rule against the government in, among other areas, the rights of criminal defendants to confront witnesses.

�Scalia and Thomas are vanguards of an understanding by the modern right that its distrust of government extends all the way to the criminal justice system,� said Douglas A. Berman, a law professor at Ohio State University.

The court will hear another confrontation clause case, Briscoe v. Virginia, in January. It is a sequel to a decision in June that prosecutors may not use crime lab reports without live testimony from the analysts who prepared them.

The conservative re-evaluation of crime policy is not universal, of course. Two notable exceptions to the trend, said Timothy Lynch, director of the Cato Institute�s criminal justice project, are Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr.

�Roberts and Alito are coming down consistently on the side of the government in these criminal justice cases,� Mr. Lynch said.

Some scholars are skeptical about conservatives� timing and motives, noting that their voices are rising during a Democratic administration and amid demands for accountability for the economic crisis.

�The Justice Department now acts as a kind of counterweight to corporate power,� said Frank O. Bowman, a law professor at the University of Missouri. �On the other side is an alliance between two strands of conservative thinking, the libertarian point of view and the corporate wing of the Republican Party.�

Mr. Meese acknowledged that the current climate was not the ideal one for his point of view. �We picked by accident a time,� he said, �when it was not a very popular topic in light of corporate frauds.�

Sign in to RecommendNext Article in US (2 of 29) � A version of this article appeared in print on November 24, 2009, on page A1 of the New York edition.

Its about time.

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Monday, November 23, 2009

Chris Matthews and Bishhop Thomas Tobin discuss Rep. Patrick Kennedy and separation of church and state.

<div><p style="font-size:11px; font-family:Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color: #999; margin-top: 5px; background: transparent; text-align: center; width: 425px;">Visit msnbc.com for <a style="text-decoration:none !important; border-bottom: 1px dotted #999 !important; font-weight:normal !important; height: 13px; color:#5799DB !important;" href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com">Breaking News</a>, World News, and News about the Economy</p></div>

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Re: Patrick Kennedy: JFK on the Separation of Church and State#at=18

This was the lead-in to Chris Matthews' interview with Bishop Tobin regarding the squabble with Congressman Patrick Kennedy. I will post the interview/debate from hardball as soon as possible.

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Rev. Bozek: I might step down - STLtoday.com

Rev. Bozek: I might step down
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

The Rev. Marek Bozek, pastor of St. Stanislaus church just north of downtown, told parishioners Sunday that he was willing to step down if it would help the parish.

"I do not want my personal circumstances to impede what is best for St. Stanislaus," Bozek said.

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Bishop bars Patrick Kennedy from Communion over abortion - CNN.com

Bishop bars Patrick Kennedy from Communion over abortion

November 22, 2009 4:22 p.m. EST
Rep. Patrick Kennedy is in trouble with the Catholic Church over his support of abortion rights.
Rep. Patrick Kennedy is in trouble with the Catholic Church over his support of abortion rights.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Patrick Kennedy tells newspaper that bishop barred him from Communion
  • Diocese confirms it, says ban came in a confidential pastoral discussion in 2007
  • Bishop says he's "disappointed" that Kennedy made their conversation public
  • Kennedy fought ban on funding abortion, but voted for health care bill that included the ban

Washington (CNN) -- Rhode Island's top Roman Catholic leader has asked Rep. Patrick Kennedy to stop taking Communion over his support for abortion rights, the diocese said Sunday.

In a statement issued Sunday, Providence Bishop Thomas Tobin said he told Kennedy in February 2007 that it would be "inappropriate" for him to continue receiving the fundamental Catholic sacrament, "and I now ask respectfully that you refrain from doing so."

I'll await your comments before I leave my own. :)

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Untitled

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Sen. Patrick Leahy : This is a Defining Moment

better link

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

Senate Democrats get votes needed for health care debate - CNN.com

Great commentary comparing to Medicare and Medicaid votes.

Posted via web from michaelbaldwin

@MayorSlay At the #STL Downtown Holiday Lighting. Fireworks and some nice lights. Nice, but not like #KCMO

I was challenged by a tweet, to attend the holiday lighting in downtown Saint Louis. This event was sponsored by Macy’s and primarily benefits the Mayor’s Christmas Tree for the Salvation Army. Not bad. Macy’s, as we all know is a great corporate sponsor of community events, especially those they can monetize with Santa visiting. Additionally, the Salvation Army is one of the most respected community support agency/ministry in the world. However, I grew up in Kansas City, MO—across the State of Missouri. In Kansas City, there are two events I try not to miss no matter where I am living. The Holiday lighting of the Country Club Plaza shopping district and the Mayor’s Christmas Tree Lighting held at Crown Center, home of Hallmark Cards.

First, I like holiday lights at the holidays, not before and for not long after. Second, I like them on a grand scale. My spouse and I frequently strike out in search of private and public displays of illuminated holiday cheer. Now, bigger is not better. Tasteful is important too. Garish displays earn a low rating from me even when they have a lot of lights.

The Holiday Lighting in Saint Louis fell short of my hopes for scale and beauty, but did have an awe factor with the added fireworks. I will support the “bell ringers” and the fund during the season of giving, but I wasn’t inspired. Saint Louis has a long way to go to beat what Kansas City does to inspire. First,

KC has two different lightings. One is held on Thanksgiving night, the other the next night. They both attract hordes of participants. Participants? Yes Participants. In my 39 years of attending the Plaza Lighting (80 years this year), there are always over 100,000 people in attendance. Everyone participates with singing along with the choir, dancing in the streets, and flashing pictures at the big moment. The Country Club Plaza is like no other shopping district anywhere. It has beautiful Spanish-inspired architecture, beautifully outlined with multi-colored lights for the big night and season to come. The lights are installed beginning in August and tested several times for reliability and aesthetics. I like that normally, the principle “towers’ of the Plaza always have the same single-color bulbs every year. They have become like a signature. I like that it is HUGE. I like that it is tasteful. This first lighting is dedicated to the holiday buying and giving season—you know, merchandising.

The second lighting of the season is held at Crown Center nearer the CBD of KC. With Hallmark as a hometown, corporate sponsor, they pull out all the stops. Again, there is a choir, there are speeches to explain the charitable purpose of the Mayor’s Christmas Tree fund, there are candles to hold while we sing Silent Night. This is a night for remembering to give to those who need it most. Still, the ceremony is attended by thousands of participants. The financial goal is always lofty, but it is always met. The scene is the courtyard between the Hallmark corporate offices and the Crown Center Shopping Center. It has an ice-skating rink in the backdrop and Santa’s village in the foreground. In Kansas City, the Mayor’s Christmas Tree fund was for many years chaired by a Jewish business man. We grew to love him and believe he was like Saint Nicholas. Jerry, has since passed away, but the spirit of giving, partially inspired by that night of  

singing together in the Crown Center Court yard will never pass away.

I will always try to attend the Lightings in Kansas City, but I hope to add the Saint Louis Holiday Lighting to my holiday preparations each year. Here’s to the season of giving, because of the great gift given us. And here’s to all the ways we are inspired and the holidays brightened.

I’ll be leaving for Kansas City on Thanksgiving if you want to join me there, you can find me on Twitter or email or phone.

Posted via email from michaelbaldwin

Friday, November 20, 2009

Sim's World

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

On Becoming a Social Butterfly

As Aldous Huxley would say, it's a brave new world. This brave new world is the world of social media platform building. When the industrial revolution brought thousands of people to together to work in factories and live in neighborhoods, it didn't automatically create cohesive communities. People had to make an effort to connect with their neighbors, or attempt to create friendships with co-workers. One could choose to remain as isolated as one wanted. Thanks to recent technological advances, we now have an opportunity to connect with people we've never met, creating an endless number of virtual communities. The Internet was a giant step for mankind which, in my opinion, was more monumental than landing on the moon....

A friend I am following on her blog and twitter.

Posted via web from My 2 Cents

The diversity of small business in downtown #STL is threatened by the return of the large chain. Next big-box stores?

I have witnessed the rebirth of the downtown Saint Louis business district, with great excitement. In economic development trends, I have seen in my city and in other cities, the departure of retail and restaurant businesses with the departure of population. This is due to the fact that chains, franchises and “company” stores adhere to strict age and socioeconomic demographic guidelines. They must have a certain population density and the “right” population. This tends to create a cookie cutter population and cookie cutter business district. What I have noticed recently, in Saint Louis, is that with the movement of population back to the city, the pioneer retail and eatery establishments tends to favor the mom and pop. This, I think, is good thing and something to celebrate.

The problem is that as population continues to increase in the CBD, larger chains and big-box stores start to eye the market with envy. As the big boxes and chains move in (paying their minimum wages), they supplant the pioneer mom and pops (who generally pay living wages). As the cookie cutter business district begins to expand and take-over, the population becomes cookie cutter along with the bland offerings of the chains and big boxes. These larger corporate stores often are the beneficiaries of large, politically motivated, civic subsidies. With these subsidies, they are able to operate cheaper (plus pay lower wages) thereby driving out the pioneer competition. A point in case, in Saint Louis, would be the return of Schnuck's to the CBD.

Schnuck’s, branding themselves as The Culinaria, was a welcome addition to downtown—as a grocer. However, instead of operating a grocery store, Schnuck’s (the beneficiary of public money) opened a “food court” with a grocery store attached. First they were in direct competition with the only other grocer downtown, City Grocers. Then they became the competition of every independent eatery downtown with the expansive food court. I admit, at first I thought this was great. Buy my groceries and have lunch or dinner. Then I started noticing that several of my favorite independent, downtown eateries were closing. I made a point to talk with some of the business owners who were still open and discovered that Schnuck’s essentially copied their menu and menus of other eateries and made them available in their tax-subsidized food court. Now, my tax dollars were helping to drive my favorite restaurants out of business, to be replaced by a food court. Those independent owners with whom I spoke, did not receive any tax payer subsidy, and yet they had come into a new market and risked their own capital to create something unique of me and our downtown residents and visitors. Diversity is now being threatened.

I have long said that our public servants need to wake up and smell the independently brewed coffee of reality. If we keep trying to persuade large chains and big boxes to our downtown via public subsidy, we will destroy the vibrancy of what has been built with sweat and private capital. It is proven, that if we experience another population shift, those same, tax subsidized big boxes, will move off to another city or ‘burb and leave large empty shells on city blocks and holes in our city’s business services fabric. What’s next? Barnes and Noble downtown to compete with Left Bank Books using tax payer funds? Olive Garden to compete with Gitto’s? And using my tax dollars to do so? Not on my watch!

I believe we need to support our independent, home-grown businesses which offer much greater economic empowerment to their employees and tend to stay around when others leave due to demographic shifts.

My commitment: I will use the Culinaria as a grocery store, but not as a restaurant. Will you join me in persuading Schnuck’s and our public servants to support independent businesses? I am committed to watching every TIF or other form of public financing to make sure that independent business owners have equal access to public support.

Goliath—stay in the ‘burbs.

Tell me what you think.

Posted via email from My 2 Cents

Shocking Anti-Obama Billboards In Colorado http://bit.ly/7ZZBbp 5 mins ago from API

This type of stuff needs to stop. 

Peace,

Mike

Posted via email from My 2 Cents

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Facebook and @posterous

Tweaking the Facebook interface with posterous. I only want it to post once.

Posted via email from mike baldwin's posterous

Is all this free stuff going to cost us sometime?

I worry that I am becoming addicted to free social media outlets that will start charging me at some point. A little like the drug dealer who is a friend offering me a free high at a fun party. Later I go back to discover it’s time to pay for my next high.

I just signed up for my second Twitter account, my third blog account, I have used and still use several free Twitter clients on my Iphone  and laptop along with many other free Iphone “apps”  and now I am signed up @posterous to help me manage it all. When will I become addicted enough that I will pay anything to keep my accounts? It could turn out like the free webmail accounts we all have or have had. They managed to monetize themselves as has Facebook and MySpace. But will it all end? I’m afraid that coming off my freebie techno high will be worse than giving up coffee since my heart attack last year.

What do you think?

Posted via email from mike baldwin's posterous