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Peninsula readers' letters: March 17
From Daily News Group readers
Posted: 09/13/2013 06:11:37 PM PDT
Updated: 09/13/2013 11:18:38 PM PDT
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On a path to economic crash
Dear Editor: Five years ago this weekend, Wall Street giant Lehman Brothers collapsed, triggering the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. Today, the divide between the 1 percent and the 99 percent is as great as ever. According to one recent study, the top 1 percent has captured about 95 percent of the income gains since the recession ended. "Since the recovery, almost all of the gains have gone to the very, very top. People who are in the top 1 percent are doing even better than they did before the Great Recession.
So those who were worried about the recession or who wanted to set money aside for a rainy day are reassured. It has only rained for a short time and the sun has come out again, brighter than ever, and it is a beautiful day. So, little by little, the skeptics are won over to invest their funds, to take a chance on making more money -- for the rebounds are relatively quick and they do not feel too much pain.
And there is a rebound, for there are still people to be convinced that things will keep going up. They too must be won over and convinced to overextend themselves little by little. It is a gradual process of boom, then downturn, then bigger boom, then another downturn. And one day, when we have prepared accordingly, the downturn will become a recession, the recession will become a depression, and the depression will become the crash.
Ted Rudow III,
Palo Alto
Copyright © 2013 San Jose Mercury News
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Friday, September 13, 2013
Great recession
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/09/13/18743177.php
Great recession
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Friday Sep 13th, 2013 11:11 AM
Five years ago this weekend, the Wall Street giant Lehman Brothers collapsed triggering the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. Today, the divide between the 1 percent and the 99 percent is as great as ever. According to one recent study, the top 1 percent has captured about 95 percent of the income gains since the recession ended. “Since the recovery, almost all of the gains have gone to the very, very top. People who are in the top 1 percent are doing even better than they did before the Great Recession.
So those who were worried about recession or who wanted to keep money aside for a rainy day are reassured. It has only rained for a short time and the sun has come out again, brighter than ever, and it is a beautiful day. So, little by little, the skeptics are won over to invest their funds, to take a chance on making more money, for the rebounds are relatively quick and they do not feel too much pain.
And there is a rebound, for there are still people to be convinced that things will keep going up—indeed, must keep going up. They too must be won over and convinced to overextend themselves little by little. It is a gradual process of boom, then downturn, then bigger boom, then another downturn. And one day, when have prepared accordingly, the downturn will become a recession, the recession will become a depression, and the depression will become the Crash.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot
Great recession
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Friday Sep 13th, 2013 11:11 AM
Five years ago this weekend, the Wall Street giant Lehman Brothers collapsed triggering the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. Today, the divide between the 1 percent and the 99 percent is as great as ever. According to one recent study, the top 1 percent has captured about 95 percent of the income gains since the recession ended. “Since the recovery, almost all of the gains have gone to the very, very top. People who are in the top 1 percent are doing even better than they did before the Great Recession.
So those who were worried about recession or who wanted to keep money aside for a rainy day are reassured. It has only rained for a short time and the sun has come out again, brighter than ever, and it is a beautiful day. So, little by little, the skeptics are won over to invest their funds, to take a chance on making more money, for the rebounds are relatively quick and they do not feel too much pain.
And there is a rebound, for there are still people to be convinced that things will keep going up—indeed, must keep going up. They too must be won over and convinced to overextend themselves little by little. It is a gradual process of boom, then downturn, then bigger boom, then another downturn. And one day, when have prepared accordingly, the downturn will become a recession, the recession will become a depression, and the depression will become the Crash.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Eshoo statement
September 11, 2013 Dear Mr. Rudow, I want to thank you again for contacting me to express your views on the President's proposal for a military strike on Syria. Attached is a statement that I issued today with my position on this proposal.
If you have any questions or comments, let me hear from you. I value what my constituents say to me, and I always need your thoughts and benefit from your ideas.
Most gratefully,
Anna G. Eshoo
Member of Congress
OFFICE OF REPRESENTATIVE ANNA G. ESHOO (CA-18)
For Immediate Release
September 11, 2013
http://eshoo.house.gov
Contact: Charles Stewart
(202) 225-8104
charles.stewart@mail.house.gov
ESHOO STATEMENT ON SYRIA
WASHINGTON, D.C.—Rep. Anna G. Eshoo (CA-18) released the following statement on the issue of Syria:
“I welcome President Obama’s announcement and commend him for pursuing the Russian diplomatic proposal to disarm and destroy Syria’s arsenal of chemical weapons. This diplomatic path holds out hope for the world that the situation can be addressed in a way that has always been one of America’s great strengths—leading with integrity to avert war.
“Our most solemn responsibility as Members of Congress is to use our best judgment to protect the national security of our nation. A decision to use military force therefore requires we be able to answer the following questions:
. Is this in the national security interests of the U.S.?
. Will this action make us safer?
. Will it make the Syrian people safer?
. Does Syria pose an imminent threat to the United States?
“There is no question that striking Syria is an act of war. It would be preemptive, unilateral, and contrary to how the U.S. has conducted its foreign policy for decades.
“I am not naïve about the very real dangers our nation faces, but these dangers cannot be removed by military action alone. In fact, the distinguished Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, made this clear in his recent testimony to Congress:
‘Militarily, I can state that we can achieve the goal of deterring and degrading. Take note that I didn’t say we can prevent.’
“What is more determinative is the power of our ideas, rather than the power of our military. There is a place for military action, but Syria is not that place.
“When the U.S. strayed from its historical moorings, we learned painful and costly lessons that might alone does not get the job done. Instead of diplomacy, containment and coalitions, our military interventions, invasions and surges have left countries in turmoil and emboldened jihadists, making the world more dangerous. We must learn from the lessons of recent history, or we will repeat the failures.
“I believe a preemptive and unilateral strike against Syria is wrong.
“I believe it will make the world more dangerous, not safer.
“I believe it will not reverse the tide on the ground in Syria.
“I believe that using force for the sake of force is not in the interest of our national security and will be counterproductive.
“I believe, as do thousands of my constituents, that going to war against Syria—regardless of how targeted or limited the strikes—will implicate the U.S. in a civil war, cause possible retaliations in the region destabilizing it even more, and add to the ill will against our country.
“I will cast a ‘no’ vote to the President’s request for authorization to strike Syria should it be taken up by the U.S. House of Representatives.”
###
Unconcern for negotiated settlement
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
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Published: Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Letters To The Editor
Unconcern for negotiated settlement
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
The U.S. government is such a bunch of liars, deceivers and betrayers of their people! The people get so used to hearing them lie; they don’t believe anything they say any more.
The same thing happened in Lebanon years ago. When they elected a pro-communist president, Eisenhower sent in the Marines! And Lebanon’s had nothing but grief ever since. And the same thing happened in Vietnam. When they looked like they were about to have a pro-communist government, the US stepped in to make sure they didn’t! It has no intention of settling by negotiation whatsoever.
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Published: Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Letters To The Editor
Unconcern for negotiated settlement
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
The U.S. government is such a bunch of liars, deceivers and betrayers of their people! The people get so used to hearing them lie; they don’t believe anything they say any more.
The same thing happened in Lebanon years ago. When they elected a pro-communist president, Eisenhower sent in the Marines! And Lebanon’s had nothing but grief ever since. And the same thing happened in Vietnam. When they looked like they were about to have a pro-communist government, the US stepped in to make sure they didn’t! It has no intention of settling by negotiation whatsoever.
©2013 The Daily Star. All Rights Reserved.
STAR ARCHIVE
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
RTF Radio
RTF RAD
The 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.More than a quarter-million people came to the nation's capital on August 28, 1963, to protest discrimination, joblessness and economic inequality faced by African Americans. Many now consider the march to be a key turning point in the civil rights movement.
Most white Americans certainly believed that the push to civil rights was moving too fast. And in that moment, civil rights as a concept, integration as a concept, was still somewhat controversial, and how America got there was not a foregone conclusion. The roots of the march really go back 20 years earlier to a march that A. Philip Randolph called and then canceled at the last minute in 1941. The purpose of that march was to protest employment discrimination in the defense industries and also segregation and discrimination in the armed forces. This was actually the point before the U.S. actually entered the war. But President Roosevelt had called on the United States not to enter the war directly, but to serve as what he called an "arsenal of democracy".
Has his dream been realized? Has that dream come true in your life? Has that dream been fulfilled? Or have our ideals and our aspirations fallen by the wayside? Where is the unity, the brotherhood, the oneness of heart and spirit? His dream can only become a reality through love, the supernatural Love of God! This is what brings unity. This is what brings equality. This is what brings mutual respect. This is what makes a man willing to prefer another and lift up another, and sacrifice of himself to improve the life of another.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
-->
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RTF RADIO TUNE IN NOW
IO
The 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.More than a quarter-million people came to the nation's capital on August 28, 1963, to protest discrimination, joblessness and economic inequality faced by African Americans. Many now consider the march to be a key turning point in the civil rights movement.
Most white Americans certainly believed that the push to civil rights was moving too fast. And in that moment, civil rights as a concept, integration as a concept, was still somewhat controversial, and how America got there was not a foregone conclusion. The roots of the march really go back 20 years earlier to a march that A. Philip Randolph called and then canceled at the last minute in 1941. The purpose of that march was to protest employment discrimination in the defense industries and also segregation and discrimination in the armed forces. This was actually the point before the U.S. actually entered the war. But President Roosevelt had called on the United States not to enter the war directly, but to serve as what he called an "arsenal of democracy".
Has his dream been realized? Has that dream come true in your life? Has that dream been fulfilled? Or have our ideals and our aspirations fallen by the wayside? Where is the unity, the brotherhood, the oneness of heart and spirit? His dream can only become a reality through love, the supernatural Love of God! This is what brings unity. This is what brings equality. This is what brings mutual respect. This is what makes a man willing to prefer another and lift up another, and sacrifice of himself to improve the life of another.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
-->
RTF Mobile App!
RTF RADIO TUNE IN NOW
IO
Monday, September 09, 2013
Hearing them lie
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/09/09/18742953.php
Hearing them lie
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Monday Sep 9th, 2013 9:55 AM
The U.S. government is such a bunch of liars, deceivers and betrayers of their people! And it gets so sickening and so commonplace, a lot of the people in some of the government just don't have any interest any more. The people get so used to hearing them lie, they don't believe anything they say any more.
The same thing in Lebanon years ago. When they elected a pro-Communist president, Eisenhower sent in the Marines!--And Lebanon's had nothing but grief ever since. And the same thing happened in Vietnam! When they looked like they were about to have a pro-Communist government, the U.S. stepped in to make sure they didn't! He has no intention of settling by negotiation whatsoever.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
Hearing them lie
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Monday Sep 9th, 2013 9:55 AM
The U.S. government is such a bunch of liars, deceivers and betrayers of their people! And it gets so sickening and so commonplace, a lot of the people in some of the government just don't have any interest any more. The people get so used to hearing them lie, they don't believe anything they say any more.
The same thing in Lebanon years ago. When they elected a pro-Communist president, Eisenhower sent in the Marines!--And Lebanon's had nothing but grief ever since. And the same thing happened in Vietnam! When they looked like they were about to have a pro-Communist government, the U.S. stepped in to make sure they didn't! He has no intention of settling by negotiation whatsoever.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
Sunday, September 08, 2013
They want war anyway
Sunday, September 08, 2013
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Published: Sunday, September 8, 2013
Letters to the editor
They want war anyway
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
They’re not interested in talking peace; they want war. The U.S. has never listened to anybody before, they’ve always gone ahead and done what they pleased, and nothing will satisfy the U.S. and Israel (who is probably calling the shots) but to eliminate Syria. The U.S. has less reason for fighting this war than any war they’ve ever fought! They have a hard time even thinking up excuses for it.
I remember reading something once upon a time by a great columnist that my father used to like. He said if they’d put the presidents and kings and the politicians into the battlefield, you’d never have any more wars! Because it’s not the people who make the wars who have to fight them. If the people who actually made the wars and got the world into wars had to themselves personally fight them, there’d never be another war!
©2013 The Daily Star. All Rights Reserved.
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Friday, September 06, 2013
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Peninsula readers' letters: September 5
From Daily News Group readers Posted: 09/04/2013 05:35:11 PM PDT
Updated: a day ago
War drums
Dear Editor: As U.N. arms experts investigate the alleged chemical weapon strike in Damascus, the U.S. and its Western allies are seriously considering military intervention against the Syrian regime. Though the U.N. experts are yet to conclusively establish who used the chemical weapons, war drums in Washington are getting louder. One must remember that the U.S. case of weapons of mass destruction against Iraq fell flat on its face. The regime change there, instead of bringing peace, has thrown the country into a vicious cycle of violence and turmoil that shows no signs of abating. Same is the case in Afghanistan, where the U.S., after years of conflict, is finding it hard to get a face-saving exit.If the U.S. and allied forces go in on the ground to attack, the Russians are going to be very upset, and that could lead to a major war. The Russians and Chinese are especially upset at the U.S., but many other nations also consider the U.S. an arrogant bully. Man's inhumanity to man shows again that mankind can't run its own affairs. Pray for the innocent who are suffering.
Ted Rudow III,Palo Alto
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Peninsula readers' letters: September 5
From Daily News Group readers Posted: 09/04/2013 05:35:11 PM PDT
Updated: a day ago
War drums
Dear Editor: As U.N. arms experts investigate the alleged chemical weapon strike in Damascus, the U.S. and its Western allies are seriously considering military intervention against the Syrian regime. Though the U.N. experts are yet to conclusively establish who used the chemical weapons, war drums in Washington are getting louder. One must remember that the U.S. case of weapons of mass destruction against Iraq fell flat on its face. The regime change there, instead of bringing peace, has thrown the country into a vicious cycle of violence and turmoil that shows no signs of abating. Same is the case in Afghanistan, where the U.S., after years of conflict, is finding it hard to get a face-saving exit.If the U.S. and allied forces go in on the ground to attack, the Russians are going to be very upset, and that could lead to a major war. The Russians and Chinese are especially upset at the U.S., but many other nations also consider the U.S. an arrogant bully. Man's inhumanity to man shows again that mankind can't run its own affairs. Pray for the innocent who are suffering.
Ted Rudow III,Palo Alto
contracostatimes.com
Thursday, September 05, 2013
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Peninsula readers' letters: September 5
From Daily News Group readers
Posted: 09/04/2013 05:35:11 PM PDT
Updated: 09/05/2013 12:48:58 AM PDT
War drums
Dear Editor: As U.N. arms experts investigate the alleged chemical weapon strike in Damascus, the U.S. and its Western allies are seriously considering military intervention against the Syrian regime. Though the U.N. experts are yet to conclusively establish who used the chemical weapons, war drums in Washington are getting louder. One must remember that the U.S. case of weapons of mass destruction against Iraq fell flat on its face. The regime change there, instead of bringing peace, has thrown the country into a vicious cycle of violence and turmoil that shows no signs of abating. Same is the case in Afghanistan, where the U.S., after years of conflict, is finding it hard to get a face-saving exit.
If the U.S. and allied forces go in on the ground to attack, the Russians are going to be very upset, and that could lead to a major war. The Russians and Chinese are especially upset at the U.S., but many other nations also consider the U.S. an arrogant bully. Man's inhumanity to man shows again that mankind can't run its own affairs. Pray for the innocent who are suffering.
Ted Rudow III,
Palo Alto
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Peninsula readers' letters: September 5
From Daily News Group readers
Posted: 09/04/2013 05:35:11 PM PDT
Updated: 09/05/2013 12:48:58 AM PDT
War drums
Dear Editor: As U.N. arms experts investigate the alleged chemical weapon strike in Damascus, the U.S. and its Western allies are seriously considering military intervention against the Syrian regime. Though the U.N. experts are yet to conclusively establish who used the chemical weapons, war drums in Washington are getting louder. One must remember that the U.S. case of weapons of mass destruction against Iraq fell flat on its face. The regime change there, instead of bringing peace, has thrown the country into a vicious cycle of violence and turmoil that shows no signs of abating. Same is the case in Afghanistan, where the U.S., after years of conflict, is finding it hard to get a face-saving exit.
If the U.S. and allied forces go in on the ground to attack, the Russians are going to be very upset, and that could lead to a major war. The Russians and Chinese are especially upset at the U.S., but many other nations also consider the U.S. an arrogant bully. Man's inhumanity to man shows again that mankind can't run its own affairs. Pray for the innocent who are suffering.
Ted Rudow III,
Palo Alto
Wednesday, September 04, 2013
PPJ
Special Note: Later today we will begin circulating a petition to our local Members of Congress to vote no on authorization for the use of military force in Syria. Please watch for it and help spread the word. Meanwhile, we urge you to read this excellent piece, Optimism and Fear, by Phyllis Bennis. Also, Reps. Anna Eshoo and Zoe Lofgren have released a joint statement that raises some excellent questions about the Administration's request for authorization.
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I phoned up and stated, if the U.S. and allied forces go in on the ground to attack, the Russians are going to be very upset, and that could lead to a major war. The Russians and Chinese are especially upset at the U.S., but many other nations also consider the U.S. an arrogant big bully. Man’s inhumanity to man shows again that mankind can’t run its own affairs. Pray for the innocent who are suffering!
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Beating of war drums
Wednesday, September 04, 2013
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Published: Wednesday, September 4, 2013
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Beating of war drums
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
As the UN arms experts investigate the alleged chemical weapon strike in Damascus, the US and its Western allies are seriously considering military intervention against the Syrian regime. Though the UN experts are yet to conclusively establish who used the chemical weapons, war drums in Washington are getting louder. One must remember that the US case of weapons of mass destruction against Iraq fell flat on its face. The regime change there, instead of bringing peace, has thrown the country into a vicious cycle of violence and turmoil that shows no signs of abating. Same is the case in Afghanistan, where the US, after years of conflict, is finding it hard to make a face-saving exit.
If the U.S. and allied forces go in on the ground to attack, the Russians are going to be very upset, and that could lead to a major war. The Russians and Chinese are especially upset at the U.S., but many other nations also consider the U.S. an arrogant big bully. Man’s inhumanity to man shows again that mankind can’t run its own affairs. Pray for the innocent who are suffering!
©2013 The Daily Star. All Rights Reserved.
STAR ARCHIVE
Saturday, August 31, 2013
War drums
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/08/31/18742416.php
War drums
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Saturday Aug 31st, 2013 2:50 PM
Back in the early ‘90s when Yugoslavia was splitting apart, Serbia was the biggest part that was left, and it seized control of the Yugoslav army and armaments and tried to hold the country together by force. All the various provinces and ethnic groups were declaring their independence.
During this time, the U.S. and most of the rest of the world stood by and did nothing—or just talked and arranged peace conferences while people were being killed left and right.
Then when things started dying down a little in Croatia and the atrocities moved to Bosnia, the U.S. and its people still weren’t too concerned. After all, it was mostly Muslims who were dying there. It took Tsome real outrageous atrocities for the U.S. to stop the war. The situation is almost beyond fixing now. That’s why I said the U.S. response was too little and too late. They should have stopped Milosevic several years ago when he was killing Croats and Bosnians.They can’t stop him now unless they send in ground troops, and if they do that, they’ll have a real mess on their hands, let me tell you!
As the UN arms experts investigate the alleged chemical weapon strike in Damascus, the US and its Western allies are seriously considering military intervention against the Syrian regime. Though the UN experts are yet to conclusively establish who used the chemical weapons, war drums in Washington are getting louder. One must remember that the US case of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) against Iraq fell flat on its face. The regime change there, instead of bringing peace, has thrown the country in a vicious cycle of violence and turmoil that shows no signs of abating. Same is the case in Afghanistan, where the US, after years of conflict, is finding it hard to get a face-saving exit.
If the U.S. and allied forces go in on the ground to attack, the Russians are going to be very upset, and that could lead to a major war. The Russians and Chinese are especially upset at the U.S., but many other nations also consider the U.S. an arrogant big bully. Man’s inhumanity to man shows again that mankind can’t run its own affairs. Pray for the innocent who are suffering!
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Never be another war!
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/08/29/18742329.php
Never be another war!
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Thursday Aug 29th, 2013 2:39 PM
They’re not interested in talking peace; they want war. The U.S. has never listened to anybody before, they’ve always gone ahead and done what they pleased, and nothing will satisfy the U.S. and Israel (who is probably calling the shots) but to eliminate Syria. The U.S. has less reason for fighting this war than any war they’ve ever fought! They have a hard time even thinking up excuses for it.
I remember reading something once upon a time by a great columnist that my father used to like. He said if they’d put the presidents and kings and the politicians into the battlefield, you’d never have any more wars!—Because it’s not the people who make the wars who have to fight them. If the people who actually made the wars and got the world into wars had to themselves personally fight them, there’d never be another war!
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
Never be another war!
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Thursday Aug 29th, 2013 2:39 PM
They’re not interested in talking peace; they want war. The U.S. has never listened to anybody before, they’ve always gone ahead and done what they pleased, and nothing will satisfy the U.S. and Israel (who is probably calling the shots) but to eliminate Syria. The U.S. has less reason for fighting this war than any war they’ve ever fought! They have a hard time even thinking up excuses for it.
I remember reading something once upon a time by a great columnist that my father used to like. He said if they’d put the presidents and kings and the politicians into the battlefield, you’d never have any more wars!—Because it’s not the people who make the wars who have to fight them. If the people who actually made the wars and got the world into wars had to themselves personally fight them, there’d never be another war!
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
Monday, August 26, 2013
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Peninsula readers' letters: August 24
From Daily News Group readers
Posted: 08/23/2013 06:35:12 PM PDT
Updated: 3 days ago
Civil rights march
Dear Editor: More than a quarter-million people came to the nation's capital on Aug. 28, 1963, to protest discrimination, joblessness and economic inequality faced by African Americans. Many now consider the march to be a key turning point in the civil rights movement.
Most white Americans certainly believed that the push to civil rights was moving too fast. And in that moment, civil rights as a concept, integration as a concept, was still somewhat controversial, and how America got there was not a foregone conclusion. The roots of the march really go back 20 years earlier to a march that A. Philip Randolph called and then canceled at the last minute in 1941. The purpose of that march was to protest employment discrimination in the defense industries and also segregation and discrimination in the armed forces. This was actually the point before the U.S. actually entered the war. But President Roosevelt had called on the United States not to enter the war directly, but to serve as what he called an "arsenal of democracy."
Has his dream been realized? Has that dream come true in your life? Has that dream been fulfilled? Or have our ideals and our aspirations fallen by the wayside? Where is the unity, the brotherhood, the oneness of heart and spirit? His dream can only become a reality through love, the supernatural love of God. This is what brings unity. This is what brings equality. This is what brings mutual respect. This is what makes a man willing to prefer another and lift up another, and sacrifice of himself to improve the life of another.
Ted Rudow III,
Palo Alto
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Peninsula readers' letters: August 24
From Daily News Group readers
Posted: 08/23/2013 06:35:12 PM PDT
Updated: 3 days ago
Civil rights march
Dear Editor: More than a quarter-million people came to the nation's capital on Aug. 28, 1963, to protest discrimination, joblessness and economic inequality faced by African Americans. Many now consider the march to be a key turning point in the civil rights movement.
Most white Americans certainly believed that the push to civil rights was moving too fast. And in that moment, civil rights as a concept, integration as a concept, was still somewhat controversial, and how America got there was not a foregone conclusion. The roots of the march really go back 20 years earlier to a march that A. Philip Randolph called and then canceled at the last minute in 1941. The purpose of that march was to protest employment discrimination in the defense industries and also segregation and discrimination in the armed forces. This was actually the point before the U.S. actually entered the war. But President Roosevelt had called on the United States not to enter the war directly, but to serve as what he called an "arsenal of democracy."
Has his dream been realized? Has that dream come true in your life? Has that dream been fulfilled? Or have our ideals and our aspirations fallen by the wayside? Where is the unity, the brotherhood, the oneness of heart and spirit? His dream can only become a reality through love, the supernatural love of God. This is what brings unity. This is what brings equality. This is what brings mutual respect. This is what makes a man willing to prefer another and lift up another, and sacrifice of himself to improve the life of another.
Ted Rudow III,
Palo Alto
Monday, August 26, 2013
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Fear that helps labour abuse
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto,CA
There are labour abuses in Bangladesh and their connection to US multinational corporations is a question. The US government did slap a small sanction on the Bangladeshi government for its record on workers’ right. They took away their GSP special trade status.
Labour law is getting worse in Bangladesh. Workers in export processing zones still don’t have the right to unionise. Reporting by people shows that the building inspectors are still doing the same kind of corrupt things they used to do in the past.
And, you know, the US could slap tougher sanctions on Bangladesh if they wanted to, but Bangladesh keeps throwing out this card that if they do, it will breed radical Islam in Bangladesh. So you really see, interestingly, the war on terror preventing tougher — you know, disrupting activists at home here in the US, as well as preventing tougher sanctions on Bangladesh, because of this fear of radical Islam in Bangladesh.
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Fear that helps labour abuse
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto,CA
There are labour abuses in Bangladesh and their connection to US multinational corporations is a question. The US government did slap a small sanction on the Bangladeshi government for its record on workers’ right. They took away their GSP special trade status.
Labour law is getting worse in Bangladesh. Workers in export processing zones still don’t have the right to unionise. Reporting by people shows that the building inspectors are still doing the same kind of corrupt things they used to do in the past.
And, you know, the US could slap tougher sanctions on Bangladesh if they wanted to, but Bangladesh keeps throwing out this card that if they do, it will breed radical Islam in Bangladesh. So you really see, interestingly, the war on terror preventing tougher — you know, disrupting activists at home here in the US, as well as preventing tougher sanctions on Bangladesh, because of this fear of radical Islam in Bangladesh.
©2013 The Daily Star. All Rights Reserved.
STAR ARCHIVE
Saturday, August 24, 2013
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Peninsula readers' letters: August 24
From Daily News Group readers
Posted: 08/23/2013 06:35:12 PM PDT
Updated: 08/23/2013 10:42:47 PM PDT
Civil rights march
Dear Editor:
More than a quarter-million people came to the nation's capital on Aug. 28, 1963, to protest discrimination, joblessness and economic inequality faced by African Americans. Many now consider the march to be a key turning point in the civil rights movement.
Most white Americans certainly believed that the push to civil rights was moving too fast. And in that moment, civil rights as a concept, integration as a concept, was still somewhat controversial, and how America got there was not a foregone conclusion. The roots of the march really go back 20 years earlier to a march that A. Philip Randolph called and then canceled at the last minute in 1941. The purpose of that march was to protest employment discrimination in the defense industries and also segregation and discrimination in the armed forces. This was actually the point before the U.S. actually entered the war. But President Roosevelt had called on the United States not to enter the war directly, but to serve as what he called an "arsenal of democracy."
Has his dream been realized? Has that dream come true in your life? Has that dream been fulfilled? Or have our ideals and our aspirations fallen by the wayside? Where is the unity, the brotherhood, the oneness of heart and spirit? His dream can only become a reality through love, the supernatural love of God. This is what brings unity. This is what brings equality. This is what brings mutual respect. This is what makes a man willing to prefer another and lift up another, and sacrifice of himself to improve the life of another.
Ted Rudow III,
Palo Alto
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Cupertino Courier
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Sunnyvale Sun
Willow Glen Resident
Rose Garden Resident
Almaden Resident
Cambrian Resident
POWERED BY
Peninsula readers' letters: August 24
From Daily News Group readers
Posted: 08/23/2013 06:35:12 PM PDT
Updated: 08/23/2013 10:42:47 PM PDT
Civil rights march
Dear Editor:
More than a quarter-million people came to the nation's capital on Aug. 28, 1963, to protest discrimination, joblessness and economic inequality faced by African Americans. Many now consider the march to be a key turning point in the civil rights movement.
Most white Americans certainly believed that the push to civil rights was moving too fast. And in that moment, civil rights as a concept, integration as a concept, was still somewhat controversial, and how America got there was not a foregone conclusion. The roots of the march really go back 20 years earlier to a march that A. Philip Randolph called and then canceled at the last minute in 1941. The purpose of that march was to protest employment discrimination in the defense industries and also segregation and discrimination in the armed forces. This was actually the point before the U.S. actually entered the war. But President Roosevelt had called on the United States not to enter the war directly, but to serve as what he called an "arsenal of democracy."
Has his dream been realized? Has that dream come true in your life? Has that dream been fulfilled? Or have our ideals and our aspirations fallen by the wayside? Where is the unity, the brotherhood, the oneness of heart and spirit? His dream can only become a reality through love, the supernatural love of God. This is what brings unity. This is what brings equality. This is what brings mutual respect. This is what makes a man willing to prefer another and lift up another, and sacrifice of himself to improve the life of another.
Ted Rudow III,
Palo Alto
Friday, August 23, 2013
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His dream
Around Town, posted by Ted Rudow III, a member of the Palo Alto High School community
by Ted Rudow III, MA
The 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.More than a quarter-million people came to the nation’s capital on August 28, 1963, to protest discrimination, joblessness and economic inequality faced by African Americans. Many now consider the march to be a key turning point in the civil rights movement.
Most white Americans certainly believed that the push to civil rights was moving too fast. And in that moment, civil rights as a concept, integration as a concept, was still somewhat controversial, and how America got there was not a foregone conclusion. The roots of the march really go back 20 years earlier to a march that A. Philip Randolph called and then canceled at the last minute in 1941. The purpose of that march was to protest employment discrimination in the defense industries and also segregation and discrimination in the armed forces. This was actually the point before the U.S. actually entered the war. But President Roosevelt had called on the United States not to enter the war directly, but to serve as what he called an "arsenal of democracy".
Has his dream been realized? Has that dream come true in your life? Has that dream been fulfilled? Or have our ideals and our aspirations fallen by the wayside? Where is the unity, the brotherhood, the oneness of heart and spirit? His dream can only become a reality through love, the supernatural Love of God! This is what brings unity. This is what brings equality. This is what brings mutual respect. This is what makes a man willing to prefer another and lift up another, and sacrifice of himself to improve the life of another.
Ted Rudow III, MA
© 2013 Palo Alto Online
All rights reserved.
Syria
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June 19, 2013
Syria
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/06/19/18738703.php
Syria by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com ) Wednesday Jun 19th, 2013 Maybe it’s because they have such a short attention span and memory. As one journalist commented, a short memory is a great boost to self-esteem. …
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Thursday, August 22, 2013
His dream
nt.
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/08/22/18741952.php
His dream
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Thursday Aug 22nd, 2013 1:21 PM
The 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.More than a quarter-million people came to the nation’s capital on August 28, 1963, to protest discrimination, joblessness and economic inequality faced by African Americans. Many now consider the march to be a key turning point in the civil rights movement.
Most white Americans certainly believed that the push to civil rights was moving too fast. And in that moment, civil rights as a concept, integration as a concept, was still somewhat controversial, and how America got there was not a foregone conclusion. The roots of the march really go back 20 years earlier to a march that A. Philip Randolph called and then canceled at the last minute in 1941. The purpose of that march was to protest employment discrimination in the defense industries and also segregation and discrimination in the armed forces. This was actually the point before the U.S. actually entered the war. But President Roosevelt had called on the United States not to enter the war directly, but to serve as what he called an "arsenal of democracy".
Has his dream been realized? Has that dream come true in your life? Has that dream been fulfilled? Or have our ideals and our aspirations fallen by the wayside? Where is the unity, the brotherhood, the oneness of heart and spirit? His dream can only become a reality through love, the supernatural Love of God! This is what brings unity. This is what brings equality. This is what brings mutual respect. This is what makes a man willing to prefer another and lift up another, and sacrifice of himself to improve the life of another.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/08/22/18741952.php
His dream
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Thursday Aug 22nd, 2013 1:21 PM
The 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.More than a quarter-million people came to the nation’s capital on August 28, 1963, to protest discrimination, joblessness and economic inequality faced by African Americans. Many now consider the march to be a key turning point in the civil rights movement.
Most white Americans certainly believed that the push to civil rights was moving too fast. And in that moment, civil rights as a concept, integration as a concept, was still somewhat controversial, and how America got there was not a foregone conclusion. The roots of the march really go back 20 years earlier to a march that A. Philip Randolph called and then canceled at the last minute in 1941. The purpose of that march was to protest employment discrimination in the defense industries and also segregation and discrimination in the armed forces. This was actually the point before the U.S. actually entered the war. But President Roosevelt had called on the United States not to enter the war directly, but to serve as what he called an "arsenal of democracy".
Has his dream been realized? Has that dream come true in your life? Has that dream been fulfilled? Or have our ideals and our aspirations fallen by the wayside? Where is the unity, the brotherhood, the oneness of heart and spirit? His dream can only become a reality through love, the supernatural Love of God! This is what brings unity. This is what brings equality. This is what brings mutual respect. This is what makes a man willing to prefer another and lift up another, and sacrifice of himself to improve the life of another.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
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Published: Monday, August 19, 2013
Letters to the Editor
Distracting public mind
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
World leaders have often used smokescreens, red herrings or other clever diverting tactics to distract the public mind from important but embarrassing issues. This is also a very common military device: to create a diversion, such as a pretended attack in one sector when actually the main drive is going to be in another.
This has been the favourite trick of despots and dictators throughout the ages: get the people’s minds off their internal problems and needs and altercations by creating a much more frightening bugaboo, such as an external war or fear of their neighbours, or causing them to focus their fears on some scapegoat leader, class, race, sect or supposed problem.
It is easy to see why he and his cohorts would have done everything in their pernicious power to get out of the papers for a while. Illegally boring into the private affairs of its citizens and scandalously destroying their personal freedom, while at the same time he tries to hide his evil-doing!
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Letters to the Editor
Distracting public mind
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
World leaders have often used smokescreens, red herrings or other clever diverting tactics to distract the public mind from important but embarrassing issues. This is also a very common military device: to create a diversion, such as a pretended attack in one sector when actually the main drive is going to be in another.
This has been the favourite trick of despots and dictators throughout the ages: get the people’s minds off their internal problems and needs and altercations by creating a much more frightening bugaboo, such as an external war or fear of their neighbours, or causing them to focus their fears on some scapegoat leader, class, race, sect or supposed problem.
It is easy to see why he and his cohorts would have done everything in their pernicious power to get out of the papers for a while. Illegally boring into the private affairs of its citizens and scandalously destroying their personal freedom, while at the same time he tries to hide his evil-doing!
©2013 The Daily Star. All Rights Reserved.
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Tuesday, August 20, 2013
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Published: Monday, August 19, 2013
Letters to the Editor
Distracting public mind
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
World leaders have often used smokescreens, red herrings or other clever diverting tactics to distract the public mind from important but embarrassing issues. This is also a very common military device: to create a diversion, such as a pretended attack in one sector when actually the main drive is going to be in another.
This has been the favourite trick of despots and dictators throughout the ages: get the people’s minds off their internal problems and needs and altercations by creating a much more frightening bugaboo, such as an external war or fear of their neighbours, or causing them to focus their fears on some scapegoat leader, class, race, sect or supposed problem.
It is easy to see why he and his cohorts would have done everything in their pernicious power to get out of the papers for a while. Illegally boring into the private affairs of its citizens and scandalously destroying their personal freedom, while at the same time he tries to hide his evil-doing!
©2013 The Daily Star. All Rights Reserved.
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Published: Monday, August 19, 2013
Letters to the Editor
Distracting public mind
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
World leaders have often used smokescreens, red herrings or other clever diverting tactics to distract the public mind from important but embarrassing issues. This is also a very common military device: to create a diversion, such as a pretended attack in one sector when actually the main drive is going to be in another.
This has been the favourite trick of despots and dictators throughout the ages: get the people’s minds off their internal problems and needs and altercations by creating a much more frightening bugaboo, such as an external war or fear of their neighbours, or causing them to focus their fears on some scapegoat leader, class, race, sect or supposed problem.
It is easy to see why he and his cohorts would have done everything in their pernicious power to get out of the papers for a while. Illegally boring into the private affairs of its citizens and scandalously destroying their personal freedom, while at the same time he tries to hide his evil-doing!
©2013 The Daily Star. All Rights Reserved.
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Saturday, August 17, 2013
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Calling kettle black
by indybay.org Wed Jul 31 11:51:38 PDT 2013
World Leaders have often used smokescreens, red herrings or other clever diverting tactics to distract the public mind from important but embarrassing issues. This is also a very common military device: to create a diversion, such as a pretended attack in one sector when actually the main drive is going to be in another.
This has been the favourite trick of despots and dictators throughout the ages: get the people's minds off their internal problems and needs and altercations by creating a much more frightening bugaboo, such as an external war or fear of their neighbours, or causing them to focus their fears on some scapegoat leader, class, race, sect or supposed problem.
It is easy to see why he and his cohorts would have done everything in their pernicious power to get and out of the papers for awhile. Illegally boring into the private affairs of its citizens and scandalously destroying their personal freedoms, while at the same time he tries to hide his evil-doing!
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
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Calling kettle black
by indybay.org Wed Jul 31 11:51:38 PDT 2013
World Leaders have often used smokescreens, red herrings or other clever diverting tactics to distract the public mind from important but embarrassing issues. This is also a very common military device: to create a diversion, such as a pretended attack in one sector when actually the main drive is going to be in another.
This has been the favourite trick of despots and dictators throughout the ages: get the people's minds off their internal problems and needs and altercations by creating a much more frightening bugaboo, such as an external war or fear of their neighbours, or causing them to focus their fears on some scapegoat leader, class, race, sect or supposed problem.
It is easy to see why he and his cohorts would have done everything in their pernicious power to get and out of the papers for awhile. Illegally boring into the private affairs of its citizens and scandalously destroying their personal freedoms, while at the same time he tries to hide his evil-doing!
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
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Friday, August 16, 2013
Himself to do it
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by indybay.org Mon Aug 5 19:29:07 PDT 2013
Himself to do it
It's really kind of amazing if you try and count the number of countries at whom the United States has directed its fury and threatened over the last two months in connection with the Snowden affair. They began with the government of Hong Kong, followed that up with the government of China, then moved to Latin America and threatened countries including Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua over whether he would be granted asylum. They've threatened Cuba over giving him the right to refueleveryone in the world knows, probably except for Americans, that the United States routinely refuses to extradite all sorts of people accused of horrible crimes.
Everyone in the world knows, probably except for Americans, that the United States routinely refuses to extradite all sorts of people accused of horrible crimes. We also stated that we are appalled by the incredible cynicism of practically all the countries in the world vis-Ã -vis what this young man has done, sacrificing his life and his future for something in which he believed.
They are furious against it. Why are they furious? Because of something that this young man revealed. But nobody stretches a hand to this young man. They use the information that he gave in order to be furious with the United States government, but they forget about the person, the human being who sacrificed himself to do it.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
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Thursday, August 15, 2013
Trauma of growing up as poor
Thursday, August 15, 2013
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Published: Thursday, August 15, 2013
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Trauma of growing up as poor
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
Broadcast on the night after thanksgiving in 1960, Edward R. Murrow’s “Harvest of Shame” exposed us to the callous exploitation of the migrant workers who pick our fruits and vegetables. This is an American story that begins in Florida and ends in New Jersey and New York State with the harvest. It is the story of men and women and children who work 136 days of the year and earn average nine hundred dollars a year.
Believe it or not, more than fifty years later, the life of a migrant labourer is still an ordeal. And not just for adults. Perhaps as many as half a million children, some as young as seven years old, are out in the fields and orchards working nine to ten hour days under brutal conditions. That was one of the most traumatic things growing up. Being poor and powerless to withstand the mistreatment, to watch my mom and dad be mistreated and is being fooled about the wages is traumatic. There was no way for us to complain. No way for us to appeal to anyone.
©2013 The Daily Star. All Rights Reserved.
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Friday, August 09, 2013
Right to join
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/08/09/18741264.php
Right to join
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Friday Aug 9th, 2013 1:46 PM
Bangladesh labor abuses and their connection to U.S. multinational corporations. The U.S. government did slap a small sanction on the Bangladeshi government for its record on workers’ right. They took away their GSP special trade status. But that only cost the Bangladeshi government—the Bangladeshi industries about $40 million a year, and it doesn’t directly affect the garment industries. It’s more symbolic.
Labor law is getting worse in Bangladesh. Hospital workers and nonprofit workers got the right to join a union taken away in Bangladesh. Workers in export processing zones still don’t have the right to unionize. Reporting by people shows that the building inspectors are still doing the same kind of corrupt things they used to do in the past. So it appears that business is going back to normal.
So, it appears that there’s some more pressure going on, but Bangladesh seems to be waiting it out. And, you know, the U.S. could slap tougher sanctions on Bangladesh if they wanted to, but Bangladesh keeps throwing out this card that if they do, it will breed radical Islam in Bangladesh. So you really see, interestingly, the war on terror preventing tougher—you know, disrupting activists at home here in the U.S., as well as preventing tougher sanctions on Bangladesh, because of this fear of radical Islam in Bangladesh.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
Right to join
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Friday Aug 9th, 2013 1:46 PM
Bangladesh labor abuses and their connection to U.S. multinational corporations. The U.S. government did slap a small sanction on the Bangladeshi government for its record on workers’ right. They took away their GSP special trade status. But that only cost the Bangladeshi government—the Bangladeshi industries about $40 million a year, and it doesn’t directly affect the garment industries. It’s more symbolic.
Labor law is getting worse in Bangladesh. Hospital workers and nonprofit workers got the right to join a union taken away in Bangladesh. Workers in export processing zones still don’t have the right to unionize. Reporting by people shows that the building inspectors are still doing the same kind of corrupt things they used to do in the past. So it appears that business is going back to normal.
So, it appears that there’s some more pressure going on, but Bangladesh seems to be waiting it out. And, you know, the U.S. could slap tougher sanctions on Bangladesh if they wanted to, but Bangladesh keeps throwing out this card that if they do, it will breed radical Islam in Bangladesh. So you really see, interestingly, the war on terror preventing tougher—you know, disrupting activists at home here in the U.S., as well as preventing tougher sanctions on Bangladesh, because of this fear of radical Islam in Bangladesh.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, August 07, 2013
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.Law encourages shootings
Stand Your Ground laws are frequently criticized and called shoot-first laws by critics, including the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. In Florida, the law has resulted in self-defense claims tripling.The law's critics argue that Florida's law makes it very difficult to prosecute cases against people who shoot others and then claim self-defense. The shooter can argue that he felt threatened, and in most cases, the only witness who could have argued otherwise is the victim who was shot and killed. Many states have some form of this law, including California.Ted Rudow III, Palo Alto
Ted Rudow III, Palo Alto
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July 18, 2013 Opinion » Letters to the Editor
« San Francisco needs to create more…
Netflix show 'House of Cards' nets… »
Zimmerman verdict an insult to family
by Examiner Readers
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.Law encourages shootings
Stand Your Ground laws are frequently criticized and called shoot-first laws by critics, including the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. In Florida, the law has resulted in self-defense claims tripling.The law's critics argue that Florida's law makes it very difficult to prosecute cases against people who shoot others and then claim self-defense. The shooter can argue that he felt threatened, and in most cases, the only witness who could have argued otherwise is the victim who was shot and killed. Many states have some form of this law, including California.Ted Rudow III, Palo Alto
Ted Rudow III, Palo Alto
Monday, August 05, 2013
Himself to do it
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/08/05/18741030.php
Himself to do it
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Monday Aug 5th, 2013 7:10 PM
It’s really kind of amazing if you try and count the number of countries at whom the United States has directed its fury and threatened over the last two months in connection with the Snowden affair. They began with the government of Hong Kong, followed that up with the government of China, then moved to Latin America and threatened countries including Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua over whether he would be granted asylum. They’ve threatened Cuba over giving him the right to refueleveryone in the world knows, probably except for Americans, that the United States routinely refuses to extradite all sorts of people accused of horrible crimes.
Everyone in the world knows, probably except for Americans, that the United States routinely refuses to extradite all sorts of people accused of horrible crimes. We also stated that we are appalled by the incredible cynicism of practically all the countries in the world vis-à-vis what this young man has done, sacrificing his life and his future for something in which he believed.
They are furious against it. Why are they furious? Because of something that this young man revealed. But nobody stretches a hand to this young man. They use the information that he gave in order to be furious with the United States government, but they forget about the person, the human being who sacrificed himself to do it.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii
Himself to do it
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Monday Aug 5th, 2013 7:10 PM
It’s really kind of amazing if you try and count the number of countries at whom the United States has directed its fury and threatened over the last two months in connection with the Snowden affair. They began with the government of Hong Kong, followed that up with the government of China, then moved to Latin America and threatened countries including Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua over whether he would be granted asylum. They’ve threatened Cuba over giving him the right to refueleveryone in the world knows, probably except for Americans, that the United States routinely refuses to extradite all sorts of people accused of horrible crimes.
Everyone in the world knows, probably except for Americans, that the United States routinely refuses to extradite all sorts of people accused of horrible crimes. We also stated that we are appalled by the incredible cynicism of practically all the countries in the world vis-à-vis what this young man has done, sacrificing his life and his future for something in which he believed.
They are furious against it. Why are they furious? Because of something that this young man revealed. But nobody stretches a hand to this young man. They use the information that he gave in order to be furious with the United States government, but they forget about the person, the human being who sacrificed himself to do it.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii
raise the fist.com
Things hav
"An eye for an eye" has always been the motto of those who live under the Mosaic Law--injury for injury, injustice for injustice, death for death. There was love and mercy and forgiveness even under the Mosaic Law, but those who practice it today have focused on justice and judgment rather than mercy and forgiveness, and their justice has become injustice and their judgment has become the slaughter of the innocent and the butchery of the helpless.
Such is the situation in the Mideast today, where the Palestinians suffer at the hands of the Israelis. Though neither side is blameless and some on both sides have shed innocent blood, those to delivered and of old are most guilty. For even of old said "Thou shalt not kill," but they have created legions of widows and orphans whose cries rise unto. Those who have sown violence and death will also reap it, for whatsoever a man sows, that will he also reap. Applicable both to those who sow good and those who sow evil.
There's been talk of "Peace, peace" for years now, and that's about all it's been--talk. Now sudden destruction has come upon the area, as travail upon a woman with child. It was inevitable, just like a woman going into labor when she's ready to deliver a child. The Israelis have remained the same as always. They let the Palestinians have a few status symbols, things like their own airport and passports and government buildings here and there, but a lot of good it did the Palestinians! The poor Palestinians have been hoping for change for years, but there's been very little change.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
--> raise the fist . com .. since 1999
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Calling kettle black
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/07/31/18740724.php
Calling kettle black
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Wednesday Jul 31st, 2013 11:47 AM
World Leaders have often used smokescreens, red herrings or other clever diverting tactics to distract the public mind from important but embarrassing issues. This is also a very common military device: to create a diversion, such as a pretended attack in one sector when actually the main drive is going to be in another.
This has been the favourite trick of despots and dictators throughout the ages: get the people's minds off their internal problems and needs and altercations by creating a much more frightening bugaboo, such as an external war or fear of their neighbours, or causing them to focus their fears on some scapegoat leader, class, race, sect or supposed problem.
It is easy to see why he and his cohorts would have done everything in their pernicious power to get and out of the papers for awhile. Illegally boring into the private affairs of its citizens and scandalously destroying their personal freedoms, while at the same time he tries to hide his evil-doing!
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
Calling kettle black
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Wednesday Jul 31st, 2013 11:47 AM
World Leaders have often used smokescreens, red herrings or other clever diverting tactics to distract the public mind from important but embarrassing issues. This is also a very common military device: to create a diversion, such as a pretended attack in one sector when actually the main drive is going to be in another.
This has been the favourite trick of despots and dictators throughout the ages: get the people's minds off their internal problems and needs and altercations by creating a much more frightening bugaboo, such as an external war or fear of their neighbours, or causing them to focus their fears on some scapegoat leader, class, race, sect or supposed problem.
It is easy to see why he and his cohorts would have done everything in their pernicious power to get and out of the papers for awhile. Illegally boring into the private affairs of its citizens and scandalously destroying their personal freedoms, while at the same time he tries to hide his evil-doing!
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Wednesday, July 31, 2013 RSS / Archive Letters
Wednesday, July 31, 2013 RSS / Archive Letters
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Man shot dead in capital
Morsi well, says EU envoy
Candidacy scrapping authority meaningless: CEC
2 govt websites hacked
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2015 World Cup schedule announced
CID issued 2nd letter inquiring probe progress
Publish ad for BNP leader Khokon: ICT
HC asks for scientific reports on modified brinjal
Published: Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Letters to the Editor
Self-defence as a ploy to kill
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
Stand-your-ground laws are frequently criticised and called “shoot first” laws by critics, including the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. In Florida, the law has resulted in self-defense claims tripling. The law’s critics argue that Florida’s law makes it very difficult to prosecute cases against people who shoot others and then claim self-defense. The shooter can argue that he felt threatened, and in most cases, the only witness who could have argued otherwise is the victim who was shot and killed. Many states have some form of Stand Your Ground law including California.
The Hate Crime Statistics Act defines hate crimes as acts in which individuals are victimised because of their “race, religion, sexual orientation, or ethnicity.”
Why is there anti-Americanism? Because of American policies toward other nations and people! They were under-developed in war, weapons, brutality, cruelty, selfishness, and the desire to dominate others! Actually they were over-developed in some of the world’s most beautiful and peaceful cultures, which the White came to destroy, and to make slaves of them.
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Home Newspaper Frontpage Backpage City Country World e-Daily Star Business Sports Op-Ed Entertainment LifeStyle Shout The Star Sections Bytes Shift Showbiz Next Step Tech Health Law and Our Rights Literature Letters Science Wide Angle Book Reviews Strategic Issues Urban City In Frame Promoting Child Rights Star Campus Rising Stars Supplements Old Supplements World Environment Day 2013 Private Universities… Coming Election Livelihoods for disabled… Enterprise, Education… Infrastructure, Food Security… Bangladesh Business Awards 2012 Independence Day Special 2013 Amor Ekushey Nababarsha Special 1420 UNFPA supplement Too Young to Wed UNDP Roundtable on VAW Project Latest News Manning acquitted of aiding enemy
Man shot dead in capital
Morsi well, says EU envoy
Candidacy scrapping authority meaningless: CEC
2 govt websites hacked
Mamnoon elected Pak president
2015 World Cup schedule announced
CID issued 2nd letter inquiring probe progress
Publish ad for BNP leader Khokon: ICT
HC asks for scientific reports on modified brinjal
Published: Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Letters to the Editor
Self-defence as a ploy to kill
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
Stand-your-ground laws are frequently criticised and called “shoot first” laws by critics, including the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. In Florida, the law has resulted in self-defense claims tripling. The law’s critics argue that Florida’s law makes it very difficult to prosecute cases against people who shoot others and then claim self-defense. The shooter can argue that he felt threatened, and in most cases, the only witness who could have argued otherwise is the victim who was shot and killed. Many states have some form of Stand Your Ground law including California.
The Hate Crime Statistics Act defines hate crimes as acts in which individuals are victimised because of their “race, religion, sexual orientation, or ethnicity.”
Why is there anti-Americanism? Because of American policies toward other nations and people! They were under-developed in war, weapons, brutality, cruelty, selfishness, and the desire to dominate others! Actually they were over-developed in some of the world’s most beautiful and peaceful cultures, which the White came to destroy, and to make slaves of them.
Last Modified: 1 day ago
More from The Daily Star
Court summons Ahmadinejad End of a religious state? King of Queen’s Dhaka cut off from 10 Khulna districts BNP makes Jamaat smile Other Internet Stories
Russia Allows Snowden ‘To Leave Moscow Airport’ (National Memo) Controlling Blood Sugar Without Medication (Lifescript.com) Britney Spears is a Mess at LAX (Hollyscoop) 8 Foods That Lower Blood Pressure (Caring.com) 6 Drinks That Lower Blood Pressure (Caring.com) Recommended by
Disqus seems to be taking longer than usual. Reload?
More Most Read Most Discussed Manning acquitted of aiding enemy Online
Industrial plots up for grabs Print
Caught on camera Print
EC authority ‘meaningless’ Print
Retailers, owners talk on implementation Print
Big parties still silent Print
River pillars to be revisited Print
2 ‘carjackers’ killed in Rab fire Print
Cops find MP Rony’s claim baseless Print
Project cost up by 111pc Print
Court opts to see scientific documents Print
Soldier of freedom Print
Abducted, killed by the two Print
Prosecution’s argument ends today Print
AL looks divided Print
12 killed in Nigeria blasts Print
100 war crimes suspects in UK Print
Death spreads like a wave Print
China rules out leaders’ summit with Japan Print
Hackers attack NZ PM’s website Print
Man shot dead in capital Online
Morsi well, says EU envoy Online
Candidacy scrapping authority meaningless: CEC Online
2 govt websites hacked Online
Mamnoon elected Pak president Online
2015 World Cup schedule announced Online
CID issued 2nd letter inquiring probe progress Online
Publish ad for BNP leader Khokon: ICT Online
HC asks for scientific reports on modified brinjal Online
Cops find Rony’s allegation baseless Online
Caught on camera 1,737 views
Cops find Rony’s allegation baseless 1,000 views
Jubo League leader shot dead in capital 694 views
2 govt websites hacked 569 views
Industrial plots up for grabs 535 views
2015 World Cup schedule announced 517 views
Hearing of Sayedee, govt appeals starts Sep 17 435 views
Man shot dead in capital 399 views
2 ‘carjackers’ killed in Keraniganj ‘shootout’ 398 views
Freedom fighter Belal Mohammad passes away 360 views
CID issued 2nd letter inquiring probe progress 359 views
HC asks for scientific reports on modified brinjal 301 views
It’s True 289 views
Candidacy scrapping authority meaningless: CEC 287 views
Mamnoon elected Pak president 274 views
The sons are coming?
Dipu Moni returns empty-handed
Blogger Asif sent to jail again
PM defends son’s remark on AL win
Theists and atheists
5 banks swindled
Joy wants Harvard guy to run publicity
Army to run taxis
Foreign Minister’s futile trip
Confidence in EC eroding
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Monday, July 29, 2013
No Apologies
Bohemian
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June 19, 2013 Columns & Blogs » Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor: June 19, 2013
No Apologies
As celebrities like Tom Cruise and Hugh Jackman celebrated Walmart at its annual meeting, workers and activists converged to demand sweeping changes at the company's U.S. stores and global factories. Around a hundred striking workers with the group OUR Walmart arrived in a caravan from across the country to protest what they allege to be retaliation against those seeking to change company practices on wages, safety and unions.
Walmart is one of only a few major retailers that has refused to sign on to the new safety standards after the latest Dhaka tragedy. The Tazreen Fashion fire in 2012 killed 117 workers and left hundreds injured, and the recent building collapse in Rana Plaza killed 1,127 and left more than 600 or 700 injured. And at that shareholder meeting, no one gave any condolence to those families.
—Ted Rudow III
Palo Alto
Write to us at letters@bohemian.com.
Copyright © 2013 Metro Newspapers. All rights reserved.
Metro SF Station MetroActive Boulevards Santa Cruz Weekly Bohemian
North Bay Bohemian News & Features Music, Arts & Culture Food & Drink Columns & Blogs Deals & Giveaways Browse News & Features
June 19, 2013 Columns & Blogs » Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor: June 19, 2013
No Apologies
As celebrities like Tom Cruise and Hugh Jackman celebrated Walmart at its annual meeting, workers and activists converged to demand sweeping changes at the company's U.S. stores and global factories. Around a hundred striking workers with the group OUR Walmart arrived in a caravan from across the country to protest what they allege to be retaliation against those seeking to change company practices on wages, safety and unions.
Walmart is one of only a few major retailers that has refused to sign on to the new safety standards after the latest Dhaka tragedy. The Tazreen Fashion fire in 2012 killed 117 workers and left hundreds injured, and the recent building collapse in Rana Plaza killed 1,127 and left more than 600 or 700 injured. And at that shareholder meeting, no one gave any condolence to those families.
—Ted Rudow III
Palo Alto
Write to us at letters@bohemian.com.
Copyright © 2013 Metro Newspapers. All rights reserved.
Sunday, July 28, 2013
When justice becomes injustice
Sunday, July 28, 2013
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Published: Saturday, July 27, 2013
Letters to the editor
When justice becomes injustice
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
“An eye for an eye” has always been the motto of those who live under the Mosaic Law–injury for injury, injustice for injustice, death for death. There was love and mercy and forgiveness even under the Mosaic Law, but those who practice it today have focused on justice and judgment rather than mercy and forgiveness, and their justice has become injustice and their judgment has become the slaughter of the innocent and the butchery of the helpless.
Such is the situation in the Mideast today, where the Palestinians suffer at the hands of the Israelis. There’s been talk of “peace” for years now, and that’s about all it’s been–talk. The Israelis have remained the same as always. They let the Palestinians have a few status symbols, things like their own airport and passports and government buildings here and there, but a lot of good it did the Palestinians! The poor Palestinians have been hoping for change for years, but there’s been very little change.
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Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Fifty years later
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/07/24/18740317.php
Fifty years later
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Wednesday Jul 24th, 2013
Broadcast the night after thanksgiving in 1960, Edward R. Murrow’s “Harvest of Shame” exposed us to the callous exploitation of the migrant workers who pick our fruit and vegetables. This is an American story that begins in Florida and ends in New Jersey and New York State with the harvest. It is a 1960’s “Grapes of Wrath” that begins at the Mexican border in California and ends in Oregon and Washington. It is the story of men and women and children who work 136 days of the year and average nine hundred dollars a year.
Believe it or not, more than fifty years later, the life of a migrant laborer is still an ordeal. And not just for adults. Perhaps as many as half a million children, some as young as seven years old, are out in the fields and orchards working nine to ten hour days under brutal conditions. That was one of the most traumatic things growing up. You see, being poor is in and of itself not traumatic. It's an inconvenience, but being poor and powerless to withstand the mistreatment, to watch my mom and dad be mistreated and are being fooled about the wages and exactly stolen from us.There was no way for us to complain. No way for us to appeal to anyone. the racial humiliation, the racial snubs and epithets. Well, the verbal mistreatment of my mom, and, was something that's very, was very hard to take.
NAFTA, signed by President Clinton in 1993. That devastated the Mexican countryside. Just in the commodity of corn. Which is a staple in Mexico. Everybody grows corn in Mexico. And they grow it for their local use, for themselves. And then the excess, they tried to sell it in the local market. So when NAFTA opened the borders to North American corn, those small corner farmers in Mexico couldn't help to compete with U.S. farmers. They're highly mechanized and highly subsidized.
Ted Rudow III, MA
Fifty years later
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Wednesday Jul 24th, 2013
Broadcast the night after thanksgiving in 1960, Edward R. Murrow’s “Harvest of Shame” exposed us to the callous exploitation of the migrant workers who pick our fruit and vegetables. This is an American story that begins in Florida and ends in New Jersey and New York State with the harvest. It is a 1960’s “Grapes of Wrath” that begins at the Mexican border in California and ends in Oregon and Washington. It is the story of men and women and children who work 136 days of the year and average nine hundred dollars a year.
Believe it or not, more than fifty years later, the life of a migrant laborer is still an ordeal. And not just for adults. Perhaps as many as half a million children, some as young as seven years old, are out in the fields and orchards working nine to ten hour days under brutal conditions. That was one of the most traumatic things growing up. You see, being poor is in and of itself not traumatic. It's an inconvenience, but being poor and powerless to withstand the mistreatment, to watch my mom and dad be mistreated and are being fooled about the wages and exactly stolen from us.There was no way for us to complain. No way for us to appeal to anyone. the racial humiliation, the racial snubs and epithets. Well, the verbal mistreatment of my mom, and, was something that's very, was very hard to take.
NAFTA, signed by President Clinton in 1993. That devastated the Mexican countryside. Just in the commodity of corn. Which is a staple in Mexico. Everybody grows corn in Mexico. And they grow it for their local use, for themselves. And then the excess, they tried to sell it in the local market. So when NAFTA opened the borders to North American corn, those small corner farmers in Mexico couldn't help to compete with U.S. farmers. They're highly mechanized and highly subsidized.
Ted Rudow III, MA
Friday, July 19, 2013
US poor denied state-run medical service
Friday, July 19, 2013
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Published: Thursday, July 18, 2013
Letters to the Editor
US poor denied state-run medical service
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
California lawmakers improperly stopped funding certain medical services that rural and other specialised health clinics provided to low-income residents under the state’s Medicaid program. A three-judge panel of the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the finding of a trial judge and said federal law requires states participating in Medicaid to reimburse clinics serving migrant workers, homeless people and other poor populations for “a panoply of medical services to under-served communities” that includes chiropractic care, dental care, optometry, podiatry and speech therapy.
To save money, the Legislature in 2009 eliminated coverage for adults receiving those services through the state’s Medicaid programme, known as Medi-Cal, saying they were optional because they were not provided by medical doctors. They even convinced lots of poor people that they were right and persuaded them to voluntarily give up some of the few things they had to make them even poorer and the rich even richer, so the rich could have more and more and the poor less and less.
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Published: Thursday, July 18, 2013
Letters to the Editor
US poor denied state-run medical service
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
California lawmakers improperly stopped funding certain medical services that rural and other specialised health clinics provided to low-income residents under the state’s Medicaid program. A three-judge panel of the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the finding of a trial judge and said federal law requires states participating in Medicaid to reimburse clinics serving migrant workers, homeless people and other poor populations for “a panoply of medical services to under-served communities” that includes chiropractic care, dental care, optometry, podiatry and speech therapy.
To save money, the Legislature in 2009 eliminated coverage for adults receiving those services through the state’s Medicaid programme, known as Medi-Cal, saying they were optional because they were not provided by medical doctors. They even convinced lots of poor people that they were right and persuaded them to voluntarily give up some of the few things they had to make them even poorer and the rich even richer, so the rich could have more and more and the poor less and less.
©2013 The Daily Star. All Rights Reserved.
STAR ARCHIVE
Sunday, July 14, 2013
They were over-developed
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/07/14/18739792.php
They were over-developed
by TedRudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Sunday Jul 14th, 2013 12:12 PM
Stand-your-ground laws are frequently criticized and called "shoot first" laws by critics, including the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. In Florida, the law has resulted in self-defense claims tripling. The law's critics argue that Florida's law makes it very difficult to prosecute cases against people who shoot others and then claim self-defense.
The shooter can argue that he felt threatened, and in most cases, the only witness who could have argued otherwise is the victim who was shot and killed. Many states have some form of Stand Your Ground law including, California.
The Hate Crime Statistics Act defines hate crimes as acts in which individuate arevictimized because of their "race, religion, sexual orientation, or ethnicity." This definition fate to convey a deeper sense of the severity of hate crimes or their impact on individual victims, their families and communities.
As defined in California Penal Code section 422 55, hate crime means "a criminal act committed, in whole or in part, because of one or more of the following actual or perceived characteristics: (1) Disability. (2) Gender. (3) Nationality, (4) Race or ethnicity, (5) religion (6) Sexual orientation, (7) Association with a person or group with one or more of these actual or perceived characteristics.
Why is there anti-Americanism?--Because of American policies toward other nations and people! They were not only hated foreigners. Under-developed in war, weapons, brutality, cruelty, selfishness, and the desire to dominate others! Actually they were over-developed in some of the world's most beautiful and peaceful cultures-- religions, art, sciences, philosophies, and beautiful, peaceful, pastoral ways of life, which the White came to destroy, and to makes slaves of them.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com
They were over-developed
by TedRudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Sunday Jul 14th, 2013 12:12 PM
Stand-your-ground laws are frequently criticized and called "shoot first" laws by critics, including the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. In Florida, the law has resulted in self-defense claims tripling. The law's critics argue that Florida's law makes it very difficult to prosecute cases against people who shoot others and then claim self-defense.
The shooter can argue that he felt threatened, and in most cases, the only witness who could have argued otherwise is the victim who was shot and killed. Many states have some form of Stand Your Ground law including, California.
The Hate Crime Statistics Act defines hate crimes as acts in which individuate arevictimized because of their "race, religion, sexual orientation, or ethnicity." This definition fate to convey a deeper sense of the severity of hate crimes or their impact on individual victims, their families and communities.
As defined in California Penal Code section 422 55, hate crime means "a criminal act committed, in whole or in part, because of one or more of the following actual or perceived characteristics: (1) Disability. (2) Gender. (3) Nationality, (4) Race or ethnicity, (5) religion (6) Sexual orientation, (7) Association with a person or group with one or more of these actual or perceived characteristics.
Why is there anti-Americanism?--Because of American policies toward other nations and people! They were not only hated foreigners. Under-developed in war, weapons, brutality, cruelty, selfishness, and the desire to dominate others! Actually they were over-developed in some of the world's most beautiful and peaceful cultures-- religions, art, sciences, philosophies, and beautiful, peaceful, pastoral ways of life, which the White came to destroy, and to makes slaves of them.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com
Friday, July 12, 2013
The disenfranchised poor
Friday, July 12, 2013
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Published: Friday, July 12, 2013
Letters to the Editor
The disenfranchised poor
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
Proposition 8, known informally as Prop 8, was a California ballot proposition and a state constitutional amendment passed in the November 2008 California state elections. The proposition was created by opponents of same-sex marriage in advance of the California Supreme Court’s previous ruling in In re Marriage Cases which legalise same-sex marriage, overriding the statute (Proposition 22 in 2000) by ruling it unconstitutional.
The very thing we rebelled about in the revolutionary war—taxation without representation. It is like the Senate of the U.S., which has only two representatives for each state, regardless of size or population, instead of like the House of Representatives, where the number of representatives is determined by the population of each state.
There the House can counterbalance the Senate and can nullify anything the Senate does, if it doesn’t like it. No law can be passed, no money appropriated for anything — without the consent of the House — the true representatives of the people. It is no longer truly representative as it should be, because in the first place, it takes a rich man to be able to run for such an office, and it takes a long-time resident of any state or country to be able to register to vote. The voting process is made so difficult that only the most determined manage to be able to use it — usually those with some political log to roll; largely property owners, or again, the rich, as opposed to the poor; longtime resident property owners, as opposed to the shifting, migratory, labour force.
©2013 The Daily Star.
Friday, July 12, 2013
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Published: Friday, July 12, 2013
Letters to the Editor
The disenfranchised poor
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
Proposition 8, known informally as Prop 8, was a California ballot proposition and a state constitutional amendment passed in the November 2008 California state elections. The proposition was created by opponents of same-sex marriage in advance of the California Supreme Court’s previous ruling in In re Marriage Cases which legalise same-sex marriage, overriding the statute (Proposition 22 in 2000) by ruling it unconstitutional.
The very thing we rebelled about in the revolutionary war—taxation without representation. It is like the Senate of the U.S., which has only two representatives for each state, regardless of size or population, instead of like the House of Representatives, where the number of representatives is determined by the population of each state.
There the House can counterbalance the Senate and can nullify anything the Senate does, if it doesn’t like it. No law can be passed, no money appropriated for anything — without the consent of the House — the true representatives of the people. It is no longer truly representative as it should be, because in the first place, it takes a rich man to be able to run for such an office, and it takes a long-time resident of any state or country to be able to register to vote. The voting process is made so difficult that only the most determined manage to be able to use it — usually those with some political log to roll; largely property owners, or again, the rich, as opposed to the poor; longtime resident property owners, as opposed to the shifting, migratory, labour force.
©2013 The Daily Star.
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Published: Friday, July 12, 2013
Letters to the Editor
The disenfranchised poor
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
Proposition 8, known informally as Prop 8, was a California ballot proposition and a state constitutional amendment passed in the November 2008 California state elections. The proposition was created by opponents of same-sex marriage in advance of the California Supreme Court’s previous ruling in In re Marriage Cases which legalise same-sex marriage, overriding the statute (Proposition 22 in 2000) by ruling it unconstitutional.
The very thing we rebelled about in the revolutionary war—taxation without representation. It is like the Senate of the U.S., which has only two representatives for each state, regardless of size or population, instead of like the House of Representatives, where the number of representatives is determined by the population of each state.
There the House can counterbalance the Senate and can nullify anything the Senate does, if it doesn’t like it. No law can be passed, no money appropriated for anything — without the consent of the House — the true representatives of the people. It is no longer truly representative as it should be, because in the first place, it takes a rich man to be able to run for such an office, and it takes a long-time resident of any state or country to be able to register to vote. The voting process is made so difficult that only the most determined manage to be able to use it — usually those with some political log to roll; largely property owners, or again, the rich, as opposed to the poor; longtime resident property owners, as opposed to the shifting, migratory, labour force.
©2013 The Daily Star.
Friday, July 12, 2013
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Published: Friday, July 12, 2013
Letters to the Editor
The disenfranchised poor
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CA
Proposition 8, known informally as Prop 8, was a California ballot proposition and a state constitutional amendment passed in the November 2008 California state elections. The proposition was created by opponents of same-sex marriage in advance of the California Supreme Court’s previous ruling in In re Marriage Cases which legalise same-sex marriage, overriding the statute (Proposition 22 in 2000) by ruling it unconstitutional.
The very thing we rebelled about in the revolutionary war—taxation without representation. It is like the Senate of the U.S., which has only two representatives for each state, regardless of size or population, instead of like the House of Representatives, where the number of representatives is determined by the population of each state.
There the House can counterbalance the Senate and can nullify anything the Senate does, if it doesn’t like it. No law can be passed, no money appropriated for anything — without the consent of the House — the true representatives of the people. It is no longer truly representative as it should be, because in the first place, it takes a rich man to be able to run for such an office, and it takes a long-time resident of any state or country to be able to register to vote. The voting process is made so difficult that only the most determined manage to be able to use it — usually those with some political log to roll; largely property owners, or again, the rich, as opposed to the poor; longtime resident property owners, as opposed to the shifting, migratory, labour force.
©2013 The Daily Star.
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Things haven't change
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/07/11/18739674.php
Things haven't change
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Thursday Jul 11th, 2013 11:48 AM
"An eye for an eye" has always been the motto of those who live under the Mosaic Law--injury for injury, injustice for injustice, death for death. There was love and mercy and forgiveness even under the Mosaic Law, but those who practice it today have focused on justice and judgment rather than mercy and forgiveness, and their justice has become injustice and their judgment has become the slaughter of the innocent and the butchery of the helpless.
Such is the situation in the Mideast today, where the Palestinians suffer at the hands of the Israelis. Though neither side is blameless and some on both sides have shed innocent blood, those to delivered and of old are most guilty. For even of old said "Thou shalt not kill," but they have created legions of widows and orphans whose cries rise unto. Those who have sown violence and death will also reap it, for whatsoever a man sows, that will he also reap. Applicable both to those who sow good and those who sow evil.
There's been talk of "Peace, peace" for years now, and that's about all it's been--talk. Now sudden destruction has come upon the area, as travail upon a woman with child. It was inevitable, just like a woman going into labor when she's ready to deliver a child. The Israelis have remained the same as always. They let the Palestinians have a few status symbols, things like their own airport and passports and government buildings here and there, but a lot of good it did the Palestinians! The poor Palestinians have been hoping for change for years, but there's been very little change.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com
Things haven't change
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Thursday Jul 11th, 2013 11:48 AM
"An eye for an eye" has always been the motto of those who live under the Mosaic Law--injury for injury, injustice for injustice, death for death. There was love and mercy and forgiveness even under the Mosaic Law, but those who practice it today have focused on justice and judgment rather than mercy and forgiveness, and their justice has become injustice and their judgment has become the slaughter of the innocent and the butchery of the helpless.
Such is the situation in the Mideast today, where the Palestinians suffer at the hands of the Israelis. Though neither side is blameless and some on both sides have shed innocent blood, those to delivered and of old are most guilty. For even of old said "Thou shalt not kill," but they have created legions of widows and orphans whose cries rise unto. Those who have sown violence and death will also reap it, for whatsoever a man sows, that will he also reap. Applicable both to those who sow good and those who sow evil.
There's been talk of "Peace, peace" for years now, and that's about all it's been--talk. Now sudden destruction has come upon the area, as travail upon a woman with child. It was inevitable, just like a woman going into labor when she's ready to deliver a child. The Israelis have remained the same as always. They let the Palestinians have a few status symbols, things like their own airport and passports and government buildings here and there, but a lot of good it did the Palestinians! The poor Palestinians have been hoping for change for years, but there's been very little change.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Reveal the truth
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
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Published: Monday, July 8, 2013
Letters to the Editor
Reveal the truth
Ted Rudow III, MA, Encina Ave, Palo Alto, CAForty-one years ago, Beacon Press lost a Supreme Court case brought against it by the U.S. government for publishing the first full edition of the Pentagon Papers. It is now well known how The New York Times first published excerpts of the top-secret documents in June 1971, but less well known is how the Beacon Press, a small non-profit publisher came to publish the complete 7,000 pages that exposed the true history of U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
In his 1972 dissenting opinion in the Gravel case, Supreme Court Justice Douglas said, “The story of the Pentagon Papers is a chronicle of the suppression of vital decisions to protect the reputations and political hides of men who work an amazingly successful scheme of deception on the American people.” My message is to them: Don’t wait ’til the war has started. Don’t wait ’til the bombs have fallen against Iran, or earlier Iraq. Don’t wait ’til the engine of this war is unstoppable. Before the war, take the risk. Reveal what you know to be the truth.
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©2013 The Daily Star. All Rights Reserved.
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Monday, July 08, 2013
The poor less and less
https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/07/08/18739494.php
The poor less and less
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Monday Jul 8th, 2013
California lawmakers improperly stopped funding certain medical services that rural and other specialized health clinics provided to low-income residents under the state’s Medicaid program, a federal appeals court ruled Friday. A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the finding of a trial judge and said federal law requires states participating in Medicaid to reimburse clinics serving migrant workers, homeless people and other poor populations for “a panoply of medical services to under-served communities” that includes chiropractic care, dental care, optometry, podiatry and speech therapy.
To save money, the Legislature in 2009 eliminated coverage for adults receiving those services through the state’s Medicaid program, known as Medi-Cal, saying they were optional because they were not provided by medical doctors.The great and powerful rich, propaganda and advertising, that they even convinced lots of poor people that they were right and persuaded them to voluntarily give up some of the few things they had to make them even poorer and the rich even richer, so the rich could have more and more and the poor less and less.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
Friday, July 05, 2013
No longer
RaisetheFist.com
Proposition 8, known informally as Prop 8, was a California ballot proposition and a state constitutional amendment passed in the November 2008 California state elections. The proposition was created by opponents of same-sex marriage in advance of the California Supreme Court's previous ruling in In re Marriage Cases" which legalize same-sex marriage, overriding the statute (Proposition 22 in 2000) by ruling it unconstitutional.
The very thing we rebelled about in the Revolutionary War--taxation without representation. It is like the Senate of the U.S., which has only two representatives for each state, regardless of size or population, instead of like the House of Representatives, where the number of representatives is determined by the population of each state.
There the House can counterbalance the Senate and can nullify anything the Senate does, if it doesn't like it. No law can be passed, no money appropriated for anything--without the consent of the House--the true representatives of the people. Is no longer truly representative as it should be, because in the first place, it takes a rich man to be able to run for such an office, and it takes a long-time resident of any state or country to be able to register to vote. The voting process is made so difficult that only the most determined manage to be able to use it--usually those with some political log to roll; largely property owners, or again, the rich, as opposed to the poor; longtime resident property owners, as opposed to the shifting, migratory, labour force.
Ted Rudow III, MA
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Thursday, July 04, 2013
The truth
http://www.indybay.org/
U.S.
Anti-War
The truth
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Thursday Jul 4th, 2013
Forty-one years ago, Beacon Press lost a Supreme Court case brought against it by the U.S. government for publishing the first full edition of the Pentagon Papers. It is now well known how The New York Times first published excerpts of the top-secret documents in June 1971, but less well known is how the Beacon Press, a small nonprofit publisher affiliated with the Unitarian Universalist Association, came to publish the complete 7,000 pages that exposed the true history of U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
In his 1972 dissenting opinion in the Gravel case, Supreme Court Justice Douglas said, "The story of the Pentagon Papers is a chronicle of the suppression of vital decisions to protect the reputations and political hides of men who work an amazingly successful scheme of deception on the American people." And he went on to say in that decision that he had no choice but to hold that it was the government that is lawless, not the press.
So my message is to them: Don’t do what I did. Don’t wait 'til the war has started. Don't wait 'til the bombs have fallen against Iran, or earlier Iraq. Don't wait ’til the engine of this war is unstoppable. Before the war, take the risk. Reveal what you know to be the truth.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
U.S.
Anti-War
The truth
by Ted Rudow III, MA ( Tedr77 [at] aol.com )
Thursday Jul 4th, 2013
Forty-one years ago, Beacon Press lost a Supreme Court case brought against it by the U.S. government for publishing the first full edition of the Pentagon Papers. It is now well known how The New York Times first published excerpts of the top-secret documents in June 1971, but less well known is how the Beacon Press, a small nonprofit publisher affiliated with the Unitarian Universalist Association, came to publish the complete 7,000 pages that exposed the true history of U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
In his 1972 dissenting opinion in the Gravel case, Supreme Court Justice Douglas said, "The story of the Pentagon Papers is a chronicle of the suppression of vital decisions to protect the reputations and political hides of men who work an amazingly successful scheme of deception on the American people." And he went on to say in that decision that he had no choice but to hold that it was the government that is lawless, not the press.
So my message is to them: Don’t do what I did. Don’t wait 'til the war has started. Don't wait 'til the bombs have fallen against Iran, or earlier Iraq. Don't wait ’til the engine of this war is unstoppable. Before the war, take the risk. Reveal what you know to be the truth.
Ted Rudow III, MA
http://tedriii.blogspot.com/
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