Wednesday, May 9, 2012

I've got my eye on you...


Although my colleague’s blog has presented some good points and ideas, the overall purpose of it fails in the aspects of the questions it fails to address.

First off, who pays for this regulation, the daycare facility? What if it is a home daycare and the facilitator takes care of family friends? At what number of students do you enforce the surveillance issue? You are expecting all daycare facilities, no matter the size of student attendance to pay for a high cost surveillance system that allows outside aces on a daily basis. Many parents already pay a high cost for daycare and this additional cost would then fall to them as well. This might push some who can’t afford it to use an unregulated facility, with no camera, where their child actually has a good chance of getting hurt.
 
Second, how is the video surveillance secure? Who monitors it? Unfortunately, in this day and age there are too many individuals who would LOVE to be able to access children playing at a daycare on a regular basis, and believe me, even if it is secure, pedophiles would still find a way around those boundaries. Just like hackers can still find their way around CIA firewalls.

Third, this blog also doesn’t address the “helicopter” parents the news speaks of and that are too involved in their child’s life. Is a parent watching allowed to call and make changes or suggestions to what they are seeing as a live feed? Many parents would almost undoubtedly call more than once a day about what they see, a child not sharing a toy, their child not getting enough of a snack, etc. and that would cause the employee to pay more attention to certain kids that others.
While surveillance is good idea on theory, it still does not take the place of an aware and active parent and a good, stable daycare facility. You can always ask other parents, read reviews online, and if there is 1 instance of uncomfortable “scratches”, change daycare facilities. There are enough out there.

One question you might ask of me after reading this is, am I a parent? The answer is, it doesn’t matter because this is an issue about regulation and control, not good parenting.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Jobs or Life


Recently I went to watch Ron Paul speak in front of the LBJ Library at the University of Texas at Austin. The first thing I noticed was another dumbass kid in uniform straight out of Basic Training talking politics in front of a camera and before I could stop him, there he went with his opinions and there his career went with them. Many outside of the military don’t know that as a solider, you are not allowed to have a political opinion because your boss is the Commander and Chief and it’s a conflict of interest. The ones that do have opinions, no longer have military careers. Although I am in complete agreement to bring all troops home as Ron Paul stated that evening, the last thing we need to do is decrease our military to non-existence.  There are already too many enemies of this country because of past actions made, that to not have a substantial military would put us all at risk.
I knew Ron Paul was a little out there and his ideas were a little extreme at times, but I didn’t realize that his Economic policies are in direct conflict with my Environmental Science beliefs and actions that I am taking to make the world a more sustainable place. Ron Paul is a free market idealist, and believes that government should stay out of big business and not have any restrictions. If we did that then it would expedite the process of global climate change, deforestation and toxins being pumped into the water. This would ultimately destroy the free market in which Ron Paul is fighting for because without resources, you have nothing to bring to the “market”. I feel that the government is already too blind to the problems the world is facing today and has put big business as a priority over human health. It’s not more or less government interference that is needed but intelligent politicians that don’t use policies to manipulate government actions to make a profit but fight for the sustainability of our entire race.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Bags, Bags, Everywhere


In the my news now blog titled “ban of the bags”, the author highlights the much heated discussion of plastic, single-use bags and how they will eventually be charged for in 2014 if consumers continue to use them in the future, in Austin. The author makes some good points and brings up a discussion that many did not know was a part of the equation, the waiving of fees of “banned bags” for low income residents on food assistance programs.

However, in quoting an article from the Austin American Statesman, the author failed to use a current article after the actual bag ban was passed in the early morning hours of March 2, 2012. In no current article does it discuss the waiving of the fee for those on food assistance programs. In fact, it was only after doing some research and visiting the Austin City Council’s website that I found the full details of the bag ban, which only exempts food pantries, not all those on food assistance. Obviously, by the time someone needs to visit a food pantry for assistance, paying for a bag to put the food in should not be something they need to worry about, and the Austin City Council understood that. Also, the one year implementation guideline completely went away with the final vote, so the ban goes into effect in 2013.

One of the biggest issues that many have not yet thought about in this discussion though is the fact that the price of using a plastic or paper bag, after the ban is enacted, is determined by the retailer. Consumers will be able to choose the type of bag they would like to use at retail counters in Austin: Reusable bags that you bring from home at no cost. Plastic bag, 4 mil in thickness, with handles. Retailer sets the price of the bags. Paper bag made of recycled content, with handles. Retailer sets the price of the bags. Purchase another type of reusable bag from the retailer. Retailer sets the price of these bags.” What happens when no one tells the consumer until they have already purchased the goods at Target, that they have to pay $4 a bag? The Austin City Council wants to stay out of the discussion of costs the retailers change, and I agree, but they should have also at least set a cap on the maximum amount a retailer could charge, since they reduced the implementation time, and also took paper bags out of the equation.

These are a few of the issues missed by the author that would have added a lot of weight to the argument. In the end, all consumers should be responsible for paying the bag fee if they choose not to comply, but all retailers should also be responsible for not making them pay, in more ways than one.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Quit watering your damn yards!


Texas needs to stop growing because it can no longer support itself with the resources that the state can provide. The main factor for needing to limit growth in Texas has and will always be water. Water is the number one necessity needed for humans to stay alive, crops to grow, and livestock to stay healthy. Due to global climate change and burning of the Amazon for the past ten or so years, Texas summers have broken record temperatures and droughts have just gotten worse.
Last summer, Texans got a glimpse of what’s to come for the future, and just how bad things can get if they continue to use and waste water at record amounts. One of many areas to run out of water is close to Austin, the Capitol of Texas. The Spicewood Beach area for a while had been selling their water to other areas needing water. They then found themselves not only unable to sell water, but running out of water for the people who live in the community and need it to survive. Because of ill planning, Spicewood Beach and others had to then have their water trucked in, rising rates to make the water even more expensive and putting pressure on local areas low on water as well.  Spicewood Beach was officially the first town in Texas to run out of water which was not an accomplishment that many had wanted to be known for. With all of Texas being in a drought, no one really had water to spare, and yet water was being trucked all over the state in what became a vicious water transfer cycle with no end in sight.
Katherine Hayhoe with Texas Tech University says “What climate change is doing is its increasing our temperatures and higher temps means faster evaporation. So you need more water to provide the same amount of irrigation for crops, which is what you’re seeing here in Texas, and many places around the world.”
I heard in the news today that Disney is looking to expand into Texas for a new theme park. Is that what Texas really needs, another theme park which wastes tons of water during the peak summer season? “But it creates jobs” many would argue, “It would help the economy”. If Disney put their new park in a state with plentiful water supply, then we could move the already overpopulated crowd of residents in Texas to that other state. If we keep bringing in Big Business, in the next 10 years Texans will be paying triple prices in water because it will have to be imported from other states.
Some say drill the wells deeper but all that is going to do is drain water quicker. The problem is there is no regulation on underground water supplies, and aquifers so people can use as much as they want. Others would be limit population growth, or actual punishment for those who don’t abide by water restrictions, but for those, someone has to regulate it at all times. One of the best suggestions to fight the water shortage has been rain water harvesting, but if all Texas harvest the rain water, what will replenish the lakes and aquifers?

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Shame in any language is shame


I disagree that the sonogram bill in Texas is about women's health and completely agree with this blog. As blogger Mean Rachel highlights in her blog The Texas Shame Act, there is an uproar over a Doonesbury comic strip that is notorious for making light of political hot topics and ideas such as Vietnam and both Gulf Wars.
This time, the comic strip has shined its light on Texas' law on mandatory sonograms before abortions as a technique to shame women out of getting an abortion by showing them the heartbeat of their unborn child. Somehow the talk on wars and soldiers were not as big of an issue as the abortion commentary has become for many in Texas. Mean Rachel and others are trying to bring this law into the public eye, but before the voters of Texas could see something that opposes government policy, the comic strip was moved into other sections of newspapers or pulled altogether. In highlighting this controversial topic, the blogger is trying to inform women of the issue that many politicians have tried to hide, the issue that this law is in fact not for their "health benefit."
How does showing the patient wanting to get an abortion, their baby’s heartbeat, have anything to do with health risks! If it’s health risks that people like Carol Everett, CEO of anti-abortion non-profit the Heidi Group want to show patients, then make a damn chart with the health risks of abortions and since we Texans like to teach children to use critical thinking i.e. creationism and evolution, then on that same chart let us also put the health risks for pregnancy as well.
Instead the people that run this state, “Republications,” understand that in passing the sonogram law they are trying to get more support from conservative Republicans (who are normally against abortion), with no thought for women's health in their mind. Kudos goes to people like the writers of Doonesbury and Mean Rachel for getting out there to shake down this unlawful act of trying to control the way we live. As I have seen on cars around Austin, “you can control my uterus when you pry it from my cold dead body.”

Monday, February 27, 2012

Pick Up Your Own Damn TRASH!

In my search for an editorial that would make me so mad that I could rant and argue about American ideologies I found a very well written piece on the Dallas Morning News website titled “Editorial: Dallas should start over on advised trash law” . I agree with the author of this editorial that if the trash in Dallas is going be turned into renewable energy then the city has to show the residents and prove that the renewable issue is the main reason for wanting all waste at this specific dump, rather than just getting more revenue from making commercial waste haulers take trash there. The city should have included everyone, including the citizens in the area affected by the trash increase and the waste haulers in the conversation before they went and made decisions for what they thought was best for the city, aka, what the city got out of it in terms of money. A good idea for renewable energy was taken over by greed. The authors intended audience is the people of the city of Dallas. The author is trying to show how he/she is on their side and supports them. He/she does this when discussing how the money the city was hoping to get from this ordinance will directly come back to the citizens of the city in the form of higher fees for services, to pay for the higher trash fees of commercial businesses. The author doesn’t really take a stand on either side of the issue, and that is why I believe it is an anonymous editorial, because it means more coming from what is basically the general voice of reason.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Junk Mail


An article from the Texas Insider shows another uneducated Senator has taken it upon themselves to stop the important things they should be doing like working on the Texas budget or figuring out what the hell Texas residents are going to do if this drought continues, but instead has attacked the mandate for healthcare of faith based employers and made it a religious battle. This is the final time I am going to say this. They are all idiots!!!
There is something called the J-curve and unless you want to learn how not to breathe, eat, or drink dirty water, the human race needs to learn to stop breeding. This has nothing to do with faith or religious beliefs but everything to do with survival of the human race. If someone doesn't want to have a child (which is no better to the world then the Key Stone Pipeline), THEN LET THEM!!!  Like Planned Parenthood, just because they offer abortions takes out the account that they do way, way more in educating and healthcare for women. As individuals we are responsible for our own decisions.  Politics (poli= meaning many and tics= are blood sucking insects) must stay out of this fight. Healthcare must be on the employers now because who knows how long Medicaid will still be around to fund the uninsured.
We keep trying to find ways of lowering the extremely large deficit, which continues to grow and grow. From mushroom pickers to engineers, all of us need to be insured to ensure the survival of Texas and our nation as a whole.