the 9-29-5 Penny Press
Transcription
the 9-29-5 Penny Press
2nd Amendment s s e r P y n n e P Las , NV as Veg um Vol b um N e3 er 1 BER SE M PTE 005 2 29, Even Applies In New Orleans See Analysis Page 3 PHOTOGRAPH BY CARL JUSTE/MIAMI HERALD NEW ORLEANS, LA — Members of a law enforcement task force consisting of members of the FBI , Louisiana State Police and New Orleans Police Department search the W.B. Cooper Apartments in New Orleans on September 16, 2005, looking for guns, fugitives, looted items and drugs THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 2 www.pennypresslv.com Penny Press Logotype Pointedlymad licensed from: Rich Gast Credits: Publisher and Editor: Fred Weinberg Circulation: Charlotte Weinberg The Penny Press is published weekly by 5010 Productions, Inc. All Contents © Penny Press 2005 Contributing Editors: Brent Jordan Al Thomas Doug French Bill Here Brent Jordan Pat Choate Joyce Meyer Bob Jennings Letters to the Editor are encouraged. They should be sent to our offices at 418 1/2 S. Maryland Parkway, Las Vegas 89101. They can also be emailed to: pennypress@mailblocks.com No unsigned or unverifiable letters will be printed. 702-740-5588 Fax: 702-920-8215 Penny Press LAS VEGAS, NEVADA 16 PAGES VOLUME 3 NUMBER 1 SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 2nd Amendment Even Protects Geraldo By FRED WEINBERG Penny Press Publisher If you have ever wondered why James Madison started the debate Analysis in 1789 which eventually added the Bill of Rights to the Constitution in 1791, the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina serves as a living lesson. Simply put, the first amendment protects Geraldo’s microphone and your right to know things. And the second amendment protects your right to protect yourself. Both were at stake this past month. There was some jerk at FEMA (the Federal Emergency Management Agency) who told the media that they would not be allowed to shoot pictures or video of dead bodies. That lasted as long as it took CNN to waltz into a Federal Court and read the First Amendment to a judge. A more ominous problem surfaced when New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin ordered his police department to confiscate all guns in the city which weren’t owned by law enforcement. Now picture this. The most corrupt city in the most corrupt state in the nation had descended into an almost cinematic condition of complete lawlessness aided by the fact that a significant portion of that corrupt city’s Police Department simply cut and ran or, worse, joined the looters. Those remaining property own- The Conservative Weekly Voice Of Las Vegas Inside: Brown Not To Blame For Katrina See Editorial Page 6 ers who had the foresight to own firearms for protection were safe— or at least had a chance at selfdefense, right? Wrong. Nagin, who today is strutting around like he wasn’t the cause of almost every death through his incompetence and indecision, told his cops to pick up the guns of law abiding citizens. If there were ever a better explanation of the reason we needed a Bill of Rights (or at least the first two amendments) than Hurricane Katrina, we must have missed it. Fortunately, in the biggest news story which most of the media never told you about, the Second Amendment Foundation and the National Rifle Association filed suit against the City of New Orleans, its mayor and its now departed police Penny Wisdom Freedom is our fortune and honor is our saving grace. —Charlton Heston superintendent and last Thursday, Federal Judge Jay Zainey signed a Temporary Restraining Order and Preliminary Injunction forbidding New Orleans from taking guns from law-abiding citizens and ordering them to return the guns that were taken. That was a central focus of last weekend’s Gun Rights Policy Conference in Los Angeles, hosted by the Second Amendment Foundation with keynote speeches from the NRA’s Wayne La Pierre and Idaho Senator Larry Craig. “When someone,” said La Pierre, “talks about how the second amendment is outdated today… “Remember New Orleans!” Craig told conferees that the new buzz word in Washington about the rebuilding of New Orleans was, PAT CHOATE FRED WEINBERG DOUG FRENCH BILLHERE AL THOMAS DIANE GRASSI JOYCE MEYER BRENT JORDAN PET OF THE WEEK Continued on page4 PAGE 5 PAGE 6 PAGE 7 PAGE 8 PAGE 10 PAGE 11 PAGE 12 PAGE 14 PAGE 15 THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 4 You Can Get Billhere's Calendar and Newsletter FREE by email! The FREE, e-mailed, VegasResource.com Newsletter and complete index of Las Vegas coupons for shows, buffets and attractions is available on the internet at: http://www.vegasresource.com/FreeVRC.html Your Gun Rights Protect A Lot Of Other Rights, Too Continued from page 3 “local control”. “The most corrupt state in the union spending Billions of your tax dollars? “This is a city which pays its starting police officers $17,000 a year and tells them to make it up on the streets.” Second Amendment Foundation founder Alan Gottlieb pointed out that the lawsuit may not be over. “We hope they decide to challenge the order,” said Gottlieb. “Because if they do, maybe we can get a case up to the Fifth Circuit which has already ruled that the Second Amendment confers gun ownership as an individual right.” One has to wonder why a Second Amendment court ruling this significant—issued at a time of national emergency—was a news story in only three newspapers. Only the Washington Times, the Austin (Texas) Statesman and the Ft. Worth Star Telegram gave the story any space. The television networks, all engaged in Hurricane Rita coverage and with complete access to the story ignored it. And the anti-gun groups maintained a stony silence. But for now, Judge Zainey’s order is law in the Fifth Circuit and your right to defend yourself should your surroundings turn lawless in an emergency appears intact. That was a pretty good day’s work for those folks who have been working for years to defend your right to gun ownership. And, ultimately, for those who live and die on the first amendment as well. Because if there’s nothing to back up your right to free speech and freedom of the press, even Geraldo’s microphone can go dead in a New Orleans minute. And as irritating as it might occasionally be, protecting Geraldo’s freedom of the press protects your freedom of speech, too. THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 5 Commentary: Pat Choate Arms From Abroad George Washington would have imprisoned most of the people running the Pentagon today as being traitors. No sane person, he would reason, would make the nation dependent on foreign countries, including likely future belligerents, for the arms and materials needed to safeguard the United States. Only a traitor would put the country in such jeopardy. Washington knew for he almost lost the Revolutionary War because the young country lacked the weapons it needed and had to depend on suppliers in France and Holland. After the war’s end, he and the other Founding Fathers vowed that this country would never again depend upon others for the weapons needed for its defense. Since 1989, however, U.S. defense policy has changed. Beginning in the Administration of George H.W. Bush, the U.S. has sought out its military supplies and weapons wherever they can be obtained at the lowest cost. The Clinton Administration took the matter even further in 1995 asking that foreign suppliers be given a preference in certain circumstances. Thus, when the U.S. went into Iraq and needed two-piece protective suits to guard against biological The Penny Press Tips Its Cap To: District Judge Donald Mosley who stepped up and killed two birds with one stone by sentencing Tamara Schmidt to at least four years in prison for neglect of her crippled daughter, Brittney Bergeron, and her dead daughter, Kristyanna Cowan. We had another judge trying, over the objections of Brittney, trying to "re-unite" the mother and daughter and this sentence should put an end to that nonsense. In case you were on another planet, the girls were assaulted by another couple of creeps Schmidt was doing a drug deal with. Nevada's drivers. We're finally not leading the league in drunk driving fatalities. Now we're just average. The Penny Press Sends A Bronx Cheer And A Bouquet of Weeds To: Community College of Southern Nevada President Richard Carpenter for insisting who insisted that the public have access to his personnel evaluation. “Everything I do, I’m going to be transparent with,” he said. That makes him totally unlike other university personnel who forget all the time exactly where their paychecks come from. weapons the Pentagon had to go to overseas to get all the parts. The next generation of Army spy plane is being made in Brazil. A consortium of Italian and British producers will make the next set of Presidential helicopters. The Washington Post reports that twelve of the biggest weapon systems used in Iraq, including the drones and Tomahawk missiles, could not be built without foreign parts. This is what we know. What we do not know is even scarier. The Pentagon keeps track of its first and second tier of suppliers and where they produce their goods. They do not track the many lower level suppliers and that is the problem. These suppliers are buying their components off the commercial shelf wherever they can get a deal, and that means China, Taiwan, or South Korea. If we have another major war, the only likely opponent is China. Certainly, China is building an ocean-going navy and modernizing its Army and Air Force. They have repeatedly said that when they are strong enough, they will either bluff Taiwan into submission to take it by force. In recent months, the Chinese have angrily dealt with Japan. Isn’t it the height of foolishness to depend upon China for the arms and materials we need to defend ourselves? Unless the Pentagon has forgotten, the U.S. has treaties that require us to go to Japan’s defense if it is attacked and a succession of Presidents, including George W. Bush, have pledged to go to Taiwan’s aid should it be attacked. Do our military planners really think that they will be able to get critical items out of China during a time of war, or even out of Taiwan, Korea or Japan ? It is about as likely as the Iranian revolutionaries getting spare parts from the U.S. for all those F-4 jets we sold them in the early and middle 1970s. America won World War I and II because we had the industrial and technological capacity to be the arsenals of democracy. The global search for cheap parts and inexpensive weapons by this and the past two Administrations has greatly reduced the safety of the United States. In time of war, assured supplies, regardless of cost, is the difference between victory and defeat. If President Bush and his DOD appointees cannot be made to understand the necessity for assured supplies, Congressional action is required, including enactment of Buy American provisions in all the defense procurement acts that it funds. And if the foreign suppliers don’t like this change in U.S. policy and complain, I say to hell with them. Our security is more important than their profits. PAT CHOATE Want A Penny Press In The Mail? $55 per year First Class Mail Name__________________ Address________________ City_____State___ZIP_____ Penny Press 418 ½ S. Maryland Las Vegas, NV 89101 OPINION THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 6 From The Publisher... Posse Comitatus 101 Over 40 years ago as a cadet in the Civil Air Patrol’s Peoria (Illinois) Composite Squadron, I and a fair number of other 13-year olds spent a lot of time filling up sandbags and shoring up the banks of the Mississippi River during flood season near Moline. powers. And while most of them won’t come right out and say it, their argument is that government officials in Louisiana are so corrupt, incompetent or both that the President should have known that and called what was happening in New Orleans an insurrection and simply Federalized the whole situation. The next year, I was in charge of a group of 14-year olds who were deployed a number of times as a ground search and rescue unit—even though we had to be driven to the locations we were searching by our adult senior leaders because we weren’t old enough to drive ourselves. Here are the facts. By the time I was 15, I had flown many hours as an observer in a CAP single engine aircraft as we ran grid searches for missing airplanes and missing people. The Civil Air Patrol is a civilian auxiliary of the United States Air Force and among the first things that they taught us back then was about something called the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878. The reason they taught us those things was that back then most of the CAP’s deployments dealt with state and local emergencies and our leaders took the position that as a agent of the federal armed forces, we could do nothing until we were asked to by the state. Strictly speaking, the Act actually forbids the use of the military in any sort of a domestic law enforcement capacity absent extreme conditions, but in 1965, we had never thought of alQaeda and the Russians were our enemies. So, we went by the strictest interpretation of the law which our adult leaders determined kept us on the sidelines until we were asked in as part of an emergency. With that background and plenty of intervening experience, I can tell you that the members of the House Committee which excoriated former FEMA director Michael Brown should be ashamed of themselves, as should House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi who called for Brown’s replacement on the basis of pure partisan politics. It would appear that the only thing Brown was guilty of was perhaps inflating his resume a bit. And if we were to fire everybody in Washington who did that, we’d be missing half of Congress, one or two Supreme Court Justices and tens of thousands of staffers. Left totally unsaid by any of these idiot savant congresspersons was the fact that under Brown’s tenure, FEMA had successfully worked over 150 incidents including two of the five largest hurricanes ever to hit the United States. The problem here is that most people in Congress don’t understand the concept of a first responder and they assume that the Federal Government is always supposed to be there. Well, it is. But not first. And it is not the responsibility of the Federal Government to evacuate large cities. When you get right down to it, Brown is being pilloried for not anticipating how incompetent and corrupt one single state was. You didn’t hear complaints from Florida about FEMA during last year’s hurricanes. You didn’t see any evacuation problems from Houston last weekend. For starters, the fault for New Orleans lies squarely in one location. New Orleans. And Governor Haley Barbour seems to have Mississippi under control. The Mayor, Ray Nagin, is without a doubt the least competent individual who ever had to play such a role on the national stage. As disasters go, Nagin is one himself. And the second most incompetent individual is the Governor of Louisiana, Kathleen Blanco. Truth be told, I don’t know whether or not Brown was a great, good or mediocre administrator. Essentially, the Democrats in the Hate George Bush movement who don’t want the FBI to have the authority under the Patriot Act to check library records now seem perfectly willing to let the Federal Government violate the bulwark of the separation of And that may be the way they do things in Louisiana and Washington DC, but the rest of us have a higher standard. But he’s getting blamed for things which simply aren’t his responsibility. FRED WEINBERG THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 7 Commentary: Doug French UNLV Department Chair Wants You To Pay More Taxes! The chairman of the UNLV economics department, Stephen M. Miller, was given an editorial page platform in the Las Vegas Review Journal recently to advocate for a windfall profits tax on oil companies as a solution to the nations oil dependence. Despite the article’s title: “Gasoline Prices: Don’t mess with the market” the professor advocates for just the opposite. Miller’s piece was in response to State Senator Bob Beers’ proposal to temporarily lift Nevada’s state gasoline tax. Professor Miller (not to be confused with NPRI policy director Steven Miller or ex-city councilman Steve Miller) is against the Beers proposal because temporarily lifting the gas tax will not, in his view, lower the price at the pump, but will, again in his view, only serve to increase “big” oil company profits. Instead of the state of Nevada having those millions to pay his salary to shape the minds of young impressionable college kids, the money would instead flow into the coffers of private enterprise. That thought evidently offends the sensibilities of the department chair. Miller rightly contends that higher gasoline prices “rations the product to the best use on a willingness to pay basis.” Plus, he identifies a couple of reasons why gasoline prices are high—increased Chinese demand and the lack of refinery construction constricting supply. Then strangely, the professor frets about the oil industry’s image if the price of gasoline doesn’t fall if the taxes are stayed. But he isn’t too worried about “big oil,” thinking that government should “take action to put a dent into those extraordinary profits.” But, how will this help the consumer at the pump? Where Beers wants to really give market forces a chance to help the consumer, Miller proposes a higher state gasoline tax that “could reduce the excessive profits of gasoline profits of gasoline retailers if their profits appear excessive.” Obviously Professor Miller is less concerned about consumers than he is about “excessive” profits. And, by the way, just who does Miller think should be the judge of “excessive”? Government, of course. “Government can impose a windfall profits tax to absorb as much of the current profits of big oil that the government deems excessive,” Miller writes. In fact, if gasoline prices were to fall without the tax, Miller believes that this “corresponds to precisely the wrong policy recommendation.” The higher the price at the pump, the more that demand slows: consumers will buy less. Big oil companies sell gas on a wholesale basis to their retailer customers based upon the demand from those retailers irrespective of what state taxes happen to be. Most retail sellers of gasoline keep their prices as competitive as possible in order to attract customers to their properties to sell them other higher margin products like beer, cigarettes, food items, and video poker play. Although Miller is correct that the higher costs of production didn’t increase prices, demand has; consumers are now cutting their consumption, thus it is possible that lifting the tax might lower the price at the pump a few pennies as retailers attempt to recapture previous sales. Besides, perhaps Professor Miller hasn’t heard, state government is flooded with taxpayer money at the moment. Also, just where does Professor Miller think oil companies will get the money to find more oil or increase refining capacity if profits are sent to the government to be wasted? The late great Murray Rothbard wrote about “excess” profit taxation in his book, Power and Market: “Attacking profits ‘doubly’ disrupts and hampers the whole market-adjustment process. Such a tax penalizes efficient entrepreneurship.” Rothbard goes on to make the point that it is times of crisis like now that the “more important it is not to tax ‘excess’ profits, or any form of ‘excess’ revenue for that matter; otherwise, adaptation to the new conditions will be blocked just when rapid adjustment is particularly required.” The anti-profits Professor Miller believes the correct policy “does not try to lower the price of gasoline.” He wants consumers to pay more and the government to get more through an excess profits tax. But, as Rothbard wrote about the excess profits tax; “It is difficult to find a tax more indefensible from more points of view than this one.” DOUG FRENCH THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 8 The Best Vegas Calendar BAR NONE! By Billhere The FREE, e-mailed, VegasResource.com Newsletter and complete index of Las Vegas coupons for shows, buffets and attractions is available on the internet at: http://www.vegasresource.com/FreeVRC.html SEPTEMBER, 2005 29-Oct. 1= Ann-Margret - Stardust. 29-Oct.5= Howie Mandel - MGM Grand. 30= Trisha Yearwood - Las Vegas Hilton. 30= Blue Man Group opens in the Venetian in a new custom built theater, where the old C2K Nightclub was originally located. 30-Oct.1= Wayne Brady - Mirage. 30-Oct.1= Classic Rock All-Stars-Cannery. 30-Oct.1= Trisha Yearwood - Las Vegas Hilton. 30-Oct. 1= Wayne Brady - The Mirage. 30-Oct. 2= Rich Little - Suncoast. OCTOBER, 2005 ================ 1= Air service starts from Palm Springs,CA - America West. 1= Taekwondo Championship - Cashman Ctr. 1= Dolly Parton - House of Blues Mandalay Bay. 1= Andre Agassi’s Grand Slam For Children with Mary J.Blige,Celine Dion, Duran Duran, Glenn Frey, Robin Williams - MGM Grand Garden Arena. 1= Styx & REO Speedwagon-Orleans Arena. 4-9= Elton John - Caesars Palace. 6= Green Day, Jimmy Eat World - Thomas and Mack. 6-19= Tom Jones - MGM Grand. 6-19= George Carlin - Stardust. 7= Billy Ray Cyrus - Boulder Station. 7= First Friday huge arts night 6-9 p.m. - Downtown Arts District: http://www.firstfriday-lasvegas.org 7= The Killers - Hard Rock. 7-8= Damon Wayans - The Mirage. 7-9= Grand Sumo Championships - Mandalay Bay. 7-9= Maxxis Motorcycle U.S. Open - MGM Grand. 8-9= Mötley Crüe -The Joint in the Hard Rock. 8-10= Al Martino - Suncoast. 8-Nov.6= Professional Bull Riders Championship - Mandalay Bay. 9= Maynard Ferguson - Santa Fe Station. 11-16= Elton John - Caesars palace. 14-15= The Black Crowes -Hard Rock The Joint 14-15= David Spade - The Mirage. 14-16= Juan Gabriel - Las Vegas Hilton. 14-16= Mr.Olympia Contest-Orleans Arena. 14-16= Roger Williams - Suncoast. 15= Eagles - MGM Grand. 15= Grand Funk Railroad - Texas Station. 15-16= Gun & Knife Show - Cashman Center. 15-17= The Letterman - Suncoast. 16= Paul Rodriguez - Mandalay Bay. 17= Alice Cooper - Hard Rock The Joint. 18-23= Elton John - Caesars Palace. 18-25= . STATION CASINOS. Free Conference Call at 1-800-6201687. 20-23= Don Rickles - Stardust. 20-23= Frankie Avalon/Bobby Rydell-Orleans. 20-24= Dennis Miller - MGM Grand. 21= Nazareth - Boulder Station. 21-23= Home Show - Cashman Center. 21-23= Smothers Brothers - Suncoast. 22= Jimmy Buffett - MGM Grand. 22-24= Jose Feliciano - Suncoast. 25-Nov.9= Howie Mandel - MGM Grand. 26= Entertainment Expo - Golden Nugget. 26-29= Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme - Stardust. 27-30= Pointer Sisters - The Orleans. 28= Basketball.Lakers vs. Kings-Thomas & Mack. 28-29= Ray Romano - The Mirage. 28-Nov.6= Professional Bull Riders Finals - Mandalay Bay. 28-30= Antique Arms Show - Mandalay Bay. 28-30= Air Supply - Suncoast. 29= Jimmy Buffett - MGM Grand. 29-31= James Darren - Suncoast. 30= Move clocks ahead one hour. 30-Feb.7= Danny Gans show closed - Mirage. 31= Halloween. ?Oct.?= La Bete nightclub closes for four weeks and will have a multimillion dollar renovation, new management and a new name - Wynn Las Vegas. ++++++++++ ==================================== Please e-mail errors, omissions and additions to: billhere@VegasResource.com THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 9 Trucks And Guns Bob Jennings/Penny Press The Las Vegas Motor Speedway hosted its annual NASCAR Craftsman Truck Race last weekend. It wasn't a great weekend for the local guys as the Orleans Racing Team was out early. In Los Angeles, the Second Amendment Foundation hosted its anual Gun Rights Policy Conference. Wayne LaPierre of the NRA (left) gave the keynote speech. THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 10 Commentary: Albert Thomas China’s Wal-Marts May Sell America To Chinese People This week I was watching a TV program about Wal-Mart and its spectacular operations world wide. One part was about the stores they opening in China and there was one particular sentence by a young local Chinese “associate” (employee) that caught me and opened a whole new way of thinking about the possible change that might occur in US/Chinese relationship. Each Wal-Mart store could be a center for the dissemination of better understanding by the Chinese about the USA. Though not intended each store’s “associates” would be U.S. diplomats. In the USA Wal-Mart has been misnamed as the Chinese outlet. Look again at many hundreds of products in any of your favorite stores. Products are not only made in China, but in Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Japan and a host of other Asian countries. The quality is fine. The reason they are made there is because the cost of production is so low that products can be shipped 12,000 miles to your backyard at a price you find irresistible. Fingernail clippers or lawn mowers – it doesn’t make any difference. The workers in those Asian countries are producing and BUYING those products from American companies IN their own country. Every yen or yuan sold to them is profit for an American company. Wal-Mart is planning 2,000 stores in China by a company Sam Walton started in Arkansas – and they still have their headquarters there. The anti-Wal-Mart sentiment is promoted by a very small group of local and union people and in many cases funded by outside interests. As a kid I can remember the opposition to the A&P food stores similar to what we are seeing against Wal-Mart today. They said it would cause the local grocery stores to close. They were right. Now answer this. Do you want to shut down your Albertson’s, Piggly Wiggly, Winn-Dixie, A&P, etc. and go back to the corner grocery store? I don’t think so. Who has benefited most from these huge changing marketing operations? YOU, the consumer. What was that one sentence that young Chinese said to the head of Asian Wal-Mart? Approximately, “Working here gives you a better understanding of other people”. This is very profound as it indicates a new thought pattern about “other people”, namely the U.S. Here is a way that might change the thinking of the Chinese about America. Imagine what 2,000 Wal-Mart stores could do for international understanding and world peace. Am I too bold in this extrapolation? Maybe, but it can give the USA a chance to reach down into the basic fabric of Chinese culture to the people. Let the diplomats deal with the higher Chinese officials and hope that some of the change of heart of the “associates” will seep out to their customers and then upward to the leaders. AL THOMAS Al Thomas’ best selling book, “If It Doesn’t Go Up, Don’t Buy It!” has helped thousands of people make money and keep their profits with his simple 2-step method. Read the first chapter and receive his market letter for 3 months at www.mutualfundmagic.com and discover why he’s the man that Wall Street does not want you to know. THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 11 Commentary: Diane Grassi Contracts For Hurricane Rebuilding Require Keen Oversight Hurricane Katrina was the first and greatest blow to the United States Gulf Coast region when it set down on August 29, 2005, but it was subsequently followed by failing levees in the greater New Orleans, LA area, only to be hit again by Hurricane Rita some four weeks later, leaving New Orleans, southern Louisiana, southern Mississippi and now southeast Texas in dire need of emergency assistance. All three episodes combined have but complicated the clean up and restoration of a vital region of the country, a major U.S. port. In addition, over 300,000 homes were permanently lost with at least 200,000 families requiring federal housing, not to mention the loss of thousands of jobs. The U.S. has a challenge on its hands, like no other, in terms of the expanse of uninhabitable land and infrastructure which is has been destroyed. In that effort, local, state and federal governments along with the private sector have been urged to proceed cautiously and as equitably as possible, according to numerous government officials and business leaders hit hardest in the communities most badly hurt. Congress has thus far approved appropriations of over $62 billion for the emergency financing of Hurricane Katrina. Figures for Hurricane Rita to date are just now being discussed so there will be more emergency funding for it as well as President Bush is expected to ask the Congress for a third special appropriation within the next three weeks. Of concern however, is how the money will spent, which contractors will be the recipients of these monies, how much the local communities will be able to have a fair chance of partaking in the restoration process and the essential oversight to alleviate waste and fraud. The Government Accounting Office (GAO) which monitors public spending on behalf of the Congress is expected to audit the contracts won by U.S. firms. Contracts have so far been secured for repairing the New Orleans’ flood levees, rebuilding naval facilities, providing temporary housing and mobile homes, providing trucks, ships, buses and planes and the immense task of removal of debris and hazardous materials. Contracts were awarded by the Army Corps of Engineers and FEMA. More than 15 contracts exceed $100 million with five worth $500 million or more. Additionally, more than the 80% of those contracts executed by FEMA were no-bid contracts or with limited competition in addition to guarantees that contracts will be given a certain profit. “You are likely to see the equivalent of disaster profiteering,” according to Danielle Brian, Director of the Project on Government Accountability, a non-profit government spending watchdog group. Richard L. Skinner, the Inspector General for the Department of Homeland Security, overseeing Hurricane Katrina contracts said, “When you do something like this, you increase the vulnerability for fraud, plain waste, abuse and mismanagement.” Skinner’s comments were in reference to two major contractors, also no-bid contracts, utilized in Iraq as well. One is Kellogg, Brown & Root (KBR), a subsidiary of Halliburton, now represented by Joe Allbaugh, President Bush’s former campaign manager, former Director of FEMA and friend of recently resigned FEMA Director Michael Brown. KBR is repairing damage to three naval bases as well as damage assessments, repairing roofs and restoring power. Skinner also said, “Bills have come in for deals that apparently were clinched with a handshake, with no documents to back them up.” The other contractor to which Skinner refers is the Shaw Group, also represented by Allbaugh. It is a Louisiana construction firm which won a $100 million contract from FEMA for housing and support services and a $100 million contract from the Army Corps of Engineers to pump floodwa- ters out of New Orleans. Additionally, AshBritt, Inc., a Pompano Beach, FL company, was awarded a $568 million contract for clean up in Mississippi as part of an ongoing contract with the Army Corps of Engineers, signed in 2003. In addition, Ashbritt was a client of the former lobbying firm of Governor Haley Barbour of Mississippi. Also of concern is the track record of recent work done in Iraq by KBR, including a five-year oil infrastructure contract instead of the standard oneyear contract. Whistleblower, Bunnatine Greenhouse, was the chief contracting officer for the Army Corps of Engineers, and has since been demoted after her protest to what she saw as unethically awarding such a contract to KBR. In addition, KBR was cited for lost property and equipment in Iraq as well as leaky pipelines, necessary to carry water to the oil fields which still are not working properly, thus delaying the production of oil to date. KBR also was responsible for rebuilding a pipeline network in Northern Iraq but could not complete the project for non-specified reasons. A government audit is presently in play regarding that project. Iraqi officials also have been critical of KBR for using foreign contractors and shoddy equipment, overseen by U.S. officials with little experience in the oil industry. Given the risk of graft and the need for accountability, Richard Skinner has just appointed Mathew Jadacki to the new Office of Hurricane Katrina Oversight. Jadacki was a former FEMA auditor. The Department of Homeland Security is one of 13 different agencies and departments to have inspector generals auditing hurricane contracts. President Bush recently said. “We’ll make sure your money is spent honestly by sending a team of inspector generals down there to review all expenditures.” The Congress also is drafting additional legislation in this oversight effort and also to investigate what went wrong with both Hurricane Katrina preparedness and its aftermath. The Office of Management and Budget wants its say in oversight too as well as the various local and state governments in the Gulf region. However, due to the potential for more bureaucratic overkill, resident businesses of the affected communities may get lost in the mix. While all government contracts supposedly require the preference for work going to the affected communities, many small businesses feel they simply cannot compete with multi-billion dollar corporations with contracts already in place. Will Nelson of the National Association of Minority Contractors, a nonprofit trade association, said that he went to Biloxi, MS two weeks ago to submit a bid on behalf of minority contractors and was shut out by local officials. “The door was slammed in our face,” he said. Additionally, access to key government personnel for small contractors in the region is nearly impossible for those left only with toll-free phone numbers to call. It will be largely left to the discretion of the large corporations to subcontract with those most in need who have the capability to work and to hire local workers, in an effort to get back their livelihoods. And it will take a great deal of perseverance and integrity on the part of all levels of government, agency officials and the private sector in order for hurricane contracting oversight not to become as entangled and as unwieldy as the relief effort itself. What is of concern to many in Congress is for proper oversight while contracts are being negotiated and not for a call for investigations after the fact. And others in Congress are wisely calling for revisiting pork barrel legislation recently passed by Congress for fiscal year 2006 such as the $286 million transportation bill which was cited for $24 billion in special projects or about 9% of the entirety. There will be so very many expenses yet to be realized at this juncture in the hurricane recovery effort which will require serious thinking on the part of our lawmakers, not for the benefit of their political lives, but for the benefit of the lives of the American people most tragically at a loss and for the future health of the U.S. economy. Hopefully, many this time will be up to the task. DIANE GRASSI THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 12 Commentary: Joyce Meyer and success. This kind of average, status quo life can lead to frustration and a feeling of being unfulfilled. A person who is excellent is one who exceeds the status quo. He does more than what is expected of him. He goes the extra mile—getting to work a little early and perhaps leaving a little late. He does what is right You and I have been given a tre- even when no one else is around. mendous gift in this life—the free- Excellence can be seen in many dom of choice. But with that free- areas of his life. He has an attitude dom comes responsibility. For every that says, “I’m going to take what I choice we make, there are certain have and do the very best I can with consequences we can expect. And it.” whatever we pursue in life is what God ordained a destiny for each we will receive. one of us, but that doesn’t mean it I believe there are three pri- will automatically happen. He also mary choices that are continually set before us: the choice to be lazy, the choice to be mediocre, and the choice to be excellent. Although the majority of mankind is stuck in the mire of mediocrity, those who pursue a walk of excellence find the real rewards. In fact, I don’t believe any of us can really be fulfilled unless we are striving to be the best we can be. I believe that cultivating a desire to become a person of excellence requires a clearer understanding of the differences between being lazy, mediocre, and excellent. Although we may not fit into the category of laziness or mediocrity exclusively, I think everyone has room for improvement. Of the three choices, laziness is the most destructive. A lazy man does just what he feels like doing, which is usually nothing. He wants everything to be easy, never difficult. He is normally not watchful, doesn’t plan ahead, and fails to take care of things. Sooner or later, everything—from his checkbook to the lives of his children—winds up in a mess. As a result, he is unhappy…and usually filled with jealousy, envy, and resentment over what others have. Although many people struggle with laziness, I believe that more often, people are tempted to accept a “middle of the road” mentality. This is the mindset that says, “I’m okay—I’m just as good as anyone else.” This mediocre type of thinking plagues the majority of our society, trapping incredible numbers of people somewhere between failure Lazy… Mediocre…Or Excellent? The Choice Is Yours! gave us the freedom of choice, and it is up to us to cooperate with God and make right choices. Wherever you are right now in your life, you got there through a series of choices. I realize that as children, other people made choices for us that may have been unwise or damaging. However, just because we started out somewhere doesn’t mean we have to finish there. God sets the same opportunities for success before everyone—His promises are available to whosoever will believe and obey His Word. Romans 2:11 says that …God shows no partiality [undue favor or unfairness; with Him one man is not different from another]. If you want your life to change, then your choices must change, and today is the best day of your life to begin. I challenge you to draw a line separating you from your past, and make the choice to move forward as a person of excellence. Surrender your soul—your mind, will and emotions—to God, and let Him give you His grace to see and choose the more excellent ways. JOYCE MEYER For more on this topic, you may order Joyce’s five-part series, Pursuing Excellence and Integrity, which is available by calling 1-800-727-9673 or by visiting www.joycemeyer.org. THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 13 You think you know what goes on in here? You don’t have a clue. Find Out What REALLY Was Happening At Cheetahs Available Now At All Las Vegas Borders Books THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 14 Commentary: Brent Jordan The Weightiest 16 Pages Ever Published? One point two ounces. Sixteen pages of newsprint and soul––the Penny Press: In my humble opinion, quite possibly the weightiest alternative newspaper ever published. I am astounded at what has been accomplished in those weekly 16 pages. I believe even the publisher / editor, Fred Weinberg himself, may underestimate what he has done. I was reminded of the miracle of the Penny Press, the other day when I responded to a blog (web log) entry by the senior editor of one of the other “alternative” newspapers in town (it claims “alternative” status even though it is owned and published by Stephens Media Group, the same publisher who puts out the Las Vegas Review Journal. And indeed, the senior editor in question has worked for the LVRJ and Stephens for years). The editor posted this: “Poor Republicans. It seems that inconsiderate bitch Mother Nature has fouled their plans to help the most needy citizens in America, the wealthy. GOP leaders in both House and Senate were all set to come to work this week and repeal the estate tax once and for all, cut entitlement programs, and get to work on private accounts in Social Security. “No more.” (Steve Sebelius) At first I thought it was parody; a satirical look at the pathetic group of “journalists” who have one agenda above all others: Hate Republicans. I admit I was shocked when I found out he was serious. This editor made the mistake of posting his views online where anyone and everyone could respond without the censorship or editing alterations under which he is normally protected. I, being an “anyone,” responded by questioning if he were truly serious in his taunting, jeering, childish gloating and apparent glee, that because of the hurricane disaster, the righteous agenda of returning taxpayers well-earned money to those who earned it was being derailed. His response not only confirmed that he was indeed serious (as serious as one of these people get in any case), but took the form of an angry, defensive, obtuse, even silly rebuttal that relied on wild, inane assumptions, conjecture, and a liberal dose of creative editing. The somewhat personal attack did not bother me (is there anything you can say to a former career strip club bouncer that he hasn’t already heard?), it was the incomprehensible childlike pouting of the man that was truly shocking. In a subsequent retort he even resorted to the protective “we” (Stephens Media) when he no longer felt comfortable facing me alone on the journalistic field of battle; (“We don’t think we misunderstood anything, and thus stand by our response...We’re fair-minded that way.”) This is a supposed news editor– –someone who puts forth and helps form opinion––and he was letting his overblown ego dictate and override his logic. It was as if he were screaming; “Who has the audacity to challenge my word?!” I compared this response to Fred Weinberg of the Penny Press: When Mr. Weinberg disagrees with something you say in his paper, he will come right out and tell you so. If he thinks you are wrong, he will tell you that you are wrong. If he thinks you are an idiot, he will tell you that also. (I would be disappointed with less from this proud Southwestern gentleman.) What he won’t do is edit out what he does not agree with. He will allow you to express your opinion, and if his differs, he will write his own response telling you why. Both side by side, for the world to see and judge. In reality, there is no comparison. It’s not the flaming card-carrying liberal point of view of the typical news editor that bothers me so much (have any opinion you want as long as you can back it up), as the fact that far too often these editors have no life experience from which to draw on for their opinions: From mama’s lap to high school to college to an internship to making a living writing about other peoples lives and experiences. I have a great deal of respect for formal education (I am currently working my butt off to get one myself), but never at the expense of life-earned education. Anyone who speaks with Fred Weinberg, or reads any of the writers of the Penny Press, can discern instantly that their opinions are hard earned through real life experiences. These writers (excluding myself) are obviously highly formally educated also, but it is the blend that makes their writing so valid. As opposed to nearly every other publication available, Fred Weinberg has put together an eclectic group for his paper. All their opinions run side by side, with equal weight and respect: A staunch Republican beside a Libertarian beside a Bible thumper beside an atheist beside a banker beside a former strip club bouncer...each with differing beliefs and opinions. Each with an equal opportunity to express those beliefs and opinions. That is a true alternative. That is a true free press. If you can find this type of diversity and freedom of the press anywhere else, let me know. I would like to include in my weekly reading. Some papers offer a mockery of dissenting views in their “letters to the editor” section: a sentence or two here and there that are carefully selected to be hammered down by an equally carefully selected deluge of counter responses. (I once had a letter to the editor printed in the LVRJ, and in response I was attacked, on a personal level, by no less than five letters over three consecutive days in the paper. Good to know I can illicit a response, at least.) Does it still qualify as “free press” if it only expresses one redundant view? I’m not sure. It is not very interesting or educational at the very least. I know for a fact that there are great people––genuine, honest editors––working in the “main stream” media––Thomas Mitchell of the LVRJ; a shining example. I often wonder how much of their genuine nature and honesty is allowed to shine through. It is a great honor to have the opportunity to express my opinions along side the other diverse, educated writers of the Penny Press. It is my honor because it makes me part of the weightiest sixteen pages ever published. BRENT KENTON JORDAN Editor’s note: We should point out that as of our 9-8-5 issue we are now being printed on the same press by the same company which owns Citylife and employs the editor to which Brent refers. In addition to owning a knee-jerk liberal weekly which exists to gather what we euphemistically call “adult” advertising, they are a fine commercial printer which also prints USA Today. We’re honored to be among their customers but to kill any rumor before it starts, we are still independently owned. THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 15 Pet Of The Week Adopt This Pet ! Allie is a wonderful tabby and white cat. She does okay with other cats, however she would enjoy being the only cat in the home. Allie loves to perch in windows, and watch what is happening outdoors. She is spayed and current on yearly vaccinations. Allie is 2 1/2 years old. If you are looking for a pet we will do our best to find you a pet that fits your needs and you will fit theirs. This is just one of the pets awaiting a loving home.To inquire about a certain pet you can e-mail us at: adoptions@animaladoptionsltd.org or call 361-2484. Also, we need kitty litter and food donations. Betty Honn founded Southern Nevada’s first no-kill, non-profit animal sanctuary in 1968. Since then, volunteers, contributors and patrons have made our daily operations possible. Betty passed away in 1997, but not before saving countless thousands of animals from needless euthanasia. Her daughter, Teresa now continues the work, and is committed to fulfilling her mother’s vision.For more than 30 years, from kittens to Kodiaks, Betty Honn’s Animal Adoptions, Ltd. has provided refuge for animals. When You're At The Speedway, Eat Where The Pros Eat! The FAST LANE Cafe Footsteps Away From The Speedway 6825 Speedway Blvd 702-651-9977 WE CATER SOUVENIRS, DIE CAST, COLLECTIBLES 13" Italian Sub $5.96 13" French Dip Sub $5.96 3 Egg Breakfast $4.96 THE PENNY PRESS, SEPTEMBER 29, 2005 PAGE 16
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