News Cut

News Cut: November 30, 2010 Archive

Guilt trip (5x8 - 11/30/10)

Posted at 7:23 AM on November 30, 2010 by Bob Collins (2 Comments)
Filed under: Five by 8

1) BEGGING FOR ATTENTION

Oh, it's on in Moorhead! A Moorhead reader's letter to the Fargo Forum, describing the Salvation Army bellringers as "noisy" beggars, didn't go unnoticed. "Went to my local Hornbacher's store and was instantly accosted by the first beggar of the year. You know, some guy wearing red and clanging around with some ridiculous bell begging for my hard-earned money so that they can give it to people that do not work as hard as I do," Richard Kodadek wrote.

"We apologize, but we think we're out there for the right reasons: to help other people," the head of the bell-ringing effort told the Forum.

The Red Kettle campaign is behind last year in almost every location in the state.

2) PAWLENTY'S NEW PARDON CONTROVERSY

A couple of months ago, I spent an afternoon at a meeting of the Minnesota Board of Pardons. Dozens of people who had already paid their debt to society begged to have their names cleared, mostly so they could get a job. Most were rejected and a headline on the front page of the Star Tribune this morning is why:

Suspect in sex assault case won pardon in 2008

Jeremy Giefer served time for having sex with his 14-year-old girlfriend (he later married her)and received a pardon from the panel, which includes Gov. Tim Pawlenty. Giefer is charged now with sexually assaulting another girl before and after the pardon.

The newspaper considers whether the pardon will hurt Pawlenty's presidential chances, comparing it with Mike Huckabee's commutations. Huckabee commuted the sentence of a man who -- a year ago yesterday -- allegedly killed four cops in Alaska Washington state.

But the two aren't close to being the same. A pardon merely clears the name of someone who is already free of his/her prison and jail time and has been for more than 10 years. A commutation actually lets someone out of prison.

Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Times today reports on the difficulty offenders are having finding work. It's never been easy to get a job after prison, now it's pretty much impossible. "In a bad economy, there are fewer jobs, and when people don't have jobs, they're more likely to commit another crime and get sent back to prison," said John Schmitt, a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a Washington think .

3) "IT'S THE PHOTOGRAPHER"

Joao Silva, a contract photographer for the New York Times, stepped on a land mine while on patrol in Afghanistan with a group of American soldiers. He lost both of his legs and has suffered internal injuries. The Times has taken the memory card out of his camera and made this slideshow.

Even after he was badly hurt, he kept shooting.

afghan_photog.jpg

4) IF A CONGRESSMAN SPEAKS BEFORE AN EMPTY HOUSE, DOES HE MAKE A NOISE?

An Indiana congressman got upset yesterday when the House refused to recognize him. What makes Steve Buyer's moment of fame most fascinating is there was nobody else on the floor to be recognized. As usual in Washington, the House chamber was empty except for the one representative looking for some C-SPAN face time.

5) THIS IS WHAT NET NEUTRALITY LOOKS LIKE

For months, tech journalists have struggled to explain why net neutrality is, and why it's an issue before Congress. Comcast and Netflix have solved the dilemma. Last week Netflix announced a new pricing option for people who stream its movies over their computers or Internet TV. Now, Comcast wants to know who's going to pay for all that bandwidth on the Internet? Netflix says Comcast is demanding extra fees to carry the additional programming and is threatening to put up a roadblock between you and Netflix.

"Comcast's action amounts to setting up a 'toll booth' on the Internet," Cecilia Kang, the tech writer of the Washington Post, says.

Bonus: Bob Dylan's handwritten lyrics to "The Times They Are A Changing" are for sale.

TODAY'S QUESTION

President Obama has frozen federal employees' pay for two years to fight the deficit, but union officials say the freeze won't help much and unfairly hurts working people. Is it fair to freeze the pay of federal workers?

WHAT WE'RE DOING

Midmorning (9-11 a.m.) - First hour: San Francisco takes aim at McDonald's Happy Meals by requiring restaurant meals to meet certain nutritional guidelines in order to include a toy with the food purchase. Will it change our children's health Should parents or the government be policing meals?

Second hour: VocalEssence singers give their annual Midmorning performance and best effort at nearly unsingable Christmas carols.

Midday (11 a.m. - 1 p.m.) - First hour: Former ambassador Barbara Bodine discusses the diplomatic implications of Wikileaks disclosure of classified communications.

Second hour: A debate from the Intelligence Squared series about screening vs. profiling of airline passengers.

One of the people who participated in the debate, Asra Nomani, has written more about why she would accept profiling by airport screeners:

In the debate, I said, "Profile me. Profile my family," because, in my eyes, we in the Muslim community have failed to police ourselves. In an online posting of the Intelligence Squared video, a Muslim viewer called me an "Uncle Tom."

Talk of the Nation (1-3 p.m.) - First hour: The legality of Wikileaks

Second hour: TBA

All Things Considered (3-6:30 p.m.) - Many of Minnesota's 52,000 Hmong residents arrived 30 years ago as refugees. Some left their homeland in the mountains of Laos, often with little more than the clothing they wore. MPR's Dan Olson will report that although Hmong poverty is still an issue, poverty rates are down sharply and life for many Hmong is improving.

(2 Comments)

Is Minneapolis the new Cleveland?

Posted at 8:37 AM on November 30, 2010 by Bob Collins (5 Comments)
Filed under: Economy

cleveland_skyline.jpg

Whatever recovery was underway in home market values has collapsed in the Minneapolis area. The Case Shiller Index for September, which measures the resale value of homes across the country, has shown another drop in the Twin Cities. Home values dropped an astonishing 2.1% from August to September. Only perennial economic dog Cleveland had a worse showing. Nationwide, values dropped .7%. The numbers are not seasonally adjusted.

The picture isn't much brighter compared to a year ago. While prices nationwide have increased .6% in the last year, all of the gains in the Twin Cities have been wiped out. Market values have dropped 1.2%.

The numbers don't get any better when seasonally adjusted. The values dropped 2.2% from August in the Minneapolis area. That puts the region dead last in the survey of 20 large cities. They dropped 1.3% over a year ago.

The numbers propel a renewed debate over whether government attempts to stimulate the economy really help, or just delay the inevitable bottom. The end of a government tax credit and near 10 percent unemployment have led to a decrease in demand, delaying a recovery in the industry that precipitated the worst recession since the 1930s, Bloomberg said.

City
Diff from August
Diff. from year ago
Washington
0.3%
4.5%
Las Vegas
0.1%
-3.5%
Los Angeles
-0.1%
4.4%
New York
-0.3%
-0.1%
Seattle
-0.6%
-2.6%
Nationwide
-0.7%
0.6%
Tampa
-0.8%
-4.3%
San Francisco
-0.9%
5.5%
San Diego
-1.0%
5.0%
Denver
-1.0%
-1.6%
Atlanta
-1.0%
-3.1%
Charlotte
-1.0%
-3.7%
Miami
-1.2%
-2.7%
Boston
-1.3%
0.4%
Detroit
-1.3%
-3.0%
Phoenix
-1.5%
-1.5%
Chicago
-1.5%
-5.6%
Dallas
-1.6%
-2.6%
Portland
-1.9%
-3.6%
Minneapolis
-2.1%
-1.2%
Cleveland
-3.0%
-1.9%
(5 Comments)

Big gas price jump in Minnesota

Posted at 11:50 AM on November 30, 2010 by Bob Collins (14 Comments)
Filed under: Economy, Energy

gas_price_sign_11_10.jpg

General Motors picked a great day to roll its first Chevy Volt off the assembly line. The price of gasoline in the Twin Cities jumped overnight to near $3 a gallon. This is the highest price we've seen since the economy collapsed in 2008.





Twin Cities Historical Gas Price Charts Provided by GasBuddy.com

Is the Volt the answer to higher gas prices? Maybe. But when it came off the assembly line today -- it'll be in showrooms in a few weeks -- it came with a price tag of about $41,000.

It also came with broken promises. The EPA says the car will get about 60 miles per gallon when it's using its electrical and gas systems. But after about 50 miles or so, it's a pretty ordinary car, according to PC World:

According to the EPA, Volt drivers will only be able to get around 35 total miles of operation before the car's battery goes kaput and the gas engine takes over. After that, you'll be able to continue on for around 344 miles gas-only, but the car's fuel economy drops to around 37 miles per gallon sans electrical assistance.

That's a substantial drop in performance from the promises GM made about the Volt. Early predictions were it would get more than 200 miles per gallon. And it still might if you drive only short trips and are able to tool around town on battery-only.

But don't expect to negotiate much with the dealer. GM will only make about $1,000 on each car.

Gas mileage hasn't been a big concern for a few years now, but from the indications on the signpost today, that's about to change.

(14 Comments)

Death in a classroom

Posted at 1:02 PM on November 30, 2010 by Bob Collins
Filed under: Crime and Justice

Samuel Hengel died today. He's the 15-year-old who held a Wisconsin classroom hostage yesterday until police stormed the room. He shot himself.

If there's any positive in the aftermath of the tragedy, it may be that a kid bringing a gun to a classroom is still unusual enough to make the news. Everyone seems to be asking the right questions: How did it come to this for a kid? What can be done to keep it from happening to someone else's child.

In other similar incidents, those questions had a somewhat easier answer. The shooter was bullied or teased (as was apparently the case in Cold Spring, Minnesota in 2003), or maybe prescription drugs played a part (as some suggested in the school shootings in Red Lake in 2005)

But six of Hengel's best friends were in the classroom he held at gunpoint yesterday, and none of those friends has any clue what set him off:

The most frightening possibility in the aftermath of the incident is that it didn't happen for any particular reason.

A dead end in Powderhorn Park

Posted at 1:22 PM on November 30, 2010 by Bob Collins (3 Comments)
Filed under: Crime and Justice

Hennepin County prosecutors today charged a 16 year old boy with the sexual assault of a mother cross-country skiing with her kids in Powderhorn Park in Minneapolis last Wednesday evening. The boy, and others, are also charged with sexually assaulting two girls in a nearby garage later in the evening.

MPR's Brandt Williams is covering the boy's arraignment in court today and will have the story later on today, but while no one has been proven guilty, we wonder nonetheless how a kid grows up to allegedly behave that way.

The top of the charging petition, released by prosecutors, may hold a clue:

petition_unknown.jpg

(3 Comments)

Mixed reviews for Don't Ask, Don't Tell

Posted at 1:05 PM on November 30, 2010 by Bob Collins
Filed under: War

The long-awaited study of whether openly-gay people should be allowed to serve in the military is out, and there's plenty in it for both sides of the issue to point to to support their position.

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said opposition is strongest in male-dominated combat units. He also said the upper crust of the military is "less sanguine" about repealing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" than he is.

That might be enough to kill the effort to repeal it, although Gates insisted "a repeal would require some changes of regulation, training, education, and strong principled leadership up and down the command."

About 19 percent of military members surveyed said they would think about leaving the military if gays are allowed to serve. The number, however, rises to 38% among the Marines only.

One in five spouses of military members said they would try to move off base if gay people were allowed to live on base.

Just before indicating that 40 to 60 percent of combat units object to homosexuals in their ranks, Gates described repeal as having "low risk."

Gates urged Americans to "resist the urge to lure our troops into the politics of this issue."

You can find the full report here.

Wisconsin jeweler urges diamond purchases before Second Coming

Posted at 3:27 PM on November 30, 2010 by Bob Collins (4 Comments)
Filed under: Economy, Religion

Christmas is over-the-top season for jewelry store advertising. There's still a lot of the holiday season left to go, but a Superior, Wisconsin jeweler has already won this year's award for most-memorable TV commercial.

Larry Falter of LTD Jewelers is running a "Second Coming Sale," based on the belief that Jesus is returning to earth very soon. In the meantime, his diamonds are half off.

"I've had people come in and want to talk about Jesus Christ and I've had people come and say, 'Where are those diamond earrings? I want to buy them for half off," Mr. Falter told me this afternoon.

Falter has been running TV ads "for years and years," but this is the first time he's brought his religious beliefs into the mix. He recently returned from a visit to Israel as part of Jews for Jesus. "I just thought we would have some fun with it all," he said. "I haven't had any negative comments, but there could be some I don't know about. People are not responding because to them it's a negative. But I'm OK with it. We have signs in the store that talk about having a 50-percent-off Second Coming sale."

The need for diamonds and the Second Coming generally don't go together very well. "They don't," he acknowledges. "But my point is in the here and now if you're looking to do this or that, here we are. People can hear one message and maybe do something with that or not with regard to the Lord, and the other thing they can do something with -- or not -- is where to shop."

Falter doesn't see the ad, currently running on two Duluth TV stations, as being the beginning of a series on the Second Coming, but he's not ruling it out. "I'm a little more out there right now as a Christian businessman. Will I find I want to do more like this in the future? I don't know. It's just something that was timely for me right now, maybe because of my own personal convictions and having those reinforced by the trip to Israel, and also by the fourth quarter in any jewelry business being the most important to do business in. What will I do next year? I couldn't honestly give you a truthful answer."

For now, he's more concerned with the economy. "I think people are going to shop more strongly than in recent years," he said. But he's worried the publicity surrounding Friday's meeting of a presidential commission charged with finding ways to cut the U.S. deficit will kill consumer enthusiasm.

"If they hit the hammer on this really hard, it could set a shock wave of 'Maybe, I should hold back a little bit,'" he said.

Update 8:36 a.m. Wed. - I wasn't aware of this yesterday but Aaron J. Brown has written about this ad. Find it on his excellent blog.

(4 Comments)
November 2010
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