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Transgender Caught Taking Pictures of 13-yr-old girls at Target

TEXAS: Transgender Caught Taking Pictures of 13-yr-old girls at Target – LGBT’s Leader: She was born…

A transgender ‘woman’’, James Goebel, was caught taking photos of teens girls using the restroom at a Dallas area Target store.
One of the victims, a 13 year old girl, said she could hear someone’s iphone camera snapping and was curious, so she looked under the stall only to see the camera phone in her face. She ran out and told her father, who held the door shut until police arrived.
When authorities arrived, they arrested 28 year old James Goebel and searched her phone for evidence. They found over 700 photos of young girls using the restroom, from dates ranging in the past 5 months.

Dallas’s local LGBT community has come together to stand in defence with Goebel, claiming she should not be persecuted because she was “born a pedophile and therefore can not change her sexual orientation”. This comment comes from the leader of Dallas’s LGBT Aqua Squad, Dorothy Wright.
The United States does not currently view pedophilia as a sexual orientation, but this is something that Dallas LGBT Aqua Squad is hoping to change.

Illinois is Broke yet look at these Unsustainable Pensions

March 24, 2016

Top 20 State Legislator Pension Recipients

By Mark Wachtler
March 24, 2016. Springfield. (ONN) Illinois and Chicago may have the most bankrupt and unfunded pension funds in the country. But for members of the elite establishment – former State Representatives and State Senators – there is apparently no shortage of taxpayer funds to make them and their family members multi-millionaires. Here is a list of the top recipients of the Illinois General Assembly pension program. Readers will find some very familiar names.

Gary Hannig, former IL State Rep, will receive an estimated lifetime pension of $5.24 million for working part time as a State Representative. Image courtesy of WN.com.

Recently, Taxpayers United of America released a list of the largest State Legislature pension recipients. Illinois State Representatives and State Senators have their own separate pension plan. Since being a State Legislator is a part time job and was never meant to be a life-long career, one wonders why they need a pension plan in the first place. Especially when many of the esteemed members of this list are double or triple-dippers – receiving multiple taxpayer-funded pensions at the same time.



Former Illinois State Reps and State Senators receiving the highest pension payments (fromTaxpayers United of America and Reboot Illinois):
 
1. Gary Hannig
State Representative (D-Litchfield)
Estimated lifetime pension: $5.24 million
 
2. Dan Rutherford
State Treasurer, State Senator (R-Chenoa)
Estimated lifetime pension: $4.96 million
 
3. Judy Erwin
State Representative (D-Chicago)
Estimated lifetime pension: $4.94 million
 
4. Jim Edgar
Governor (R)
Estimated lifetime pension: $4.75 million



5. Robert Molaro
State Representative (D-Chicago)
Estimated lifetime pension: $4.31 million
 
6. Thomas Homer
State Representative (D-Canton)
Estimated lifetime pension: $4.24 million
 
7. Carl Hawkinson
State Senator (R-Galesburg)
Estimated lifetime pension: $4.11 million
 
8. Samuel McGrew
State Representative (D-Galesburg)
Estimated lifetime pension: $3.92 million
 
9. John Friedland
State Senator (R-South Elgin)
Estimated lifetime pension: $3.89 million
 
10. Edward Petka
State Senator (R-Plainfield)
Estimated lifetime pension: $3.68 million
 
11. Arthur Berman
State Senator (D-Chicago)
Estimated lifetime pension: $3.67 million



12. Roland Burris
Attorney General, Comptroller (D)
Estimated lifetime pension: $3.46 million
 
13. James Thompson
Governor (R)
Estimated lifetime pension: $3.38 million
 
14. Timothy Degan
State Senator (D-Chicago)
Estimated lifetime pension: $3.32 million
 
15. Pat Quinn
Governor (D)
Estimated lifetime pension: $3.25 million
 
16. Lee Daniels
State Representative (R-Elmhurst)
Estimated lifetime pension: $2.81 million
 
17. Richard M. Daley
State Senator, State’s Attorney, Chicago Mayor (D-Chicago)
Estimated lifetime pension: $2.28 million



18. Doris Karpiel
State Senator (R-Carol Stream)
Estimated lifetime pension: $2.02 million
 
19. Emil Jones
State Senator (D-Chicago)
Estimated lifetime pension: $1.66 million
 
20. James ‘Pate’ Philip
State Senator (R-Addison)
Estimated lifetime pension: $1.52 million
 
*Lifetime pension amounts based on an average life expectancy of 85 and a Constitutionally-required 3 percent annual cost of living increase. Figures do not include recipients’ other taxpayer-funded pensions from Chicago, Cook County or other counties, municipalities or government agencies.

Gary L Good 2016 Memorial Day Speech – Channahon IL

Gary L Good 2016 Memorial Day Speech – Channahon IL

Memorial Day Remember the Difference
Memorial Day Remember the Difference

Good morning. It is an honor to be here today speaking with you on this important American Commemoration Day. Before I begin, I want to say thank you to President Schumacher and the Trustees for inviting me to speak this morning. As she just told you, my name is Gary Good. I retired from the US Army as a lieutenant colonel on April 1st, less than 8 weeks ago. Today, I have returned to my beloved Illinois to continue my service to the people of Will County … To make Illinois Incredible once again.
As we stand here today, I want us to consider this same date 94 years ago … In 1922. On this date, May 30, 1922, Chief Justice William H Taft dedicated the Lincoln Memorial on our National Mall and presented it to the President, Warren Harding. As these men stood before that 19 foot tall statue of Abraham Lincoln sitting in that marble chair, looking upon the National Mall, it must have been a humbling moment.

Lincoln Memorial
Lincoln Memorial Statue

This man, this Illinois man, who led our nation through the abolition of slavery by persevering in our Civil War which took the lives of more than 2% of our population … More than 600,000 men and women. To one side were the words of his Gettysburg Address when President Lincoln reminded those in attendance that it had been a mere four score and seven years, 87 years ago, since 56 men had signed their death warrants when they Declared Independence from King George III and declared the equality of man. How could those men say anything that would be more meaningful than Lincoln’s words or the actions of those nearly 8,000 dead at Gettysburg who had given their lives so their nation might live. As he said, “we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground… These brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract.”
That marble floor has held the weight of many, many people. Those people look upon those words and seldom comprehend the weight those words carried as they commemorated that battlefield … Words that could be spoken in so many more places. Those eyes of Abraham Lincoln look out across the National Mall to the Washington Monument, the obelisk dedicated to the first leader of our nation who understood selfless service, even upon making the decision to leave office when most everyone wanted him to stay. He was led by a greater power, by the hand of God, that to ld him that a democracy cannot be held in the hands of a single man or small group of men … lest it become controlled by a despot seizing life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness from some to give to others … those in HIS favor.
Beyond that tall, proud monument stands the US Capitol where the words of President John F Kennedy rang-out across the Mall and around the world … “ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” In the half-century prior to his remarks more than 500,000 Americans had given their lives in World War I, World War II, and Korea. Each of those lives had stood their ground, had done their job, had fought for freedom … And more often than not, their death paid the price for another to continue on … For one of their brothers-in-arms to come home and marry, have children, and grandchildren.
As I look at those assembled here today, I see hats, shirts, uniforms, and more that are quiet reminders of those young men and women who died to allow us to return here today. And, that is why we stand here to remember. We do not stand here for us, the veterans … we stand here, dedicating our time, to remember the Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines, Coasties, and civilians who died to preserve our freedoms. This day was first commemorated as Decoration Day on this very day, May 30, 1868 when citizens in Charleston, South Carolina went to the cemeteries to place flowers and others decorations upon the graves of Union and Confederate Soldiers killed in the Civil War. The practice flourished in just a few years … until it became a national holiday when Americans take time to remember.
Five years ago on this very day, May 30, 2011, I was in Afghanistan. I was an Army Strategist working on the planning of Afghan Security Forces and the US forces who would support them … Planning that would end-up on the desk of the President of the United States and other leaders around the world. But, on that day, we too took time to commemorate our fellow Americans who had given their lives. I worked in a multinational headquarters for an American Lieutenant General. My office had an Australian, a Norwegian, a German, a Pole, a French officer, and a British officer. The British officer, a Colonel, came forward and offered a special commemoration … A special gift to memorialize all the dead on this very American of days … He played the bagpipes for the ceremony. It was hauntingly beautiful to hear those bagpipes playing Taps and the rest … Knowing that the sounds that usually permeated the air in Kabul … were all halted to the sound of bagpipes commemorating the dead.

Ronald Reagan at Normandy
President Ronald Reagan at Normandy

Amazingly, those same sounds had been talked about in another hallowed place by another great citizen of Illinois … Ronald Reagan. At the D-Day commemoration in 1984, Ronald Reagan, harkening to his kindred Illinois brother, Lincoln, once again used time to take us back to a terrible, but triumphant day, in history. He took us back forty years to the D-Day invasion and spoke of the 225 US Army Rangers who scaled the walls of the cliffs at Normandy to destroy German artillery that would rain down upon Omaha Beach and kill many, many Allied Invaders if those Rangers failed. As their daggers dug into the precipice of the cliff and pulled their tired bodies over the edge, they fought on to be triumphant … And only 90 remained to fight another day. 135 had died or been severely injured, but each of those lives given saved the lives of untold numbers of American, British, Canadians, and more. Reagan went on to tell the story of a British regiment holding a bridge but terribly outnumbered. They heard the sounds of bagpipes and wondered if they were dead already … Until they saw their comrades in arms coming down the way with reinforcements. As Reagan stated, once again like Lincoln … his Illinois brother invoked God and the works of his divine hand when he said, “they had the rock hard belief of every man that day, that D-Day, that Providence would have a great hand in the events that would unfold here; that God was an ally in this great cause.”
And, that brings us back to Lincoln and the memorial we began with… Around him … Now … Many years after that commemoration on May 30, 1922, the USA has dedicated its National Mall to those who have given their lives in defense of the hallowed ground that is The United States of America … This City upon a Hill. The eyes of his 19 foot marble statue gaze from his left … Where we commemorate the 58,307 Vietnam dead by name … over to the center where the World War II monument commemorates the more than 400,000 dead with 4,048 stars …a star for each 100 of them … following over to his right where we commemorate the Korean War with a haunting platoon of soldiers on patrol and the 36,516 dead. Southwest of the Lincoln Memorial stands Robert E. Lee’s former estate, Arlington, which the Union seized when he took his commission from the Confederacy … And they buried the first Union dead in his front yard. Today, more than 14,000 are interred there … A moving place dedicated to those who gave their lives in war … AND those who returned home because of them …. But wanted to rest side by side with their brothers-in-arms.
We here in Illinois are proud of our dedication to preserving Liberty. Time and again around our great state, we have created places of memorial to remember those who gave their all to defend freedom and preserve Liberty. At my beloved Alma Mater, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, we play football in Memorial Stadium … Dedicated initially to those who died in World War I and then extended to those who died in World War II. Our beloved Chicago Bears, who wear their blue and orange in homage to George Halas’s Illinois Alma Mater colors, play in Soldier Field, dedicated to the US Soldiers who died in World War I. Just down the road in Elwood, we have Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery which contains more than 32,000 interred remains.
Today, we commemorate the dead … Because of them, we stand here today. You stand here with me … Many of you might know the name or names of those who died and allowed you to stand here. While I was a young man in the Army, I was back at Fort Rucker, AL where I had completed flight school and flew Blackhawk helicopters. Seven years before, CW3 Michael Durant had been shot down in his Blackhawk in Mogadishu, Somalia. He knew the names of the two men who had saved his life … Gary Gordon and Randy Shugart … these two men, made famous in the movie Blackhawk down … they demanded to be placed with CW3 Durant … knowing they would likely not come back alive. This is the way of the warrior … to stand when no one else will … at the side of his brother-in-arm. These two men received the Medal of Honor like so many of our Medal recipients do … posthumously. CW3 Durant spoke to my class of young captains about the debt he can never repay.
It is hard for those who have never served to connect a name on a wall, or a star on a monument to their own lives and see the ties that bind their lives to those who paid the ultimate sacrifice … It is hard to completely empathize when they watch the old man in Saving Private Ryan as tears roll down his face at Normandy. He might be a movie character, but those tears have watered many a grave around the world.
But, we must try … and this is the day we do so … we take a deep breath and explain as best we can.
For that reason, we must remember, and live, Ronald Reagan’s final words standing on that cliff at Normandy 32 years ago next week …
“Let us make a vow to our dead. Let our actions say to them the words for which General Matthew Ridgway listened, ‘I will not fail thee nor forsake thee.’ Strengthened by their courage, heartened by their valor, and borne by their memory, let us continue to stand for the ideal for which they lived and died.”
Let us never forget, and may our state step forward once again and be the Incredible state it once was … A state that defends the liberty of all … Justly. God Bless you all, God Bless our Fallen, and God Bless Illinois.
Thank you.
Gary L. Good
Lieutenant Colonel, US Army, Retired

Memorial Day remembrance of those who died in service to our country

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In remembrance of those who died in service to our country . . . Originally known as Decoration Day, this day was established in honor of those who perished during the Civil War.   It was not until after World War I that the observance was expanded to honor those who have died in all American wars.  In 1971, Memorial Day was declared a national holiday by an act of Congress.
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Three years after the Civil War ended, on May 5, 1868, General John Logan, commander of an organization of Union veterans, established Decoration Day as a time for the nation to decorate the graves of the war dead with flowers.  It is believed that May 30 was chosen because flowers would be in bloom all over the country.  General Logan’s order for his posts to decorate graves in 1868 “with the choicest flowers of springtime” urged:  “We should guard their graves with sacred vigilance. … Let pleasant paths invite the coming and going of reverent visitors and fond mourners.  Let no neglect, no ravages of time, testify to the present or to the coming generations that we have forgotten as a people the cost of a free and undivided republic.”

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Although many cities in the North and the South in 1866 claimed to be the birthplace of Memorial Day, the official birthplace was declared by Congress and President Lyndon Johnson in 1966 to be Waterloo, New York.  (NOTE:  A stone in a Carbondale, Illinois cemetery carries the statement that the first Decoration Day ceremony took place on April 29, 1866 in Carbondale, the wartime home of Major General Logan.) 

 
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In December 2000, to ensure the sacrifices of America ’s fallen heroes are never forgotten, Congress passed “The National Moment of Remembrance Act”.  The National Moment of Remembrance encourages all Americans to pause wherever they are at 3 p.m. local time on Memorial Day for a minute of silence to remember and honor those who have died in service to the nation.  As Moment of Remembrance founder Carmella LaSpada states: “It’s a way we can all help put the memorial back in Memorial Day.”
http://www.va.gov/opa/speceven/memday/history.asp
History of Memorial Day (3-minute video):   http://www.history.com/topics/holidays/memorial-day-history

In honor and in memory of our fallen service men and women, we celebrate Memorial Day, May 30, 2016.

Our World War II 'Boys of Fury' and the Prayer Behind the Barn

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MAY 30, 2016
Our World War II ‘Boys of Fury’ and the Prayer Behind the Barn
Adam Andrzejewski
CONTRIBUTOR
Family Legacy: Gathering on Mother’s Day 2016 are 26 of 79 descendants of my grandfather, Sgt. Donald (Marna) Norris, in St. Charles, Ill.
Family Legacy: Gathering on Mother’s Day 2016 are 26 of 79 descendants of my grandfather, Sgt. Donald (Marna) Norris, in St. Charles, Ill.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
Family Legacy: Gathering on Mother’s Day 2016 are 26 of 79 descendants of my grandfather, Sgt. Donald (Marna) Norris, in St. Charles, Ill.
Family Legacy: Gathering on Mother’s Day 2016 are 26 of 79 descendants of my grandfather, Sgt. Donald (Marna) Norris, in St. Charles, Ill.
Because of the battlefield courage exhibited by my grandfather and his Army lieutenant (1944-1945), my family received a generational legacy of American abundance, freedom and liberty. Here’s our story.
The 2014 film Fury starring Brad Pitt showcased the Sherman tank commanders of World War II in the European theatre. While American tanks were lighter, more maneuverable and easier to fix, the German tanks possessed heavier armor and bigger guns. Therefore, battlefield victory was an achievement requiring smarts, guts, quick-decision making and learned instincts.
My grandfather, Sgt. Donald Norris of Sugar Grove, Ill, and Lt. John Howard of Winnetka, Ill fought in the 745th Tank Battalion, First Infantry Division alongside each other in a three tank, fifteen-man unit. Both fought from the earliest days of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944. Both defended and crossed the Ludendorff Bridge over River Rhine at Remagen, Germany moments before its destruction on St. Patrick’s Day, 1945. While both officers received battlefield commission and promotion, Howard meritoriously earned two Silver Stars and two Purple Hearts; Norris earned the Bronze Star and carried a piece of molten tank turret in his calf until his peaceful death in 1990.
Both men depended on each other to survive the war. Here’s just one of their stories:
During the block-by-block cleanup of German cities, my grandfather enjoyed the warmth of his woolen cap rather than the chill of the “steel pot” helmet, especially during cold weather. Lt. Howard spotted Norris, and would have none of it – ordering Norris to put the helmet back on. Soon after an unseen German pillbox disabled my grandfather’s tank. Bailing out, Norris took a sniper shot to the head. The steel pot, though dented, held strong.
On this Memorial Day 2016, I’m only able to write this piece because of Lt. Howard’s forceful directive to my grandfather. It was a generational gift culminating in 79 descendants. Surviving the war meant that my grandparents Don and Marna Norris could raise ten children, including my mother Janet. Don and Marna would have 23 grandchildren. Today, my girls are three of  their 46 great-grandchildren.
Lt. John Howard (left) and Sgt. Donald Norris (right) – from the Howard photo archives of World War II
 

AFSCME battle to increase wages at taxpayer expense

The state’s largest government-worker union has no strike fund, but refuses to agree to a contract taxpayers can afford.
The union-backed arbitration bill failed, but Illinois’ largest government-worker union is still without a contract.
Now that House Bill 580 is out, the focus on the state’s negotiations with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees shifts to the impasse proceedings pending before the Illinois Labor Relations Board. Should that board determine that the two parties are at impasse, Gov. Bruce Rauner could implement his last offer to AFSCME – and AFSCME could go on strike.
Following the failure of HB 580, AFSCME Council 31 Executive Director Roberta Lynchindicated that an AFSCME strike is a possibility: “If [Rauner] imposes those demands, public service workers will be forced to work under his terms or go out on strike.”
Since July 2015, AFSCME and the state have entered into three tolling agreements, which bound the union and the governor to continue negotiating in good faith until either a contract is reached or impasse occurs. According to the agreements, if the parties disagree on whether impasse, or stalemate, has been reached, either side could submit the issue to the Illinois Labor Relations Board.IPI160213asusual
Negotiations came to a halt in January, when AFSCME’s lead negotiator said to the governor’s representatives: “I have nothing else to say and am not interested in hearing what you have to say at this point – carry that message back to your principals.” Thereafter, Rauner asked the labor board to determine that the parties have reached impasse under the state’s labor laws.
What’s next
afscme_Madigan
 
Should the board agree that the parties are at an impasse, the governor could implement his last and best offer. AFSCME, in turn, could decide to strike. On the other hand, if the board concludes that the two sides have not reached impasse, negotiations will continue.
Despite the fact that AFSCME has no strike fund – and the average employee would lose$8,000 in salary and benefits for each month of a strike – Lynch’s comment indicates that she may direct AFSCME’s workers to go on strike should the board determine the parties are at impasse.
AFSCME’s refusal to consider contract provisions that could ease the financial burden on the state’s taxpayers stands in sharp contrast to at least 18 other unions that have already ratified contracts that bring labor costs more in line with what taxpayers can afford.
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For example, on May 17 the Illinois Federation of Teachers, representing educators at the Illinois School for the Deaf, ratified a collective bargaining agreement that includes provisions that will help address the state’s ongoing financial crisis, including a four-year temporary wage freeze, implementation of merit pay for conscientious workers, and changes to the state-provided health insurance program that allows employees to keep their current premiums, maintain their current coverage, or mix and match to best suit their needs.
The Teamsters reached an agreement with the state in August 2015. That agreement includes a four-year wage freeze, continuation of a 40-hour workweek, and the implementation of a bonus system for employees meeting or exceeding expectations.
Yet AFSCME has repeatedly rejected similar provisions, continuing to demand guaranteedfour-year wage increases, platinum-level health insurance coverage at little to no cost to union members, and a workweek that includes overtime for workers after 37.5 hours.
It could be months before there is final resolution on the question of an impasse and, therefore, before AFSCME could legally go on strike. Hearings before an administrative law judge, or ALJ, began in April and are scheduled through May 27. The parties will then submit post-hearing written arguments. Because the timetable will depend on the parties’ schedules, it could be four to eight weeks before the parties submit these final briefs – meaning, at the earliest, the parties will submit their briefs toward the end of June.
Once the ALJ has reviewed the record and the parties’ final written arguments, the ALJ will issue a decision. That decision will be binding on the parties unless one party appeals to the five-member panel of the Illinois Labor Relations Board. But the appeals process does not end with the board; the party disputing the board’s ultimate decision can then appeal to the Illinois Appellate Court, and then to the Illinois Supreme Court. Even if the state courts expedite the appeal, the appeals process would add weeks or months to the impasse timeline.
But the longer the timeline, and the longer AFSCME clings to its unreasonable demands, the easier it is to see that AFSCME stands apart from other unions in the state – and against the taxpayers. Other unions have recognized the state’s financial limitations. It’s time for AFSCME to do the same.

TAGS: AFSCME: American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees

Memorial Day

Memorial Day
David A. Lombardo 5/29/2016
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Monday is Memorial Day, and few people have the vaguest notion of what that means. Memorial Day is a day for remembering the people who died while serving in the country’s armed forces. Those that have served don’t forget. All told, the United States has been involved in 78 wars or conflicts beginning with our own Revolutionary War through the present day Middle East conflicts.
The Civil War tops the list for killed and wounded at just shy of one million, forty thousand casualties and the Bombing of Libya is at the lowest end with two casualties. But in between those two extremes, those 78 events resulted in almost 1.4 million dead, 1.5 million wounded and almost 41,000 Americans missing in action. Reading off numbers is mind-numbing; people can’t relate if they’ve not been personally touched by a war, but for those that have, the numbers represent something very visceral, very deep and dark inside them.
In Vietnam everything happened very quickly. We walked down the airstairs from the TWA charter jet that brought us halfway around the world and got onto a bus. It was to transport us to the replacement center where personnel arriving in country were processed and given assignments. I casually asked the sergeant why there was chicken wire over the bus windows. “To prevent them from throwing a grenade into the bus,” he laughed.
Not a hundred yards off the airport, someone took a few shots at us, and a busload of kids in wrinkled, new uniforms piled on top of one another on the floor. That night they blew up an ammo dump a mile away, and it knocked down half the tents at the replacement center. Within my first week I’d come under fire three times. Two weeks later I was in the field on my first major military operation when I saw a young 2nd Lieutenant, sitting on the tailgate of an armored personnel carrier, get half his head blown off by an accidental discharge from a .30 caliber machine gun.
One of the most difficult things I have ever done was triaging the wounded as they arrived en masse at our mobile aid station. I had been in country for less than a month, and I was making choices of who lived and who died. I wasn’t even a medic; I was a medical administrator, but when you have 30 serious casualties coming in and 20 people to deal with them, everyone pitches in.
The best advice I’ve ever received came from our company commander, who was also the company’s senior doctor. “You can’t save everybody,” he told me. “Give me the ones that we can save, and do your best to comfort those we can’t.”
I reminded him I wasn’t a medic and had only the most basic medical training at Fort Sam Houston. “Don’t worry about it,” he said. “You’ll know which is which when you see them.” It was beyond surreal, and those that you left behind haunted you when you closed your eyes to try to get a few minutes of sleep.
In fairly short order I learned to debride, give blood, do cut-downs, give shots and a host of things a 20-year-old kid had no business learning to do. When Doc showed me how to suture someone up, he had me practice on an orange. When he was satisfied I could do it, he said I needed to do it on someone for real, and everyone within earshot quickly walked away. I gave myself a shot of lidocaine and practiced on my own arm.
I was never given someone whose life was seriously in jeopardy; rather they gave me routine tasks such as starting an IV or giving blood. They sent me the not-so-complicated wounds that just required cleaning and suturing. That was my territory: freeing up the professionals to work on those whose lives hung in the balance. I don’t care if you were Special Forces or a cook, no one in the military comes out the same as when they went in.
People keep thanking me for my service. It makes me uncomfortable; I didn’t do it to be thanked. Rather than thank a veteran, I’d ask that you’d respect what they’ve done in the hope it would make your life and our country safer and more secure. On this Memorial Day, say a prayer for those that paid with their lives and then commit to doing something to make our world a safer, more secure place to live.

Telemundo caught staging #NeverTrump Mexicans for camera shot

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EL BUSTED: Telemundo caught staging #NeverTrump Mexicans for camera shot

Filmmaker Andrew Marcus, on the scene for Rebel Pundit at yesterday’s anti-Trump protest in San Diego, caught a Telemundo cameraman red-handed as he was staging a camera shot with #NeverTrump protesters brandishing the Mexican flag (upside-down).

Marcus confronted the Telemundo journalist instructing the protesters to gather for a shot for his camera, and then telling them to change the position of the Mexican flag, which they were displaying upside down.
As for the protesters, they proceeded to harass Marcus, obstructing his camera and spitting on his face. One of the female protesters defended the spit by saying it was a minor who had done it.

Feds Order Colleges to Stop Checking Criminal/School Discipline History Because it Discriminates Against Minorities

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Feds Order Colleges to Stop Checking Criminal/School Discipline History Because it Discriminates Against Minorities

MAY 20, 2016   The Hill

The Obama administration has ordered the nation’s colleges and universities to stop asking applicants about criminal and school disciplinary history because it discriminates against minorities. Institutions are also being asked to offer those with criminal records special support services such as counseling, mentoring and legal aid once enrolled. The government’s official term for these perspective students is “justice-involved individuals” and the new directive aims to remove barriers to higher education for the overwhelmingly minority population that’s had encounters with the law or disciplinary issues through high school.
Instructions are outlined in a cumbersome document (Beyond the Box) issued by the U.S Department of Education (ED) this month. It says that “data show plainly that people of color are more likely to come in contact with the justice system due, in part, to punitive school disciplinary policies that disproportionately impact certain student groups and racial profiling.” Because education can be a powerful pathway to transition out of prison and into the workforce, it’s critical to ensure that admissions practices don’t disproportionately disadvantage justice involved individuals, the directive states. Colleges and universities should also refrain from inquiring about a student’s school disciplinary history—including past academic dishonesty—because that too discriminates against minorities. Civil rights data compiled by ED show “black students are suspended and expelled at a rate three times greater than white students and often for the same types of infractions.”
Therefore colleges and universities should consider designing admissions policies that don’t include disciplinary history so they don’t have the “unjustified effect of discriminating against individuals on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion and disability,” the new ED guidelines state. Three out of four colleges and universities collect high school disciplinary information and 89% of those institutions use the information to make admissions decisions, according to the order. That needs to change, according to the administration. A few years ago it warned public elementary and high schools to administer student discipline without discriminating on the bases of race, color or national origin because too many minority students—especially blacks—were getting suspended. The feds assert they issued the directive after reports of “racial disparities” in “exclusionary discipline policies” that created a “school to prison pipeline.”
Colleges and universities are to take it a step further by offering students with criminal histories special support services. This is to include targeted academic and career guidance as well as counseling, legal aid services, mentoring and coaching. “Institutions should recruit and train peer mentors with previous justice involvement to work with justice-involved students to ensure a smooth transition to postsecondary education and provide support and resources throughout their time at the college or university,” the new directive states. “These peer mentors could begin their work by acting as navigators who help acclimate justice-involved students to the educational institutions.” Perhaps colleges and universities should also start sending recruiters to jails across the country.
This is part of a broader effort by the administration to even the playing field for convicts. Earlier this month Judicial Watch reported that the president issued an order prohibiting federal agencies from asking job applicants about criminal history. The measure will ensure that hiring managers are making selection decisions based solely on qualifications, according to a White House announcement. “Early inquiries into an applicant’s criminal history may discourage motivated, well-qualified individuals who have served their time from applying for a federal job,” the announcement says, adding that “early inquiries could also lead to the disqualification of otherwise eligible candidates.”
Years ago the administration tried slamming the private sector with a ban on job applicant background checks by claiming that they discriminate against all minority candidates, not just ex-cons. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the federal agency that enforces the nation’s workplace discrimination laws, wasted taxpayer dollars suing companies for checking criminal histories asserting that it violates Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. The apparent intent was to discourage other businesses from checking criminal histories out of fear of getting sued by the government, but it didn’t quite work out that way. A federal judge eventually blasted the EEOC’s claims, calling them laughable, distorted, cherry-picked, worthless and an egregious example of scientific dishonesty. Of interesting note is that the EEOC conducts criminal background checks as a condition of employment.

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District 33C Schilling School third graders delight parents with poetry jam

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News Release
Homer CCSD 33C
Goodings Grove   Luther J. Schilling   William E. Young   William J. Butler
Hadley Middle   Homer Jr. High
 
Contact: Charla Brautigam, Communications/Public Relations Manager
cbrautigam@homerschools.org | 708-226-7628
 

Schilling School third graders kick off their poetry jam by singing “The Pages of a Book” to friends and family on May 26.

 
For Immediate Release:
May 26, 2016
 
Schilling School third graders delight parents with poetry jam

Students recite the poem “My Smartphone Isn’t Very Smart.”

 
Schilling School third graders staged a poetry jam May 26, combining music and poetry for friends and family.
 
“These kids have been working really hard,” music teacher Rebecca Worley told parents and grandparents as they gathered in the school gymnasium.

Students recite the poem “The Spaghetti Challenge.”

 
For several weeks, students in Julianne Day, Tasha Ohotzke and Brittany Tews’ third-grade classes have been learning about haikus, limericks and acrostic poems — poems where the first letters of each line spell out a word or phrase.
 
On May 26, they took turns reciting some of the poems they studied in class, including “I Tried to Do My Homework,” “My Smartphone Isn’t Very Smart” and “Dad is Making Dinner.”
 
They even read a few pieces they wrote themselves, including a touching poem that one student wrote about his mother.
 
“Did you know?” someone asked the subject of the poem. She quietly replied “no.”
 
Many of the poems that students recited were funny, including one about a “misbehaving robot” that never helps with homework or chores and “neglects to clean the floors.”
 
The poem, written by Kenn Nesbitt, concludes: “My robot must be broken. I’ll need to get another. Until that day, I have to say, I’m glad I have my mother.”
 
At the end of the poetry jam, students sang “See You Later” to their friends and family and wittily exclaimed: “It’s time for you to go. We wish it wasn’t so.”
 
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