Sunday, September 27, 2015

Echo from the Suffrage: Twelve Reasons Why Women Should Vote

by Nomad

Here's an public ad for universal suffrage from the 1920s.

This list makes so much sense and yet, even today so many women voters stay at home.
  


  1. Because those who obey the laws should help to choose those who make the laws.
  2. Because laws affect women as much as men.
  3. Because laws which affect women are now passed without consulting them. 
  4. Because  laws affecting Children should include the woman's point of view as well as the man's.
  5. Because laws affecting the home are voted on in every session of the legislature.
  6. Because women have experience which would be helpful to legislation.
  7. Because to deprive women of the vote is to lower their position in the common estimation. 
  8. Because having the vote would increase the sense of responsibility among women toward questions of public importance.
  9. Because public spirited mothers make public spirited sons.
  10. Because about 8,000,000 women in the United States are wage workers, and the conditions under which they work are controlled by the law. 
  11. Because the objections against their having the vote are based on prejudice, not on reason.
  12. Because to sum up all reasons in one-- it is for the common good of all. 



Friday, September 25, 2015

A Question of Qualifications: A Closer Look at Carly Fiorina

by Nomad

When it comes to GOP candidates, like Donald Trump and Ben Carson, isn't it fair to ask: what kind of minimum qualifications necessary to be the Republican nominee in 2016? 

In the case of Carly Fiorina, her only qualification is her tenure as CEO of Hewlett-Packard. That's actually a liability.


When Carly Fiorina announced her decision to be a Republican candidate for 2016, many insiders questioned her thin qualifications to become president of the United States. 
For the better-informed voter or former HP employees, it was perhaps startling to hear point to her corporate business history as evidence.
Why?
It was exactly that subject - her tenure as CEO of Hewlett-Packard (HP) from 1999 to 2005 that her Democratic opponent, Barbara Boxer, used against her in the 2010 California Senate race. It proved to be more than enough to make voters think twice about Fiorina.

Putting aside the particular details of the Fiorina business history, we need to be asking: 
Is running a corporation really the same as being president?     

Certainly any successful venture is something a candidate could legitimately point out. Indeed, management skills required overlap to some degree. 
However,  there are some crucial differences too. 

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Jihad Reality: Why Disillusioned ISIS Defectors are Dropping Out

by Nomad

Syria ISIS Jihadist Defectors Disillusioned by what they witnessed, some former ISIS members have defected. Their testimony reveals the truth about the organization and the nature of the caliphate they have set up.


In Western society, we are pretty regularly taught not to dwell too deeply on mistakes we make in life. Move on and not look back in regret is the message.
However, in some instances, the mistakes we make can destroy our lives, the lives of people we care about and can affect in a direct and often damaging way, innocent victims. 

Shouldn't we as individuals take the time to stop and reflect on our bad decisions? And when mistakes happen on a grand scale, shouldn't society also sit back and make use of this bad example? 

I bring this point up after reading an article about former ISIS members who are now defecting from the organization and returning back to their homes. They are now testifying to the painful disillusionment they experienced and how their fantasy of jihad and a new world order were destroyed by the harsh barbarous reality on the ground.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

The Re-Greening of Suburbia: How an Old Shopping Mall May Soon be Home to World's Largest Green Roof

by Nomad

The Hills Green RoofOne development proposal in California would see the world's largest green roof. It will provide an example of how green thinking will change the urban and suburban landscape.

The story of the shopping mall in some ways represents the story of mid-century America. A product of the automobile loving suburban culture of the 1960s, the mall as a cultural icon, critics say, is an idea that has passed its prime.
Many large-scale malls today have become less and less economically sustainable. In some areas of the country, malls are experiencing higher vacancies, being repurposed and are even being demolished.

The question is what is going to come next? 
In California, one developer is offering a possible answer.

Monday, September 21, 2015

Ben Carson vs John Kennedy: A Religious Test for the Executive Office?

by Nomad

John Kennedy vs. Ben CarsonRemarks from the Republican candidate, Dr. Ben Carson have called into question whether the White House is reserved for a limited category of Americans based on their faith.


On Sunday's Meet the Press,  GOP candidate Ben Carson 
was asked whether a candidate’s religious faith should be considered when Americans elect a president. He said:
“I guess it depends on what that faith is. If it’s inconsistent with the values and principles of America, then of course it should matter. But if it fits within the realm of America and consistent with the Constitution, no problem.”
Within "the realm of America" is a strange turn of phrase. Moreover, the Constitution has nothing to say about the faith of a prospective leader of the nation.  
Then when probed a little more, Carson stated:
"I would not advocate that we put a Muslim in charge of this nation. I absolutely would not agree with that."
It was a shocking thing to hear for so many reasons. Especially a nation which professes to believe that America that can be home to all faiths and that everybody- in theory- has a right to rise as far as they are capable of, even to the presidency. 
Has Carson really thought this through? Are atheists also excluded from holding the executive office? What about Mormons?
If Muslims should be forbidden then which religions make the cut?