Archive for the ‘Opinion & Editorials’ Category

Who Cares About the Boys?

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

 

In millions of American homes, mothers and fathers are tearing their hair out trying to motivate their sons to finish high school, move out of the house, get a college degree, and live the “happy ever after” American dream.  While their problems seem personal, the statistics are not.

 

·        Boys receive 70% of D and F grades

·        Boys account for 80% of high school dropouts

·        Boys cause 80% of classroom behavioral problems

·        Boys represent up to 70% of children diagnosed with learning disabilities

·        Boys represent 80% of children diagnosed with behavioral problems

·        Boys represent up to 80% of children on Ritalin and other medicine used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

·        Boys represent less than 44% of America’s college students

Today in America women earn 57% of all BAs and 58% of all master’s degrees. Demographers project that if this trend continues there will be 156 women per 100 men earning degrees by 2020. 

It’s not just education.  Boys are failing to launch into adulthood.  Young men, if they do leave, are more likely return home and, for the first time in history, women in their 20s are out earning their male counterparts.

A parent might soothe him or herself by saying “who cares so long as my son is happy.”    But is he really happy?  The fact that boys are 85% more likely to commit murder, and four to six times more likely to kill themselves suggests otherwise.

This all seems pretty alarming to me, so where is the national outrage?  Well, there is the periodic national news story where the problem is examined and quickly forgotten.  There is the occasional alarming statement by an education official but once the cameras are gone no one really does anything.  There are the websites and nonprofits urging action but so far no real national urgency has emerged. 

Complicating the issue, the proposed solutions from those who recognize the problem are frequently clouded by political agendas.  The feminists claim the problem doesn’t exist, and the anti-feminist claim the problem exists because of the feminists.  Unfortunately no one seems to have done the obvious.  No one has asked the boys.

I am thrilled with the progress made by women in education and in life.  But the goal has never been to exceed the achievements of young men.  The goal has been to equalize education and employment opportunities.  How can anyone look at these statistics and believe that education and opportunity is equal in America? 

So I ask “Who cares about the boys?”

Onions to Collect Flu Virus?

Monday, November 16th, 2009

I recently received an email about the power of onions and sucking up viruses and air impurities.  So I searched the net and found two stories.

Story 1 – The Email Circulating About H1N1 and Onions

“In the winter of 1918, there was a flu that was all over the world. Gene was in France at this time and there were folks all around dying. One man lost his wife and two children with this flu. The doctors sent out word to the whole community to get a hundred-pound sack of onions and eat them three times a day, anyway you can. Boiled, fried or raw, just eat onions. It seemed to help all right.

They sent riders out all over the community to tell everyone that there was a special Sunday set aside for a prayer day. The sickness started in November and when this rider was sent out at this time it was in the spring. The flu did finally die down, our family did get it, but not as sick as some of the other families.

We were well enough though to take care of our chores and we went down to the King Family and helped them out with their chores at nights for two or three days, which was about three and a half miles from us. Mr. King and the children were all down with it, but we didn’t get it so bad that we couldn’t take care of our own work. It was all over by February or March, but up until then it was a worry for everybody.”

Although influenza is no longer the unchecked grim reaper of years past (in 1918 the so-called “Spanish Flu” killed an estimated twenty to forty million people worldwide, including a half-million Americans), it continues to present a very real danger even in modern times. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), millions of people in the United States, about 10% to 20% of U.S. residents, will get the flu each year. Influenza also costs Americans an estimated $10 billion annually in lost wages and medical expenses. Worst of all, every year about 36,000 people in the United States die from it, and about 114,000 are admitted to hospitals because of it. The flu is not just a mild sickness from which everyone recovers after enduring a week of feeling lousy and missing work; it is an illness that can, has, and does kill.

The 2009 outbreak of H1N1 (swine) flu has brought home even to those who don’t normally ponder such matters the danger posed by contagions often dismissively regarded as mere seasonal flu, maladies that are thought of as wholly unpleasant but not life-threatening. These days, people are far more aware of the sniffles and sneezes around them. Also, unlike in other years, more folks are actively looking for ways to avoid catching the flu.

In addition to good advice about washing one’s hands frequently and avoiding the company of persons who are obviously under the weather, those looking to sidestep being felled by the flu are subject to toutings of a variety of folk remedies, each of which is presented as a surefire and deadly preventive. The missive quoted above about onions absorbing the virus is one such offering.

There’s nothing medically magical about peeled or cut onions: they don’t act as sponges that soak up whatever viruses or nasty microbes might be present in the same room with them. However, the belief that they do act in this fashion antedates the 2009 flu outbreak by at least a hundred years. Long-standing superstition asserts that keeping raw onions in the house (either cut or whole; different folks swear by different methods) will draw illness-causing germs from the air, thereby rendering the home free of contamination.

The full article on this can be found here http://www.snopes.com/medical/disease/onion.asp

Story 2 – Benefits of Onions For Cold and Flu Symptoms

Most of us are aware of the powerful odor of onions. Did you know this is their secret weapon against viruses and bacteria? That pungent odor is caused by the rich sulfur compounds that promote health and well-being. Throughout history onions have been held in high regard for their culinary and medicinal qualities. They have even been used as a currency in Egypt to pay the workers who built the pyramids.

Onions have phytochemicals and quercetin which assist the body by moving and breaking up the mucus in the head and chest. The powerful odor causes the eyes to tear and the nose to run. It is this affect on your body that stimulates the immune system to fight the virus or bacterial infection. This is helping your body shed the virus and reduce the inflammation from congestion.

The onion is a warming, stimulating and penetrating herb. It is used in soups and even cough syrups. But you don’t have to eat it to experience its healing affects. Apply them externally as a poultice and inhale and feel their pungent effects. Onions bring heat to the area and this action brings the fever to that part of the body to control how far the infection spreads.

You can also cut them in slices and put them in a bowl by your bed at night or in any room in the house. It is said they absorb the viruses and bacteria from the air. A doctor during the 1918 Spanish flu discovered a farmer and his family doing this very thing and they did not catch the flu, so the story goes.

Onions are anti-bacterial, ant-viral, and anti-parasitic. They are rich in vitamin C, potassium, chromium, fiber, manganese and vitamin B6. So eat onions every day, learn to make poultices and syrups and continue a 5,000 year old remedy.

Want to know more about how to boost your immune system? Traditional diets and how to prepare them, healthy fats, herbal remedies and debunking health myths are some of the subjects covered in The Natural Living Site Newsletter at http://thenaturallivingsite.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Shanna_Ohmes

To comment or talk about this article, listen to The Mighty 790 KFGO or visit www.kfgo.com or call the studio hotline at 701-237-5948.

Jason Spiess is host of Night Time Live which airs from 7-10pm on KFGO AM..  Jason also hosts Man About Town which airs this Saturday from 1-2pm on KFGO-AM.  Jason can be reached at jason@kfgo.com.   Jason can also be followed on Facebook.

Steve Stark Kartoon

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Dorgan Hoeven Boxing

Photos of Military Deaths in Afghanistan Banned

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

The U.S. military in eastern Afghanistan recently changed its media embed rules to ban pictures of troops killed in the war.

“Media will not be allowed to photograph or record video of U.S. personnel killed in action,” says a ground rules document issued Sept. 15 by Regional Command East at Bagram Air Field.

This language is new. A version of the same document dated July 23 says, “Media will not be prohibited from covering casualties” as long as a series of conditions are met.

Pictures of American military deaths are rare, but until now they have not been officially banned during either of the ongoing wars.

The new language was added in early September, according to a military spokesperson, Master Sgt. Tom Clementson of Regional Command East Public Affairs. Clementson described it as “a clarification rather than a new rule.”

“The clarification was added to ensure that service members’ privacy and propriety are maintained in situations where media have unique and intimate access as embedded reporters,” Clementson wrote by e-mail in response to questions. “While RC East does everything possible to accommodate an embedded reporters’ ability to cover the war in this region, there is also a command responsibility to account for the best interests of its service members.”

The change occurred after the wide distribution of a photograph of a dying U.S. Marine. On Sept. 4, the Associated Press released a photo of a mortally wounded Marine in Afghanistan.

The image, which was shot August 14 by AP photographer Julie Jacobson, was released as part of a package of stories and photos about the death of Lance Cpl. Joshua M. Bernard. Both U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and Bernard’s family had asked the AP not to release the photo. Few newspapers published the image, but it was widely circulated online. (The photograph can be viewed here.)

Based on a review of other embed agreements, the ban issued in early September appears to be unique to the U.S. operation in eastern Afghanistan.

The NATO-controlled International Security Assistance Force, which handles embeds elsewhere in Afghanistan, allows press photos of casualties as long as some conditions are met. For example, photos that identify a dead service member cannot be released before the service member’s next of kin have been notified of the death.

(The AP’s photo of Lance Cpl. Bernard was taken in Helmand province, which is outside of Regional Command East.)

For Multi National Force-Iraq embeds, a ground rules document dated Aug. 14 contains restrictions on casualty images, but does not ban photos of killed-in-action casualties.

The new Regional Command East rule drew little notice before Friday, when it was reported by the blog of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. It has since appeared on other blogs, including one from PDN sibling publication Editor & Publisher.

The AP is aware of the change. “We have queried the Pentagon about the photo rules and have been told that the matter is being reviewed,” AP spokesperson Paul Colford said this week.

Under the Obama administration, the Pentagon took one step toward making war casualties more visible to the press. In April, it began allowing photographers to cover the returns of remains at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware when next of kin give their consent.

For more information listen to KFGO 790AM or email studio@kfgo.com

Source: editorandpublisher.com, KFGO News Center

President Obama Taps UND Alum for Federal Court Bench

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009
President Obama Taps UND Alum for Federal Court Bench

President Barack Obama this week forwarded to the Senate the name of University of North Dakota alum Rosanna M. Peterson as his nominee to serve on the District Court for the Eastern District of Washington.

Peterson was among more than two dozen applicants for the lifetime position last November, and the only woman among the three finalists. The American Bar Association, which rates judicial appointment candidates, unanimously found Peterson “qualified.”

“I am honored to nominate Rosanna Peterson to the United States District Court bench,” said President Obama. “Throughout her career, she has displayed exceptional integrity and an unwavering commitment to justice. She will be a distinguished addition to the federal bench for the Eastern District of Washington and I am grateful for her willingness to serve.”

Peterson earned her undergraduate degree in English in 1977; her Master of Arts degreein English in 1983, her juris doctor ( law ) degree in 1991, all from UND.

President Obama’s choice of Peterson for the federal bench was enthusiastically received at UND.

“We are so proud to have one of our graduates nominated for a federal judicial appointment, one of the most prestigious positions in the legal profession,” said Kathryn Rand, dean of the UND School of Law. “Professor Peterson’s nomination is a testament to the quality of the education we provide at UND.”

Rand said that Peterson—once her appointment is ratified by the Senate—joins a select group of UND School of Law alumni who have been appointed to the federal bench over the years, including Kermit Bye of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit; and Daniel Hovland, Ralph Erickson, and the late Rodney Webb of the U.S. District Court for the District of North Dakota.

Peterson, a professor at Gonzaga University School of Law in Spokane,  Wash., would become the first female judge on Eastern Washington’s U.S. District Court bench. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., called the nomination of a woman to the federal bench in the state of Washington “historic.”

A native of Salt Lake City, Utah, Peterson has served as president of the Federal Bar Association for Eastern Washington and the Woman Lawyers State Bar Association.

Following graduation from law school, Peterson clerked for the Honorable Fred Van Sickle in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Washington. After her clerkship, Peterson practiced general litigation, employment and education law, as well as criminal defense at several private law firms in Spokane.

In 1999, Peterson joined the faculty of Gonzaga University School of Law, where she teaches evidence, federal jurisdiction, and trial advocacy. She became the director of the School of Law’s Externship Program in 2002.

For more information listen to KFGO 790AM or email studio@kfgo.com

Source: UND, KFGO News Center

Video: Will the US sign the Climate Change Treaty in Copenhagen?

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Interview with NDSU President Joseph Chapman

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Click Link to Listen:   Pres. Joseph Chapman pt 1

Click Link to Listen:  Pres. Joseph Chapman pt 2

North Dakota’s Population Becoming More Diverse

Thursday, October 8th, 2009
North Dakota’s Population Becoming More Diverse

Although racial minorities in North Dakota continue to represent a relatively small proportion of the state’s total population (fewer than one in 10), the racial minority population has grown by one-fifth during the past eight years.

This month’s “Population Bulletin,” a monthly publication from the North Dakota State Data Center at North Dakota State University, presents the July 1, 2008, population estimates by race and ethnicity as released from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Population Division.

These estimates reveal a continuing increase in population diversity throughout North Dakota. The state’s racial minority population (people who are nonwhite or report multiple races) totaled 55,209 in 2008, which is 8.6 percent of the state’s total population of 641,481.

While the white population in North Dakota declined 1.8 percent (10,446 people) from 2000 to 2008, the racial minority population grew by 21.4 percent (9,727 people).

The American Indian population, North Dakota’s largest racial minority, grew by 4,226 from 2000 to 2008, which is an increase of 13.4 percent. During the same period, the black population grew by 2,799 (67.3 percent), Asian by 1,183 (30.2 percent) and people of multiple races by 1,519 (25.4 percent).

The Hispanic population (an ethnic category reported separately from race) represents 2.1 percent of North Dakota’s population and grew by 5,441 people (69.9 percent) from 2000 to 2008.

Nationally, the Hispanic population grew 33 percent from 2000 to 2008.

“The growth in North Dakota’s racial minority and Hispanic populations is helping to mitigate some of the population losses in rural areas, especially in the western portion of our state,” says Richard Rathge, State Data Center director.

To comment or talk about this article, listen to The Mighty 790 KFGO or visit www.kfgo.com or call the studio hotline at 701-237-5948.

Downtown Fargo Neighborhood Honored

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Downtown Fargo has been named by the American Planning Association as one of 10 neighborhoods around the country honored in its “Great Places in America” program.

Officials say the designation is for Fargo’s historic character and revitalization during the past decade. A statement announcing the award says more than $100 million in public and private investments have been made since 1999 to change what the association calls a “rough, northern frontier image” into one that’s more metropolitan.

The APA says overall building values in the downtown Fargo neighborhood have risen 110 percent, from $103 million in 2000 to more than $218 million this year.

To comment or talk about this article, listen to The Mighty 790 KFGO or visit www.kfgo.com or call the studio hotline at 701-237-5948.

Dr Ashton Gets Flu Shot, Says “Just Get Your Damn Vaccine”

Friday, October 2nd, 2009