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HI

I hope you will all take a minute to check out this site from ethicaloil.ca. and take a stand against foreign interference in Canadian national affairs. 



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New post on Fellowship of the Minds

Saturday funny…

by DCG

Well, it'd be more funny if it wasn't so close to the truth...!

DCG

DCG | January 14, 2012 at 6:45 am | Tags: Barack Obama | Categories: Humor, US Presidents | URL: http://wp.me/pKuKY-bP1

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New post on Fellowship of the Minds

Hell freezes over: Domocrat governor tells welfare recipients to work

by Dr. Eowyn

When America was awash in money, before the economy tanked in 2008, our largesse overflowed.

Result: welfare abuses such as this:

Read more about this welfare-abusing single mom here.

Daniel Weintraub reports forHealthy Cal, Jan. 12, 2012, that faced with state deficits in billions of dollars, California's Democrat Governor Jerry Brown is doing the unthinkable:

Gov. Jerry Brown is proposing the most far-reaching changes to welfare since former President Bill Clinton and Congress overhauled the program 15 years ago.

Brown wants to cut $1 billion from the program — nearly one-third of its general fund budget — by shortening the amount of time recipients can remain on aid and focusing the state's cash assistance and child care subsidies on people who are moving from welfare to work.

His plan has won initial praise from the state's independent budget analyst. But advocates for the poor say it would further marginalize the state's already struggling underclass. And Democratic leaders in the Legislature have said they will delay any action on the proposal until after the governor's March 1 deadline, in the hopes that state tax revenues will come in higher than Brown anticipates.

While a common perception of welfare is a program that supports poor, unproductive people, the program has morphed over the past decade into one that provides not just cash grants but job training and services to help people enter the workforce. And more than anything, it is a program that supports children. More than 1 million of the 1.4 million people helped by the program are children.

It is also a program which, while never a major part of the state budget, has shrunk dramatically over the past generation.

In the mid-1990s, when welfare was an entitlement with no work or education obligations and no time limit, more than 900,000 families were on aid in California. But in 1996 then-President Clinton and Congress agreed on a fundamental restructuring of the program. Aid would no longer be open-ended, and states were required to move a certain percentage of their cases from welfare to work.

These changes altered the mindset of the program from one of providing subsistence grants to one that became more of a bridge to employment. In California, recipients were given a five-year time limit (recently reduced to four years) and they got more access to education, job training and child care to help them move into the workforce.

Even the name of the program was changed to reflect the new attitude, from Aid to Families with Dependent Children to Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and, finally, to Cal-Works. [The current name, Cal-Works, of course is oxymoronic. George Orwell would be so proud of California! -Eowyn]

For a time, the changes in the rules and the philosophy seemed to work. They coincided with a late-1990s economy that was bolstered by the technology boom, and the number of welfare cases dropped in half, to 460,000 by 2007.

The cases that remained, however, were the toughest: people whose lack of education, job skills or experience made them very difficult to employ. As the economy slid into a recession, those people found it nearly impossible to find jobs, and they were joined on the rolls by more families headed by newly jobless parents.

The welfare caseload began to grow again. By next year, if nothing is done, about 600,000 families will be on welfare in California. The cost of the program will grow by half a billion dollars.

[...] Brown has proposed what can only be described as a radical restructuring of the program.

His most dramatic proposal is to reduce the time limit from its current 48 months to just 24 months for people who fail to find unsubsidized employment. The adults would be kicked off aid and denied other services, but the families would continue to collect assistance for the children.

People who found jobs within their first two years on welfare but whose incomes still qualified them for aid would be allowed to remain in the program for a total of 48 months. And they would be allowed to keep more of what they earned. For the average family of three, the change would amount to an increase of $44 a month.

And while those families who remained on welfare with parents working would continue to be eligible for state-subsidized child care, many other families would lose this benefit. On one end, Brown would limit eligibility to just those parents who were meeting the state's work requirement, leaving many low-income or penniless families out of child care altogether. On the other end of the scale, he would reduce the income eligibility threshold from 70 percent of the state's median family income to about 62 percent, ending subsidized child care for families earning anything more than twice the federal poverty level. This would result in an estimated 62,000 children losing child care, out of about 296,000 who get it from the state today.

Brown wants the changes in welfare to take effect by October of this year. While the time limits on aid would apply retroactively, Brown proposes giving all recipients six months to find work before kicking them off the rolls. The counties would get $35 million in one-time funds from the state to help people ready themselves for work and find jobs.

But Brown acknowledges that few of the long-term cases would find work. His administration estimates that welfare cases would plummet next year from a projected 597,000 families to just 324,000, a reduction of 44 percent. Nearly 300,000 would be part of a new, separate program giving limited assistance, but few services, to the children in families headed by parents who could not, or refused, to work.

While Brown has proposed asking voters to raise taxes as part of his budget plan, the changes he suggests in welfare would take place with or without the tax increase. The state, he said, simply does not have enough money to do all the things it once did.

Welfare advocates and others say that the cuts will backfire, leaving more children in poverty and leading to social problems that will cost the state far more than the cuts would save in the long run. But Brown says he has no other choice than to propose changes that Democrats would have at one time would have considered cruel.

"We can't spend what we don't have," he said when he released his budget proposal in early January. "It's not nice. We don't like it. But the economy and the tax statutes of California make only so much money available. We have to spend it and make tough choices."

"We can't spend what we don't have." I wish that message would sink into the dense (or simply malevolent) noggin of that fraud in the White House.

H/t Stephen Frank's California Political News & Views.

~Eowyn

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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Andrew Campanella
Date: Friday, January 13, 2012
Subject: At Midnight Tonight
To: Bruce Majors <majors.bruce@gmail.com>




Dear Friend --

What a day it's been!
This morning, we were excited to announce that Bill Cosby had announced his full endorsement for National School Choice Week! (Tweet him a thank you for supporting our shared cause @BillCosby and mention @SchoolChoiceWk and #SchoolChoiceWeek). 
And…this afternoon, the number of events on our website crossed the 200 mark!
 
There's no question: National School Choice Week 2012 is going to be huge. And we know that you're doing everything possible to make the Week an enormous success.
But as you plan your events and activities for National School Choice Week, please take a few minutes to make sure your events are truly National School Choice Week celebrations, by reserving materials — like our logo scarves, banners, rally signs, and more — right away.

Those materials are just a few clicks away. Reserve yours right now!
Please reserve these materials for your event before midnight tonight. It takes just a few minutes. Because after midnight, our expedited shipping fees kick in—and we want you to maximize your resources. It's very important to us that we get you the materials you need in time for your event!
I can't explain enough how important it is to coordinate the branding of your event with our National School Choice Week scarves, rally signs, and banners. When the media reviews the hundreds of events that take place (and trust us, we're getting hundreds of inquiries already!), these common visual elements show that all of our events are linked together. Our Event-In-A-Box kits are heavily discounted — to the tune of 90 percent in some cases — and our Buy One, Get One free promotion will continue.

Don't wait any longer. Head to our website right now to make your reservation.
You can even consider reserving a Mini-Kit to provide materials for your friends and family, and send photos to us of your own family celebrations after the Week! 
 
Thanks again for all that you do, and for ordering your materials before midnight tonight.
Have a wonderful weekend. We're just one week away from the biggest education reform celebration in American history: National School Choice Week 2012.
Sincerely,
Andrew Campanella
Vice President for Public Affairs
National School Choice Week
www.SchoolChoiceWeek.com
 
PS: If you haven't posted your event yet, please do so today by clicking here. You can always edit your event later on, but you'll want to make sure we have time to help promote it for you…and the way to do that is to post it on our site right away. 
 
-=-=-
National School Choice Week · 801 West Norton, Suite 1, Muskegon, MI 49441
This email was sent to majors.bruce@gmail.com. To stop receiving emails, click here.
You can also keep up with National School Choice Week on Twitter or Facebook.

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