Saturday, December 22, 2012

Developing a Constitution

When we consider Egypt coming up with a Constitution we need to remember our process. The Constitution developed over a period of 100 days and was adopted on September 17, 1787, by the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and ratified by conventions in eleven states. It went into effect on March 4, 1789. The first ten amendments ratified by three-fourths of the states in 1791 are known as the Bill of Rights. The Constitution has been amended seventeen additional times (for a total of 27 amendments) and its principles are applied in courts of law by judicial review. The process is not an overnight process and we need to be patient with all countries.

 

Saturday, December 15, 2012

What Sex and Killing Have in Common

In 1974 there was a movie "Death Wish." Eventually there were four sequels over a period of twenty years. At the time I was taking some psychology courses at a local university and I was subscribing to a magazine Psychology Today. In one issue there was an article on the reaction of audiences across the country when the hero killed his first bad guy, they stood and cheered.

 

The film was disliked by many critics due to it advocating vigilantism and unlimited punishment to criminals. The book upon which the movie was loosely based denounced vigilantism, whereas the film embraced the notion. It was seen as echoing a growing mood in the United States as crime rose during that time.

 

Hollywood is great at making war and killing seem simple and strait forward. It makes the watcher believe that people kill each other because they are told, because it is kill or be killed, the enemy is hated or whatever. Hollywood tries to make us believe that all soldiers shoot at each other, attempting to hit and kill each other. While in some situations there may be some truth in the matter, it is mostly wrong.

 

A book to read on the subject is :On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society" by Dave Grossman.

 

When most people talk about killing, they are like virgins talking about sex. You can talk about it all day, you can fully understand the mechanics involved but when the time comes there is so much more involved than the person thought. As with sex until you kill you have no clue as to how you will react. I find the number of Christians who claim they are ready to kill to protect their property curious. I find them odd and far from being Christian. We have at least a couple of elders in waiting in that category.  

 

A look at history may shed some light on the subject. In World War Two, studies have shown that only 15-20 percent of the soldiers fired at the enemy. That is one in five soldiers actually shooting at a Nazi when he saw one. While this rate may have increased in desperate situations, in most combat situations soldiers were reluctant to kill each other.

In Korea, the rate of soldiers unwilling to fire on the enemy decreased and fifty five percent of the soldiers fired at the enemy. In Vietnam, this rate increased to about ninety five percent but this doesn't mean they were trying to hit the target. In fact it usually took around fifty-two thousand bullets to score one kill in regular infantry units!

If one studies history one will find that man is often unwilling to kill his fellow man and the fighter finds it very traumatic when he has to do so.

The solution is not to control weapons we need to understand why people are willing to kill. Millions if not billions of dollars are spent each year on advertising to influence the way consumers think but no one believes watching violent movies and television programs as well as playing violent video games influences us or our children.



John Jenkins
865-803-8179  cell
Gatlinburg, TN



Email: jrjenki@gmail.com
Blogs: http://littlepigeon.blogspot.com/
          http://alumcave.blogspot.com/


 
"Be a yardstick of quality. Some people aren't used to an environment where excellence is expected."

---Steve Jobs


Re: Update from Senator Bob Corker - December 15, 2012

The president has an advantage, he does not have to prepare for re-election where as members of congress must. Remember the Republican convention where the speakers said Obama had his chance but failed so the voters should give Romney a chance.
 
The Fiscal Cliff appears to be an artifical disaster caused by Congress' failure to do their job. It appears you all agreed to pass laws that if implemented would have such a negative affect on the country you were hoping the members of the other party would never let happen. You have reached the point where you expected your opponents to fold as they expected you to fold. One thing you must do is to elect new leaders in the next congress. Failure to do that will show the voters you are stuck in the past.
 
Congress succeeds together and fails together. We voters have long memories.

John Jenkins
865-803-8179  cell
Gatlinburg, TN



Email: jrjenki@gmail.com
Blogs: http://littlepigeon.blogspot.com/
          http://alumcave.blogspot.com/


 
"Be a yardstick of quality. Some people aren't used to an environment where excellence is expected."

---Steve Jobs




On Sat, Dec 15, 2012 at 12:48 PM, Senator Bob Corker <Senator_Bob_Corker@corker.enews.senate.gov> wrote:

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December 15, 2012
Bob Corker -   U.S. Senator, Tennessee

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Update from Senator Bob Corker
December 15, 2012


Senator Corker made the following statement yesterday in response to the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Connecticut.

"Like any parent, I am heartbroken to hear what has happened, and like other Tennesseans, I am saddened for all the victims and families and have them in my thoughts and prayers," said Corker.

Meeting Our Obligation to Older and Younger Americans


Anticipating the possibility that an agreement to avert the fiscal cliff might not adequately reduce the nation's long-term deficits, Senator Corker introduced "dollar-for-dollar" legislation on Wednesday to raise the debt ceiling by roughly $1 trillion in exchange for roughly $1 trillion in reforms to Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.

"I continue to hope Speaker Boehner and President Obama will negotiate a deal north of $4 trillion before year-end, but I think we should also prepare now for the possibility that they do not. The next opportunity we have to make the structural, transformative reforms to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid that will save these programs and put our country on a path to fiscal solvency is the debt ceiling debate," said Corker. "I've introduced dollar-for-dollar legislation that will raise the debt ceiling by roughly $1 trillion in exchange for roughly $1 trillion in reforms to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. This bill incorporates many of the recommendations made in the bipartisan Simpson-Bowles and Domenici-Rivlin proposals. This bill meets our obligations to older and younger Americans. Young Americans expect us to solve our fiscal issues so they aren't saddled with debt and robbed of their opportunity for the American dream. And seniors expect us to honor the commitments we have made to them."

Read more about Senator Corker's "Dollar-for-Dollar Act" here.



Corker on CNBC's Squawk Box: Time to Discuss Social Security and Medicare Reform
Knoxville News Sentinel: Corker ties debt ceiling to entitlement reform

To Help Community Banks, We Should Fix Dodd-Frank

Yesterday, the Wall Street Journal editorial page reported on the Senate's vote "to end a 2008 rescue program for banks," crediting Senator Corker for doing "as much as anyone to protect taxpayers in this debate."

On Thursday, proposed legislation to extend the TAG (Transaction Account Guarantee) Program failed when a budget point of order raised by Senator Pat Toomey (R-PA) was upheld. The proposed TAG legislation violated the Budget Control Act passed by Congress and signed into law by President Obama last year.

TAG was a temporary measure established during the 2008 financial crisis to provide unlimited federal insurance for noninterest-bearing business accounts. With banks now holding sufficient deposits to support their outstanding loans and data showing that large institutions are by far the largest holders of TAG deposits, the program's benefit to the community banking system is, at best, unclear.

Prior to the vote, Senator Corker delivered remarks on the Senate floor urging his colleagues to uphold the budget point of order.

"I [had] amendments that would have fixed this bill, made it work for community bankers… The only reason we are voting on this amendment is that my friends on the other side of the aisle know Dodd-Frank has hurt community bankers throughout this country."



Earlier in the week, Senator Corker expressed his opposition to further extension of TAG.

"Some of what we passed in Dodd-Frank makes a great deal of sense, but much of it does not. And it's time for us to devote energy to fixing and improving the law where there are flaws. If we really want to help community banks, that is where we should focus our energy. Giving out limitless deposit insurance is what some people have decided is a consolation prize. That's too bad. We should fix Dodd-Frank if we want to help our community banks. Liquidity to make loans is not the problem. Slow economic growth is the problem. Extending insurance to keep these deposits around, then, fixes a problem that simply does not exist… [I]f we really want to help community banks thrive and succeed, our focus should be on dialing back Washington's desire to micromanage our banking institutions," Corker said on the Senate floor Tuesday.

Wall Street Journal: Put a Corker in It
"Senator Bob Corker (R, Tenn.), who did as much as anyone to protect taxpayers in this debate, helped fill in the blanks on Thursday. 'The only reason that we're voting on this measure is that the Members on the other side know that Dodd-Frank has hurt community banks,' he said. By then it was clear that Mr. Corker had started a conversation that Democrats really did not want to have. Pro-bailout lawmakers became suddenly silent on Thursday when the program's fate hung in the balance. In the final debate on Majority Leader Harry Reid's bill to extend the TAG, not a single Senator rose to defend the program's merits. Mark down a victory for taxpayers, but there is more to do. Next year's priorities should be to end too big to fail for the biggest banks, while easing Dodd-Frank's regulatory burdens on community banks so they have greater freedom to succeed." Read more: http://on.wsj.com/TS7zU1.

 

CONTACT INFORMATION
Washington, D.C.
185 Dirksen Senate Office Building | United States Senate | Washington, D.C. 20510
Phone: 202-224-3344 | Fax: 202-228-0566
Chattanooga
10 West MLK Blvd., 6th Floor
Chattanooga, TN 37402
Phone: 423-756-2757
Fax: 423-756-5313
Jackson
Ed Jones Federal Building
109 South Highland Ave., Ste. B8
Jackson, TN 38301
Phone: 731-424-9655
Fax: 731-424-8322
Knoxville
800 Market Street, Ste. 121
Knoxville, TN 37902
Phone: 865-637-4180
Fax: 865-637-9886
Memphis
100 Peabody Place, Ste. 1125
Memphis, TN 38103
Phone: 901-683-1910
Fax: 901-575-3528
Tri-Cities
Tri-Cities Regional Airport
2525 Hwy 75, Ste. 126
Blountville, TN 37617
Phone: 423-323-1252
Fax: 423-323-0358
Nashville
3322 West End Ave., Ste. 610
Nashville, TN 37203
Phone: 615-279-8125
Fax: 615-279-9488
You can also Click Here to contact Senator Bob Corker using an online form
 

Friday, December 07, 2012

United Nations Convention on People with disabilities

Will this convention create obligations for states?
 
Yes. States will be obligated to introduce measures that promote the human rights of persons with disabilities without discrimination. These measures would include anti-discrimination legislation, eliminate laws and practices that discriminate against persons with disabilities, and consider persons with disabilities when adopting new policies and programmes. Other measures include making services, goods, and facilities accessible to persons with disabilities.
 

John Jenkins
865-803-8179  cell
Gatlinburg, TN



Email: jrjenki@gmail.com
Blogs: http://littlepigeon.blogspot.com/
          http://alumcave.blogspot.com/


 
“That is why you develop a brain, so you can think about more than one thing at a time.”
―    Bill Clinton