Sunday, August 24, 2008

Protect Our Parks PSA


Saturday, August 23, 2008

Tom Interviewed on WBEZ - "Connecting the Dots"

I was interviewed by Richard Steel on WBEZ Chicago's morning news magazine, 848. He was interested in my first post for the Huffington Post''s new Chicago edition. My beat is themed "Connecting the Dots in Chicago." My first post introduced the topic, which looks at the relationship between the state of the federal budget, the incompetence of Illinois' state government and the corruption in Chicago's city government. The result of this chain reaction of misguided federal spending and clowns and crooks running local government is the Screwed Citizen. Read the piece and leave a comment!


Monday, August 18, 2008

Catch Tom @ The Huffington Post

I've joined the writing crew at the Huffington Post for a new Chicago edition. Check out my first post, "Connecting the Dots in Chicago," which chronicles the connection between local city finance in Chicago with issues of privatization of the commons and poor services.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Back to School in S.C. - Attend Campaign School

The Southeastern Institute for Women in Politics invites you to participate in a unique, hands-on workshop to prepare women to win elected and appointed positions at the federal, state and local levels...and to train campaign managers and volunteers who can help them. When: Wednesday, September 10, 1 - 5 PM. Where: University of South Carolina, Columbia - School of Journalism and Mass Communications. Fee = $75.00

To our friends in the area, here's a chance to get some political knowledge at a bargain basement price!

Monday, August 4, 2008

State of Human Development in America

The folks who have been measuring and reporting on global human development for the United Nations have turned their lens to the USA. The American Human Development Project has published its first report, "The Measure of America," and the news is not good.

HEALTH:
  • The U.S. will spend $230 million on health care in the next hour.
  • One in six Americans goes without health insurance (around 47 million people).
  • According to the National Academy of Sciences, lack of health insurance results in lost economic value equal to $178 million to $356 million every day, due to the poorer health and earlier deaths of the uninsured.
  • The U.S. ranks #24 among the 30 most affluent countries in life expectancy – yet spends more on health care than any other nation.
  • The U.S. infant mortality rate is on par with that of Croatia, Cuba, Estonia, and Poland; if the U.S. infant mortality rate were the same as that of top-ranked Sweden, 21,000 more American babies would live to celebrate their first birthdays every year.
  • A baby born in Washington, D.C. is almost two-and-a-half times more likely to die before age one than a baby born in Vermont. African American babies are more than twice as likely to die before age one than either white or Latino babies.
ACCESS TO KNOWLEDGE:
  • College graduates can expect, on average, double the lifetime earnings of high school graduates.
  • Fourteen percent of the population – some 30 million Americans – lacks the literacy skills to perform simple, everyday tasks like understanding newspaper articles and instruction manuals.
  • Twelve percent of Americans lack the literacy skills to fill in a job application or payroll form, read a map or bus schedule, or understand labels on food and drugs.
  • More than one in five Americans – 22 percent of the population – have “below basic” quantitative skills, making it impossible to balance a checkbook, calculate a tip, or figure out from an advertisement the amount of interest on a loan.
  • In 2006, 4.5 million young people ages eighteen to twenty-four were not in school, not working, and had not graduated high school.
STANDARD OF LIVING
  • The richest 20 percent of all U.S. households earned more than half of the nation’s total income
  • in 2006.
  • The top 1 percent of U.S. households possesses a full third of America’s wealth.
  • Households in the top 10 percent of the income distribution hold more than 71 percent of the country’s wealth, while those in the lowest 60 percent possess just 4 percent.
  • Nearly one in five American children lives in poverty, with more than one in thirteen living in extreme poverty.
  • The poverty line for a family of four (two adults and two children) is an income of $21,027 before taxes; in 2006, more than 36 million Americans were classified poor by this definition.
  • In every racial/ethnic group, men earn more than their female counterparts.
  • In 1980, the average executive earned forty-two times as much as the average factory worker; today, executives earn some four hundred times what factory workers in their industries earn.
  • In 2004, median net worth was $140,800 for whites, and $24,900 for nonwhites.
  • The real value of the minimum wage has decreased by 40 percent in the past forty years.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

What Can Nuns Tell Us About Creativity?

Have you heard about the School Sisters of Notre Dame? This order of Catholic nuns is dedicated to education and firmly believe that the idle mind is the devil’s workshop. So they have vowed to keep their minds active. When not doing their educational work and worship, many of the good sisters play games, do puzzles, follow current events and such.

A number of years ago, this group came to the attention of the medical science world as they were outliving the general population and showing fewer signs of Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia. A study was begun to monitor their living habits and where upon their deaths many have been donating their brains to science.

The main question being explored in the study is “What factors in early, mid, and late life increase the risk of Alzheimer’s disease and other brain diseases such as stroke?” Other research questions relate to the determinants of longevity and the quality of life in the elderly. Some very interesting discoveries have been made, particularly fascinating for people interested in improving their creative thinking. Read the full article at "Before & After."

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Why You Should Become
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"America Needs You!
Why You Should Become
a Creativity Champion"

America needs her artists, cultural workers and creative professionals to lead in the public sector! This book makes the case for creativity as a national value and the basis for a winning politics and explains why creative professionals have what it takes to lead and run for local public office. You're already a leader! Believe it.

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