Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Domestic violence = 'pre-existing condition'?

Posted By on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 12:41 PM

Un. Be. Lievable. In case you needed any more reasons to despise health insurance companies, health care reform advocates today are pointing out some of the mind-boggling things that some insurers consider “pre-existing conditions.” An industry that is widely viewed as being heartless, and that’s on its better days, is being justly attacked for allowing insurers in eight states — including the Carolinas, naturally — to classify domestic violence victims as high-risk, or uninsurable, because being beaten up by one's mate is a “pre-existing condition.” Yep, the health insurance industry has a big new jewel in its Cruelty Crown.

Two things: first, denying coverage to women who’ve been beaten by their spouses is grotesque and clearly inhuman, and I don’t want to hear some lame excuse about “protecting their profits.” Second, it’s also now clearer than ever that the insurance industry can’t, or won’t, properly monitor itself, which lends yet more proof that it needs a major overhaul.

Meanwhile, states can legislate against this heinous practice, as Arkansas did in April when lawmakers there told health insurers to act like decent human beings for a change.

NC insurers don't have to cover her
NC insurers don't have to cover her

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Max Siegle's Family Affair

Posted By on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 11:56 AM

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Growing up as the child of a Jewish father and an African-American mother, Max Siegle has lived in two worlds all his life. In the recently published anthology Family Affair: What It Means to be African-American Today,

Siegel, currently the highest-ranking African-American NASCAR executive, writes about his life and how his early sense of self shaped him into the man he is today. Sharing his story in the anthology, he said, is another dimension of what he does personally.

“I constantly do a lot of introspection of where I am in my life. It’s a great time for the book because of everything that’s going on in the world, it kind of evaluates where African-Americans are as a people,” said Siegle. “What I’ve found is that if you focus on the things you have in common with people, you’ll find that we have more in common than what we have different.”

In his essay, “Calm within the Storm,” Siegel writes about how is father moved him and his sister from place to place after telling them that their mother died. When he was 11, he learned the truth — that his father had lied about his mother’s death and was dying himself of lymphoma.

As the illness turned his father into a shell of himself, Siegel writes that his father told him he had to become a man sooner, rather than later. “I was fortunate enough that despite my dysfunctional household, my parents instilled a lot of self-confidence. I never really had any self-esteem issues,” he said.

The dysfunction that he says surrounded him as he grew up, prepared him for life. Siegle — president of global operations at Dale Earnhardt Inc. — never expected to work in NASCAR, a business that employs only a few African-Americans, he writes in his essay.

“I have approached life pretty open-minded, but I’m also very realistic and very deliberate. I didn’t come [into NASCAR] thinking that I would be treated a certain way,” he said about his success in the sport. Siegel said he was aware of the stereotypes typically thrown around about NASCAR, but he approached his job with an open mind.

And in his essay, he says this about what his job has taught him.

“Living in Charlotte, N.C. has been an ideal situation for my family, and I can honestly say that this position has forced me to use every skill I have ever developed — marketing, business, law and leadership. It’s a win-win situation. Having confidence in my abilities is the primary reason why I am where I am today.”

According to Siegel, NASCAR itself is committed to diversity and including women and people of color in the sport. And he said the he can see his impact on the sport because he knows that people are watching what he’s doing.

“You’re under such a microscope, but it’s great to see the impact that you have, touching one life or two lives and an organization.”

Family Affair editor, Gil L. Robertson IV, writes in the preface of the book: “If America is ever to engage in a real conversation about race, all of its citizens must be mentally and spiritually prepared to take part.”

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'Dirty Book Guy' for mayor?

Posted By on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 11:39 AM

While most voters and members of the media seem to believe it's a foregone conclusion that Charlotte's mayoral race will be between two city councilmen — Anthony Foxx, a Democrat, and John Lassiter, a Republican — there's the little matter of today's primary.

Before Lassiter can take on Foxx, he's got to get through the "Dirty Book Guy," Martin Davis, and Jack Stratton.

CLT Blog reports:

Stratton, who doesn’t even live in Charlotte, features a rambling, incoherent website dedicated to an unintelligible conspiracy theory. The other fringe candidate, Martin Davis, has been dubbed “dirty book guy” by the Charlotte Observer and Creative Loafing.

Martin Davis first rose to notoriety at the October 7th, 1997 Mecklenburg Board of County Commissioners meeting. Davis used a public comment period to read sexually explicit excerpts from “The Faber Book of Gay Fiction” which he had stumbled across at the public library. The meeting was broadcast live on television.

At first, the Commissioners allowed Davis to proceed. After several more sessions of reading aloud graphic and often homoerotic books, Chairman Parks Helms had enough. At the March 6th, 2001 County Commissioners meeting, Helms forbid Martin Davis from reading any adult material aloud. When Davis ignored the Chairman and attempted to read a special passage from “Woman on Top,” Helms had him forcefully removed from the building, or as Davis puts it “had a police officer attack me.”

Read more, and watch an excerpt from Davis' reading of "Woman on Top" here.

Here', in 2008, Davis pleads with the Mecklenburg Board of County Commissioners to reconsider funding for "Angels in America," a play with homosexual themes.

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20x20x20 on 09/17… or in other words, Pecha Kucha is back!

Posted By on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 11:11 AM

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  • “Cloud” Installation by Wonderworld outside the venue of Pecha Kucha Vol. 3. Rock Hill, April 09. Image courtesy: Mitchell Kearney

What do making jewelry, fighting racism, re-inventing city/regional planning, and dancing the Tango have in common? Well, I really don’t know, except that those would be four of the 20 different topics featured in this Thursday’s Pecha Kucha Night. The presentations will cover a wide range of media, personalities and emotions. There will also be an engaged, diverse audience of a few hundred.

However we weren’t so sure about anything like that when we started off a little more than a year ago. We were out on a limb, hoping that there would be at least a few talented people who had something interesting to share; that we would be lucky if around 100 people showed up to the event … in other words, we ourselves had given in to the skepticism about the creative talent and community support in our region — the same “inferiority complex” that we were fighting against in our forums!

To our pleasant surprise, it did not take too long for our city to prove us wrong. At our very first event, held on a weeknight in the middle of the last year’s post-Hurricane Ike gas crisis, we had a standing-room-only crowd! But what was even more impressive was the quality and the range of the 14 presentations. We realized that we were really on to something!

What makes Pecha Kucha Nights so successful here — and for that matter, in more than 200 other cities around the world?

First of all the format is so simple — 20 images at 20 seconds each. That’s it — there are hardly any other rules. And as the last events showed us, there is hardly a topic that couldn’t be presented using that format.

Then there is the not-so-secret ingredient: beer!

As a former presenter from Tokyo says: “The beauty of Pecha Kucha Night lies in the tension between the chaos of a full-blown party and the politeness of an art school crit, with the snappy pace holding it all together.” In that spirit, in most cities where the series is successful, they are held in informal environments like bars, coffee shops, warehouses etc. The whole tone is relaxed; there is the freedom to move around and socialize.

Moreover, in the process, art and design are taken out of the pristine spaces of museums and institutions and shares the stage with every other issue/topic — funny and tragic, personal and public, mundane and profound — that make up our lives. In the process, they open themselves up to new perspectives and fresh audiences.

This Thursday night we will have our fourth and biggest yet Pecha Kucha Night, bringing together more than 20 individuals — some pretty well known in their field and beyond, some relatively obscure — to share their work, their message, their passion.

Come prepared to be amused, provoked and inspired.

Manoj P Kesavan

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Event Details:

Pecha Kucha Charlotte Vol. 4 – Thursday, 17th of September, 2009, starting at 7:30 p.m., at the Hart Witzen Gallery, NoDa (136 East 36th St., Charlotte, 28206). Admission is $5 at the door (+ cash bar). See www.point8.org/pechakucha for more details.

Volume 4 of Pecha Kucha Night Charlotte is organized by point8 forum, with help and support from the Winthrop University Galleries. Pecha Kucha(TM) is devised and shared by Klein Dytham Architecture, Tokyo.

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Community mosaic unveiling

Posted By on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 10:07 AM

On Saturday, Sept. 19, Charlotte Art League will have its Community Mosaic Project Unveiling. At the free event, folks get to witness the unveiling of a mosaic building installation - and some hard and creative work done by Charlotteans -  in historic South End. See the flyer below for more details.

artpost

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Best bets in Charlotte comedy this week

Posted By on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 9:28 AM

As the headline suggests, here are a few of the best places to find comedy events in Charlotte — from stand-up to improv to sketch comedy and more. For a complete listing of all comedy visit www.CharlotteComedyLIVE.com.

 Tuesday, Sept. 15

* Stand-Up Comedy at The Lake Norman Comedy Zone at 7 p.m.

Nationally touring headliner Jody Kerns.

Galway Hooker ~ 7044 Kenton Dr., Cornelius ~ 704-895-1782 ~ $10.

Wednesday, Sept. 17

* All-Stars Showcase benefit for 'element 7' Volunteer Group at 8 p.m.

Join host Potter along with Charlotte's best up-and-coming comics.  Treat yourself to a fun evening out while helping out a great cause.

Wine-Up ~ 3306 N. Davidson St. ~ $10 cash at door

Thursday, Sept. 17

* Stand-Up Comedy at Gastonia Comedy Zone at 8 p.m.

Featuring nationally touring stand-up comedian Bryan Cork & Jeremy Pierce.

Jack Rabbit's ~ 1225 Union Road, Gastonia ~ Reservations 704-864-1966 ~ $10

Friday, Sept. 18

* Final Underground Comedy Stand-Up Showcase at 9 p.m.

Join John and Steve as they blow-out this final installment of the Underground Comedy Showcase.  Featuring the comedy of not one, but two John Colwells, Bruce Bellile, Chesney Goodson, and Steve Forrest.

Cans ~ 500 W. 5th St. ~ $5

Saturday, Sept. 19

* Stand-up Comedy at Alive in NoDa at 8 p.m.

Stand-up comedy with nationally touring comedians Ron Feingold & Dennis Ross.

Alive ~ Behind Prevue ~ 2909 N. Davidson St. ~ Reservations 704-930-2200 ~ $15

To join Debbie’s mailing list (just one e-mail a week, I promise), e-mail DebbieMillwater@Gmail.com with the Subject Line “Subscribe.”

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Today's Top 5: Tuesday

Posted By on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 8:00 AM

Here are the five best events going down in Charlotte and the surrounding area today, Sept. 15, 2009 — as selected by the folks at Creative Loafing.

Live Trivia at Picasso's Sports Cafe

TU-TOP-HERO_2

Enter the Haggis at The Evening Muse

• Comedian Jody Kerns at Lake Norman Comedy Zone

Country Tuesday at Snug Harbor

Touch One Tuesdays at Wine Up

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Monday, September 14, 2009

Bye bye Burton

Posted By on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 5:39 PM

Say it isn’t so. A legendary childhood TV fave of mine recently met its demise. After 26 years — nearly my whole life — of convincing kids that reading is cool (and I have the library to prove it), the scholastic staple Reading Rainbow was pulled off the air two Fridays ago.

Sooo ... no weekday morning before school Electric Company. No Schoolhouse Rock interspersed with Saturday morning cartoons. Now, no hypnotically cheerful LeVar Burton. No wonder some kids don’t think learning is fun. Poor children of the future. Just how will they learn anything? Internet, schminternet. It’s creepy out there. But Reading Rainbow — now that was a wholesome, good ol’ fashioned learning machine.

The program earned more than two-dozen Emmy awards and was the third-longest running children’s show in PBS history behind Sesame Street and Mister Rogers. According to NPR, John Grant, who is responsible for content at WNED Buffalo, RR’s home station, said no one, including the station, PBS, and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, would put up the several hundred thousand dollars that would have renewed the show’s broadcast rights.

NPR reports that changes in educational initiatives are to blame as well. That is, whereas RR “operated on the assumption that kids already had basic reading skills and instead focused on fostering a love of books”, research is now directed at the basic tools of reading such as phonics, spelling, and reading fundamentals. Blah, blah, blah ... I get it.

OK, so maybe I don’t remember the title of any book that was ever on that show. However, I do remember being excited about the wonderful world of imagination and how all you had to do to get lost in a different daydream everyday was turn a page. I don’t think I even realized I was learning, expanding my thought processes, developing my creative juices. And how could anyone forget that theme song — Butterfly in the sky/I can go twice as high/take a look/it’s in a book . . . I would go on, but I think I feel a tear forming.

So I was a book nerd. But RR got me where I am today. You see, RR made me love reading. Reading made me a better writer. Being a better writer got me A’s in English. A’s in English got me everywhere. The rest is history.

Thank goodness for companies who are salvaging the life of this wonderful program by selling it on DVD. At least this way, future generations will benefit from the educational value that this program, cleverly cloaked in 30-minute increments of fun, fancy and fantasy, had to offer.

And they won’t have to take my word for it.

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N.C. develops a case of terminal groins

Posted By on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 5:06 PM

Thanks soooo very much to the N.C. Division of Coastal Management. As reported in the Wilmington Star News, the DCM was supposed to create an impartial study to make recommendations on whether to use terminal groins (now there’s an unfortunate term) to manage erosion around inlets on the coast.

The state currently has a ban on such structures, but developers and realtors have been pressuring the state to allow them, in order to save valuable (i.e., you can’t afford it) oceanfront property, as well as some of the oceanfront McMansions they’ve built. Now, the DCM, run by Democrats who supposedly have the best interests of the average citizen in mind, have picked Moffatt & Nichol to conduct the study, which will cost the state $287,000.

M&N is a coastal engineering firm from California that plans ports facilities and designs “coastal structures,” so the results of the study are practically a foregone conclusion. Some members of the N.C. Coastal Resources Commission, and environmentalists, aren’t too happy about DCM’s move. For years, many coastal scientists have noted problems caused by hardened structures on beaches, namely that they simply take sand from other sections of the beach and, essentially, move the erosion around – which, of course, makes more people jump up and down to demand yet more terminal groins. To clear up any confusion, here are photos of two different types of terminal groins. We’re talking about the kind that doesn’t involve a bull.

Deliver Us From Weasels, a collection of 50 of John Grooms’ best columns and articles, will be published in November by Main Street Rag Press. The book will cost $14.95, but can be purchased in advance through Oct. 26 for $10 including shipping at www.mainstreetrag.com/store/ComingSoon.php

jetty
original

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Can the mob rule?

Posted By on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 3:52 PM

Five buses left Northside Baptist Church just before 10 p.m. Friday night on their way to Washington, D.C., after quick stops to pick up more protesters in Durham, Salisbury and Burlington.

Why Washington? Because they were on their way to join the mob of 9/12 protesters who have a thing-or-two to say about government spending.

The Daily Beast's John Avlon weighs in on the day's festivities:

The weirdness of the Wingnut summer isn’t over. The anger has metastasized into the body politic, and it’s going to get a lot uglier from here.

Obama Derangement Syndrome is establishing itself as a potent political force, able to rally tens of thousands of citizens to the Washington Mall after Glenn Beck’s call. Joe Wilson’s outburst isn’t an embarrassment of incivility to these folks; it is a rallying cry for an army of useful idiots. But Republicans will soon find that they cannot contain or moderate this strain—while Democrats won’t understand what hit them.

The wave of white people that descended on Washington, D.C., this Saturday wasn’t motivated by simple racism, as some liberals might wish—at least that’s what the lady waving the Confederate flag told me. No, this was something else: a pent-up frustration at unprecedented Washington overspending and an individualistic resentment of the welfare state, all mixed with a dose of self-referential patriotism and a spicy dash of paranoia.

These are the American flag-brandishing patriots who dare to call the president a communist and a would-be dictator. As more than one T-shirt put it, they are exercising their First Amendment rights so they don’t have to exercise their Second Amendment rights—yet.

It was hard to tell whether the pictures of the Founding Fathers on T-shirts and posters outnumbered references to Hitler or Lenin, but these folks are riffing off history. They know their Constitution and their Tom Paine, via Glenn Beck.

Read the entire post here.

Who's paying for the protests? Here's a theory:

Glenn Beck will tell you that this weekend's march of right-wing activists on Washington was six months in the making.

Don't believe a word of it. Try 40 years.

As disgruntled white taxpayers joined conspiracy theorists, gun enthusiasts, state-sovereignty activists and outright racists on Pennsylvania Avenue, the long-time leaders of the American right, whose pedigrees go back to the 1964 presidential campaign of Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., no doubt witnessed a day they thought might never come.

Never before has the right taken to the streets in such numbers. (Estimates range between 50,000 and 100,000 attending the post-mach rally at the U.S. Capitol building.) Marching has long been the province of the left, most notably in the civil rights movement. But the election of the nation's first African-American president, a moderate liberal, in a time of economic crisis, yielded right-wing leaders the gold of backlash.

While the foot-soldiers of the Tea Party movement give it a more secular appearance than its recent predecessors, the movement is the right's replacement for a religious right that has weakened since 2004, when it helped win a second term for George W. Bush. The tactics, however, are the same: just as the religious right subverts the Christian faith in the service of its authoritarian, business-friendly goals, so, too, does the Tea Party movement subvert the American civic religion -- that faith characterized by love of country, invocation of the Founders and veneration of the Constitution.

At the dawn of the cultural evolution of the 1960s, a handful of right-wing activists and intellectuals banded together to form a philosophical movement that became known as the New Right. These were the people who won Barry Goldwater the Republican presidential nomination, only to see their candidate meet disastrous results in his race against Democrat Lyndon Johnson of Texas. But the right is never truly defeated; its leaders are patient, and they learn from their errors. When they're out of power, they stay busy, building institutions and mailing lists, all the while waiting for their moment to strike.

And so, in 1980, Ronald Reagan was elected to the presidency, largely thanks to the tireless efforts of New Right leaders.

Out of their tiny numbers, they went on from the Goldwater campaign to found the religious right, a textbook example of ground-level organizing that led to a national electoral victory with the election of Reagan. And they are at it again.

Here's Glenn Beck's dramatic commercial for the event, for which he was the live anchor on Fox News:

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