Texas Longhorns with newborn calf in Bluebonnets

Texas Longhorns with newborn calf in Bluebonnets

Please note I have a new phone number...

512-517-2708

Alan Maki

Alan Maki
Doing research at the LBJ Library in Austin, Texas

It's time to claim our Peace Dividend

It's time to claim our Peace Dividend

We need to beat swords into plowshares.

We need to beat swords into plowshares.

A program for real change...

http://peaceandsocialjustice.blogspot.com/2013/03/a-progressive-program-for-real-change.html


What we need is a "21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperity" which would make it a mandatory requirement that the president and Congress attain and maintain full employment.


"Voting is easy and marginally useful, but it is a poor substitute for democracy, which requires direct action by concerned citizens"

- Ben Franklin

Let's talk...

Let's talk...

Friday, October 28, 2011

Four Directions Walk to End Poverty

Four Directions Walk to End Poverty… make sure you watch the videos

There is a lot of important information here put together by the folks in Winnipeg, Manitoba struggling against poverty. Lots of good ideas for activists in cities all across Canada and the United States. Some really good work going on here… Alan
Date: Fri, 28 Oct 2011
From: Four Directions Walk
Subject: Four Directions Walk Cte meeting – Tues, Nov 1

Four Direction Walk to End Poverty in Manitoba

Dear Friends, Sisters and Brothers,

Thank you everyone who attended, walked and helped out with this year’s 4DW last Saturday! We’ll be having a meeting to see how things went and make plans:

Four Directions Walk Committee
Tues, Nov. 1, 4:30 pm
St. Matthews Maryland Church
641 Maryland
(Use the South door on McGee)
Everyone is welcome.

Numbers, media, etc.
This was our largest annual Walk to date; more than 100 people participated including 10 Walkers from the perimeter with another 20 joining along the way.

A larger number of groups participated, swelling the numbers including Occupy Winnipeg, Action 1:21, FemRev Winnipeg, Feed My Lambs (thank you for the food!) and The Urban, among others. We want to thank all the groups that helped out, some of which are not listed here!

For the first time, we both major newspapers in Winnipeg covered the Walk.  The articles are appended, below. Cheryl-Anne Carr, a Walk Committee member, is quoted accurately:

“The problems have been studied long enough, the situations have been looked at long enough, the problem is that there are not enough jobs, and the pay is not high enough. The problem is the province wants to keep people poor so that theres a huge pool of labour that’s frightened and can be used to keep wages down, and prices high. There’s a shortage of housing, theres a shortage of education spaces.”

Paul Graham with the help of Ken Harasym has produced a 30 minute video of the Walk, which will be broadcast repeatedly on Shaw Cable’s community channel: http://paulsgraham.ca/2011/10/24/video-four-directions-walk-to-end-poverty/
Many thanks! This is a must-see!

There is another video on youtube, but I don’t know who produced it:

It looks like we’ll have to have another Walk next year, because we had zero response from the government. We invited all elected politicians to listen, not speak). Only Harvey Smith from Winnipeg City Council attended (J Gerbasi and J Browaty sent their regrets they could not attend).

Of Winnipeg’s MPs, 3 Conservatives sent regrets (Fletcher, Toet and Bateman). Of MLAs, only one Progressive Conservative sent regrets (R Eichler, chair of the caucus).

If you have qs, we are at 792-3371 or reply by email.

Yours For Ending Poverty in Manitoba,
Four Directions Walk Committee


* * * * * *
Anti-poverty rally held at Legislature
By,Winnipeg Sun, Saturday, October 22, 2011
(81 internet comments omitted)
With flags waving and protest signs in the air, people marched from four directions of the city with one message eliminate poverty.
Protesters walked for hours before joining for a rally at the Manitoba Legislative Building Saturday afternoon.
“The problems have been studied long enough, the situations have been looked at long enough, the problem is that there are not enough jobs, and the pay is not high enough,” said Cheryl-Anne Carr, Four Directions Walk committee member.
“The problem is the province wants to keep people poor so that theres a huge pool of labour that’s frightened and can be used to keep wages down, and prices high. There’s a shortage of housing, theres a shortage of education spaces.”
The event marked the fourth annual Four Directions Walk to End Poverty. Clothing and food donations were being taken at the rally for the less fortunate.
Protester Terry Weaymouth said he hopes the protest will open people’s eyes to Winnipeg’s poverty problems.
“I think everybody’s affected by poverty, especially in my life,” he said. “I grew up in poverty and my friends have been affected by poverty. Its a big issue.”
Shon Villier held up a sign that read Solidarity in different languages.
“We don’t have to live in a society where people are hungry and living in the streets,” Villier said. “We have the resources to share, we have the money and it doesn’t have to be this way.”

Politics blamed for plight of poor
Marchers rally at legislature
By: Alexandra Paul, Winnipeg Free Press, Sunday, October 23, 2011
(72 internet comments omitted)
Under grey skies, about 50 people with banners and placards that called for an end to poverty rallied on the steps of the Manitoba legislature Saturday.
The fourth annual Four Directions Walk to End Poverty saw groups of a dozen or more gather at each of the four cardinal points of the Perimeter Highway and walk through the city to meet at the government seat.
“I came all the way from the Perimeter at Headingley,” said Neil Adams, a community worker from the North End. “I told people on the way here, who were honking their horns on Portage Avenue, to honk for better housing, better water and more wages.”
The annual event draws together a coalition of anti-poverty groups that believe it is a lack of political will that keeps welfare rates low and the working poor dependent on food banks.
“The problem is the government wants to keep people poor so they’ll have a pool of cheap labour,” organizer Cheryl Ann Carr said.
“We’ve talked to hundreds of people and put together a justice charter, and we can eliminate poverty in this province and we can do it quickly,” Carr said.
The charter is a six-point plan that calls for housing, expanded health care, jobs and annual incomes to be human rights. It also calls for an end to racism, sexism and all forms of discrimination. The sixth demand is for proportional government and pay cuts to match the average workers wage and benefits for all MLAs.
The Lutheran Urban Ministry collected sweaters, coats, shoes and boots to distribute at the rally.
Another group was handing out food next to a sign that read, Feed My Lambs.
Walkers began at St. Mary’s Road and the Perimeter in the south, Portage Avenue at the Perimeter in the west, Main Street at the Perimeter in the north and Pembina Highway at the Perimeter in the south.
“The major problem we face in this city and in this province is poverty… What it requires is for some level of government action to do something about it,” Coun. Harvey Smith (Daniel McIntyre) said.
He pointed to municipal housing programs in cities like Calgary that could be adopted in Winnipeg to cut the rate of homelessness.
Longtime poverty advocate Nick Ternette said he puts the blame for a lack of political will squarely on the shoulders of the provincial government.
“The NDP has paid no attention to poverty issues in an effective way. During the election campaign, I asked one cabinet minister (if he supported) a guaranteed annual income and he said No. A single person on social assistance gets $481 a month; thats $4 a day for food. It hasn’t increased in over a decade,” Ternette said.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Don't you just hate it when salespeople tell you something that isn't true just to sell you something?


I sent this to both Gander Mountain and Columbia.

Notice; I will be placing this exchange on my blog.

---------- Forwarded message ----------











From: Alan Maki 
Date: Tue, Oct 18, 2011 at 5:59 PM
Subject: Re: I bought these hiking boots at Gander Mountain in Forest Lake, Minnesota on Saturday [Incident: 111017-000020]
To: Columbia Sportswear Customer Care


James,


Taking these boots back is not an option.

I live in Warroad, Minnesota over 400 miles from the store I purchased them at. 

I tried taking them back to Gander Mountain in Bemidji, Minnesota and they told me they would not refund my money because "it was your responsibility to know what you purchased." The Bemidji store is over 140 miles from me--- one way.

Either way, an exchange would cost me more in gas than what I paid for the boots.

If you advertise something as "waterproof" (according to the salesman WP stands for "waterproof") the boots should be waterproof at least to the point where one can walk through the damp early morning grass.

I went to purchase hiking boots for fall hunting and ended up with boots that did not serve the purpose I specifically stated I wanted them for.

You should see to it that I am refunded a portion of my money in line with a comparable pair of boots that are not waterproof. In no place is there anything in the box or on the box explaining your coding as to what is waterproof and the limitations of waterproofing.

Alan L. Maki


On Tue, Oct 18, 2011 at 3:46 PM, Columbia Sportswear Customer Care <columbia@custhelp.com> wrote:

Recently you requested personal assistance from our on-line support center. Below is a summary of your request and our response.

We will assume your issue has been resolved if we do not hear from you within 96 hours.

Thank you for allowing us to be of service to you.


 Subject
I bought these hiking boots at Gander Mountain in Forest Lake, Minnesota an Saturday, Oct. 15, 2011
 Discussion Thread
 Response (James)10/18/2011 01:46 PM
Hi Alan, 

I am sorry to hear about your boots. I am sure that Gander Mountain has a return policy, especially since these shoes are such a new purchase. As far as the Coretek Boot itself, the material is indeed meant to be waterproof. However, it doesn't have a waterproof membrane, meaning that if water penetrates the outer material, your feet end up getting soaked. 

So in essence, the material on your boots is waterproof, but I would recommend buying something that has an Omni-Tech or OutDry membrane, meaning that even if water penetrates the outer material, your feet will remain dry. 

I understand your frustration as a consumer, and don't want you to feel like you don't have any options. I would encourage you to take the footwear back to Gander Mountain and see what they can do for you. If they are not too much help, contact us and we will get you taken care of. 

Regards, 
James
Customer Care
 Customer (Alan Maki)10/17/2011 05:09 AM
I bought these hiking boots at Gander Mountain in Forest Lake, Minnesota an Saturday, October 15. The salesman told me these boots were waterproof. He told me the "WP" stood for "waterproof." I walked through the moist grass this morning and they got soaked through. I obviously wasted $79.00.
 Question Reference #111017-000020
Date Created: 10/17/2011 05:09 AM
Last Updated: 10/18/2011 01:46 PM
Status: Waiting
First Name: Alan
Zip/postal code: 56763
Country: 
Phone: 218-386-2432
Last Name: Maki
 Style #
Columbia Coretek WP



-- 
Alan L. Maki
58891 County Road 13
Warroad, Minnesota 56763

Phone: 218-386-2432

Primary E-mail: amaki000@centurytel.net


Should an occupation of the Ford Twin Cities Assembly Plant be considered to save it?

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Now is the time to bring back the "Rebuild America Act" and the push for "peace dividends."

The claim that the Occupy Wall Street movement is the "first populist movement" on the "left" since the 1930's is not really true.  Those who push this view want to discourage today's activists from building on the struggles of the past.
The peace movement has been a "populist movement" for many years now. 
The Occupy Wall Street movement could build on the struggles of the peace movement by reviving the progressive "Rebuild America Act" first proposed by left-wing labor leader William Winpisinger that found tremendous support among liberals, progressives and the left.
Since the AFL-CIO has entered the Occupy Wall Street movement, and this movement is growing by leaps and bounds, we need to find ways to help keep it growing. This would be the perfect time to talk with the leaders of organized labor about its responsibility for what Obama is doing by virtue of Organized labor's support for Obama and his phony "jobs legislation" by bringing forward the "Rebuild America Act."
The Occupy Wall Street movement could also start pushing for a "peace dividend;"end militarism and wars, fund human needs.  

The AFL-CIO should not be pushing Obama's phony "American Jobs Act" that only creates more troughs for Wall Street's fat pigs to profit from.

What ever happened to William Winpisinger's "Rebuild America Act?"

The AFL-CIO should bring back to life its committee on conversion from military spending to spending on human needs; William Winpisinger worked hard to establish this committee.

Richard Trumka and Elizabeth Warren should do what they said they would do: Hold Obama's feet to the fire. They could do this by running against Obama and Biden promoting William Winpinsinger's "Rebuild America Act."

The Occupy Wall Street movement might have the political strength and muscle to put the progressive "Rebuild America Act" back on the table so we can begin to talk about "peace dividends" again.
How is Barack Obama's Wall Street war economy working for you?