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Wilmington News Journal Rips Stories from Bloggers Idea Tree

I'll start with the simple "coincidence".  In recent weeks (see this blogs stories below)..In comments on other blogs and in a recent op-ed offered to the News Journal I cited the fact that the Markell administration was doing nothing to bring the auto industry back to Delaware.  No sooner do I comment on that than we see this article Show up "GM auto plant may get new tenant"
 
 
The story " Riverside shows promise to rise, be revitalized" appears to be spun directly out of recent posts by yours truly.  Over on Delaware Politics I wrote:
"We’ve got to clean up the neighborhoods, restore some sense of morality and order to the home situation and ensure these kids have a chance. The truth noman, is that too many minorities live in disaffected communities that are neglected by the residents, the elected officials and the neighbors. I’m not just talking about places like “Eastside” in Wilmington (where 6-8 shootings have taken place since July) either. Places in Bear like Sparrow Run, Glasgow Pines, etc are rough neighborhoods where our little kids (6,7,8 yrs old) are exposed to fighting, weapons, drugs, hardcore violence, (even sex though maybe not directly)."
 
Right here on this blog both of the following posts mention the plight of the inner city citizen: An analysis of the CMS prison deaths and A New Choice for Delaware.
 
I would like to take issue with one of the opening statements of the Journal..."Thanks to a change in leadership in Washington that has put more money into public housing the HOPE VI program has been re-funded."
 
The truth is that the Bush Administration and Congress in 2007 authorized the $800 Million for HOPE VI.  It had nothing to do with the "change in leadership in Washington".  In fact it was the EVIL Bush Administration that did it. 
 
Here is the text from H.R. 3524 which became HOPE VI Improvement and Reauthorization Act of 2008 and later became part of the Bush Stimulus Package. 
 
All of this leads me to a pair of conclusions.  On the one hand I am glad that attention is being paid to the areas of our state that need it most.  On the other I am a little miffed that the News Journal reporters are acting like thee ideas are either theirs, new or worse, the Markell administration.  The truth is that the Markell administration can't even fix its own leaky pipes.
 
This is what little Adam Taylor from The NEWS JOURNAL would have seen if he'd done 10 minutes of research ON THE INTERNET...

SEC. 13. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    Subsection (v)(1) of section 24, as so redesignated by section 8(1) of this Act, is amended by striking all that follows `section' and inserting `$800,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2008 through 2015.
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        6-yr old Boy Suspended for Bringing a Camping Utensil to School

        "NEWARK, Del. — Finding character witnesses when you are 6 years old is not easy. But there was Zachary Christie last week at a school disciplinary committee hearing with his karate instructor and his mother’s fiancé by his side to vouch for him.

        Zachary’s offense? Taking a camping utensil that can serve as a knife, fork and spoon to school. He was so excited about recently joining the Cub Scouts that he wanted to use it at lunch. School officials concluded that he had violated their zero-tolerance policy on weapons, and Zachary was suspended and now faces 45 days in the district’s reform school.

        “It just seems unfair,” Zachary said, pausing as he practiced writing lower-case letters with his mother, who is home-schooling him while the family tries to overturn his punishment."

        In a separate incident, a girl was suspended for bringing an uncut cake, and a knife to school. 

        "House Bill 120, introduced by Rep. Teresa Schooley (D-Newark) comes in the wake of a recent incident where an 11-year old student was suspended for five days and faced expulsion because she brought a knife to school to cut a cake.

        The girl’s teacher used the knife to cut the cake, then reported the student for bringing a deadly weapon to school, according to the girl’s parents. No charges were pressed against her, but the Leasure Elementary School student was suspended according to district policy.

        The policy classifies any blade longer than three inches as a deadly weapon, regardless of its use, and students caught carrying or concealing one are subject to five days suspension and possible expulsion.
        HB 120 would give school boards the ability to modify the terms of expulsion or determine that it is not an appropriate punishment on a case-by-case basis.

        “I am in no way making light of the situation of children bringing weapons to school, but I think adults know the difference between a weapon and a knife being used to cut a cake,” Schooley said. “Because the law is so strict and there’s no room for discretion, families are placed in difficult situations where they have to get a lawyer to fight expulsion.”"


        Let me just say, THANK YOU REPRESENTATIVE SCHOOLEY!  And thank you to the 16 cosponsors(where the hell are the rest of our legislators, I would expect all 41 representatives to be sponsoring this bill unanimously).

        This is the problem with a “one size fits all” solution. Kids like young Zachary, so excited about taking a POSITIVE step forward end up violating some policy somewhere. Our children have had their youth stolen from them. When I was a 7 year old boy at least 5 of my cub scout friends did this EXACT same thing everyday. Heck, I wore my baseball spikes to school one day because I was excited to be playing in a game that afternoon.

        Today our 6, 7 and 8 year old kids are treated like adults and assumptions of violent intent are made immediately. How, in just 20 years have we allowed the innocence to escape out children? Have we really spiraled this far down? And if we have, shouldn’t we do something to help out children regain that innocence and be allowed to be kids?

        I know I'm just an average Joe but can't we do better than this?

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        A new choice for Delaware

        Gray Ghost writes:

        To Reduce Gangs and Gang Violence....

        Reduce "entitlements" to ZERO.

        One of the reasons, in my opinion, that crime in our "inner" cities is so bad is that the "Welfare State" rewards bad behavior. 

        In Mississippi we have many casinos. When do these casinos make their most money? At the first of the month with the distribution of "welfare" checks.

        If there were no "welfare", no SSI, no food stamps, what would happen? More people would be required to work (or they would starve). There would be less demand for the importation of foreign workers.

        I agree completely but I also understand the plight of the citizenry here and in many inner cities. There are very few "adequate" services. It's not for lack of funding contrary to popular belief but instead a multitude of waste, fraud and abuse. The answer is not to flood the market with money but to get out those who abuse and misuse the system. Benjamin Franklin said the best way to help the poor is to make being poor unattractive (paraphrased for today's lingo) and I believe that must be done. Do I sympathize with the poor? Absolutely, in many cases.
         
        In fact, I'm working on a non-profit to cure many of the ills I mentioned in this post. It's designed to help those who NEED help and to direct those who NEED guidance. It's designed to teach the young how to grow up with the principled strength that our founders had and to give them the courage to rise above the fray (and hopefully deter them from beating each other to death with railroad ties). It's going to replace ACORN and provide an alternative location for the homeless, the disenfranchised and the hungry.
         
        At the same time it's going to be a resource center for anyone looking for any kind of assistance. From job placement/job training to housing and subsistence as well as counseling in many areas this organization will help the people who need the help. This organization will also advocate for individual property rights while demanding that the city of Wilmington take action on condemned properties. No longer will caved in roofs be the sore sight seen from our city buildings. No more will the inner city residents be trapped in a city of garbage and filth. Our water and sewage systems need over hauls and not the band-aid fixes the city feels it can muster. We will demand that these problems be addressed and work to fix them. We won't stop there. The streets of Wilmington aren't safe after dark. The city (or more precisely a group of concerned citizens) have formed an escort service for city workers to make it safer to walk to their cars at night but that's not a fix. Once again it's a band-aid. They do an excellent job and I applaud them but we must do more.
         
        This non-profit will address those issues by working with the local churches to hold block vigils once a week. It will also reach out the communities where gangs have become the norm and where people feel little hope coming their way. We'll offer them access to local faith based groups and give them a positive message to carry forward into a life outside of the criminal element. We'll provide them a way out and leg up while ensuring that THEIR will pulls them out of their poverty and criminal activities.
         
        We'll show that Wilmington and by extension the rest of Delaware is a state worth a look by more than just banks and financial companies. We'll invite new manufacturing businesses to remodel, rebuild and reestablish a manufacturing industry in Delaware. How? We'll work with the government and new high tech companies working in many different fields including alternative energy, semiconductors, and the auto industry. We'll fight to reduce the union stranglehold on our state and reinvigorate the workforce. We'll fight for the rights of our workers while protecting the hard earned profits of our business community.
        At the same time, Delaware has become a so-called "Blue State Haven" for financial institutions and is one of the corporate capitals of the world thanks to our kind business laws. We're not proposing we eliminate those but instead that we ask those corporations who benefit so much from our legal system (Delaware's Chancery Courts are renowned in the business world) and from out low taxes/fees. We'll be asking those companies headquartered or squatting here to contribute to the community. At the same time the citizens will be asked to cover their share as well. This does not necessarily mean a rise in taxes but instead a shifting of the direction of the funds from government pockets to where it belongs, the people.
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