Archive for November, 2006

MIAMI: CAPITAL of the THIRD WORLD

Posted in Florida, Politics, Wire on 30 November 2006 by thePalmettoPatriot

TITLE: GOP Rep. Calls Miami ‘Third World Country’
Gov. Jeb Bush Fires Back, Calling Colorado’s Tom Tancredo’s Comments ‘Disappointing’ And ‘Naïve’
AUTHOR: CBS NEWS
SOURCE: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/11/30/politics/main2217944.shtml
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DENVER (CBS/AP)- A Colorado congressman who likened Miami to a “third world country” defended his comments in a letter to Gov. Jeb Bush, saying fewer city residents consider themselves Americans.

Bush had earlier responded to the remarks made by Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., after the congressman criticized the city’s poverty and crime while attending an immigration conference in Palm Beach over the weekend.

Tancredo, a vocal supporter of the anti-illegal immigration movement in the U.S. House, made his initial comments to WorldNetDaily, a conservative online new site, his spokesman Carlos Espinosa said.

“Look at what has happened to Miami. It has become a Third World country. You just pick it up and take it and move it someplace. You would never know you’re in the United States of America. You would certainly say you’re in a Third World country,” Tancredo said.

Bush, who plans to move to Miami after vacating the governor’s office, said in his letter, said Tancredo’s comments were “disappointing” and “naïve.”

“Miami is a wonderful city filled with diversity and heritage that we choose to celebrate, not insult,” Bush said. Late Tuesday night, Tancredo responded with a letter to the governor, defending his view.

“I certainly understand and appreciate your need and desire to create the illusion of Miami as a multiethnic ‘All American’ city,” Tancredo wrote. “I can also appreciate that Miami’s schools graduate many outstanding students and that the cultural and ethnic diversity of the city offers many advantages to its residents.

“However, it is neither naïve nor insulting to call attention to a real problem that cannot be easily dismissed through politically correct happy talk,” Tancredo wrote. Tancredo said a growing number of Miami residents don’t speak English, one of the few things that holds Americans together.

Bush said he was disheartened by the congressman’s “disparaging comments” and touted the city’s diversity as a reason Florida leads the nation in job growth and continues to have a bustling economy. He acknowledged crime problems in the city, but noted they have dropped every year since 1999.

“Perhaps your naive comments served as a good reminder for everyone to lessen the anger, frustration and emotion surrounding the issue of immigration,” Bush said in the letter. “Overheated rhetoric won’t solve this issue. We need a comprehensive solution that will require cooler heads to prevail.”

Miami Republican Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Alvarez, also criticized Tancredo’s comments. Ros-Lehtinen also invited him to visit Miami.

“I hope you will take Cong. Ros-Lehtinen’s offer to come visit our community,” Bush said in a handwritten post script. A spokeswoman for Bush said the governor has a close connection with Miami’s Hispanic community.

“He’s disappointed,” Alia Faraj said. “He takes pride in the diversity in Florida and feels very strongly about Miami. It’s his home.”

WHALES found to be SMARTER than REPUBLICANS

Posted in Science, Wire on 27 November 2006 by thePalmettoPatriot

SCIENCE

TITLE: HUMPBACK WHALES HAVE “HUMAN” BRAIN CELLS

AUTHOR: REUTERS UK

SOURCE: http://uk.reuters.com/article/oddlyEnoughNews/idUKN2642608820061127

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Humpback whales have a type of brain cell seen only in humans, the great apes, and other cetaceans such as dolphins, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.

This might mean such whales are more intelligent than they have been given credit for, and suggests the basis for complex brains either evolved more than once, or has gone unused by most species of animals, the researchers said.

The finding may help explain some of the behaviors seen in whales, such as intricate communication skills, the formation of alliances, cooperation, cultural transmission and tool usage, the researchers report in The Anatomical Record.

Patrick Hof and Estel Van der Gucht of the Department of Neuroscience at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York studied the brains of humpback whales and discovered a type of cell called a spindle neuron in the cortex, in areas comparable to where they are seen in humans and great apes.

Although the function of spindle neurons is not well understood, they may be involved in cognition — learning, remembering and recognizing the world around oneself. Spindle cells may be affected by Alzheimer’s disease and other debilitating brain disorders such as autism and schizophrenia.

‘COMPLEX SOCIAL PATTERNS’

The researches found spindle neurons in the same location in toothed whales with the largest brains, which the researchers said suggests that they may be related to brain size. Toothed whales such as orcas are generally considered more intelligent than baleen whales such as humpbacks and blue whales, which filter water for their food.

The humpbacks also had structures that resembled “islands” in the cerebral cortex, also seen in some other mammals.

These islands may have evolved in order to promote fast and efficient communication between neurons, the researchers said.

Spindle neurons probably first appeared in the common ancestor of hominids, humans and great apes about 15 million years ago, the researchers said — they are not seen in lesser apes or monkeys.

In cetaceans they would have evolved earlier, possibly as early as 30 million years ago, the researchers said.

Either the spindle neurons were only kept in the animals with the largest brains or they evolved several times independently, the researchers said.

“In spite of the relative scarcity of information on many cetacean species, it is important to note in this context that sperm whales, killer whales, and certainly humpback whales, exhibit complex social patterns that included intricate communication skills, coalition-formation, cooperation, cultural transmission and tool usage,” the researchers wrote.

“It is thus likely that some of these abilities are related to comparable histologic complexity in brain organization in cetaceans and in hominids.”

MOVING TO MIAMI? THINK AGAIN

Posted in Economics, Florida, Wire on 19 November 2006 by thePalmettoPatriot

TITLE:  THERE’S TROUBLE IN PARADISE – LOTS OF IT
Restless locals call Miami a corrupt, exorbitant mess, and many are leaving

AUTHOR:    Tim Padgett (TIME)

Jewelry, an actress once said, takes people’s minds off your wrinkles. So too has Miami’s necklace of pearl beaches and aventurine waters long distracted residents from the city’s notorious imperfections. Crime and corruption were a small price to pay, people told themselves, for an otherwise affordable existence so near paradise.

That logic may no longer apply. Crime is down, but the city’s old dysfunctions have been joined by acute new economic pressures on Miami’s middle class and retirees. Now that the city’s jagged growth spurt is showing signs of sputtering, regular Miamians are taking stock of their new city: traffic jams, half-built high rises, struggling schools. And more than ever, they are voting with their flip-flops. They’re leaving town.

When Brenda Powell, 61, retires next year, she plans to leave Miami, where she has lived for 30 years, and perhaps head for North Carolina. A retiree moving away from Florida might seem as odd as an Everglades egret flying north for the winter, but Powell, an administrative assistant, says she has had enough. “Miami has become an overcrowded mess,” she says. “It takes me an hour to drive less than 10 miles.” Joseph and Teresa Burke and their four children are also moving to North Carolina. Although the 2006 hurricane season, ending in a few weeks, has been merciful, insurers have been less so. Premiums have been going up as much as 1,000% since 2000 for some home- and business owners. The Burkes watched hurricane and other insurance costs on their Miami Beach house skyrocket from $3,500 a year in 2000 to $17,000 today. “I’m leaving everything I’ve known my entire life,” says Joseph, 43, who runs a small ocean-freighter business. “But if the rest of the country was based on the same out-of-whack economic-fluid levels Miami’s on these days, America would be a Third World banana republic.”

Census Bureau data show that in each year since 2000, on average over 20,000 more residents have left Miami (which includes the city of Miami and Miami-Dade County, pop. 2.4 million) than have moved there from other parts of the U.S.

Immigrants from other countries, especially Latin America, are the only reason Miami’s population is still growing. Ironically, as more Latin Americans migrate to Miami, couples like Fred and Linda Adam may be switching places with them. The Adams just sold their home near Miami Beach, and are moving to more affordable Honduras. “We could hold on to our house,” says Fred, 57. But Miami’s spiraling cost of living means “we couldn’t afford the other things we like to do here,” such as scuba diving. “We’d be twiddling our thumbs.”

Today Miami is the least affordable metropolitan area in the U.S. It has one of the highest median house prices ($372,000) and the nation’s wealthiest community (Fisher Island, where luminaries like Oprah Winfrey have had homes). But a heavy reliance on the tourism industry and its attendant low-wage service jobs has given Miami one of America’s lowest household median incomes ($33,000) and the country’s highest proportion of renters and homeowners who spend 30% or more of their pay on housing.

It probably doesn’t help the morale of working-class residents that Miami has a way of shaking its wealthy side in your face. On many mornings, rush-hour drivers on packed causeway bridges between Miami and Miami Beach have to idle their engines a bit longer as the drawbridges raise for yachters on their breakfast cruises from nearby celebrity islets.

The competition to stay afloat hasn’t improved ethnic tensions, either. For all the vibrant, cross-hemispheric diversity in Miami, its Latino, black and white enclaves remain segregated and mistrustful of one another. The Cuban exiles’ dominion over much of Miami politics (remember the Elián González uprising?) has bred resentment in some quarters. This showed in the outcry earlier this year when the Miami-Dade school board, whose system has a dismal 45% graduation rate, announced that it would spend tens of thousands of dollars in court to ban a kindergarten book about Cuba that it says isn’t tough enough on Fidel Castro.

Even though the city of Miami has the third worst poverty rate in the nation, there have been few credible attempts to help the lowest earners find housing. One problem is weak government oversight of development–a sign, some complain, that Miami’s sun-soaked complacency has addled its political leaders as well. “Planning is disdained as the enemy here,” says Gihan Perera, director of the Miami Workers Center. Local anger boiled over recently at a housing scandal that Perera’s group helped the Miami Herald expose: Miami-Dade’s government housing agency paid millions of dollars to politically connected developers for low-income projects that were never built or were used to construct private condominiums instead. “This is a greedy city,” says Yvonne Stratford, 52, an unemployed seafood-warehouse worker who had hoped to live in one of the new low-income units.

Imagine Miami, a private community-development project, recently asked some 1,600 randomly selected residents to list what they thought were the top “Miami values.” What was the No. 1 value? Corruption. “[Miamians] don’t trust their leaders or each other,” says the group’s founder Daniella Levine.

When it comes to that problem, and to many others, Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Alvarez says he knows where to start. “The structure of government here often doesn’t work,” he told TIME. “[Miami] gets ruled in the end by an unwieldy, unaccountable bureaucracy.” Alvarez argues that the citizens of Miami are ready to help take their city back. He points to a recent $3 billion bond issue that voters approved for massive infrastructure improvements, a half-penny tax to build up their virtually nonexistent public-transit system, and a new $400 million downtown performing-arts center. And a majority of Miamians support Alvarez’s efforts to reduce the inordinate powers of their county commission–which include housing-agency oversight–especially since its members have long run Miami-Dade like a collection of venal fiefdoms. A judge has ordered the commission to schedule a referendum on the issue. But in the meantime, Miamians are likely to see more of their neighbors winging north.

To view a photo essay on the state of Miami today, go to time.com/miami

(With reporting by Kathie Klarreich/Miami)


[Ed. Note: We at the PP swell with pride to know that Miami's corruption is driving people out, something for which we natives have wished for ages now! Miami's corruption is, in fact, the absurd reality upon which the patriotism of our magazine is founded! That's right America, we natives of Miami don't really care if you want to be here or not anyway, so go ahead, pack it up, and get the hell out! Hope the door don't hit you on the way out! Somebody hand me a café con leche!]

SAYONARA, NEO-CON VAMPIRE!

Posted in Politics, Wire on 8 November 2006 by thePalmettoPatriot

[As PP contributor Üvüs says, "Sayonara you neo-con vampire!"]

TITLE: RUMSFELD RESIGNS AS DEFENSE SECRETARY AFTER BIG ELECTION GAINS FOR DEMOCRATS
AUTHOR: David Stout (NY TIMES)
SOURCE: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/08/us/politics/09BUSHCND.html?hp&ex=1163048400&en=90b2a0fec771582a&ei=5059&partner=AOL
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Published: November 8, 2006; NY Times

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, the hard-driving and super-confident Pentagon boss who came to symbolize President Bush’s controversial Iraq policy, is resigning, President Bush announced today.

Mr. Bush, appearing at the White House the day after the Republican Party suffered sweeping defeats in Tuesday’s midterm elections, said he and Mr. Rumsfeld had had “a series of thoughtful conversations” and agreed that “the time is right for new leadership at the Pentagon.”

The president said he would nominate Robert Gates, former head of the Central Intelligence Agency and now president of Texas A & M University, to replace Mr. Rumsfeld.

While praising Mr. Rumsfeld as “a superb leader in a time of change,” Mr. Bush said both he and the departing secretary recognized the “value of a fresh perspective.”

Only days ago, Mr. Bush had voiced confidence in Mr. Rumsfeld, as he had consistently done since the start of his presidency. But Tuesday’s elections produced a furious reaction from the American public over a military campaign that has cost the lives of nearly 3,000 members of the armed forces and that many people of all political stripes have described as poorly managed.

Whether the president asked Mr. Rumsfeld to go, or whether Mr. Rumsfeld took the cue from the elections, was not immediately clear. But people who know the secretary have said he might step aside on his own if he concluded that he had become a liability, and there was no indication from Mr. Bush that he had tried to talk Mr. Rumsfeld out of leaving.

Democrats have accused Mr. Rumsfeld of ignoring the advice of some generals that imposing a peace in Iraq would be harder and bloodier than just winning the war to topple Saddam Hussein.

As the months have dragged on since Mr. Hussein was overthrown, and Iraq has been riven by sectarian violence, the Democrats have intensified their complaints. They have blamed Mr. Rumsfeld and his top aides not just for the loss of American lives but, in the Democrats’ view, lowering America’s stature in Europe and elsewhere around the world.

Mr. Bush said Mr. Gates was an ideal choice to apply a new perspective to Iraq, since he has been an adviser to several presidents. Perhaps more important, Mr. Gates is a member of the bipartisan commission that has been studying the Iraq campaign with the possibility of charting a new direction.

That commission is headed by James A. Baker 3d, secretary of state and a top adviser to the first President Bush, and Lee Hamilton, former Democratic Congressman from Indiana and co-chairman of the 9/11 commission.

While there may be adjustments in Iraq, Mr. Bush said America’s enemies should not mistake change for retreat. As for bringing American troops home, Mr. Bush said, “I want them to come home with victory.” By victory, he said again that he means a country that “governs itself, sustains itself and defends itself.”