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WOW REPORTS (7/6-7/10) | 07/06/2009 7:00 am

wOw Reports: What News Matters to You -- And Why?

We are inviting you to share with us – and everyone else – the compelling news events that are impacting your life.
By YOU!
Image © Shutterstock

wOw Reports is a place for YOU, the wowOwow.com community, to tell us — and everyone else — the stories that you find most compelling, interesting and important. Whether it’s urgent circumstances happening in your neck of the woods or happenings in another country, tell us the news that is most important to you — and why.

wOw Reports hopes to become a new kind of news site — one based solely on a community of shared interests and positive, open discussions. So let’s get the storytelling started below.

wOw Reports Archives:

Click here for the news that mattered to you in the past.
Click here for the editor’s picks of the best news from you.

Read more about: News, wOw Reports

82 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

S G
My issue is why won’t the republicans work with the president. They sunk us and now they don’t want to help repair the problem.Also why if health care for all is such a bad thing are the insurance companies spending over a million and a half a day to stop health care reform. One word GREED!
By S G on 07/06/2009 8:02 am
alice ruth

I don’t trust the motives of the insurance companies who are working against health care reform, but I also have reservations about the government’s ability to effectively manage a health care plan. I don’t believe that the government manages medicare or medicare efficiently, and the VA hospitals don’t have particularly good management track records in the area where I live.

I know that reform is necessary, but I think we’re a long way from the compromise it’s going to require from insurance companies, large HMOs, government health care officials, Congress and the President. We need to inform ourselves of the truth behind the health care rhetoric and demand that our representatives in Congress make decisions based on the best interest of the citizens, not special interest groups.

By alice ruth on 07/06/2009 8:41 am
Laura Ward
You’re right. I voted for McCain. But I still feel we need to give Obama a chance instead of thwarting him in every way. Ego is involved too.
By Laura Ward on 07/06/2009 11:47 am
caj p
I’m with you SG on this one.  We are all supposed to want the best for this country and yet the Republicans just want to say NO at every turn with no real thought for the people of this country as it’s all about them.   Health Care reform is much needed and long over due and yet we still get this opposition from the right and also some dumb Democrats  as well.   I have no doubt that these opposing this plan are in the pockets of the insurance lobbyists and will fight tooth and nail to help them at all costs.   So much for working for their constituents seeing as 70/80% of the country are crying out for this reform to be done ASAP.  It just goes to show who they really care about and one thing for sure it’s not the American people.   The health care system is broken so why wouldn’t you want to fix it?   It’s just boils down to power and greed from those insurance companies who just don’t want to share the stage with anyone else as they have ruled the roost for far too long.  I think this time though they may have bitten off more than they could chew as the country is baying for blood over this and want it changed and Obama wants to see it done also.  Having great faith in the Prez as I always have he will get what he wants simply because he has the  majority of the American people behind him in his quest.
By caj p on 07/06/2009 8:38 am
Barbara B
caj  I just want it to be a well thought out plan and not just hurry up because I promised I would do it.  I am  an Independant and also want the Republicans to cooperate.  But sometimes they have a point about how quickly this new President is spending money.  So far the bailout has not stimulated a thing and unemployment is at it’s highest.  Some of it  is panic over how much the government is spending.  Another fear for Americans is in doing all of this the people who are poor can not benefit if you cripple the people who are still making the money & paying taxes.  I’m all for taxes and paying my fair share but to work so hard and save then get taxed like crazy well that is so not right.  I’m trying to stay in my house and have paid all my taxes anothe hike can put me under and I am middle class.  How is that going to help.  Also so far I have never been impressed by how the Government handles Welfare, Social Security Medicare as it is.  Planning and making sure 100% that it works is what I am looking for before we give up our lives to the Governemnt.  I would rather be at my own mercy than theirs.
By Barbara B on 07/06/2009 8:51 am
C Hardy

Here is news that has yet to be posted here on WOW….Jordan Chandler admits he lied about Michael Jackson….I always wondered how long it would take for this young man who is now 26 to come out and say it was a lie and my Daddy made me do it…$22 million they were paid for it to go away, yet some on here still say MJ did it…

SG, I wonder the same…why wont they work w/ the President?  Not saying this is right or wrong but maybe they dont feel the President is right so why do something they are against?  Did the Dems do things they didnt like when Bush was President?  No one made them vote YES for the Iraq War, they did it b/c at the time they thought it was right, when it turned out it wasnt right, they all changed….that is just how Politics work.  You scratch ones back and then they scratch yours, if your not getting your back scratched then you bitch…

By C Hardy on 07/06/2009 8:54 am
S G

WOW about the Jordan thing. How sad.

 Secondly it will take us all to fix the country. The same ole policies don’t work. I wish everyone could open their minds and hearts and forget about the wallets out of both parties and make our country what it should be.

By S G on 07/06/2009 9:33 am
C Hardy
SG wouldnt that just be great?  It really would be if people didnt have to take money for this or that but that is what our Country has come to…where did they go wrong? 
By C Hardy on 07/06/2009 10:58 am
S G
C it is amazing how money and greed now run amok. Commercialism too. I would like to know why in certain European countries enough is cared about their children advertisers cannot market to them. My youngest son loves dvr for everything. He complains about the commercials all the time. He even knows greed is a bad thing.
By S G on 07/06/2009 11:23 am
C Hardy

I wish we knew…I really wish we knew.  :)

By C Hardy on 07/06/2009 12:03 pm
deber B

C Hardy, thought you and others would find this article interesting.  

Who betrayed my conservative principles?

I don’t know what I should title this post. Maybe "How I became labeled as a conservative." But labels are the damnedest things. People start calling you something, and pretty soon the label begins to takes on meaning, and if you’re not careful, the label can influence your thinking one way or another, and you can find yourself reacting. The reactions might take the form of conforming, rebelling, ignoring, or just passively going with the flow, but if you’re a human being it’s hard not to react in some way. Even not reacting — what we would call ignoring — involves a process of deliberation. You’re not ignoring in the true sense of the word, because if you know something, you are not in a state of being ignorant of it.

I feel compelled to elaborate on a somewhat flippant statement I made in an earlier post:

Too bad we can’t bring back the ideologically easy days when "conservative" simply meant those who supported the war.
Ideologically easy? Perhaps I spoke too fast. While it is undeniably true that many an American (and many a blogger) found himself or herself labeled "conservative," there’s nothing easy about the underlying ideological question.

 

Why, how, and since when is it "conservative" to support your country during a war?

And since I’m on the subject of "easy" ideology, there’s another form of "conservatism" which has been on my mind.

The failure or refusal to believe that President George W. Bush was like Hitler, and was running a Nazi-like regime.

Or how about not believing that the 9/11 attack was an inside job?

Just to be clear, yes, I supported the war, and yes, I ridiculed the idea that Bush was a Nazi and that 9/11 was an inside job. That being the case, I became tagged with the "conservative" label no matter how many times I said I was a libertarian. This debate (in which my libertarianism was attacked as suspect) is typical, and I lost track of the number of times I was called a conservative (and worse) by lefties. But hey, I’m one of those annoying snots who rejects all labels and refuses to be bound by them, so I contemptuously ignored most of these references.

Times have changed. It now seems that supporting the war, not believing 9/11 was an inside job, and opposing the belief that Bush is a Nazi are no longer conservative positions. Even foot dragging on Gitmo has become suspiciously liberal.

Where does that leave the previously labeled conservatives?

Why, they’re supposed to be dragged into a contest. Something involving "conservative principles." What are they? Beats me, as it seems to depend on whom you ask. To some, it’s enough simply to be against big government, or statism. But to others, you also have to be against all things which are said to threaten "family values."

Social and religious conservatives often use the term "family values" to promote conservative ideology that supports traditional morality or values.[2] American Christians often see their religion as the source of morality and consider the nuclear family to be an essential element in society. Some conservative family values advocates believe the government should endorse Christian morality,[3] for example by displaying the Ten Commandments or allowing teachers to conduct prayers in public schools. Religious conservatives often view the United States as a "Christian nation".[4] For example, the American Family Association, says "The American Family Association exists to motivate and equip citizens to change the culture to reflect Biblical truth and traditional family values."[5] These groups variously oppose abortion, pornography, pre-marital sex, homosexuality, some aspects of feminism,[6] cohabitation, and depictions of sexuality in the media.
I don’t know how accurate the above list is, but it does not articulate either my political positions or many of my political principles, and to the extent it defines "conservatism," then I cannot truthfully be said to be a conservative, regardless of how devoutly I support the war, and regardless of how much I doubt Bush’s Nazism and 9/11 involvement.

 

What I want to know is, whatever happened to my conservative principles? Can it be that I was a conservative, but no longer am? How is that possible? Looking back over the six years of this blog, I don’t think my positions have changed on very many issues. I think I am conservative about some things, liberal about some things, and in general I still consider myself a small l-libertarian who simply thinks what he thinks. Naturally, to some I will always be a conservative, but to others I will fail the litmus test hopelessly.

Can I accomplish more with or without the label? I guess that depends on whether the conservative label is a matter of principle or pragmatism. And on whether the label is a definition.

Should labels be put ahead of principles, or should principles be put ahead of labels?

I don’t mean to sound facetious, but I think it’s often forgotten that betraying a label is not the same thing as betraying a principle.

AFTERTHOUGHT: I think much of the problem is that once you adopt any label shared by other people, they will then insist you adopt what they call their principles. (This can be further aggravated by an unfortunate tendency to confuse opinions with principles).

posted by Eric on 07.06.09 at 11:51 AM
By deber B on 07/07/2009 6:42 am
Lila Kuh

In New York, a 40-year-old social worker is charged with endangering a minor by posting a sexually suggestive ad on Craigslist targeting a 9-year-old girl.  Randy men answering the ad were given the girl’s home phone number.  Police say the social worker did this  for revenge against the little girl for a dispute with her own daughter.

This recalls the recently-dismissed Myspace suicide case in which 50-year-old Lori Drew  created a fictitious Myspace personality and used it to harass 13-year-old Megan Meier, who was so distraught that she killed herself. That was in response to a fallout in the friendship between Megan and Ms. Drew’s daughter.

What is wrong with parents these days, when they think it is OK to attack their children’s peers over ordinary, silly childhood spats?  When they think it is OK to mentally abuse other children, or send randy men looking for them?  Where have all the grownups gone?  I can recall some wacky parents from my own childhood years, but nothing like this.

By Lila Kuh on 07/06/2009 9:22 am
S G
Lila the worst part is Lori Drew’s sentence has been overturned. Adults need to teach how to behave. Behaviours such as these people are exhibiting are the most juvenile and whats more is dangerous.Parenting does not come naturally to some and therefore I think some education is necessary. I also think Mrs. Drew and the social worker should spend time behind bars cooling their heels and having to think about their actions.
By S G on 07/06/2009 9:37 am
Lila Kuh
S G, I heard, and it just burns me up!  I absolutely cannot believe that there really isn’t a crime that Lori Drew could have been charged with, other than that lame misuse-of-a-computer thing.  The vitriolic reaction against her shows that our society still - thank God - finds her conduct reprehensible.  And for a social worker, who is supposed to help people, to attack a little girl this way - ugh.  I scarcely have words for it.  At least law enforcement was able to charge her accordingly.
By Lila Kuh on 07/06/2009 12:15 pm
S G

Lila I agree. I volunteer 3 times a week and work with kids. I love trying to give them a positive view of themselves and others. I do not allow put downs and rude behavior to one another. As an adult we should set an example.

By S G on 07/06/2009 12:41 pm