Maybe that’s not quite what Marie Antoinette (“Let them eat cake!”) would say today, but oil is as much king in North America today as Louis XVI was in France way-back-when. The current royal demands include the not only approval of the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline, but also nearly doubling the capacity of an existing tar sands pipeline that runs across northern Minnesota to Wisconsin. Continue reading
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Losing water
Black water from a farmer’s faucet near Willmar, receding water in White Bear Lake, and a dry city well in Hibbing were among the danger signs cited in a recent Star Tribune article on Minnesota’s water. In the land of ten thousand lakes, we are losing water. Continue reading
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Renting, from rats to riches
I remember paying $65 a month rent for one of my first apartments, which I shared with a 70-something-year-old nun named Sister Mary Edward. We also shared the apartment, involuntarily, with several very large rats, who did not pay rent, but enthusiastically gobbled up all the D-Con we could afford to feed them. I don’t know how much that Chicago apartment costs today, but shocking Minnesota rental figures just hit my in-box this week, courtesy of the Minnesota Housing Partnership. Continue reading
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Those crazy Brits – and our shared scandal
Not only do they drive on the wrong side of the road — they actually require that local government “must ensure accessible, affordable care ‘delivered flexibly at a range of high-quality settings’, including schools and nurseries.”
Imagine that! Continue reading
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Domestic terrorism begins at home
In St. Paul, Kira Trevino is missing since February 24 and believed dead. Police charged her husband with murdering her. The body of 16-year-old Anna Lynn Hurd was found in a Maplewood park last weekend. Her 17-year-old boyfriend has been arrested on suspicion of murder. Continue reading
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Getting in line for immigration
“Go to the back of the line” is one of the mantras of the current immigration debate, but few know what the line looks like. Continue reading
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Sometimes a D is a good grade
The Star Tribune and Pioneer Press headlined Minnesota’s “D” rating on school reforms — but that rating could be a good thing. The bad grade came from Michelle Rhee’s StudentsFirst, and has nothing at all to do with how well Minnesota educates students. By most measures, Minnesota’s student achievement is among the best in the nation. The pattern of the StudentsFirst report is consistent: states with high student achievement get failing grades on its education “reform” rating. Continue reading
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Clyde Bellecourt arrested while drinking coffee at IDS Crystal Court on Christmas Eve
UPDATED 6:20 p.m., 12/25/2012 – Christmas Eve — a time of peace, a time of good will, a time to handcuff and carry off to jail a 75-year-old American Indian leader who came downtown to shop and have a cup of coffee? Continue reading
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What you need to know about chained CPI — a (relatively) simple story
I admit it — when I read that the latest fiscal cliff debate was over chained versus unchained CPI, my first reaction was to hide my head under a pillow until it all goes away. I’m a policy wonk, but I don’t like economic esoterica, and I did not want to have to learn about a whole new concept in order to follow the budget debate. Continue reading
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December 14, 2012 – Don’t
Don’t look at the news today,
don’t read it
Stay away from Twitter and Facebook
Close your ears
I have seen it and it is
too terrible to bear
Don’t look at the news
Let one of us remain
Untouched by this latest horror
if only for today
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