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Verse of the Day

5/1/2008

Smart FIX 40 and such

Filed under: Current / General, Local, Personal permalinktrackback — Team Swap @ 10:52 am

First of all…THANK YOU TDOT FOR FINALLY GETTING AROUND TO FIXING DOWNTOWN KNOXVILLE, even if it does affect my drive to church for the next 14 months. I am leaving 10 minutes earlier Sunday, regardless of what the wife thinks…LOL.., and all should be well. Fourteen months of inconvince is worth the rest of my life driving on three FULL lanes of Interstate through downtown.

Yes, I know this should have been done in the 70’s, but hey back then half of Knoxville fought it and the other half moved to Farragut and started working in Oak Ridge so there you go. Regardless of the timing it is time and I appreciate it. Bottomline thanks, good luck, and do good work ASAP… (13 1/2 months would be even nicer wouldn’t it?)

Now for my next point. Mr. Nicely start the Knoxville Beltway in 14 months. You got B&B here, you got the machinces, you got the workers here, you got the gas taxes, you got EPA warnings that could drop with less congestion, so get to paving and building and such. If you can do the downtown thing in 14 months with all the traffic and roads around it, I think you can do the Orange route in 3 years since there fewer roads and less traffic to contend with. So, 2012 or early 2013 I would love to see a finished beltway around Ktown. Worst case give me Lenoir City to the Oak Ridge Hwy area by 2012.

Then Knoxville, and it’s visitors, can get on with our bizness.

3/12/2008

Hit the Road Jack (or Jill).

Filed under: Current / General, Family, Local, News, Personal, Politics permalinktrackback — Team Swap @ 7:30 am

First saw this last night on line and heard about it again this AM on local radio. The Center for Union Facts - a anti union think tank - is asking students, parents and teachers nationwide to nominate the WORST teachers in the US. The worst 10 will be offered $10,000 to QUIT teaching and allow the website to write about them. Full details here

I am from a family of teachers, both my parents are retired from public education facilities, and numerous of my family members have been or still are involved in the education profession. Even members of my spouses family are and have been involved in working in public education. I believe there are few jobs / professions that are more important and impactful then teaching / education. I personally think that many (not all but many) times parents / students are swayed more by personal bias then actual facts when it comes to what then consider a good or bad teacher. A stern teacher that demands order and pushes lazy kids to learn is rarely liked, but they are highly effective and are worthy of praise.

With the above facts understood I say the following - there are few things worse then bad teachers and nothing worse then bad teachers being protected by their teachers unions. There are a lot of factors that go into making bad teachers - lack of concern / passion to begin with, more administration less education, the idea that teachers are baby sitters, uninvolved and unconcerned parents, inability to enforce rules / order, forced / mandatory curriculum that does not improve actual education, teaching to the test, and numerous other things -, but whatever the cause they need to go. If this “project” ,which I think it more about starting a national debate then about actually getting rid of the 10 worst teachers, works to weed out the chaff then I am all for it.

I must also add that I don’t like the core idea of shaming teachers to improve is flawed, but I do think something has to be done to get public education in America turned around. It is not the same as it was even 20 years ago, and it was already slipping then.

3/11/2008

SNOX IV over the Atlantic

Filed under: Current / General, Local, News, Technology permalinktrackback — Team Swap @ 7:18 am

The Spirit of Knoxville has launched SNOX IV and it is over the Atlantic. The Spirit of Knoxville is a local project, mainly of volunteers, that is associated with the UT radio club to send a autonomous balloon across the Atlantic. When / if this occurs it could well be a world record. Full Details at the Spirit of Knoxville site here.

3/6/2008

Endorsements

Filed under: Current / General, Faith, Family, Local, News, Personal, Politics permalinktrackback — Team Swap @ 12:00 pm

This post comes from a topic that was on a local radio show this AM. The shows host - Hallerin Hilton Hill - contended that endorsements don’t matter any more and that people vote their own pocketbook, etc. Hal also contended that the views / endorsement of family and friends have far more impact on voters then endorsements.

At the end of the day I think Hal’s main point - people vote for their own pocketbook in the end - is true. People looking for lower taxes find candidates that want lower taxes. People looking for more social aid and government services find those candidates and vote that way.

In reinforcing the point about friends and family being important in the candidate selection process, one must also remember that we tend to be around people that share our values and views. SO, when our family and friends say they support candidate x or y then it is likely we share a similar set of values and goals, so we are likely to desire a similar candidate. If the overall views of our family and friends are similar to ours then it is pretty obvious that their views on a political candidate will likely way on our decision making process.

The previous point, about people associating with those similar to themselves, is actually not true for me and my wife though. We are the lone conservatives in both our families and we are the only couple actively involved in church in either family at the moment. These two differences mean that we typically disagree with the candidates that our families support. This fact even cares over to our friends. We do have conservative friends, but most of our friends (i.e. non family members we see regularly) are fairly liberal, so we tend to disagree with the candidates that our family and many of our friends support. The fact that we don’t “run with” a lot of people like us means that we tend to reach our political views via personal research and endeavors. Endorsements tend to be just one small part of our decision making process.

That leads me to my key point about endorsements, they are more guide then guidance for the politically engaged.

As I have already stated, I agree with Hal on his second point - that the views of family and friends mean more then the endorsement of the paper or some columnist even if that is not true for me personally - but I think he missed the real point of endorsements. Endorsements are really designed to allow people a simple means of measuring their views with others that they do not know personally but respect or with groups / individuals they personally respect or support.

Let me explain a bit. Say for instance you are a Al Gore fan or a Trent Lott fan, that means that you respect their views / opinions. If you respect Mr. Gore or Mr. Lott and they openly support candidate X (or oppose candidate Y),. You personally may be actively following the race, but unsure about the candidates. The endorsement of a person you respect may guide you to that candidate. You have a core set of values, you share those with Mr Gore or Mr Lott, so their view is sufficient to guide your decision in a race you are aware of, but not passionate about.

Another situation where a endorsement may act as a guide is if you have narrowed it down to two or three candidates and the candidate that Mr Gore or Mr Lott endorses is one of those few. In that case, the endorsement reinforces 1) your respect for them and 2) the similarities in the views you share with them. That reinforcement may cause you to shrink your small group selection to one candidate which you will support.

If you are a member of a union or a pac the same can be true. You look at all the candidates and you narrow it down to a few. Then a group that you support or align with typically picks a candidate then you follow their lead.

Basically, I think endorsements are to politics what readers digest is to books. They let you quickly get the gist of the candidate and their views based on your past experience and view of the individual or the group offering the endorsement. They may not make the decision for you, but they help you narrow the pack.

The beliefs that I shared above are based on people actively following races and candidates. Unfortunately as fewer and fewer people actively follow races or candidates, I think endorsements are quickly becoming the voting guides for the lazy. No reason to do the work and find out for yourself, just listen to person A or organization B and vote as they lead you to achieve the common goals you share. When this happens it is little more then voting by proxy. In my view though the good news about voters like this is that they tend to be lazy and they may or may not show up at the polls as in the end they don’t care. Hal’s overall point though - people vote their pocketbooks - will at times make the lazy voter come out, but many even that is not sufficient. They want government on autopilot and voting is a annoyance not a privilege or right others have died to both grant and defend.

2/29/2008

One more reason Knoxville is better then Gary or..

Filed under: Current / General, Local, Music, Personal, Photos / Images / Video permalinktrackback — Team Swap @ 11:22 am

Pittsburgh, or Buffalo, or Detroit, or Kalamazoo, or Toledo, or the entire states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, and North Dakota.

SC&A has a lovely post up with video showing why people move South. Sure we wreck down here when it snows, but hey we built our roads on converted cow paths and it really does not snow here we just get ice with a snow mist on top of it. I will trade our 3 or 4 bad DAYS a year to 3 to 4 bad MONTHS up north. SC&A’s post here

The Knox County Mayor’s Office

Filed under: Current / General, Local, Misc, Personal, Politics permalinktrackback — Team Swap @ 9:39 am

Republican or Democrat this Knox County Mayor’s P card incident is appallingly bad. Based on the results of the released audit, there was no oversight or control of the spending of those within the mayor’s office. The mayor himself has over $7,000 of questionable expenses, and numerous subordinates of his seem to have followed the pattern. The “created” / forged Kinko’s receipts sound not just immoral but illegal to me as well. It seems that outside of Ragsdales office that the rest of the County government was doing a responsible job with their p / purchase cards.

I expect more of people that are spending MY MONEY!!!

2/28/2008

Give Memphis to Arkansas

Filed under: History, Local, Misc, Personal, Sports permalinktrackback — Team Swap @ 3:14 pm

[H/t to Knoxify for this one]

The Diddle over at The Bruce Is Loose believes that Tennessee should give Memphis to Arkansas to help both the state education scores and the general welfare and mental health of the state. Diddle thinks that the loss of Calapari, CDR, and The U of M would help the state. Post here.

If we could some how keep FedEx, nelly’s / Interstate BBQ, and Charlie Vergo’s Renevous Ribs I would agree with Diddle, at least from a academic and mental prespective. I may be willing to give up one of the two rib places if Arkansas promises to keep Lisa Marie on the Arkansas side of the river.

2/16/2008

Dogs Eating OUT in TN

Filed under: Current / General, Local, Misc, Personal, Politics permalinktrackback — Team Swap @ 10:45 am

Two issues that are near and dear to our hearts - 1) pets and 2) dining out - are getting a combined discussion this week in Nashville. This Thursday the companion bills of local Senator Tim Burchett and Nashville Rep Janis Sontany which allow regular pets (i.e. non service animals) to eat outdoors with their owners at properly permitted restaurants come up to vote. Tom Humphrey has story up at the Knoxville News Sentinel today here. There are the same bills that we have discussed previously at Swap Blog Here. As we have said in the past SUPPORT THESE BILLS!! This is good law for good pets and responsible pet owners. It might bring in some money to the state too.