WhackyNation

Exposing political wacks and media hacks

January 28th, 2008 10:29:09 AM

Gates takes big step toward Foster Nation program

Amazingly, Bill Gates’ remarkable foundation has taken a big step toward what amounts to adoption of an idea I’ve been trying to promote for several years. In addition to pouring millions into the eradication of AIDS and other diseases occurring principally in African nations, the foundation has now granted $350 million in an extraordinary effort to boost farm productivity in poverty-stricken areas of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.

By great coincidence, it is the first step in the program I have tried to persuade our federal government into establishing. My proposal is for the U.S. to end all foreign-aid programs and to replace them with my Foster Nation plan. Under that plan we would select one underdeveloped Third World nation at a time and make it a Foster Nation.

We would then send to each nation selected several of our best minds in the fields of agriculture, industry, education, the professions, and every other field in an effort to vitalize their economies and raise their standard of living. Our representatives would help them find and utilize their natural resources, improve their farming and industrial programs, and do the same for their schools and all the professions.

The U.S. would save billions in foreign-aid funds, most of which are frittered away through faulty administration. At the same time, we would be helping to feed millions, as the Gates Foundation grants are now doing. But even more important, by raising the standard of living in each of the countries aided, we would be eliminating the people’s desire to flee to another country — most often the U.S.

The Gates program, directed by a foundation fellow named Rajiv Shah, is already at work “introducing new seed varieties, irrigation, fertilizer, training for farmers, and access to local and international markets,” as the Seattle Times has reported.

“In the poorest countries, 65 percent of jobs are in farming. Yet Africa’s share of food production is shrinking and the number of people who are hungry is going up — in sharp contrast to improvements in the rest of the world.”

In an astounding statement, the Times’ article reported that

“in sub-Saharan Africa, more than 200 million people are hungry or malnourished — one third of the population.”

As could have been expected, the Gates plan has drawn criticism from certain quarters. Some of that criticism has come from environmentally extreme quarters and is based on the notion that the Gates program is market-driven and that its farming procedures are going to wreck the environment in the downtrodden countries.

What malarkey! It seems the extremists would rather see millions starve than to help them revitalize their lives and their economies so that their standard of living could begin to rise toward the standards in the First World nations.

I’m hoping that the U.S. will take a cue from the Gates venture and adopt my total Foster Nation Plan, which is a great improvement over our ongoing foreign-aid programs. Although better farming would help feed the poverty-stricken nations, they also need new industries, better school systems, improved medical and dental programs, and all the rest.

October 30th, 2007 01:44:39 PM

Local control, Eastern Washington, and 2008

I suspect that most of our readers have not been following what has been happening in Eastern Washington, particularly Kittitas County, for the last few months. We are experiencing one of the biggest power grabs in a long time. In the past few months, local land use decisions have been overruled at an alarming rate by unelected state bureacrats. It looks like the Governor has choosen Kittitas County to be a “test case” to see what she can get away with in other counties. I offer the experience of Kittitas County as a warning to all the other counties that think “it won’t happen here.”

I recently published a guest editorial in the Yakima Business Times. I re-post that essay below.

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The Loss of Local Control

“Greetings” my neighbors to the south. I come bearing tidings from Kittitas County that should be of concern to all the people of Yakima County. I know it’s easy to ignore us in our under-populated county north of you, but that is exactly what the State of Washington and her governor hope you will do. There is nothing less than a complete loss of local control at stake and the opening battle is being fought in your backyard. The bad news: the state is winning.

For reasons that are not quite clear, the clumsy and indifferent bureaucracy we call the state of Washington has targeted Kittitas County in an opening assault to seize all land use decisions from local county governments. If they are successful, we will be living in a state where west-side environmentalists will have their boots on the throats of eastern Washington residents. They want our land. They want our water. If we are not careful, they are going to get both.

Kittitas County is currently serving as their proverbial “canary in the coal mine” to see how much they can take before the people push back. My fear is that if Kittitas County capitulates today, the state will be coming for Yakima County tomorrow.

In the last few months, Kittitas County has received a host a World Wrestling Federation slap-downs from our governor and her appointed boards. Our land use laws have been tossed. Our comprehensive plan has been invalidated. Now there is an attempt to shut down our wells. All of these things have been done in direct conflict with our locally elected officials and their democratically arrived at decisions.

In June of this year, the Eastern Washington Growth Management Hearings Board (EWGMHB), a group of unelected Gregoire appointees, issued an “order of invalidity” striking down large portions of the Kittitas County Comprehensive Plan. The urban growth nodes were eliminated. Our ability to create three-acre zoning was thrown into question.

Following closely on the heels of that decision, the Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council (EFSEC), a group of Gregoire appointees, overruled a local decision to reject a wind farm along the Yakima River. Our County Commissioners had earlier approved the largest wind farm in the state, but felt the location of this farm overly burdened local land owners and environmental concerns. Didn’t matter what our elected officials felt. EFSEC and the Governor told us that our local land use ordinances had no effect and the wind farm will be approved regardless of local input and rule of law. Interestingly there are five “interests” represented on the EFSEC board: Department of Ecology, Fish and Wildlife, Natural Resources, Community Trade and Economic Development, and Utilities and Transportation. Not a single private representative in the group. No one to speak for land owners, private property, or local control.

Just last week, we got hit again. A new group, Aqua Permanente, which is closely aligned with west-side funded radical and fringe environmental groups such as Futurewise and The Ridge, have petitioned the Department of Ecology to prohibit the drilling of any new exempt wells in Kittitas County. We are all holding our breath up here. If we lose this one, most of our land will become worthless and economic development will halt immediately.

Right now, it is only Kittitas County that is suffering the arrogance of unelected Gregoire appointees. But let’s be clear. Although they are only coming for us today, they will be coming for you tomorrow. We are confronting the very real possibility that an indifferent majority of west-side voters will be colonizing eastern Washington. To many of them, we are nothing more than people who happen to live on resources they want. From their perspective, it is acceptable to build homes, factories, and businesses where they, and their children, live. We, however, are supposed to leave our land undeveloped… just in case they want to come fishing, hiking, snowmobiling, or camping in “their” backyard.

September 17th, 2007 09:08:46 PM
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