buddenblogtag:typepad.com,2003:weblog-606892005-10-04T10:48:41-05:00San Antonio ProgressiveTypePadCourage Winds Democracy for America Endorsementtag:typepad.com,2003:post-67239492005-10-04T10:48:41-05:002005-10-04T10:48:41-05:00The following is taken from Democracy for America's Blog for America. Self-explanatory and great news!!!! -- Esther A Great Day for True-Courage Zada True-Courage, whose husband John is running in the 21st Congressional District in central Texas and this year's...Esther Buddenhagen
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><strong>The following is taken from Democracy for America's Blog for America. Self-explanatory and great news!!!! -- Esther</strong></p>
<p> A Great Day for True-Courage</p>
<p><em>Zada True-Courage, whose husband John is running in the 21st Congressional District in central Texas and this year's winner of the DFA Grassroots All-Star Challenge, joins DFA today to recount their political journey of the last three years.</em></p>
<p>Wow, this is an exciting week for the True-Courage family! I am so excited that my husband John Courage, Congressional Candidate (TX CD-21), has won this very special endorsement from a very special organization, Democracy for America.</p>
<p>It seems like only yesterday Howard Dean was standing in our campaign office in September, 2002 giving a talk to some of our campaign volunteers and friends and then block walking with us through a neighborhood to campaign for Courage for Congress.</p>
<p>I remember hearing Governor Dean give a speech that evening (in which at the end he plugged John Courage's campaign) and I was so inspired by his message. As he walked through the room, I shook his hand and said you have 100% of my support. Unfortunately we lost John's race but we didn't lose our resolve to support Governor Dean.</p>
<p>When the Dean for America Meet-ups began we hosted the first one in San Antonio in February 2003, three people showed up. In March it was 9 people and April it was 26, we finally grew to holding 5 Dean For America Meetups spread around town every month. The amazing thing was the faces were new and the people were energetic and ready to move to Take Their Country Back! Then things seemed to take off. Dean for Texas, under the leadership of Glen Maxey, was taking hold and we were all busy working for our candidate. Howard Dean came to San Antonio for the Sleepless Summer Tour and we had excited 3,500 people there to listen to a new message, You have the Power! We believed and we kept moving going to Iowa and New Hampshire, calling New Mexico and participating in Parades and Flash Mobs and hosting House Parties.</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a machine. We were working with a really strong group of Democracy of Texas folks and a strong group of Democracy of America folks. We had many people from the Democracy for America movement popping up in leadership positions of the Texas Democratic Party.</p>
<p>Alas, things didn't turn out the way we wanted for our candidate, but he didn't quit and neither did we. Our volunteers hung together and we kept working. We helped open and man a San Antonio Democratic Campaign office that had 900 people sign up to volunteer. We trained people, phone banked and made sure there were Kerry-Edwards signs, bumper stickers and buttons to be had. We were so organized that Theresa Heinz-Kerry actually stopped by to visit and we crammed hundreds of people into our headquarters to greet her. We kept meeting with our Democracy for America Group. Every meeting would bring more people excited and ready to work.</p>
<p>Alas, things didn't turn out how we wanted for the General Election either, but 16 people showed up at our headquarters for the Democracy for America Meetup the night after the election. This was after we had said we were not going to meet, we were trying to vacate the office! They came and they said "We want to keep fighting". Glimmers of hope and the strength of the Democracy for America movement were shown in Austin and Travis County which had carried for Kerry and almost every other Democratic candidate in the county.</p>
<p>We in San Antonio budded into the San Antonio Area Progressive Action Coalition and moved our Meetup day to the first Saturday of the month. We wrote letters to get Howard Dean elected chair of the DNC, we visited our Congressmen to tell them we didn't want Social Security privatized. We had people in our group running for city offices because Howard Dean said that's what we need to do. We had one elected Mayor of a small town and one elected city councilperson of San Antonio. Many of us attended Democracy Fest. Today we are supporting candidates who have stepped forward from our ranks to run for office at the county, state and national levels because we all know just voting is not enough. We have got to be sure people are on the ballot to create competition for every race so people have some reason to go vote.</p>
<p>When my husband and I mulled this race over, it took some real soul-searching. Campaigning for office is not easy but we said ok let's go for it! Today I am very proud that my husband, John Courage, has won the DFA endorsement in a lively two round campaign from a large field of congressional candidates from all over the country. We couldn't have done it without the Democracy for Texas group and our DFA group from San Antonio and the help of many more. It is amazing to see the power of people when they come together and focus on a goal. I am excited because with a movement like this I know we will take our country back!</p>
<p>—Zada True-Courage</p></div>
Barak Obama's Commencement Speechtag:typepad.com,2003:post-52798982005-06-21T07:49:57-05:002005-06-21T07:49:57-05:00HERE is the first truly inspiring speech by a Democrat in years. It is Barak Obama's commencement speech at Knox College in Illinois. http://www.knox.edu/x9803.xmlEsther Buddenhagen
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p>HERE is the first truly inspiring speech by a Democrat in years. It is Barak Obama's commencement speech at Knox College in Illinois. </p>
<p>http://www.knox.edu/x9803.xml</p></div>
Lytle, Texastag:typepad.com,2003:post-46385572005-05-15T09:53:00-05:002005-05-15T09:53:00-05:00Note: for more pictures, click on Lytle under photo albums listed in left hand column. A week or so ago, on a clear, gentle spring day we took our dog, Rita, and our cat, Louie, on a drive to Lytle,...Esther Buddenhagen
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><a href="http://bakirita.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/img_0555.JPG" onclick="window.open(this.href, '_blank', 'width=800,height=600,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false"><img width="100" height="75" border="0" alt="Img_0555" title="Img_0555" src="https://bakirita.blogs.com/my_weblog/images/img_0555.JPG" style="margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px; float: left;" /></a><span style="color: #66ff66;"><em>Note: for more pictures, click on Lytle under photo albums listed in left hand column.</em></span></p>
<p>A week or so ago, on a clear, gentle spring day we took our dog, Rita, and our cat, Louie, on a drive to Lytle, Texas, about twenty five miles south of San Antonio.<a href="http://bakirita.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/img_0560.JPG" onclick="window.open(this.href, '_blank', 'width=800,height=600,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false"><img width="100" height="75" border="0" alt="Img_0560" title="Img_0560" src="https://bakirita.blogs.com/my_weblog/images/img_0560.JPG" style="margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px; float: left;" /></a> Lytle sits in the midst of a blanket of fertile farmland which was intensely green this April day. It has a large, welcoming city park where kids come to play and families have picnics and birthday parties and such. (Click on thumbnails to see bigger version and check out the <span style="color: #66ff66;"><strong>Lytle photo album where there is also a map showing its location relative to San Antonio</strong></span>). This Saturday there were several picnics and a big birthday party for a little tiny girl going on. After showing off Rita and Louie in the park we walked down the old main street of Lytle which straddles the railroad tracks. Now Interstate 35, the main road to <em>la Frontera </em>passes along the east side of town. Of course more contemporary commercial<a href="http://bakirita.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/img_0579.JPG" onclick="window.open(this.href, '_blank', 'width=800,height=600,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false"><img width="100" height="75" border="0" alt="Img_0579" title="Img_0579" src="https://bakirita.blogs.com/my_weblog/images/img_0579.JPG" style="margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px; float: left;" /></a><br />development has sprouted there. This development includes an H.E.B.(our local and only significant chain of supermarkets -- a south Texas institution, really) whose arrival made a lot of people in Lytle quite happy. </p>
<p>When we were walking down the old main street, we came upon a couple putting gorgeous, huge fake flowers in a giant outdoor basket. They'd bought the basket as an Easter decoration and thought it was just too spectacular to put away and use once a year so they were replacing the Easter decorations with spring ones. The husband was very anxious that I know the idea wasn't entirely theirs: a friend around the corner had also decided to have year-round decorations. <a href="http://bakirita.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/img_0600.JPG" onclick="window.open(this.href, '_blank', 'width=800,height=600,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false"><img width="100" height="75" border="0" alt="Img_0600" title="Img_0600" src="https://bakirita.blogs.com/my_weblog/images/img_0600.JPG" style="margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px; float: left;" /></a> </p>
<p>Husband and wife were very happy to have moved to Lytle where they could afford a small, pretty house and both could be close to work. They told us about the Lytle Music Festival Saturday, May 21 from 2-10 PM. We are planning to go. Here is the poster announcing the program.<a href="http://bakirita.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/lytle_poster_music_fest_may_21.jpg" onclick="window.open(this.href, '_blank', 'width=640,height=853,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false"><img width="100" height="133" border="0" alt="Lytle_poster_music_fest_may_21" title="Lytle_poster_music_fest_may_21" src="https://bakirita.blogs.com/my_weblog/images/lytle_poster_music_fest_may_21.jpg" style="margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px; float: left;" /></a></p>
<p>Lytle was started (founded sounds too purposeful) by John T. Lytle, a Confederate soldier who'd come out West to be a rancher and trail driver in the 1860's. I think under his influence, Lytle built a railway station on the International-Great Northern tracks which boosted the town considerably. By 1883, Lytle had a general store, a bar, a casketmaker and facilities for shipping. By 1884 50 people called Lytle home and it had a Union church (I'm not sure what a Union church is). By 1892, the population had grown to 100 and there were four general stores, two livestock breeders and a Methodist church. Although the population of the town sounds small, little towns like Lytle were centers for farmers and ranchers in the area.</p>
<p>In additon, coal had been found in the region. The three mines, The Carr Company, the Berreti Company and the Belto Company hired 500 workers. I don't know how long the mines have been abandoned, but now they are apparently just large overgrown pits. It would be worth finding them on another trip.</p>
<p>By 1904, the population was 212 and the Lytle school had 62 students and two teachers. Today it is a private home. The town was incorporated in 1912 when there were 600 inhabitants, a weekly newspaper, five general stores, telephone services, two lumberyards and the Lytle State Bank. A hotel had been built in 1895 called the Bush Hotel, later changed to the Rose Hotel. </p>
<p>Oil was discovered in the region, but it seems not to have made a significant impact on the town's economy.</p>
<p>By 1930, hard times were evident in Lytle. An irrigation company had failed to complete a facility and the town lost its incorporated status. The town still did not have water or disposal facilities. Under the leadership of Dr. W.H. Joyce, the president of the Chamber of Commerce the town acquired these basic services and in 1951, it was reincorporated.</p>
<p>The history of the Lytle Church of Christ fills in the picture a bit more. A Church of Christ congregation that was established at the head of Luros Creek outside of Lytle in the 1840's. There is little information until 1948 when it seems the CoC in Natalia in Atascosa County had grown large enough that it was decided there should be a Lytle congregation. This new congregation appears to have gotten its start at a tent revival led by "a brother Profitt from Oklahoma" on Main Street. It seems to have been so successful that the Lytle School Board gave the congregation permission to meet in the high school band hall which originally served as a stockade and base jail for Hondo Air Force base which today no longer exists. It now and for some time has had its own church building. We didn't get a picture of it, but we did of the Baptist Church which now is largely Hispanic. <em><span style="color: #33ff33;">See photo album.</span></em><br /> </p>
<p>Today with a population of roughly 2500 and growing slowly, the face of Lytle has undergone dramatic changes. It's now 61.2% Hispanic, 36.5 Anglo, 21.6% "other" and 1.6% American Indian. This obviously adds up to more than 100%. I don't know why. The median age is 34.4, and there are slightly more women than men. It is more comfortable than some South Texas towns, probably because it's not too far from San Antonio and it is right on the Interstate. The average income is $34,857; the average house value is $64,000. Of the households, 96 have an income of under $10,000 a year, 269 under $25,000, and 463 have an income of less than 40,000. There are 52 households with an income over $100,000 and two with an income over $200,000. The Anglo population is quite a mix with people reporting family origins in Denmark, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Portugal, Armenia, Belgium, Sweden, Russa, Poland and France in addition to Scottish, Scotch Irish, French and English.</p>
<p>Information for this comes from from <br /><a href="http://www.accd.edu/pac/history/rhines/StudentProjects/1998/Lytle/lytle.htm">The Small Towns Research Project at Palo Alto Community College</a>, <a href="http://">http://www.city-data.com/city/Lytle-Texas.html </a><br /><a href="http://lytle.o-coc.com">Lytle Church of Christ</a><br />and our trip to Lytle.</p>
<p></p>
<p> </p></div>
George W. Bush as Fishtag:typepad.com,2003:post-46385132005-05-10T09:50:46-05:002005-05-10T09:50:46-05:00Check out this website: http://www.bushfish.org/index.html The fish symbol with Bush in the center! It does not appear to be a joke, but rather a marketing device for some ummm extreme christian charitable organization.Esther Buddenhagen
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p>Check out this website: <a href="http://">http://www.bushfish.org/index.html</a></p>
<p>The fish symbol with Bush in the center! It does not appear to be a joke, but rather a marketing device for some ummm extreme christian charitable organization. </p></div>
San Antonio Politics: Who controls San Antonio? A beginner's searchtag:typepad.com,2003:post-45252882005-05-09T11:27:00-05:002005-05-09T11:27:00-05:00In the San Antonio mayor's race, Carroll Schubert the conservative listed as major supporters and friends, not just contributers, some of the richest, most powerful people in San Antonio. Who are these people and why are they so powerful? And...Esther Buddenhagen
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p>In the San Antonio mayor's race, Carroll Schubert the conservative listed as major supporters and friends, not just contributers, some of the richest, most powerful people in San Antonio. Who are these people and why are they so powerful? And what should the rest of us know about them?As a relative newcomer to San Antonio, and someone who is definitely <em>not</em> powerful I had grown accustomed to hear that developers ruled the city. I imagined Republicans were all developers and all developers were Republicans. I imagined they all fit my personal stereotype of developers as cigar-chomping, crude and ruthless, maybe tied to gangsters and in the habit of giving bribes. I was wrong. There's a network of super-rich, superpowerful people, not all of whom are developers, but many of whom benefit greatly from ruthless development.They include construction people, engineers, oil people, and financial people, lawyers and publicists and people in the media. But it's more complicated than that. And I have to say, a lot of the people on Carroll Schubert's list are very impressive people, often bold, often adventurous, with much achievement and a real sense of civic pride and community commitment. They can't possibly all be seeing eye to eye on the Bush/Perry/Christian Right agenda. Most of them, at any rate, don't come across as anything close to right wing Christian zealots. Yet in their support of Republicans they damage all of us <em>and</em> themselves. I am guessing that they are united by bonds of community and self-interest which lead them to narrow perceptions of the best way to do things. They'd probably guffaw if they heard themselves described as people who have a narrow view, but we're all susceptible, none more than those who are successful in a powerful but limited arena and who spend their time surrounded by same, especially in a larger culture which defines the world as black and white and drives us into opposite corners. I suspect, too, among some of them there is a certain inability to think outside the box of already-used approaches to making money, a "don't fix it if it ain't broke" attitude which doesn't admit that "it" is broke. Many of them a do have the city's best interests at heart and they believe they know best how to tend to them. But they don't. There are other perspectives they should know about. In possessing, what shall I say, a limited mindset they aren't different from the rest of us. We all benefit when we allow our mindsets to come into contact with other mindsets. This is how good change comes about.</p>
<p>We need to <em>talk</em> to some of these people.</p>
<p>For others of you who may be as naive as I was, here's a basic introduction into what these folks do:</p>
<ul><li>Charlie Amato -- Founder, Chairman of the Board SWB Corporation, insurance, mortgages and "investment solutions". Founder of Businessmen's Hall of Fame.<br /> </li>
<li>Ernesto Ancira, Jr. -- Huge car business and links with energy resources here and in Mexico, among other things. Also treasurer of Schubert's campaign.</li>
<li>Hope Andrade -- Vice Chair, OptimaCare, a home health company. Commissioner, Texas Highway Commission (think toll roads).</li>
<li>Sam Barshop -- Barshop and Oles, developer of luxury shopping centers, etc. including over the aquifer and founder of the La Quinta Inns motel chain (which I have to say we frequent because they always allow pets). Recently he and wife Ann donated big bucks for UTHSC's Sam and Ann Barshop Center for the Study of Longevity and Aging, interestingly enough opened at the Texas Research Park on the west side of San Antonio, a park which recently had been losing tenants, not gaining them.</li>
<li>Bob Coleman -- Founder and Chair, Texace, a company that manufactures hats. But don't be fooled. This guy's company lists as its partners Troon Golf, an organization which "creates extraordinary experiences at the greatest golf properties in the world...Golf's first and foremost luxury brand" and St. Andrews Links Trust, the ultimate fancy golf club in Scotland where, incidentally, Tom DeLay just had a vacation at Jack Abramoff's expense. I'm not suggesting a link (excuse the pun). I think this guy really likes rubbing elbows with the very rich and famous.<br /> </li>
<li>Gene Dawson, Jr. and Sam Dawson -- Owners, Pape-Dawson Engineers, "the largest locally owned engineering and surveing company in San Antonio." Projects include Valero Corporate Headquarters, SBC Center, Rogers Ranch and The Dominion, La Cantera, Retama Park and the Hyatt Hill Country Resourt, The Quarry at Lincoln Heights, and another bunch of quarries, not so pretty, owned by Martin Marietta Materials; surveying Project Starbright which is the Toyota site and various highway projects. They build in the Hill Country and over The Aquifer</li>
<li>Trish DeBerry -- Partner, Guerra, DeBerry, Coody: Marketing and Communications. Political campaigns have included work for Bush/Cheney in 2000, the National Republican Party, National Republican Senatorial Committee, Jeb Bush for Governor campaign, Rick Perry for Governor Campaign, and the Henry Bonilla Campaign, these campaigns with a general emphasis on Hispanic voters. Also has worked on PR for No Child Left Behind and the White House Initiative on Education. The firm has done "crisis" work for Lumbermens/Professional Golfers Association as well -- Think PGA Village.</li>
<li>Walter Embrey -- President, Embrey Properties, Ltd, a national development company specializing in commercial and multi-family ventures including the Isom Trade Center where buddies have offices, and other projects including over the Aquifer.</li>
<li>Tom Frost is Frost Bank.</li>
<li>Bill Greehey -- Bill Greehey is Valero, one of the hundred best companies to work in in the U.S. It also is number 55 of the Fortune 500. If corporations have to exist, this is one that should exist. It has worked very effectively to develop technologies that reduce CO2 and other greenhouse gas emissions and is open in reporting aspects of cost and technology concerning greenhouse gases, all the way down to the consumer. It's a company that receives a Triple A rating in inclusion of Hispanics on the Board and in high positions according to a 2001 La Prensa San Diego article. This in a world in which 854 of Fortune's top 1000 companies have no Hispanics on Boards or in executive positions and in which 20 entire industries including health care, sporting goods, food and grocery wholesalers and securities firms don't. It also participates very actively and generously in charitable giving in San Antonio. Charitable giving is an iffy area for corporations, and Valero is a master at combining fun and commerce with charity in its participation in San Antonio PGA Tour events, but it gives widely and to a diverse group of organizations. Valero doesn't need to support Republican Right candidates. IF it does.<br /> </li>
<li>Jack Guenther -- If I'm right, Jack Guenther is a member of Guenther and Son, Inc., family. Guenther and Son is the Pioneer flour company which now owns several brands and distributes frozen products as well as flour and the like. Jack seems to serve on many Boards among arts and charities organizations.</li>
<li>Gordan Hartman is a developer who builds lots of homes over the Aquifer.</li>
<li>Jim Hasslocher -- Frontier Enterprises/Jim's Restaurants. Hasslocher's company had run the Tower Restaurant in Hemisphere Park since it opened and lost the contract to Landry's a year or so ago. The restaurant wasn't very good and wasn't really making anywhere near the most of the opportunities the Tower presents.<br /> </li>
<li>.Tim Hixon -- Hixon Properties. But not your typical developer. He is a memeber of the Downtown Alliance and active on The Riverwalk. His business interests appear to be focused on the center of the city. If anything, he is a protector of the Aquifer, at least as far as I can tell. He has been called the champion of Government Canyon Park, a new park over the Aquifer. He is an ardent conservationist and a member of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission. He fishes and has hunted. All you liberals out there who've never lived away from a city, this is okay as long as you're not hanging out with a bunch of drunks and shooting animals with automatic weapons or from the comforts of home or not giving them a chance by shooting from a car in a private game reserve or from the comforts of home over an internet connection or something like that. A lot of true hunters have a real understanding and appreciation of wilderness.</li>
<li>Peter Holt -- The San Antonio Spurs, of course, are Peter Holt's baby. He can afford this baby because he is the owner of Holt Enterprises, the nations largest CATERPILLAR dealership, and one of the largest dealerships in the world. He is the fourth generation of CAT dealers, his grandfather, Benjamin, having developed the first CAT. CATs I'm sure you know are useful in big construction.</li>
<li>Ed Kelley -- President and CEO of USAA Real Estate Co. He is also (or has been) the chairman of the San Antonio Economic Development Foundation, a private organization whose purpose is to attract new business to San Antonio. I learned some interesting things at the<a href="http://www.santionioedf.com"> SA Economic Development Foundation's website</a>. Most of us I think are aware that the service industry is San Antonio's biggest source of employment hiring 32% of workers. Trade is second with 24% and government is third with 20%. Did you know that construction only accounts for 6% of employment and finance, real estate and insurance combined only account for 7%? These last industries are responsible for much concentrated wealth in our area. Unemployment has been creeping up since 1999 whenit was 3.9%. I believe today it is in the area of 5.6%. You might also be interested to know that the EDF is promoting the fact that we have low density housing as an advanatage to living here. Translate that to urban sprawl. Also it is advertising the fact that McMansions are cheap here. Read development, urban sprawl, resource guzzling. Yet, they advertise that we have wonderful clean air, without mentioning that it is increasingly threatened by the urban sprawl they are promoting. As is our water.</li>
<li>Cyndi Krier -- One of the more strident members of this group. She is a professional go getter for herself and has benefitted from the support of extreme right organizations including Texans for Governmental Integrity, founded by Dr. James Leininger, a somewhat shadowy extremist with lots of money. She has been a state senator, a Bexar County judge and a USAA lobbyist. She is currently on the UT Board of Regents where she will serve until 2007. The UT Board of Regents is an interesting group to look into. Krier also is a member of the <a href="http://www.pstx.org">Philosophical Society of Texas,</a> It's kind of fun to look this site over. It doesn't appear to be extreme, but rather genteel in its approach to Texas history and issues.</li>
<li>Lowry Mays -- The Chairman of the Board of the (in)famous Clear Channel Communications. He's a member of the San Antonio Economic Development Foundation.</li>
<li>Joe C. McKinney -- Vice Chairman of the Board, Broadway Bank; Retired chairman and CEO of JP Morgan Chase Bank, San Antonio Region. Is (or has been) chairman of the San Antonio Economic Development Foundation.</li>
<li>Forrest Millar -- President of SBC External Affairs and Planning Group. Is he a stand-in for Ed and Linda Whitacre? Don't know much more about him.</li>
<li>Sam Millsap -- Attorney, former Bexar County District Attorney, specializes currently in health law and employment law. It's possible he has, at times, actually been one of those <em>nasty trial lawyers</em> that Bush so dislikes. In 1985, he won "The Good Guy Award" from the Texas Women's Political Caucus and the Mary K. Polk Leadership Award from the Texas Council on Family Violence. Most recently, although an advocate of the death penalty, he has spoken out in favor of a moratorium on the exercise of the death penalty in Texas saying, "Our system in Texas is broken. Until it is fixed and we are satisfied that only the guilty can be put to death, there should be no more executions in Texas."</li>
<li>Palmer Moe -- Is currently the Managing Director of the Kronkosky Charitable Foundation in San Antonio. He worked in the busines of energy for thirty five years including as President and Chief Operating Officer of Valero from 1983-1992. Currentlyhe is on the Board of Whiting Petroleum of Denver. The Kronkosky Foundation looms large in the life of San Antonio to which it devotes most of its many financial resources. You might be interested to learn that its program areas include health and human services where it concerns itself with quality of life issues for the elderly and people with disabilities, with child abuse and neglect and with medical research; cultural efforts devoted to "meaningful activities" and the broadening of public participation and to improving and expaning public use of "information and learning" available in museums and public libraries; and expansion and improvement of public parks, zoos and wildlife sanctuaries, the prevention of cruelty to animals , and assistance to victims of "public disasters" in Texas. The Kronkosky Foundation gave a lot of money for the development of Government Canyon Park.</li>
<li>John Peveto -- Founder of a very lucrative nation-wide chain of brake repair shops called Brake Check. It seems like he has a real sense of fun: he is a member of Los Compadres, a Harley motorcycling club and Cigar Solamente, a cigar aficionado's club which does in some magical way obtain the occasional Cuban cigar.</li>
<li>Gene Powell -- Bitterblue, Inc, a development corporation. It also seems to include a little oil company. Cute. Powell was a 2004 Bush pioneer and his wife contributed $5000 to the Bush Florida recount effort. He is also one of the biggest contributor to Susan Combs, the strongest advocate for Texas HB 2833 which seeks to define "any combination of city actions limiting impervious cover [over the aquifer] to 45% as a "taking" for which the landowner must be fully compensated. (See aquifer alert on this blog) He is a prime developer of land over the aquifer. His most recent over-the-aquifer project is a development south of 1604 and between Lockhill-Selma and Salado Creek where he is building 1250 homes and some commercial on 716 acres. He was recently in the news when with his partner Denton Communities he volunteered that by mistake he had thinned cedar trees on a tract near the proposed PGA Village, a tract which was endangered species habitat. He set aside some other acreage for the birds. Powell makes some token efforts to give money to conservationists and liberals. He has donated 500 dollars to the Bexar County Land Trust and 500 dollars to Patti Radle's campaign for City Council. Patti is a social activist and in my mind the only really, really honest with herself as well as the rest of us councilperson..</li>
<li>Carl Raba -- <em>Doctor</em> Carl Raba (BS;MS; PhD Engineering, Texas A&M) -- is the chairman and CEO of Raba-Kistner Consultants. He and his wife who is retired chair and CEO are the only folks I know of on this list who have a school named after them: Dr Carl and Bunny Jean Raba Elementary School, "Home of the Rattlers", located on Raba Drive in the Northside Independent School District. Raba-Kistner does consulting and testing in environmental, forensic and pavement, and it does geotechnical engineering. It is precertified to do about a hundred things related to road construction for the Texas Department of Transportation. Good things it's done: the handbook on managing lead-based paint in city housing where it was used before 1978; the leader in the area in using recycled materials, particularly concrete at Brooks City Base where it showed that it was not only environmentally sounder to do this but economically wiser. Not so hot: City government still remembers that "Raba-Kistner had cost the pubalic taxpayer millions of dollars during their work on the Alamodome" and had a negative reputation for not doing an adequate job there. Thus, they were not considered for work on the San Antonio River Improvement Project.</li>
<li>Edward Steves -- from an old, old San Antonio family. His family's homestead is a major attraction on the San Antonio Conservation Society's list of historic homes to visit. His wife is on the board of directors of said society. His family's business initially was lumber, but today it is a manufacturer of thousands upon thousands of doors sold nationally and, the company hopes, soon internationally.</li>
<li>Tullos Wells -- Managing partner of the San Antonio area offices of the law firm Bracewell and Giuliani: yes, that Giuliani. This is one of the largest law firms in the country. Wells is Board Certified in labor and employment law and hospitality, sports and entertainment law. He tends to defend against charges of discrimination, etc, and does it with great success. He is interesting in part because he is Chairman of the Board of the Austin San Antonio Intermunicipal Commuter Rail District and he is a gung-ho advocate of commuter rail. You can hear him talk about it at www.tpr.org by clicking on Texas Matters #139. He says there's only so much concrete you can pour, and you simply can't pour enough to build roads to link San Antonio and Austin. He's a colorful and detailed speaker. With him at the helm of the board, I can't believe it won't work. Interestingly, Sam Barshop and Carroll Schubert are on the board of the commuter rail district.</li>
<li>Marty Wender-- sounds like a mentsch, socially. He is a big time developer, responsible for the 3500 acre planned, mixed use development known as Westover Hills. Among other things. He seems particularly proud to have facilitated very fast the conversion of hiway 151 into a mini freeway that bisects the development. He's listed as one of the top 100 developers in the nation.<br /> </li></ul></div>
Bush's Culture of Death: Updatestag:typepad.com,2003:post-43740392005-04-20T10:13:34-05:002005-04-20T10:13:34-05:00Culture of Death is a dramatic moniker, but it is after all truly apt. The Christian Right, George Bush, Tom DeLay, et. al. are pushing policies that kill people, not just in war, but in peace. They kill the meek...Esther Buddenhagen
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<p>Culture of Death is a dramatic moniker, but it is after all truly apt. The Christian Right, George Bush, Tom DeLay, et. al. are pushing policies that kill people, not just in war, but in peace. They kill the meek and the humble and the sick and the hungry.</p>
<p>Some Updates:<br />On April 8, 2005 Barbara Boxer, D-California introduced an amendment to a bill currently in front of the Senate which would lift the "global gag rule" against funding clinics associated in some way with abortions. This bill is cosponsored by Republican Senator Olympia Snow of Maine. Eight Republicans supported it so that it passed in the Senate, 52-46. Ms Boxer attached a similar amendment two years ago which also was passed by the Senate. It died in the House. If it should by some miracle pass in the house, the President has, of course, promised to veto it.</p>
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<p>The Bush Administration and the Republican Congress are now moving to establish a rule similar in intent to the "global gag rule," this time against needle exchanges in the struggle against the spread of AIDS. In an editorial in the NYTimes published February 26, 2005, the Times reports that "While Washington does not buy syringes for needle-exchange programs, it does give money to groups that use other people's money to administer needle exchanges....The asistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement, Robert Charles, warned the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, which currently holds the rotating chairmanship of the joint program Unaids, that the organization should not work on needle-exchange issues and should remove positive references from its web site, which it did.</p>
<p>Needle exchanges do assist in preventing the spread of AIDS. They do not encourage drug use. Republicans have used, according to this editorial, grossly inaccurate charts to push their position. </p>
<p>Needle exchanges are especially valueable in parts of Asia, the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. </p>
<p>Opponents argue that needle exchange "muddies the message that illegal drug use is unacceptable, and keeps drug abusers from suffering the consequences of their addiction." As The Times points out, by this logic, doctors should refuse to treat lung cancer in smokers.</p>
<p>The editorial concludes, "Washington's antipathy toward needle exchanges is a triumph of ideology over science, logic and compassion. The United States should help pay for these important programs, If it cannot bring itself to do so, it should at least allow the rest of the world to get on with saving millions of lives."</p>
<p>---</p>
<p>Here in San Antonio, the local affiliate of the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundations has received calls and e-mails from anti-choice activists "pressuring Komen to end support for Planned Parenthood's Habla Con Tu Hermana breast health education programs. The folks at comen have pledged "full support of Planned Parenthood." You can read more about this at <a href="http://">www.ppaction.org/pptx/</a></p>
<p>---<br />I've added a new typelist, called Bad Guys -- somewhat less familiar members of the Bush Culture of Death who have a lot to do with developing and promoting Culture of Death policies. Only three so far, but that is only due to a my need to stop writing now.</p>
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