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>Remember Pearl Harbor

>g19942

At dawn on Sunday, December 7, 1941, naval aviation forces of the Empire of Japan attacked the United States Pacific Fleet center at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii and other military targets. The goal of this attack was to sufficiently cripple the US Fleet so that Japan could then attack and capture the Phillipines and Indo-China and so secure access to the raw materials needed to maintain its position as a global military and economic power. This would enable Japan to further extend the empire to include Australia, New Zealand, and India (the ultimate boundaries planned for the so-called “Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere”). The prevailing belief within the Japanese military and political establishment was that eventually, with the then expected German defeat of Great Britain and Soviet Russia, the United States’ non-involvement in the European war, and Japan’s control of the Pacific, that the world power structure would stabilize into three major spheres of influence:

1.) The Empire of Japan controlling East, Southeast, and South Asia and the entire Pacific Ocean.
2.) The combined powers of Germany and Italy controlling Great Britain, all of Europe, Western and central Asia, the Middle East, and Africa.
3.) The United States, controlling North and South America.

https://www.ccdemo.info/PearlHarbor/PearlHarborDayRemembered.html

Back ground:
Eighteen months earlier, President Franklin D. Roosevelt had transferred the United States Fleet to Pearl Harbor as a presumed deterrent to Japanese agression. The Japanese military, deeply engaged in the seemingly endless war it had started against China in mid-1937, badly needed oil and other raw materials. Commercial access to these was gradually curtailed as the conquests continued. In July 1941 the Western powers effectively halted trade with Japan. From then on, as the desperate Japanese schemed to seize the oil and mineral-rich East Indies and Southeast Asia, a Pacific war was virtually inevitable.

By late November 1941, with peace negotiations clearly approaching an end, informed U.S. officials (and they were well-informed, they believed, through an ability to read Japan’s diplomatic codes) fully expected a Japanese attack into the Indies, Malaya and probably the Philippines. Completely unanticipated was the prospect that Japan would attack east, as well.

The U.S. Fleet’s Pearl Harbor base was reachable by an aircraft carrier force, and the Japanese Navy secretly sent one across the Pacific with greater aerial striking power than had ever been seen on the World’s oceans. Its planes hit just before 8AM on 7 December. Within a short time five of eight battleships at Pearl Harbor were sunk or sinking, with the rest damaged. Several other ships and most Hawaii-based combat planes were also knocked out and over 2400 Americans were dead. Soon after, Japanese planes eliminated much of the American air force in the Philippines, and a Japanese Army was ashore in Malaya.

These great Japanese successes, achieved without prior diplomatic formalities, shocked and enraged the previously divided American people into a level of purposeful unity hardly seen before or since. For the next five months, until the Battle of the Coral Sea in early May, Japan’s far-reaching offensives proceeded untroubled by fruitful opposition. American and Allied morale suffered accordingly. Under normal political circumstances, an accomodation might have been considered.

However, the memory of the “sneak attack” on Pearl Harbor fueled a determination to fight on. Once the Battle of Midway in early June 1942 had eliminated much of Japan’s striking power, that same memory stoked a relentless war to reverse her conquests and remove her, and her German and Italian allies, as future threats to World peace.

https://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/pearlhbr/pearlhbr.htm

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>GET A FREE DINNER AT BLEND!

>GET A FREE DINNER AT BLEND! FOR THE WHOLE MONTH OF DEC ON SUNDAY, MONDAY AND TUESDAY NIGHTS, BLEND WILL OFFER ANY CUSTOMER A BUY-ONE-GET-ONE-FREE ENTREE IN THE DINING ROOM ONLY (NO TAKE OUT)! ALL YOU NEED IS THE SECRET PASSCODE AND THE ONLY WAY TO GET THE SECRET CODE IS TO FOLLOW BLENDBAR ON TWITTER AND SEND US A DIRECT MESSAGE REQUESTING THIS PASSCODE…. SEE YOU AT BLEND IN DECEMBER!!!!

watermark

photo by www.artchickphotos.com

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>$48 million dollar Referendum : it’s a GOOD thing the village isn’t taking care of the buildings — we couldn’t afford it!

>The Village does not own the buildings. The school district owns them. And thus the school district is responsible for managing them.

And BTW last year the school district took the grounds maintenance away from the Village because the Village was screwing them on the price. Way too expensive.

And how about those multi-hundred-thousand $$ bathrooms at Vets…thanks, Village! Haven’t you noticed that the village is allowed to just pass an ordinance any time a project is mismanaged and goes over budget? School district can’t do that. They have to stay within their budget.

So any way you look at it, it’s a GOOD thing the village isn’t taking care of the buildings — we couldn’t afford it!

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>Senate Health Reform Plan Prescribes Heavy Tax Dose

>Senate Health Reform Plan Prescribes Heavy Tax Dose
by Michael F. Cannon

https://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=11025

Michael F. Cannon is director of health policy studies at the Cato Institute and co-author of Healthy Competition: What’s Holding Back Health Care and How to Free It.

Added to cato.org on December 2, 2009

Amid double-digit unemployment, a record $1.6 trillion federal deficit and a national debt projected to double in 10 years, U.S. Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., voted to bring to the floor of the Senate a health care overhaul with so many job-killing tax increases that it’s hard to fit them all into one column. But let’s give it a shot.

For starters, consider the $500 billion in explicit tax increases.

One levy would take $15 billion from sick patients with high out-of-pocket medical expenses, including elderly and low-income patients.

The Senate health care bill would impose massive tax increases on Day One and keep increasing your taxes well into the future.

If you have a health savings account or flexible spending arrangement, there are taxes specific to those health plans, plus a third tax that would apply to all “consumer-directed” plans.

Another levy would tax medical devices, and another would tax prescription drugs. Those two taxes would increase health insurance premiums by about 1 percent, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. There’s another $60 billion tax that would drive health premiums higher still.

If your premiums climb high enough, you’ll become subject to a $149 billion tax on those with high health insurance premiums. Yet many face high premiums simply because they have expensive medical needs, making this yet another tax on the sick.

The legislation would increase the Medicare tax on wages above $200,000, yet divert the revenue toward new entitlement spending.

And lest any corner of the health care sector go untaxed, the bill would even impose a 5 percent tax on cosmetic surgeries.

Yet those are just the explicit tax increases. There are trillions of dollars in hidden tax increases, too.

Senate Democrats promise to fund half of their new entitlement with $491 billion of Medicare cuts. Yet those promised cuts are merely a tax increase waiting to happen.

Congress frequently reneges on such promises. Want proof? At the very same time Congress is promising to cut future Medicare spending by $491 billion, it is reneging on a past promise to cut Medicare’s physician payments by $210 billion. Even Medicare’s chief actuary calls the (new) promised cuts “doubtful” and “unrealistic.”

If history is any guide, Congress will scrape up that $491 billion by raising taxes — or by increasing the deficit, which simply raises taxes on future generations.

Another hidden tax comes in the form of price controls that would increase premiums for young adults in order to subsidize their parents, even though the parents typically have higher incomes. The same price controls would increase premiums for people with healthy lifestyles to subsidize those who (for example) overeat or consume alcohol to excess.

Those price controls could even tax farmers to subsidize office workers. The bill would allow populous urban areas like Omaha to make all of Nebraska one single “rating area,” which would increase premiums in rural areas to subsidize wealthier urban areas.

The bill’s largest hidden tax, however, is a mandate that would force all Americans to purchase health insurance, whether they want it or not.

Here’s why that mandate is a tax. When the government forces you to pay $10,000 to the IRS, and then gives that money to a private insurance company — as this legislation would do — we rightly call that a tax.

If instead the government forced you or your employer to pay $10,000 directly to a private insurance company — as this legislation also would do — the outcome would be the same. That makes the mandate a tax, even though that $10,000 never passes through the federal Treasury.

Including the cost of that “mandate tax” reveals the actual cost of the legislation to be roughly $2.5 trillion — more than double the official estimate.

The Senate health care bill would impose massive tax increases on Day One and keep increasing your taxes well into the future.

Sen. Nelson was one of the key lawmakers who brought this ticking tax bomb one step closer to reality. Let’s hope the ensuing Senate debate exposes why job-killing tax increases are the wrong prescription for health care reform — in this or any economy.

https://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=11025

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>Climategate : Climate Scientists Subverted Peer Review

>Climate Scientists Subverted Peer Review

by Patrick J. Michaels

https://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=11022

Patrick J. Michaels is senior fellow in environmental studies at the Cato Institute and author of Climate of Extremes: Global Warming Science They Don’t Want You to Know.

Added to cato.org on December 2, 2009

This article appeared in the DC Examiner on December 2, 2009.

The more we learn about the purloined e-mails from the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit the more it resembles Watergate. As was the case in 1974, there will be no one particular spectacular revelation, but rather an unremitting and unrelenting daily drip-drip that ultimately brings down the house.

The latest gem comes from none other than Rajendra Pauchari, the climatologically untrained head of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Without the IPCC there would be no cap-and-tax legislation awaiting debate in the Senate. There would be no meeting in Copenhagen, where, next month, world leaders will attempt to globalize cap-and-tax. There would also be no pledge from President Obama to emissions reductions that have never been passed by the Senate.

The last IPCC compendium on climate science, published in 2007, left out plenty of peer-reviewed science that it found inconveniently disagreeable.

The e-mails have given Pauchari the onerous task of defending the IPCC from its own “scientific” leadership, now accused (or, perhaps, incriminating itself) of seriously manipulating the scientific literature that goes into the august IPCC scientific reports.

In one of the e-mails, Penn State’s Michael Mann, long a power player in the production of these reports, said this about some scientific articles he did not like: “I can’t see either of these papers being in the next IPCC report. Kevin and I will keep them out somehow — even if we have to redefine what the peer-review literature is!”

This is pretty serious stuff, because it, and many similar e-mails, paint a picture of IPCC boffins committing science’s capital crime: Trying to game the peer-reviewed literature, which is akin to editing what goes in the Bible.

In this case, Mann is actually speculating about keeping contrary information out of the IPCC reports by blacklisting certain professional journals.

One series of these e-mails called out the journal Climate Research, which had the audacity to publish a paper surveying a voluminous scientific literature that didn’t support Mann’s claim that the last 50 years are the warmest in the past millennium. Along with the CRU head Phil Jones and other climate luminaries, they then cooked up the idea of boycotting any scientific journal that dared publish anything by a few notorious “skeptics,” myself included.

Their pressure worked. Editors resigned or were fired. Many colleagues began to complain to me that their good papers were either being rejected outright or subject to outrageous reviews — papers that would have been published with little revision just a few years ago.

More by Patrick J. MichaelsSo what is Pauchari’s response to all of this? Denial.

“IPCC relies entirely on peer-reviewed literature in carrying out its assessment and follows a process that renders it unlikely that any peer reviewed piece of literature, however contrary to the views of any individual author, would be left out.”

That’s just not true. The last IPCC compendium on climate science, published in 2007, left out plenty of peer-reviewed science that it found inconveniently disagreeable.

These include articles from the journals Arctic, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Earth Interactions, Geophysical Research Letters, International Journal of Climatology, Journal of Climate, Journal of Geophysical Research, Nature, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and Quaternary Research.

We have hardly heard the end of Climategate, but don’t expect some climactic grand finale. In 1974, errors, boo-boos, and downright duplicities slowly piled up.

The same is happening now. Like Tricky Dick, Pauchari may soon be headed home

https://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=11022

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>Still in Denial : In wake of financial crisis, N.J. towns, counties brace for losses

>https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2008/09/nj_towns_and_counties_brace_fo.html

In wake of financial crisis, N.J. towns, counties brace for losses
By Carly Rothman/The Star-Ledger
September 30, 2008, 6:07PM

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2008/09/nj_towns_and_counties_brace_fo.html

Watching and worrying. That’s what county and local government officials in New Jersey are doing this week as they monitor the bleak national economic condition, bracing for the worst when it comes to the impact the financial crisis will have on their 2009 budgets.

A host of officials said today they already were anticipating tough times next year, with likely decreases in revenue, and have already enacted plans to cut spending – cuts that could lead to reduced services and employee layoffs.

Officials are also paying close attention to possible cuts in state aid to towns and counties after comments this week by Gov. Jon Corzine who said he is reviewing contingency plans he asked state department heads to craft in August that would trim their costs by 5 percent.

“We have a hiring freeze in effect and we are not filling job vacancies unless they are critical positions, such as staffing our nursing home or having enough officers at the county corrections center or juvenile,” Morris County Administrator John Bonanni said. “But what is happening with the economy this week is problematic. It is of great concern.”

Essex County Executive Joseph DiVincenzo said his county expects to lose at least $2.5 million in property taxes due to the downturn of the economy. He does not think there will be a significant impact on the current budget but has asked county departments to tighten their belts next year, starting with a 5 percent cut across the board.

“We’ve been expecting the worst, so we’re a little prepared for this, but I didn’t expect it would be this bad,” DiVincenzo said. “This year, we’ll be fine. What we do next year is going to have to be less.”

The financial woes prompted Union County to postpone a plan to refinance some of its debt, a move that could have saved the county $2 million.

“Recent situations have made that opportunity deteriorate,” said county finance director Larry Caroselli. “Thankfully, we issued (bonds) earlier this year, in February, when market conditions were a lot stronger. If we had to (issue bonds now) because of a need of cash, we’d really be biting our nails.”

Many officials across the state expect a decline in money collected from taxes, due to foreclosures, a decrease in new development and new ratables, plus what could be a large number of tax appeals.

Marvin Joss, administrator in Clinton Township, Hunterdon County, said a credit crisis inevitably leads to a drop in tax collection due to foreclosure and instability in the personal finances of residents. Tax collection can drop between 2 and 5 percent in a township like Clinton when the economy is ailing, Joss said, and that means the money that wasn’t collected has to be raised in additional taxes the next year.

That possibility has sparked interest in shared services between towns and counties, plus a host of cost-saving initiatives.

Madison has begun sharing a municipal court with neighboring Florham Park and is in talks to share senior transport services as well, said Mayor Mary-Anna Holden. In Morristown, town officials approved a plan to install solar panels at the wastewater treatment plant to save between $100,000 to $150,000 annually in energy costs.

Morristown Mayor Donald Cresitello said towns and cities are working to cut their budgets and urged Corzine not to balance the state budget by cutting aid to already cash-strapped towns and school districts.

“He needs to look inside first,” Cresitello said, suggesting cuts within the state bureaucracy.

Meanwhile, towns and counties are anxiously eyeing the impact of the economic downturn and stock market on employee pension funds, said Jack Mozloom, spokesman for the New Jersey Association of Counties.

“There is a lot of concern out there, a lot of people who could be affected,” said Mozloom. “It’s too early to know right now what the impact of what’s happening this week will have on those funds. But we’re all watching and worrying.”

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2008/09/nj_towns_and_counties_brace_fo.html

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>I don’t believe unemployment went down, I think our government is fudging numbers now.

>I don’t believe unemployment went down, I think our government is fudging numbers now.

The report doesn’t match up with other jobs data: Today’s report will no doubt be a head scratcher for economists as they try to understand how other labor market data could be so divergent. Earlier in the week, ADP reported private payroll losses of 169,000 for November. The Monster Employment Index, which measures online job demand, actually dipped slightly from October’s number. “This was a shocking report because the reported payroll data bear little resemblance to any other evidence concerning the labor market, including the ADP survey, which is based on hard data from a much wider sample of payrolls than is the government’s survey,” says Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at research firm MFR.

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>Valley Renewal : Surprise – it’s all about the money!

>Surprise – it’s all about the money!

In the summer, the Planning Board hired an expert in hospital design to review their proposed H-Zone amendments to the Master Plan. While the draft wording was prepared by the Village Planner the text was almost entirely a copy of the details in the “Renewal” supplied by Valley.

To many people’s surprise, the independent consultant proposed a much more “community friendly” recommendation that included increasing setbacks to 120 feet and putting all parking underground.

The response from Valley, as reported in today’s Ridgewood News to the consultant’s recommendations, is that the hospital has concerns about the “constructability and financial feasibility” of the proposal. What this means in 2009 is that the hospital is concerned about some additional cost because anything is technically possible.

It is very surprising to hear this when Valley is one of the most profitable hospitals in NJ and has benefited from an additional $25 million windfall profit increase from receiving most of the former patients of PVH over the last 2 years.

These statements also seem to run contrary to Audrey Meyer’s statement in the Record of Dec 3, where she suggests that non-for-profit hospital’s like Valley use their profits to benefit the community.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/Second_expert_is_hired.html

https://www.northjersey.com/news/opinions/duchak_meyers_120309.html

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>Home for the Holidays: The tradition was ‘tinkered with’

>The tradition was ‘tinkered with’ by changing the day from Friday to Saturday. Mistake #1. I used to look forward to ditching work early, scoot up to the train station. Sing with a few thousand of my neighbors and have dinner afterwards and stroll the streets. Saturday was hum-drum because you had to give up a weekend day to have all the pomp & such.

Mistake #2: groupthink about the global warming hoax following the Anne Zusy types down to the Square instead of the focal point of the town. And to make matters worse, let’s hang recycling on the tree. I may be alone on this, but my tree may have home-made ornaments by the kids, but there are no used pork n beans cans.

Mistake #3: VOR compounds last year’s error by doing it AGAIN, sans garbage ornaments. Big deal. You know what used to work and brought people in? The traditional tree, singers, bands and such on a Friday night at the station. I remember the throngs of people stretching a block north n south and several blocks down East Ridgewood Ave.

Notice that NYC doesn’t drop the New Years ball over the Smithsonian. And why? Because Times Square is the place. Same reason the celebration belongs back at the station.

PB050002

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NJ Tea Party Coalition : Announcement of 12/15 Rally to DC

New Jersey Patriots Are Taking their Voices to DC Again!

We are taking it to the “buses” on December 15th once again to provide our Senators the visual aid they need to understand clearly that we do not want this Healthcare bill on our backs or the backs of our children or grandchildren. We cannot afford, nor will we tolerate, another power grab by Congress to rule over our very own bodies and force upon us unconstitutional actions to compel us to buy or subsidize government healthcare in any shape or form.

Continue reading NJ Tea Party Coalition : Announcement of 12/15 Rally to DC

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>Preserve Graydon will be Downtown for the Holidays Friday Dec. 4

>We’re go­ing Down­town for the Holi­days to­mor­row night, Fri­day, Dec. 4, from 5:30-9 PM. It’s Ridge­wood’s an­nu­al De­cem­ber cele­bra­tion. Stores will be open late and East Ridge­wood Ave. will be­come a pede­s­trian mall. The Cham­ber of Com­merce will pro­vide free en­ter­tain­ment and hot cider. We’ll have a table at the in­ter­sec­tion of Oak St. and East Ridge­wood Ave. (north­east corn­er), across the street from Van Neste Square, near the big clock.

Come say hel­lo and see the new Gray­don fundrais­ing items that were a big hit at our Holi­day Bazaar:

Car/re­frig­er­a­tor mag­nets
Yard signs (take with you or re­quest free de­liv­ery)
Note cards with Dorothy War­ren scene of ice skat­ing at Gray­don (blank in­side)
Spe­cial of­fer: the same cards with your mes­sage and name in­side—or­der now for speedy de­liv­ery as Christ­mas/New Year cards (min­i­mum of 100 for cus­tom or­ders)
Last day of our Cheese­cake Aly fundrais­er: fes­tive cheese­cakes, down-home cho­co­late chip cookies, and cheese­cake gift cer­tifi­cates for home de­liv­ery in mid-De­cem­ber. Free sam­ples of rasp­ber­ry cheese­cake while they last.

Com­ing soon: our on­line store! Till then, grab a warm coat and meet us Down­town for the Holi­days: to­mor­row (Fri­day), 5:30-9 PM.

Swimmingly,
Marcia Ringel and Suzanne Kelly, Co-Chairs
The Preserve Graydon Coalition, Inc., a nonprofit corporation
“It’s clear—we love Graydon!”
[email protected] www.PreserveGraydon.org

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>CLIMATE CHANGE ‘FRAUD’

>Wednesday December 2,2009
By John Ingham

https://www.dailyexpress.co.uk/posts/view/143573

THE scientific consensus that mankind has caused climate change was rocked yesterday as a leading academic called it a “load of hot air underpinned by fraud”.

Professor Ian Plimer condemned the climate change lobby as “climate comrades” keeping the “gravy train” going.

In a controversial talk just days before the start of a climate summit attended by world leaders in Copenhagen, Prof Plimer said Governments were treating the public like “fools” and using climate change to increase taxes.

He said carbon dioxide has had no impact on temperature and that recent warming was part of the natural cycle of climate stretching over ­billions of years.

“If you have to argue your science by using fraud, your science is not valid. “
Professor Pilmer


Prof Plimer – author of Heaven and Earth: Global Warming, The Missing Science – told a London audience: “Climates always change. They always have and they always will. They are driven by a number of factors that are random and cyclical.”

His comments came days after a scandal in climate-change research emerged through the leak of emails from the world-leading research unit at the University of East Anglia. They appeared to show that scientists had been massaging data to prove that global warming was taking place

The Climate Research Unit also admitted getting rid of much of its raw climate data, which means other scientists cannot check the subsequent research. Last night the head of the CRU, Professor Phil Jones, said he would stand down while an independent review took place.

read more…

https://www.dailyexpress.co.uk/posts/view/143573

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>Ridgewood needs to be promoted as a town that is good for business,

>Paying cops to replace to crossing guards??? I never said that as that would be a stupid comment because the cops are already being paid by the town – the point was let’s get rid of the crossing guards and have the cops whom we, as tax payers already pay, do this service for the two hours a day. There is a cost savings initiative already.

7:53 – you must be married to a cop or have one in your family. I never said that I hated cops, I was pointing out the waste of having a larger than required force. I was also pointing out the need for cops to do more than just nothing – how do you know that I was not there when the good Lt. smacked into the civilian car on Linwood Avenue? You seem to know a lot about me. Also, if there are crimes been committed in this town, it is duty of the police via the press to inform us, the taxpayers. I actually witnessed two blue hairs going at it one day in the Daily Treat – it was over moving too slowly. Bar brawls in Ridgewood – that is funny – I might go out this weekend to witnessed one myself.

In reference to Graydon – we all know that those people looking to preserve Graydon pool are fighting a losing battle. When the town’s pediatric physicians stop telling parents that their kids are suffering from the Graydon Syndrome, when they get sick in the summer from swimming in the dump and when this same group of preservationists come up with a rejuvenation plan of their own, then and only then might we see a change in the direction the battle is heading.

My whole point is this – we need cuts and proper investments for the stability and growth of this great town. Like any business, cuts will hurt but not only do we need cuts in wasteful spending, we need investment in cash generating ventures. Ridgewood needs to be promoted as a town that is good for business, good for families in that it not only offers a respectable environment, but it offers an exceptional educational experience for all children up through the completion of secondary school, with qualified teachers that are the best at what they do and it offers the best in the region round-year activities for the town’s families to enjoy. If we don’t make the necessary cuts and investments, if we don’t make the necessary changes to Graydon pool and if we don’t clean up our act in our schools, our town will continue to lose revenues to other towns.

Get the point?

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>We Can’t Escape Our Connection with Nature

>A growing movement to restore nature to children’s lives in our overbuilt, overpaved, overprotective world is receiving wider attention.

In an op-ed piece last summer, two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times reporter Nicholas Kristof described a camping experience with his daughter. He notes that many children today experience nature mostly through the TV screen and consider nature to be exotic and removed from their daily lives. He writes, “Suburban childhood that once meant catching snakes in fields now means sanitized video play dates scheduled a week in advance.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/02/opinion/02kristof.html?_r=1

An article in yesterday’s New York edition of the New York Times describes a “forest kindergarten” in Saratoga Springs, New York. Children lucky enough to attend this school gain an appreciation and love of nature that they are unlikely to forget. Later, when today’s children become the stewards of the earth, those with important memories and experiences connected to nature will be more likely to care about the earth and to take good care of it than those who spent childhood in a protective bubble.

We at the Preserve Graydon Coalition believe strongly in the importance of encouraging children to connect with nature. This point represents only one of our many reasons for caring deeply about preventing the loss of Graydon Pool and working hard to achieve that aim.

It’s easy to imagine holding some mild equivalent of a “forest kindergarten” at Graydon all year ’round. Would this be possible with a concrete pool?

Here is the article on an outdoor kindergarten just one state away. The “slide show” is wonderful.

https://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/30/nyregion/30forest.html

Extensive, interesting, well-presented information is available at the website of the Children & Nature Network: https://www.childrenandnature.org/. The site includes articles on a wide swath of related topics, including the value of nature to healing and the medicinal qualities of dirt. Yes, dirt. BBC News reports, “Children should be allowed to get dirty, according to scientists who have found being too clean can impair the skin’s ability to heal. Normal bacteria living on the skin trigger a pathway that helps prevent inflammation when we get hurt, the US team discovered.”

We are part of the earth whether we like it or not. The farther we attempt to separate ourselves from it, the worse that will be for us and our children. Let’s teach them to embrace that connection instead.

Marcia Ringel
Co-Chair, The Preserve Graydon Coalition
www.PreserveGraydon.org

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