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September 30, 2007

In Lansing, MI, our pastor fails to pray for legislature and the governor as shutdown looms

Hey, how many of you Michigan churchgoers went this morning and the pastor didn't pray for our political leaders and the possible shutdown of state government?

Mine didn't.  I would like to think that ours just missed the severity of what's going on.  His sermon was about prayer and he did pray for a variety of things and people, but not for our governor, our state legislators nor the many people who have been and stand to be hurt more by the stalemate in Lansing.

Would the prayers of our small church make a difference in a very polarized and very political situation?  I don't know.  Does God care about the Michigan Legislature and its inability to govern our state?

I bet he does.


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My Michigan reading list:

It's almost time to get ready to go to church.  But, here's what I want to read when I get home:

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Michigan Republicans need to match their words with their actions

Michigan Republicans have been bleating for weeks about how they demanding spending cuts in the state budget.  They stuck to their mantra of cuts and reforms.  Now when the hammer is ready to fall on a state government shutdown, what happens?

They fold.  Their convictions turn to jello.  Michigan residents will pay more income and sales taxes and no apparent spending cuts. 

This is not good government.  It makes our state look like some banana republic where conviction and principle is tossed out the window for the whims of questionable leaders.

Democrats are no better.  They knew only one tune and that was to raise taxes.

How long will voters allow this vacuum of leadership on both sides?

Leon Drolet should look at circulating recall petitions for the whole legislature and for the governor. 

We need political leaders with the courage of their convictions and with wisdom.

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September 21, 2007

This is the 1,000th post on my blog, Daily Grit

This is my 1,000th post on this blog, Daily Grit which I started about three years ago as an experiment with this new channel of communication.

It's been an adventure that reminds me of my first days at Michigan State University's School of Journalism1417991272_a1396bff74_m back in the mid-1960s when we first started using IBM Selectric typewriters and when there were new business visionaries who talked about writing news stories on computers someday.

I remember sitting in the old Press Room at the Michigan State Capitol Building

writing my column for a chain of small newspapers and then transmitting it back to the newspaper chain's corporate office on a clunky machine with a big spinning drum that you attached the copy paper to.  A light would read it and transmit the copy.  I don't even remember the name of the machine.

Continue reading "This is the 1,000th post on my blog, Daily Grit" »

Reading the morning papers about Michigan's budget crisis is not fun

Michigan lawmakers  are taking are state right to the edge  of a big financial cliff. 

According to this morning's online newspapers, the consequences of the state legislature not being able to adopt a budget by Oct. 1 and causing a shutdown of state government could last for years.  Here's what I've read so far:

We seem to be at a historic moment in the state's history.  Michigan once was a leader  in being able to govern itself.  That doesn't seem to be the case anymore.    Where's this all going to end?  Whatever happens, I'm sure it won't be pretty.

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September 17, 2007

Does Lutheran World Relief know that their survey company is doing this?

Do you feel that this is being honest?

I just got a call where my caller ID said the identity of the caller was unavailable.  I'm not sure why I picked it up, but I did and the caller identified herself as either being from or calling for Lutheran World Relief.

They wanted to take a survey.  She said I would not be asked for a contribution.

I felt stung that my own church body--the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod (LCMS) --would use a survey firm where such secular and misleading tactics would be used.  I would have felt different if the caller ID had reflected the identity of the caller. 

Because of their tactics being like those of most other telemarketers, I declined the conversation.

Lutheran World Relief should apologize and should vow to be more transparent in its calling efforts. 

How is their ways different from the world's ways?

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Can our neighborhood in blue-collar town make use of a "Ning" social media site to build community?

My wife and I along with our elderly Beagle, Snoopy, live in the southwest corner of Michigan's capital city.  It's a great place to live.  It's very residential and very livable for middle-class standards.  But, it still has the challenges that come from living in a city with a hundred-thousand plus population.

That's why my wife and I are starting to become active in our neighborhood association.  We are empty-nesters and the meetings take place during prime snooze time for our dog who sees with her nose.

Averillwoods We've met a whole lot more of our neighbors  and have had a chance to discuss neighborhood challenges and hopes.  The goal is to get everybody to take a part and to play some kind of role in the neighborhood.  That's why I started a "Ning" site for the Averill Woods Neighborhood Association.

It's pure social media with a blog, forums, groups and room for much more.  The platform is there to build an online community. 

The challenge is whether residents of the neighborhood who are still learning web 1.0 can grab onto some basic concepts of web 2.0.  If this experiment works, then we may have a model for other neighborhoods around the country to emulate.

I'm anxious to learn whether other neighborhoods have used Ning or similar sites.  What can we learn from your experience?

My neighbor--Rita Bunton--has her life story available on Amazon

We sat across from each other at the monthly meeting of our neighborhood association meeting in the southwest corner of Michigan's capital city.  Rita Bunton was one of maybe 25 people sitting in a middle school library talking about mutual concerns stemming from life in our part of the city.

Then when we left, she handed me a postcard promoting a new book that she had written, her life story describing what it was "like to be a black working-class girl in a blue-collar Midwestern town in the 1950s and 60s.

When I got home from the meeting, I found her book on Amazon.  I do want to read it and learn more about her and her life.

I hope our neighborhood gets behind her and buys and reads the book.  Hopefully, we can talk more at the next neighborhood association meeting or before.


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Neighborhood street cameras move one step closer to reality in Lansing, MI

This story from today's Lansing State Journal states that our city is moving one step closer to getting almost a dozen high-powered street cameras with the power to record action down below in high definition.

The Lansing City Council is expected to approve the cameras and they are expected to give their okay for a loan to purchase them. 

If the City Council fails to approve them, Mayor Virg Bernero says he will buy them anyway. 

This has all taken place without invited collaboration with city residents.

  • Will the cameras make a difference?
  • What about the other elements of the mayor's plan?  Does anybody remember what they are?
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September 09, 2007

Think about the children of 28-year-old suspected serial killer

Here in Michigan's State Capitol city, 28-year-old Matthew Macon is suspected of being a serial killer.  He's suspected in the deaths of several women some of whom were brutally assaulted.

Today's Detroit Free Press has a story about how Macon has fathered at least four children with three women.  One of the children is eight years old.

Think of his kids.  Think of his position of being a father and then think about his preparation to be a dad.  If he's convicted, he won't stop being a father and his kids will not stop needing to know their real father.

How will his kids be affected by what he has done, what he has allegedly done and his inability to fulfill his role as a father.

Will the cycle continue with his children?  What can be done to stop it?  Can he start fulfilling his parental role from inside prison if he's convicted?

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