Monday, June 12, 2006

Our Delegation had better say no to a fourth seat

Our Delegation had better say no to a fourth seat!

I may be cynical but I’m not stupid. What the heck is congress thinking about? A voting seat for Washington DC would be a total disaster, even if Utah was given a carrot of a 4th seat early. That’s right folks, Utah will get a 4th seat anyway maybe even a 5th if growth continues in Washington county.

In 2012 after the 2010 census we will get 4 anyway so what’s the hurry. I know, I know seniority right, but who would that likely new Representative be? An average joe like Rob Bishop, not likely. We are talking about a state wide race here (at large) and this will make the field very small who can afford a pre-convention state wide race for the GOP nomination.

Because lets face it folks, who ever wins this nomination, after the 2011 redistricting that the Legislature will orchestrate will be set for life. The districts will be redrawn to try again to remove Matheson, but the other 3 will be solid GOP until the Millennium.

But what really troubles me is this is totally UNCONSTITUTIONAL! One of the best explanations comes from


Government & Constitution
Why D.C. Representation in Congress Is Unconstitutional
by Rep. Candice MillerPosted Jun 12, 2006



Congress' Exclusive JurisdictionThough well-intentioned, this legislation is, above all, unconstitutional. The Constitution explicitly declares that representation in Congress can be granted only to states. Article 1, Section 2 states that "Representatives ... shall be apportioned among the several states..." Accordingly, the District of Columbia is currently represented in the House of Representatives not by a member of Congress, but instead by an elected delegate who can participate in debate and vote in committee but cannot vote on the House floor. The same goes for other American non-state territories that are comprised of American citizens, including Puerto Rico and Guam.Becoming a state is the only means by which the District of Columbia could gain a seat in the House of Representatives, and in order to pursue statehood, D.C. would first need the Constitution to be amended. The District of Columbia is unique among all other non-state territories, because Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution gives Congress exclusive jurisdiction "in all cases whatsoever" over the District of Columbia. Congress would need to be relieved of all responsibility for the district in order for the district to pursue statehood, and until such an amendment to the Constitution is passed, there will always be a question as to the constitutionality of a potential D.C. representative.

So should this issue come up for a vote in either body of congress, I expect all the Utah delegation to vote this down. If not, you are not upholding your oath to protect and defend the constitution of the United States.

Mark

Sunday, June 11, 2006

Anonymous Blog Owners and Anonymous Blog Comments should be ignored!


I read with great interest the following article from Charley Foster’s Blog http://utahbeehive.blogspot.com/ . Since my wife is a 3L at the University of Utah Law School we both find his blog informative and more importantly fact based. As many of you know who read the papers, I have been involved in some legal issues that hopefully will be settled this coming week. Unfortunately the other party involved felt it necessary to involve the media in this matter and that has drawn the interest of several blog sites who have chosen to post articles and allowed anonymous comments that have been totally false or pure speculation.

From Charley Fosters Blog
Friday, June 02, 2006

"bloggers not liable for anonymous comments on their blogs

...at least in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Some time ago I wrote that the pre-emption clause of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act ought to block such claims, and here the U.S. District Court held exactly that, saying the act overrides the traditional treatment of publishers under statutory and common law". - Dimeo v. Max (pdf)

Two local blogs in particular http://utahconservative.blogspot.com/ and http://www.slcspin.com/ have chosen to post false information or pure speculation and allow anonymous comments full of lies and innuendo that have been hurtful to both myself and my family to be posted on their sites.

In my opinion no Blog owner should be anonymous. Why should someone who posts articles about other persons or public policy hide behind a cloak of secrecy? In the case of Ethan Millard’s slcspin the pure garbage that is posted on this site should be taken to the dump and buried.

A recent post from The Fly http://www.flyonthewall.us/blog/index.php on the slcspin site has caused a real firestorm within the GOP leadership.

I find it interesting that Steve Devore has finally come clean and admitted his involvement with this site. I really think the owner of Utah Conservative should do the same.

What I find most interesting with Steve Devore’s The Fly Blog is one of his most recent posts.

"No More Anonymous CommentsThe Fly has allowed anonymous comments on his blog. As he has read the comments, many of the comments have been somewhat scurrilous in nature and some have been downright untrue. Effective immediately, the Fly will require people who want to make comments to identify themselves with their full names and e-mail addresses. We’ll follow the same letter-to-the-editor principles of the major newspapers that require the writers to identify themselves.
If you want to provide anonymous tips for investigation, you can still do so. These tips are the lifeblood of the Fly. These tips will not be published but will be investigated and then reported if there is something there. The tipsters will never be identified."

This is the exact reason why my Blog site does not allow anonymous comments. If you are not brave enough to use you real name when you post a comment or own a Blog site, of what real value are your postings?

I would say worthless

Mark E. Towner
Proud Owner and Identified Poster always of the Political Spyglass

Saturday, June 10, 2006

Victims of Crash Praised

Weather may have led to deaths; recovery efforts to resume today

By Sara IsraelsenDeseret Morning News
PROVO — The three Utah County men who died when their plane went down in Utah Lake Thursday night were men of integrity who lived their lives to the fullest, friends and family say.

Keith Johnson, Deseret Morning News
Standing near a recovered piece of plane, Cynthia Clements holds her husband, Eric, at Utah Lake State Park Friday. Thursday's plane crash killed three men, one of whom was a co-worker of Clements. Bad weather has hampered search efforts. Meanwhile, efforts were to resume today to recover the bodies of pilot Blaine Pugmire, 31, Springville; Alpine's Harold "Les" McGuire, 35; and Ray Hooper, 35, Mapleton. And investigators said they will continue to piece the "puzzle" together to determine a cause for the crash that occurred long after the Provo airport control tower had shut down for the night and in an area where radar coverage is poor. The loss of the three men is a huge blow not only to family members but the community in general, said Kyle Nelson, who worked with McGuire and Hooper in their financial consulting company, Producer Revolution, as well as other business ventures, including Engenuity. "If any men were to be part of the news, (these) are men with honor and integrity and a message that could save the world," said Nelson, executive vice president of Engenuity. "The intellectual property they have — their contribution to society can't even be measured." The men worked as financial educators, teaching skills for creating profitable, productive lives, Nelson said. Pugmire, an experienced pilot, had been hired to take the men to and from speaking engagements. The three friends were returning from a conference in St. George Thursday night when their plane went down near the Provo airport. The Utah County Sheriff's Office suspects weather might have been a factor in the crash. "We are taking so many things into factor," Utah County Sheriff's Sgt. Dennis Harris said. "It's like putting a puzzle together." Storms blew in across the county Thursday night and Friday, with heavy winds, patchy rain and ominous clouds. Bad weather continued to be an issue in the recovery efforts, as searchers were pulled off the lake several times Friday because of high winds and waves. The effort was suspended Friday evening and was expected to resume this morning around 6 a.m., Harris said, when searchers will begin investigating several points of interest identified Friday.

The Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board are also conducting parallel investigations, hoping to find a cause for the crash. Their investigation might take weeks, possibly even months, said William Hughes, an FAA inspector who was on site. The air control tower at Provo Municipal Airport is only manned between 7 a.m. and 9 p.m. The last contact with the plane was made by Salt Lake Center Air Control, which received word from Pugmire that the plane was on final descent about 11:30 p.m. Radar coverage in Utah County is limited, as there is no radar system at the Provo facility and the radar in Salt Lake City cannot pick up objects lower than 8,000 feet in the Provo area, according to the FAA. The first indication of trouble came when Pugmire's wife, Nicole, called Provo police around 3:50 a.m. Friday. She was worried because her husband was hours late checking in with her, which he always does, family members said. The call was transferred to the Utah County Sheriff's Office and they tried to find a signal from the plane. When they couldn't find one, they began searching Utah Lake around 6 a.m. with personal watercraft and later with dive teams and sonar-equipped boats. All three men had young families. Pugmire has three children under 4, and his wife is expecting the couple's fourth child next month. Pugmire's family described him as a wonderful father and husband and a stickler for flying perfection. "(Flying) was his passion, this was his love," said Pugmire's uncle, Rex Pugmire. He said his nephew had accumulated more than 2,000 flying hours, had flown commercially and was a corporate pilot. "We know where Blaine's at," said Rex Pugmire, crediting the family's faith for the peace they felt. "It's unsettling to see a plane coming in in pieces, but at the same time we're reassured."

Keith Johnson, Deseret Morning News
Friends and co-workers of the three men who died in Thursday night's plane crash grieve at the Utah Lake State Park marina during search efforts Friday. Underwater sonar equipment helped searchers find crash debris, but stormy weather hindered visibility. The same storm that might have played a role in the crash kept the water churning Friday, making visibility difficult for rescuers from the Utah, Summit and Wasatch County Sheriff's offices as well as individuals from Utah State Parks and Cross International Diving. But with the underwater sonar equipment, officials continued to bring in red- and gold-painted chunks of the Lance Air single-engine turboprop, including the tail piece and a wing. By Friday afternoon, the debris field had grown to nearly a mile and a half in each direction from the center — located about 2 miles west-northwest of the Utah Lake State Park and the Provo Boat Harbor, Harris said. The Red Cross arrived late Friday morning bringing comfort to the family and friends in the form of pizza, burgers and drinks — all donated by from local businesses. "Food is a comfort," said Katrina Pope, director of emergency services for the Provo Red Cross. "(It also shows) the community cares about them."
Contributing: Jeremy Twitchell
E-mail: sisraelsen@desnews.com

List of Hot Utah Bloggers


Aaron Toponce: PThree.org
Brandon Dayton: Merril Brandon
Charley Foster: The State of the Beehive
Christer Edwards: Development Blog
Clint Savage: Nitwit Circus Tracks
Corey Edwards: zmonkey.org - Those crazy monkeys
Dan Hanks: Brainshed Blog
Dave Fletcher: Dave Fletcher’s Government and Technology Weblog, v. 2.0
Dave Smith: Dave’s Blog
Dax Kelson: Dax’s Blog
Democracy for Utah: Democracy for Utah
Derek Carter: Goozbach’s Tech Tips
Doran Barton: FozzilinyMoo.org
Elijah Newren: Elijah’s Blog
Erin Sharmahd: TuxGirl.com
Gabriel Gunderson: gundy dot org
Gary Thornock: Gary Thornock’s Weblog
Hans Fugal: The Fugue
Harley Pig: HarleyPig’s Stall On The Web
Inside Utah: InsideUtah.com
Jacob Fugal: Jacob’s Blog
Jared Smith: jsmith’s blog
Jason Hall: [ jayce ] RSS Feed
Jeremy Votaw: Jeremy Votaw
Jesse Stay: Stay N’ Alive
Jim Knowlton: Beehive Donkey
JMD: Utah Centralist
John Dougall: Dynamic Range
Jordan Gunderson: Jordy Blog
Joseph Hall: blog.josephhall.com
KCPW’s Midday Metro: KCPW’s Midday Metro
Ken: Oblogatory Anecdotes
Kevin Tew: Entrepreneurship: Life Long Learning
Kyle Brantley: Boredom
Lamont Peterson: Peregrine
Lars Rasmussen: Musings from Lars
Lee Jensen: Serenity Now!
Liberty for Utahns!: Liberty For Utahns!
Lonnie Olson: Kittypee
Marc Christensen: Mecworks
Mister E: AgoraCart & E-commerce News, Updates and More - Mister Ed’s Corner
One Utah: One Utah
Pat Eyler: On Ruby
Paul Rolly: GenRolly Speaking (Paul Rolly)
Pete Ashdown: Pete Ashdown’s Campaign Journal
Peter Bowen: Peter A. Bowen
Phil Windley: Phil Windley’s Technometria
Richard K. Miller:Richard K Miller dot coooooooooom
Rob Latham: Rob Latham’s blog
Rob Merrell: Robdor The Burninator
Rob Miller: The Utah Amicus
Scott Morris: SUSE Linux Rants
Scott Paul Robertson: Spr — The Ramblings
Stephen Shaw: Decriptor’s Blog
Steve Dibb: steve’s blog
Steve Spigarelli: spig.net
Steve Urquhart: Steve Urquhart
Stuart Jansen: Stuart’s Blog
Tristan Rhodes: The Open Source Advocate
Utah Conservative:Utah Conservative
Utah Senate: The Senate Site
Von Fugal: Blog von RSS

Thursday, June 08, 2006

Could us Guy's Survive this episode of "Survivor"

Six married men will be dropped on an island with one car and 3 kids each for six weeks. Each kid will play two sports and either take music or dance classes. There is no fast food. Each man must take care of his 3 kids; keep his assigned house clean, correct all homework, complete science projects, cook, do laundry, and pay a list of "pretend" bills with not enough money. In addition, each man will have to budget in money for groceries eachweek. Each man must remember the birthdays of all their friends and relatives, and send cards out on time. Each man must also take each child to a doctor's appointment, a dentist appointment and a haircut appointment. He must make one unscheduled and inconvenient visit per child to the Urgent Care (weekend, evening, on a holiday or right when they're about to leave forvacation). He must also make cookies or cupcakes for a social function. Each man will be responsible for decorating his own assigned house, planting flowers outside and keeping it presentable at all times.The men will only have access to television when the kids are asleep and all chores are done.There is only one TV between them, and a remote with dead batteries. Each father will be required to know all of the words to every stupid song that comes on TV and the name of each and every character on cartoons. The men must shave their legs, wear makeup daily, which they will apply to themselves either while driving or making three lunches. Each man will have to make an Indian hut model with six toothpicks, atortilla and one marker; and get a 4 year old to eat a serving of peas. Each man must adorn himself with jewelry, wear uncomfortable yet stylishshoes, keep their nails polished and eyebrows groomed. The men must tryto get through each day without snot, spit-up or barf on their clothing.During one of the six weeks, the men will have to endure severe abdominal cramps, back aches, and have extreme, unexplained mood swings but never once complain or slow down from other duties. They must try to explain what a tampon is for when the 6-yr old boy finds it in the purse. They must attend weekly school meetings, church, and find time at least once to spend the afternoon at the park or a similar setting. He will need to read a book and then pray with the children each nightwithout falling asleep, and then feed them, dress them, brush their teeth and comb their hair each morning by 7:00. They must leave the home with no food on their face or clothes. A test will be given at the end of the six weeks, and each father will be required to know all of the following information: each child's birthday, height, weight, shoe size, clothes size and doctor's name. Also the child's weight at birth, length, time of birth, and length oflabor, each child's favorite color, middle name, favorite snack,favorite song, favorite drink, favorite toy, biggest fear and what they want to be when they grow up.They must clean up after their sick children at 2:00 a.m. and then spend the remainder of the day tending to that child and waiting on them handand foot until they are better. They must have a loving, age appropriate reply to, "You're not the bossof me."The kids vote them off the island based on performance.The last man wins only if...he still has enough energy to be intimate with his spouse at a moment's notice. If the last man does win, he can play the game over and over and over again for the next 18-25 years...eventually earning the right to be called Mother!

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Deseret News Correction


Correction: Mark Towner

Former GOP state Senate candidate Mark Towner said he did not seek a restraining order against former U.S. Senate candidate Mike Ridgway to keep Ridgway from attending the State Republican Convention. Towner was misquoted in a story that ran May 12.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

No Way Day

Why we must Stop PFS Now

Had the Industry been allowed to develop new reactor technology and recycling of spent fuel rods like what is done in France and other European Countries, we would not be having this discussion.

So why must we not allow PFS to start temporary storage of thousands of casks of spent fuel rods on a concrete slab just a few miles upwind of the major metropolitan center of Utah. Because if this is allowed to start, #1 temporary will become permanent, but more importantly Congress will again skirt the real tough issue of energy independence.

If the President of the United States were to direct the Congress to remove the roadblocks to new technology development for Nuclear Energy, and stipulate that we need to build these plants on the coasts so they can convert Seawater into hydrogen, we could within the next decade have both coasts using 100 percent hydrogen/electric automobiles.

The reprocessing of spent fuel rods by Energy Solutions would be the fuel for these new reactors, making the PFS storage unnecessary.

We must now apply the pressure on our elected officials and turn up the heat on the BLM and get this project stopped. To help make this happen please click on the following link http://www.deq.utah.gov/Issues/no_high_level_waste/index.htm and follow thru by emails, faxes, or letters.

Let’s stop this now, and obtain energy independence.

Other Blogs Today on this issue:The Senate Site blog, SLCSpin, Part of the Plan, Utahnia, Jen's Green Journal, The Utah Amicus, JuniperWest, Reach Upward, Dee's 'Dotes, Media Relations,
Obiter Dicta by Steve, Eric Hamilton's Reality Check, Josh Ewing, Wilf Sommerkorn, Rural Blogging, Utah Conservative, This Divided State, and Charley Foster

Mark E. Towner

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

We Must Never Forget The Sacrifice for Freedom



When 2nd Lt. James Cathey's body arrived at the Reno Airport, Marines climbed into the cargo hold of the plane and draped the flag over his casket as passengers watched the famil y gather on the tarmac. During the arrival of another Marine's casket last year at Denver International Airport, Major Steve Beck described the scene as one of the most powerful in the process: "See the people in the windows? They'll sit right there in the plane, watching those Marines. You gotta wonder what's going through their minds, knowing that they're on the plane that brought him home," he said. "They're going to remember being on that plane for the rest of their lives. They're going to remember bringing that Marine home. And they should."

The night before the burial of her husband's body, Katherine Cathey refused to leave the casket, asking to sleep next to his body for the last time. The Marines made a bed for her, tucking in the sheets below the flag. Before she fell asleep, she opened her laptop computer and played songs that reminded her of 'Cat,' and one of the Marines asked if she wanted them to continue standing watch as she slept. "I think it would be kind of nice if you kept doing it," she said. " I think that's what he would have wanted."

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Interview with U President Young

I spent part of the day up at the Hinckley Institute taking advantage of the Hinckley Forum “Religious Freedom and Human Rights in U.S. Foreign Policy", The Guest was President Michael Young, President, University of Utah. He was talking about the problems with Religious restrictions and human rights problems in countries that the United States and other Western countries have monetary, strategic, or energy trade agreements. This was the first time I had any interaction with President Young and I came away very impressed. The University of Utah was truly blessed to snatch this find from GW Law School. The mp3 stream should be available on KUER FM90 podcast later this week at http://www.kuer.org/2005Hinckley.html .

After speaking on the subject for nearly 30 minutes he opened up the session which was filled with Political Science students and members of the media including myself. One of the first questions asked was “What can the US and the other Western countries do to stop this” and President Young’s response was very non political, and straight from the hip “nothing really”. He said trade sanctions don’t work, and the UN is a mess that need’s total reorganization, and for all practical purposes most of these countries would simply sell their goods to other middle man countries that would simply repackage and resell to those countries that were embargoing in the first place. How refreshing to get an honest answer for a change. I wish our elected Federal officials could be more forthright when asked direct questions on issues of Immigration, national security, and the war against terror in Iraq and elsewhere in the world.

After his talk I spoke with him privately for about 20-30 minutes. I asked him about such subjects as the accreditation inquiry at BYU, and the involvement of Law School Professors in the Legacy Lawsuit. He indicated that BYU has nothing to worry about as this issue is settled Law. Concerning the Law School Professors, he supported their actions in as much as any citizen can become active in an issue that concerns them. He said as long as University staff or equipment is not used, any Professor should be able to be involved outside of the classroom. He also mentioned that there have been about 65 briefs submitted from the U Law Professors to assist the State in Legal battles.

I asked if he was concerned that the Law School had fallen out of the top tier of School’s in the US and now currently ranks 57th. He indicated that the rankings will be one of new dean, Hiram Chodosh’s top priorities.

In conclusion I found President Young to be very engaging and without puffery. His credentials speak for themselves, and his knowledge of Asian culture is remarkable. But the best thing I can say about him is character. Never did I get that feeling during his presentation, or when taking questions from the students, or even from this reporter that he felt superior in intellect.

I will conclude by saying the U got the deal of a lifetime, I just hope he can patch some of the animosity with the Legislature, and move the University forward to great things.

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Prescription Pain Killers Becomming Major Killers Themselves

Video Eyewitness News at 10

Prescription Pain Killers Becoming Major Killer
March 30th, 2006 @ 10:00pm

John Hollenhorst Reporting

If something you can buy at the store suddenly started killing 250 Utahns a year, you'd think there'd be a huge public outcry. You'd think, but there's been no public outcry at all. That's a real body count, with a trend that's getting drastically worse.
The killer is prescription pain-medicine. The victims are not drug abusers on the street, but average Utahns under the care of a doctor. Legally prescribed pain-killers came out of nowhere in the last six years to become a leading cause of death.
It's the miracle in a bottle and a potential death trap for people like Kay Brown. He suffered from chronic back pain so severe he says it was like nothing else in the world mattered. Then he got relief from Morphine, Methadone, Oxycodone.
Dr. M. Kay Brown, Pain Victim: "They don't really solve it. They ameliorate it. I can bear it. I can stand it. I can function both in my family and in my profession."
But Utah's Medical Examiner Todd Grey has noticed a severe side-effect, death, in growing numbers.
Dr. Todd Grey, Utah Medical Examiner: 'What I consider spectacular numbers now. Spectacularly bad."
Epidemiologist Christy Porucznik has been giving presentations on the rising death toll to pain doctors.
Christy Porucznik, Epidemiologist, Utah Dept. of Health: "I can just see their faces get white because they know they're prescribing these drugs pretty commonly."
Through the 1990's, a couple of dozen Utahns a year died from legally-prescribed pain-killers. In 1999 it turned steeply upward; 249 last year, who knows how many in 2006.
Dr. Todd Grey: "Quite frankly, I think it's an epidemic."
The deaths are thought not to be suicides. It's mostly accidental overdoses by people who are not chronic abusers.
Dr. Robert Finnegan, Univ. of Utah Pain Clinic: "We're talking about average folds, white collar workers, blue collar folks."
Pain doctors used to steer away from narcotics because of worries about addiction and abuse.
Dr. Robert Finnegan: "We didn't want to give much."
But the medical culture shifted as the benefit to pain patients like Kay Brown became clear.
Christy Prucznik: "Pain is managed much more aggressively, which is a good thing because we don't want people to be in pain. But at the same time, I think the pendulum might have swung a little bit too far."
Some pain victims simply use too much; they get relief and want more. Doctors sometimes prescribe multiple drugs that interact in poorly understood ways.
Christy Prucznik: "And so there's not going to be one easy solution."
Kay Brown worries that if the pendulum swings too far the other way, he'd be pushed back into his own personal Hell.
Dr. Kay Brown: "That's where I'd be, I'd be locked in that little dark room with no escape."
The same trend is beginning to get noticed in other states. Experts predict it will trigger serious re-thinking about the best way to control severe pain.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

New Utah Census Form



*New Utah Census Form*
**1. _____________________ (Given name)
**2. _____________________ (SURNAME)

**3. Descendant of:
**A. Brigham Young _____
**B. Heber C. Kimball _____
**C. Laman and Lemuel _____
**D. Cain _____

**4. Tribe of Israel: _____________________

**5. Number of occupants residing in home in each category: (Listed inchronological order)
**A. Nursery _____
**B. Junior Primary _____
**C. Senior Primary _____
**D. Young Women's _____
**E. Young Men's _____
**F. Relief Society _____
**G. Elder _____
**H. Dearly Departed _____
**I. High Priest _____

**6. Occupation [Please select all that apply.]:
**A. Amway dealer _____
**B. Shaklee dealer _____
**C. Nonie juice dealer _____
**D. NuSkin dealer _____
**E. Melaleuca dealer _____

**7. Automobile:
**A. Station Wagon _____
**B. Van _____
**C. Suburban _____
**D. School Bus _____
**E. Double Decker _____

**8. Favorite place to eat the night before Fast Sunday:
**A. Chuck-A-Rama _____
**B. Hometown Buffet _____
**C. Sumo Sam's All You Can Eat Feeding Trough _____

**9. Favorite Hero:
**A. Nephi _____
**B. Abinadi _____
**C. Samuel the Lamanite_____
**D. Steve Young _____
**E. Johnny Lingo _____

**10. Which of the following do you bring to church [check all that apply.]:
**A. Scriptures _____
**B. Franklin Planner/ Daytimer _____
**C. Pen/Pencil _____
**D. Lifesavers/ Cheerios _____
**E. Tic Tacs _____
**F. Game Boy _____
**G. Big Gulp _____
**H. Cooler _____
**I. Sony Walkman _____
**J. TV Watch _____
**K. All of the above _____

**11. Do you prepare your church lessons:
**A. A month in advance _____
**B. A week in advance _____
**C. While in the bathtub _____
**D. While on the toilet _____
**E. During Sacrament Meeting _____
**F. During the closing prayer of Sacrament Meeting
**G. During the opening prayer of the class you're teaching _____
**H. Just wing it [according to the promptings of the Spirit] _____

**12. Do you think pews should be permanently equipped with Big Gulpholders?: yes___ no ___
**13. How many years has your family sat in the same place for SacramentMeeting:
**A. 10-20 years _____
**B. 20-30 years _____
**C. 30-40 years _____
**D. Over 3 generations _____

**14. How much time does it take for you to fall asleep during a high counciltalk:
**A. 1/100,000,000th of a second _____
**B. 1/999,999,999th of a second _____
**C. 1/999,999,998th of a second _____

**15. Which day of the month do you go home/visiting teaching:
**A. 31st ______
**B. 31st ______
**C. 31st ______
**D. 31st ______

**16. How many church basketball fights were you in last year:
**A. 1-10 _____
**B. 10-20 _____
**C. 20-30 _____
**D. You'll have to ask my lawyer _____

**17. Which of the following has been your most effective Family HomeEvening:
**A. Arguing about getting along
**B. Having an opening and closing prayer with dinner
**C. Gathering around the television to watch, "Everybody Loves Raymond?"

**18. How many times a year do you make:
**A. Green Jell-O salad _____
**B. Funeral potatoes _____
**C. Cabbage and Top Ramen salad _____
**D. Turkey, cashews and grape-stuffed croissants_____

**19. How many water-filled two-liter bottles do you own:
**A. 1-2 thousand _____
**B. 2-3 thousand _____
**C. 3-4 thousand _____
**D. Enough to fill the Great Salt Lake _____

**20. Which of the following do you feel is the most secure facility in thenation:
**A. Alcatraz
**B. Fort Knox
**C. Ward Libraries

**21. How many structural engineers do you hire annually to insure you'll winthe pinewood derby: _________

**22. Keeping the Word of Wisdom in mind, how much of the following do youconsume:
**A. Chocolate:___pounds daily X 365 days annually =3D ____
**B. Cola: ____gallons daily X 365 days annually =3D ____

**23. If you had to choose between witnessing the Second Coming or attendinga BYU/UofU football game, which would you choose?
**A. Second Coming _____
**B. Football game _____
**AMEN!*

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Would You Have Invested Your Money?



Check the guy in the lower left......... that's Bill Gates.
Paul Allen, the owner of the Seattle Seahawks with a net worth around $20 billion is on the far right, lower corner!!

I grew up in Seattle and started my own software company in 1980. Our Offices were on 116th in Bellevue. At that time Microsoft had some leased office space down the road. We were looking for Office space to rent and actually looked at space in the same building. I had met Bill Gates on several occasions at computer shows, and was never impressed. If I could only go back in time and had based my software on Microsoft, not CPM/MPM and Novell. Who would have guessed?

Sunday, March 19, 2006

Gay Unions open can of worms: Polygamy


Best article on the subject yet. This is my official position on the subject.

By Charles Krauthammer


WASHINGTON — And now, polygamy. With the sweetly titled HBO series "Big Love," polygamy comes out of the closet. Under the headline "Polygamists, Unite!" Newsweek informs us of "polygamy activists emerging in the wake of the gay-marriage movement." Says one evangelical Christian big lover: "Polygamy rights is the next civil-rights battle." Polygamy used to be stereotyped as the province of secretive Mormons, primitive Africans and profligate Arabs. With "Big Love" it moves to suburbia as a mere alternative lifestyle. As Newsweek notes, these stirrings for the mainstreaming of polygamy (or, more accurately, polyamory) have their roots in the increasing legitimization of gay marriage. In an essay 10 years ago, I pointed out that it is utterly logical for polygamy rights to follow gay rights. After all, if traditional marriage is defined as the union of (1) two people of (2) opposite gender, and if, as gay marriage advocates insist, the gender requirement is nothing but prejudice, exclusion and an arbitrary denial of one's autonomous choices in love, then the first requirement — the number restriction (two and only two) — is a similarly arbitrary, discriminatory and indefensible denial of individual choice. This line of argument makes gay activists furious. I can understand why they do not want to be in the same room as polygamists. But I'm not the one who put them there. Their argument does. Blogger and author Andrew Sullivan, who had the courage to advocate gay marriage at a time when it was considered pretty crazy, has called this the "polygamy diversion," arguing that homosexuality and polygamy are categorically different because polygamy is a mere "activity" while homosexuality is an intrinsic state that "occupies a deeper level of human consciousness." But this distinction between higher and lower orders of love is precisely what gay rights activists so vigorously protest when the general culture "privileges" (as they say in the English departments) heterosexual unions over homosexual ones. Was "Jules et Jim" (and Jeanne Moreau), the classic Truffaut film involving two dear friends in love with the same woman, about an "activity" or about the most intrinsic of human emotions? To simplify the logic, take out the complicating factor of gender mixing. Posit a union of, say, three gay women all deeply devoted to each other. On what grounds would gay activists dismiss their union as mere activity rather than authentic love and self-expression? On what grounds do they insist upon the traditional, arbitrary and exclusionary number of two? What is historically odd is that as gay marriage is gaining acceptance, the resistance to polygamy is much more powerful. Yet until this generation, gay marriage had been sanctioned by no society that we know of, anywhere at any time in history. On the other hand, polygamy had been sanctioned, indeed common, in large parts of the world through large swaths of history, most notably the biblical Middle East and through much of the Islamic world. I'm not one of those who see gay marriage or polygamy as a threat to or assault on traditional marriage. The assault came from within. Marriage has needed no help in managing its own long slow suicide, thank you. Astronomical rates of divorce and of single parenthood (the deliberate creation of fatherless families) existed before there was a single gay marriage or any talk of sanctioning polygamy. The minting of these new forms of marriage is a symptom of our culture's contemporary radical individualism — as is the decline of traditional marriage — and not its cause. As for gay marriage, I've come to a studied ambivalence. I think it a mistake for society to make this ultimate declaration of indifference between gay and straight life, if only for reasons of pedagogy. On the other hand, I have enough gay friends and feel the pain of their inability to have the same level of social approbation and confirmation of their relationship with a loved one that I'm not about to go to anyone's barricade to deny them that. It is critical, however, that any such fundamental change in the very definition of marriage be enacted democratically and not (as in the disastrous case of abortion) by judicial fiat. Call me agnostic. But don't tell me that we can make one radical change in the one-man, one-woman rule and not be open to the claim of others that their reformation be given equal respect.
Charles Krauthammer's e-mail address is letters@charleskrauthammer.com. Washington Post Writers Group

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

A typical day at Utah Policy Daily


Many have asked how things happen at Utah Policy. So I thought I would share with the blog world a daily routine that has been nearly perfected in two years and 400 plus editions.

The production day for UPD actually starts the night before. Publisher LaVarr Webb after putting in a normal business day for the Exoro Group (10 hours), around 10pm starts writing the Daily Buzz column. Around 11 pm, LaVarr takes a break and grabs some sleep (about six hours). Golden Webb (LaVarr’s son) who is a web serfing guru starts reading national and local newspaper headlines as these papers publish electronically. Additionally he reads over 100+ blogs and creates the National, Local, and Blog report which must be finished by 4:30am. This is then transmitted to LaVarr for his final edits and the creation of the Messages section. LaVarr get’s up at 5am to put on his finishing touches, and then transmits to the editor Paul Hollingshead. Luci Hollingshead, Paul’s wife and Lavarr’s daughter must update the UPD calendar and candidate tracking, while Paul formats the entire newsletter and publishes to the Website by 6am. Then he must create a HTML and PDA version of the newsletter which is then transmitted to our nearly 10,000 subscribers by 7am. The website is hosted and maintained by Dave Webb, LaVarr’s Brother and programming assistance from another brother Gaylen. To say this is a “web” of Webb’s is an understatement. I’m the only non family member to be included in this Swiss watch operation.

The professionalism and integrity of this family project is most refreshing. I’m honored to be a small part in the success of Utah’s best source of political and policy reporting.

Cheers,

Mark E. Towner,
Business Development Director
Utah Policy Daily

Thursday, February 09, 2006

Utah’s Second Congressional District may decide US House Majority.


The latest breakdown of the 2006 Congressional race has the Democrats pickup 14 seats!

Fifteen seats give them the majority. How does this sound: Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Chairman Barney Frank of Finance, Chairman John Conyers of the Judiciary, Chairman Skelton of Armed Services (there goes Hill AFB), and Chairman Charlie Rangel of Ways and Means.

Is it time to send Jim Matheson back to the private sector so he can spend more time with his wife and new baby?

Calculating the GOP's Troubles By Charlie Cook© National Journal .com This column was originally featured in National Journal on February 4, 2006

A year ago, with Republican victories in the 2004 elections still fresh and with President Bush's job-approval ratings still above 50 percent, Democrats' chances of capturing the House looked fairly slim. Today, however, with Bush's approval ratings hovering around 42 percent, the possibility of a Democratic takeover -- although less than 50-50 -- is very real.
Even though House Democrats need a net gain of only 15 seats this November, that task is fairly daunting because the playing field is so small: Few House Republicans are retiring, and few of the Republican incumbents who ought to be vulnerable are in districts that actually are competitive.
Nevertheless, the Democrats do have a real shot at ending the GOP's control of the House. A simple statistical model that Cook Political Report Senior Editor Amy Walter and I developed several years ago suggests that the 2006 House election will be very close.
On an Excel spreadsheet, we gave each of the 435 House districts a numerical score based on our assessment of the chances of its going Republican this November. The score is computed by taking into account a number of factors, including the historical voting patterns of that district, the caliber of this year's candidates, the strength of the campaigns, and the political atmosphere in the district. If a district looks solidly Republican, we give it a score of 1.0. If a district is rock-solid Democratic, we assign it a score of 0.0. If the parties have an equal chance of winning in a given district, we give the district a .5 score. Very few districts are in the toss-up territory; the vast majority fall close to the partisan extremes -- 1.0 or 0.0.
Adding up the probabilities of those districts ending up in Republican hands yields an overall estimate of the number of seats that the GOP will hold after the election. We then factor in a margin of error of a few seats to come up with the range of seats likely to be gained or lost by the two parties.
This method is apt to underestimate the turnover in seats if a national "wave" election materializes. But that is a danger that we can keep in mind when analyzing the data.
The current model predicts a net Democratic gain of 10 seats. When we factor in a four-seat margin of error, the model projects that as of today, under current conditions, and without speculating about what the national political environment may do between now and November, Democrats will make a net gain of six to 14 seats. With a bit of luck -- or a wave of any size -- Democrats might even grasp their gold ring: 15 seats.
To be prepared to make the most of a wave, if one occurs, Democrats need to recruit strong challengers in states where filing deadlines have not yet passed. They also need, of course, to raise plenty of money.
Republicans must continue to hold down their retirements in competitive districts, raise money, and pound Democratic challengers in those GOP-held districts where Democrats have a chance of taking over.
The not-so-secret weapon of the National Republican Congressional Committee in recent elections has been its use of money to rip into Democratic challengers and Democratic open-seat candidates early and often. Early attacks have thus enabled the NRCC to create negative impressions of those contenders before they could define themselves positively.
In the past few campaign cycles, the NRCC had enough money to go on the attack very early and very effectively. The danger for Republicans this time is that while the committee has much more money than the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee -- $19 million at the end of 2005, compared with $15.7 million for the Democrats -- the GOP's resources might not be sufficient to douse all the anti-Republican fires that could erupt around the nation.

Will the GOP have enough money to prevail? That's the question keeping Republican strategists awake at night.

• Check out the latest changes to the House At-A-Glance chart and the Competitive Race Chart.
• Check out the latest Senate and Governors polls.

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

A Foreign Legion to Protect Our Borders?


Identification — I have been pondering recently about the Immigration proposal presented by President Bush, and how this does little to protect our southern boarders. Additionally we need the creation of a National ID / Work Card / Drivers License for all non US citizens. This would eliminate the practice of illegal aliens getting Driver’s Licenses in Utah, then moving to another state and getting a drivers License there using the Utah License as ID. Any non US citizen when pulled over for a traffic citation would present their ID card and this would alert the police that this person is not a US citizen, and they should do a little more checking before just writing a citation and letting them go. As for driving, when they can demonstrate in the state of their jurisdiction the ability to pass both a written and practical test, their ID cards would be embossed with driving privileges from that state. This must be accomplished in 90 days upon arrival to the US. This would allow tourists visiting the US to be able to rent cars while here in the US without this restriction. (Since my original post in 2004, some of these ideas have been implemented)

Border Security — I would propose the creation of a "USA Foreign Legion" run and administered by the US Marine Corps. This force would recruit foreign nationals to enlist for 4 years. After successfully completing the normal Marine Corps Training program (failure of this training program would return them to the country of origin) they would be trained for a new Horse Calvary unit that would be stationed all along the southern border. Although fully armed for any situation, these forces would be specially trained to intercept, and control border incursions using high tech non lethal measures. Those illegal aliens intercepted would be photographed and fingerprinted, then after processing they would be immediately flown by Chinook helicopter back over the border to a deportation base in Mexico. Utilizing the old US Army training manuals for the upkeep of the animals, feeding, grooming, etc will keep these troops fairly busy. After successfully serving a 4 year stint in the legion, they would be given fast track status for US citizenship. They could choose to re-enlist into the regular Army, or continue with this force. This force also could be deployed anywhere in the world for peacekeeping proposes, reserving our shock fighting forces for quick deployment. Coordinated ops with military helicopter units along the boarder directing the cavalry forces to the locations of incursion, these forces by utilizing infrared and other Military technology would finally secure our southern boarder. The benefits to the US would be a bilingual force that is familiar with the region, creates an avenue to US citizenship, and they are trained soldiers who are proud to be part of the US military. Upon honorary discharge they could enter the US civilian status with the education and tools to be successful in life.

How to Secure Air Travel — To travel by air in the United States, you should have a passport. The new generation passports should have RF ID chips and holographic pictures that can be read automatically when you go through security. Arm the pilots, X-ray all cargo and baggage and create special transponder beacon codes that airline flights are assigned that they must squawk at a designated time during the trip.

Originally Posted by on January 16, 2004 03:37 AM

Mark E. Towner, Business Development DirectorUtah Policy Dailyhttp://www.utahpolicy.com/801.502.9134

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Finally an Elected Official Gets It Right for Healthcare



Small Business Health Coverage Affordability Act
HB 122 (Rep. Mascaro)

Summary

HB 122 is designed to stimulate economic development and cover many of Utah’s working uninsured by allowing small businesses (2-50 employees) to buy-into the Public Employee Health Plan, a private not-for-profit health care trust fund. Premium costs for participating businesses will be significantly lower by virtue of the administrative efficiency, economies of scale, and community rating (pooling or spreading of risk) that are the hallmarks of PEHP.

Background

Double digit increases in health insurance premiums are threatening the competitiveness of Utah businesses and forcing many employers to drop coverage entirely. Some are shifting costs to workers, while others are thinning out the benefit package. Small business owners and their employees are particularly impacted by these challenges. Utah’s entrepreneurs should not be forced to choose between covering their workers and competing in an increasingly globalized economy.

Over the last decade premiums for employer-provided family health insurance in Utah grew 50% faster than in the US (Medical Expenditure Panel Survey). In August of 2003 employer concern about insurance costs reached a 3-year high of 42% (Kaiser Family Foundation). PEHP is able to offer affordable premiums because it has 3.8% administrative overhead costs, compared to the insurance industry average of 15%. HB 122 makes coverage more affordable for small businesses, by taking advantage of the robust purchasing power, significantly lower administrative costs, and efficient risk pooling of PEHP.
The Target Population

% of Employees in Businesses that offer health insurance by firm size in Utah, 2000-03

Source:: http://www.meps.ahcpr.gov/.

Private Sector Employees by Firm Size
Source: www.meps.ahcpr.gov/MEPSDATA/ic/2003/Tables_II/TIIB1A.pdf
…The target population is roughly 45% of 254,872. or 114,692 Utah workers. The target population would be less if there was a look-back period, (a period of time during which workers would need to be uninsured before they are eligible).

Frequently Asked Questions

How will HB 122 stimulate economic development and possibly create jobs?
Small businesses have enough to worry about meeting their bottom line. It is the intent of the legislation to encourage new business development, relocation, and expansion by making health coverage more affordable for small businesses.

Does this Initiative Create Unfair Competition for Other Insurers?
No. Since participation in the PEHP buy-in would be entirely voluntary, the program does not confer any competitive advantage to PEHP over other players in the market. Health insurance companies are always free to compete by offering more affordable or higher quality products. If anything, HB122 will promote competition based on quality and price in a vastly underserved market.

How much will HB 122 cost?
The cost should be minimal because outreach to small businesses will happen through the Governor’s new Office of Economic Development which has access to small businesses statewide. This initiative is heartily endorsed by the Vest Pocket Business Coalition, several regional Chambers of Commerce, Downtown Merchants Association, and other high-profile business associations. PEHP might need to add a few more claims processors, but otherwise they can build the buy-in into its current administrative apparatus.

Why not try a purchasing cooperative?
Utah tried to implement two purchasing coops over the last 11 years, and both failed because of low enrollment due, in turn, due to excessive cost.

Is there a precedent for groups buying into PEHP?
Yes, there are several. For over 25 years PEHP has been providing benefits for employees of the State of Utah. In addition, Salt Lake County, Salt Lake City, and dozens of other public entities and school districts within our state also offer benefits through PEHP. Today PEHP has 177,854 covered lives. In 1998, state statute was modified to permit PEHP to administer the Children’s Health Insurance Program. HB122 further modifies the statute to allow small businesses to buy into PEHP.
Small Business Health Coverage Survey Preliminary Results (n=174)

Preliminary results from a survey designed and conducted by the Utah Alliance for Health Policy Solutions and sponsored by the Governor’s Office of Economic Development show very strong support for initiatives like HB122. Key findings include:

· The average age of respondents’ (n=171) workforce was 37.2, lower than the average age for PEHP. This suggests that concerns about adverse selection are exaggerated. A younger group will be healthier and thus more likely to reduce the actuarial risk—and cost—for the rest of the pool.

· 90% of respondents (n=168) indicated that the cost of coverage impacts their businesses’ profitability, and 88% saw an impact on employee retention.
· 74% of employer respondents (n=168) said they were having trouble affording health coverage for their employees.
· 80% of respondents said that 76-100% of employees would be interested in having a health insurance benefit.

· If the employer were expected to cover 50% of a full premium cost ($300 per member, per month) for standard PEHP-like coverage, 84% of respondents indicated they would buy. 53% of respondents said they would cover 75-100% of the full premium cost. Another 39% said they would cover 50% of the premium.
· Given this level of support, 53.5% of respondents thought that 76-100% of their employees would take up the coverage. Another 24.2% said 51-75% would enroll.

Good for business, Good for Workers

Utah Premiums Paid by Workers Rising 5x Faster than Wages (2000-2004)

Change in average insurance premium
Change in Average Earnings

Utah
66.3%
13.2%

U.S.
35.9%
12.4%

Source: The Lewin Group for Families USA, 2004
Distribution of Nonelderly Uninsured by Employment data, 2002-2003.

1 Full-time Worker Part-time Worker Non-Workers
in household in household

Source: http://www.statehealthfacts.org
For further information contact Judi Hilman, Research Director, The Alliance for Health (801) 870-3887 judi@healthsolutionsalliance.org . Thanks to Nick Racker and Scott Spendlove for assisting w/data collection.

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

New Service: Roadmaps for Illegal Aliens


by Bobby Eberle , First Posted: January 24, 2006 at 7:47 am

There’s something quite mind-boggling about the ongoing debate over illegal immigration. Countless examples point to illegal aliens receiving tax-payer-funded health care, education, and other services. In some states, illegal aliens are receiving tuition discounts for colleges. In all their efforts to aid and abet these people, many left-wing groups apparently forget the “illegal” part of the equation. Now, an Arizona group is taking the illegal service industry one step further by providing roadmaps to illegals so that their travels will be easier.
According to Activists to provide migrants Ariz. maps in the Arizona Republic, a human rights agency in Mexico plans to “give out detailed maps of the Arizona desert, including rescue beacons and water stations” in order to guide “migrants” from Mexico through Arizona.

The maps were designed by a Tucson-based group, Humane Borders, which plans to hold a joint press conference today with the National Human Rights Commission in Mexico City to announce its strategy.
The maps are the latest effort by activists to aid undocumented immigrants as they trek across the border, helping to fuel a raging debate over illegal immigration in Arizona and other parts of the United States.
The problem with this plan, outside of the fact that it clearly aids in illegal activity, is that it also encourages illegal activity. It should be harder to get into the U.S. illegally, not easier. The Arizona Republic quoted Rep. J.D. Hayworth (R-AZ) as saying that “maps and water jugs do nothing but give illegal crossers false hope.”
“Either we convince potential crossers not to make the journey or, failing that, we stop them from crossing the border,” Hayworth added.
If America is serious about security, then we must be serious about putting a stop to illegal immigration. We must enforce our existing laws; we must increase the number of border patrol agents; we must invest in new surveillance technology; and clearly, we must not encourage illegal activity with complementary roadmaps to go along with defacto promises of amnesty.

Everyone Should File a Return to Enroll Their Kids


I think the following amendment should be attached to any tax reform legislation. When enrolling students each year, the parent must show proof that they have filed a state income tax for the previous year, and that ALL the kids they are registering for school must be on the return. If they have not lived in Utah for 1 year and not filed a return, then they must show proof that they filed either in another state that has income tax, or at least their Federal Income Tax return that shows the names of dependent children. Parents now must prove that their kids have had their immunizations to be enrolled, why shouldn't parents show they at least file their tax returns. I believe that everyone that works legally in Utah should file a tax return regardless of income. Many people who do not owe any taxes receive refunds or work credits. Since the funding mechanism for public education is state income tax, plus property tax, the least any parent should be required is to provide proof they actually filed a tax return. I do not think this is asking too much of anyone... I did some research on this matter today and I really think my proposal has merit. Let me state my case before you just click to the next message OK?
1. I never said any child or children would be restricted from getting an education.
2. This is how the proposal would work. When you file a tax return,(everyone who works in this state must file, it's the law folks) would be in the system as a taxpayer. The Tax Commission would simply include a certificate of compliance with the yearly tax notification. All somebody would have to do is go to the Tax Office and fill out a form to get into the system. If they don't work for a legal company that is withholding income tax, then they should be required to send in quarterly estimated tax. If they just do this much, I would have a lot less heartburn about their kids receiving a subsidized education by other taxpayers.
3. This actually could be attached to the tax reform proposal H3,which will change how we all file our taxes anyway to a small 1/2page form. They would not have to hire anyone to do their taxes, so no additional costs.
4. The parents would simply bring a copy of their Tax Compliance, along with everything else they need to register their kids. So what's the big deal? If you are reading any of this Senator Bramble, how about attaching an amendment that accomplishes this. There would be no fiscal note needed, as this would be handled by computer in the Tax Commission.
5. What’s the worst that can happen? A parent goes down to the Tax Office, fills out a form, gets a certificate and enrolls their kids. Or they say to themselves, maybe some other State would be better to call home.

Mark E. Towner

Monday, January 23, 2006

Removal of Sales Tax on Food is Dead!


January 23, 2006

Salt Lake City-Capital Hill

After speaking today with several prominent State Senators, the consensus is that sales tax on food will stay. One State Senator said “this legislation is dead in the Senate, period” I also spoke with several prominent County Commissioners and County Council Members who oppose the removal. One Commissioner I spoke with was Dannie R. McConkie, Commissioner for Davis County. He said “I’m opposed to removing sales tax on food. Most people do not understand the incredible web of intra-connections to this revenue stream. Small communities in Utah that rely on this revenue to pay bonds and provide public services would have their credit ratings lowered, costing their citizens more to borrow money for fire trucks and other community needs”.

I also spoke for some time with former Senator Garn Biography of Jake Garn. He had just addressed an education committee about the need for Utah to Invest in Science and Technology. Senator Garn is very supportive of the USTAR: Utah's Economic Development Initiative and along with ATK - ATK Thiokol ‘s Doug White said that it is critical that both primary education and teachers must receive investment of dollars to achieve the future scientists and engineers for Utah’s technology needs. ATK Doug White said they will need 122 positions filled to accomplish their task of putting men back on the moon, and on to mars. ATK recently was awarded the contract for NASA’s new manned rocket program that will replace the Space Shuttle.