Friday, April 8, 2016

Was The Gas Shortage of the 1970s Real?









As a teenager, I remember people sitting in long lines waiting to fill their tanks with gas all so that they could get to work the next day.  The reason for this is because gas stations would literally run out of gas during the gas shortage.  


The year was 1973, and America was experiencing the worst energy crisis in history.  The country was in turmoil.  The president was telling us that the world's fossil fuel supply was nearly depleted and it was just a matter of time before the entire world runs out of oil.  This crisis brought us gas thieves, siphoning tubes, and gas caps with locks.  It was not unusual to hear of people siphoning gas from each other's cars in the middle of the night. 

Perhaps  the most significant thing that the oil crisis brought us was fear.  Fear that we would no longer be a world super power.  Fear that America would somehow lose its position of privilege in the world.  And fear that we would no longer be able to enjoy the American Dream of abundant prosperity.  

So, when we Americans heard that the Arabs had oil, we gratefully signed up with the military to go and get it.  Fast forward to nearly 50 years later and we now wonder: What ever happened to the oil crisis?  It was supposed to mean the end of oil.  


Today, in 2016, most younger Americans rarely know of  such a crisis.  While most of them understand the importance of oil; somehow, the fear of running out of fuel seems to be long since past.   

Did we really go through an energy crisis?  Or was it all part of some elaborate scheme to raise the price of oil and lead us to unending war with the Middle East?

Sunday, March 20, 2016

BALLOT BOX 

Cornel West says Black Lives Matter a ‘marvelous militancy’

Cornel West says Black Lives Matter a ‘marvelous militancy’
The Black Lives Matter movement needs to be pushed toward love and justice, said civil-rights leader and former Princeton professor Cornel West on “60 Minutes” Sunday.
“I think that’s a marvelous new militancy that has to do with courage, vision,” he said. “The fundamental challenge always is will their rage be channeled through hatred and revenge … or though love and justice. You got to push them toward love and justice.” 

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The Black Lives Matter movement is a product of the death of Trayvon Martin at the hands of George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer, in 2013. After the acquittal of Zimmerman, the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter surfaced on Twitter and continued to gain attention with the deaths of other African-Americans at the hands of police.
West is known for using sometimes harsh language; he recently called President Obama “a black puppet of Wall Street.”
 “I’m very much a part of the tradition of a Frederick Douglass or a Malcolm X, who used hyperbolic language at times to bring attention to the state of emergency,” he said.

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

10 THINGS THAT YOU DID NOT KNOW ABOUT DONALD TRUMP


REUTERS/Brian Frank
Brash business billionaire Donald John Trump, commonly referred to as “The Donald,” has become the media’s celebrity political apprentice vying for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination. The 69-year old is delighting Dems and rattling the GOP by firing off provocative and outrageous soundbites designed to keep his name and face in the news—regardless of the damage to the Republican Party and his own reputation. 
He’s been on the cover of almost every news outlet for his inflammatory and controversial remarks, ranging from insults of Mexican immigrants to denouncements of news reporters. Some people consider his candidacy a publicity stunt, but he’s currently the Republican frontrunner, at least according to one poll. 



Although most Americans know Trump as a major player in the real estate industry and as the host of The Apprentice (which was canceled by NBC because of his statements), there are still some little-known facts about Trump. 
  • The Donald has never smoked cigarettes, drank alcohol or done drugs. His older brother, Fred, was an alcoholic for many years and warned Trump to avoid drinking. Fred ultimately died from his addiction. 
  • When he wakes up and looks in the mirror, he looks different. His remarkable hairline is achieved after blow-drying his hair forward and then combing it backward. 
  • He almost lost those signature locks and their 50 shades of unclear color. In 2007, Trump entered into a bet with WWE Chairman Vince McMahon. Both men chose a pro-wrestling representative to fight on their behalf and the billionaire whose representative lost the fight had to shave his head. We all know who won and Trump helped shave McMahon’s head. 
  • You can find his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. In 2007, Trump became the 2,327thstar to receive the honor for his role as producer of NBC’s The Apprentice. 
  • Trump is the only presidential candidate with his own board game, titled Trump: The Game. The monopoly-like game launched in 1989 and was ultimately discontinued after dismal sales and poor reviews.   
  • Although Trump doesn’t drink, he launched his own brand of vodka in 2006, self-described as “a superb product and beautifully packaged.” Unfortunately, consumers didn’t agree and production of Trump Vodka was halted in 2011 due to meager sales. 
  • Trump has always been his boisterous, aggressive self. His parents sent him to the New York Military Academy at age 13 because they wanted the energetic young man to learn discipline. He graduated in 1964 from the Academy and eventually earned a BS in economics from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. 
  • He doesn’t mince words about his fellow Republicans, but he’s even insulted the party’s icon, President Ronald Reagan. In his 1987 book, The Art of the Deal, Trump wrote, “Only now, nearly seven years later, are people beginning to question whether there’s anything beneath that smile.” 
  • He’s currently married to Slovenian model Melania Knauss, but he’s also been married to an alternate on the 1968 Czech Olympic Ski Team (Ivana Zelnickova Winklmayr) and actor Marla Maples. He cheated on Winklymayr with Maples, which led to a confrontation between the two women on a ski slope in Aspen, Colo. in 1991. 
  • Trump was an active member of the “birther” movement that questioned President Obama’s birthplace. He even sent investigators to Obama’s native Hawaii to back up his accusations. When Obama publically released his birth certificate in 2014, Trump referred to at his “so-called birth certificate, or whatever it was.” 
  • A consistent vocal critic of the Obama administration, he recently reached out to the president and kindly invited him to play golf anytime on any of the golf courses that Trump owns with one stipulation — if Obama ended his term early.  
  • Although he touts his enormous wealth as a reason he should be elected president, Trump-related companies have filed for corporate bankruptcy on four separate occasions. In 1991, Trump’s Taj Mahal in Atlantic City filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. In 1992, it was the Trump Plaza in Atlantic City’s turn, and Trump gave up his 49 percent state in the hotel to lenders.  Trump Hotels and Casinos Resorts filed for Chapter 11 in 2004 and most recently, Trump Entertainment Resorts filed in 2009