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Thanks to You

This is a list Im trying to compile of everyone whose helped me. IF YOUR MISSING LET ME KNOW CAUSE YOU GOT ME HERE. list isnt any order just shooting names in. Each of you helped me in realizing my goal, and made me the person i am today.
Mama Cheli
Brianna
RJ
Cathy
Haydee
Ben
Kurt
Mariela
Dwayne
Carrie
Patty
Colette
Cyndy
Baja Betty’s
Tina
Jon Jon
Julio
Javier
Ricky
Jamez ?
Kevin
Michael
BIG sis JennJenn Chowie
Mom
Dad
Diana
Amanda
Kevin H.
Jackie
Jason
Madison ? (love you niece)
M.T
J.T
D.T
E.T – (I know your a mom/ wife now, but my big sis and You and I need to hang out)
Matt
Tina
Kristina
Chrislin
Christina
Misty
Chris
Niel
Fernando
Will
BODs for SD Pride
Gabby – Support her race for a new van to help others in need!
K.lahs
Jess
Madel
Helen
Eunjae
Jimmy
(JimJae) B-)
Professor Aguilar
Anthony B.
Anthony D.
I truly have an evergrowing list, i hope to repay each of your kindness soon, Thank You all for getting me to this unexplainable event in my life

Alot in so little

Hey everyone, I decided today was a good day for a strong update. Ive been looking through pictures and videos and Im honestly missing home, China is officially taking its toll on my mental awareness. The roomies and I love the people, food, and experiences we’ve made here but we’ve all noticed it in each other. Its time for us to head back home to restart our lives and make new adventures. With the time clicking by so quickly, i decided lets give you all an update on whats been going on over here. so im gonna try to make the most pictures available, but since on my tablet the format isnt the best.
The first pictures youll see are of my students, Im glad to say they are my students and I love them each very much. I will truly miss them and my coteachers. Each day with them, makes Chengdus bleak days bearable. In less than a month I have to tell each of them They will have a new teacher, and it breaks my heart. They not only learned english, but the way to repest other people. They will be our future and i hope i taught them well.

Recently our favorite western restaurant closed down because the owners were moving back to the states for a baby. I wish you all the luck Danny and Dana on the newborn. We will definitely miss you and your food. Chengdu no longer has the Lazy pug to support our sunday morning brunches. :(

Right now though my heart aches for my puppy and the chance to take him to the park, and to say hi to my baby niece. She was born only months before i left for china and i only got to see her a few times, but as an uncle i wanna be there to spoil her. A whole year and i havent changed muched, hah.
Recently the first ever archery sports club opened up in Chengdu, you could not believe how excited i was to release an arrow again (Jon Jon can). Its called elves made me laugh, but its such a stress reliever from the rest of the world. i wish i could go more often but my budget is limited so ive only been once. I miss shoot an arrow into hay. 
I promised my roomie Josh Id visit Trinidad after we get to party it up in his home country. So look out for an update there. Had to update, IF YOU HAVENT GOTTEN A POSTCARD YET, HMU WITH A MSG ILL GET ONE OUT TO YA.
To my readers, will this be last post before i return home, No. this is my adventure across the world and i dont plan to stop my adventure. Will this prolly be my last post of China.

Aged or Not?

Hi folks, sorry for the short and inconsistent update between everything. Ive been swamped with work and school starting over here finally that its just been crazy! I have some recent photos of whats been going on in our daily lives here at the apartment. The first sunday before school started, Bryce, Josh, and myself decided to grab a good old american homemade folgers cup at our local favorite western food Restaurant, The lazy Pug. Of course as always it was amazing with our brunch =).

We Also Spent the afternoon prepping our kitchen for our future cooking, mainly Bryce to the lead with the kitchen cleaning. I commited myself to only help if Josh cleaned up after himself, lets see how well this all works out.

For those of you whove never seen a picture of our kitchen yet, this is after we cleaned it, its simple but it has everything we need. But of course we cant be college kids without a few nights of having fun, so I got some nice rooftop views of buildingd in our city.

Lastly but not least is the school schedule I got, its like highschool all over again just in Chinese xD.

I hope You all like this little update. The Reason though why its named Aged or not because officially it is 9:00am March 12, which is my birthday, but back home its barely 7pm, so whats the official judgment? Aged or not? lol

First Day

Hey Folks,

Welcome to my first full post since shutting FB down for the term. The holidays was a boring one for me, with the coldness and conserving of money. We’ve pushed through the coldness, and thanks to hibernation, Ive survived all of spring festival. Although, Im sad to say school starts now and bill paying is back. Meh I pushed and with alot of support I got my deficit down to $150, so Im really happy and Thanks to everyone out there whose help the Project feed Brian in China. My Roommates are all back from traveling and we celebrated with them buying us some pizzas from a new pizza joint that opened up recently.

It was interesting because the guy was definitely Chinese, but he had a crazy British Accent when speaking english, it was amazing. Hes got a little shop near our place so we hope to support him majorly in the future. Im hoping to find the last of the missing money soon before everything is due. With Water electricity and rent, adding on to my school bills, its an amaezment I have money to scrap for food =.=;.

But moving on, Ive been slowly traveling the streets of Chengdu checking more and more places out with window shopping when I ran into a Charlie brown Cafe, OH I sooo wanted to go in, but sadly I could not >.<

Season 2

Hey Folks, Welcome Back to Flip it My style. My names Brian and This is my blog through Chengdu. For eeveryone whose read this before, Welcome back and hope to see you donate as my adventure has only been possible thanks to hundreds of people fundraising for my future.

So Lets  get right in to it. It’s spring festival overhere in China which means the start of a new year, Had many Ups last year thanks to alot of support, Gonna keep it up. Josh had his brother come visit for two weeks, and now he leaves today, I know josh is definitely gonna miss him. (As shown below).

We’ve also had alot of fireworks shooting all around our building as masses of restaurants and local small stores all close down till the 15th. I’ve been using favebook to update people but that will be turned off this weekend so ill try to fully catch up everyone in my next post. As for now Please click the donate button as im pushing for the last amounts for school and my plane ticket home. Thanks for reading follow the pictures below

If the Narrative Fits…

The assumption is that member of Congress are self-interested, greedy, obsessed with reelection and usually corrupt. Earmark coverage fits within that narrative.  Cheese Factories on the Moon, page 104)

Pet peeve. Media coverage of politics–but especially earmarks–fails to provide sufficient context for readers more often than not.

When the facts “confirm” the narrative why bother with context?

Case in point: a story published last week by the Center for Responsive Politics.  Janie Boschma reports that former House Appropriations Committee member Steve Rothman will join a Newark law firm that lobbies on behalf of the defense industry.

Boschma employs the “revolving door” metaphor to highlight Rothman’s behavior as particularly objectionable.

Rothman served on the Defense Subcommittee of Appropriations and Boschma treads the familiar link between campaign contributions and “legislative favors.”

…the defense industry is one Rothman knows well. Among his top defense contributors during his 14-year House career were BAE Systems, $42,300; General Dynamics, $35,000; Lockheed Martin, $33,500; Boeing, $32,000; Honeywell International, $28,000; and Finmeccanica SpA, $24,000. Altogether, the defense sector donated $277,850 to Rothman during his tenure.

That is a lot of money. What the author does not tell you is this: $277,850 represents 2.4% of the campaign money that Rothman raised during his 14-year career in Congress.  A look at CRP’s own database reveals that Rothman raised $684,950 from transportation and public sector unions over the same period, almost two-and-a-half times the money he raised from defense interests.

And then a turn to the dramatic, Boschma notes the

…remarkable nexus between budgetary earmarks by Rothman and 11 other members of the subcommittee and campaign contributions…In 2007, Rothman teamed up with Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-N.J.) to earmark $1.5 million in the 2008 budget for Frontier Performance Polymers to research lightweight packaging for military gear.

Once again, $1.5 million is a lot of money. But in 2008 Rothman, according to the CRP database, was able to earmark $13.6 million, mostly in the defense area. CRP could not link most of his earmarks to campaign contributions. Of the 19 earmarks they identify they link two to campaign contributions.

That is about 1 in 10. A “remarkable nexus;” really?

What does Frontier Performance Polymers do? It seeks to lessen the weight of military ammunition to save weight for purposes of transportation and lightening the load for members of the military in the field. One may or may not think that is a legitimate use of federal funds, but readers deserve to judge based on the facts, not the implicit assumption that Rothman and Frelinghuysen routinely flush taxpayer dollars down the drain.

I do not know Steve Rothman (or Rodney Frelinghuysen). I have never met him. I have never lived in New Jersey. I am not a lobbyist. I have never worked in the defense industry. I am just a lowly college professor on the West Coast. Maybe Rothman is guilty of some wrong-doing; I do not know.

It is not my purpose to defend Mr. Rothman or this earmark.

But I have some advice (source: Cheese Factories on the Moon) to offer to Ms. Boschma and other reporters when it comes to earmarks:

  • Take the time to understand the process;
  • Try to understand individual earmarks;
  • Provide context;
  • Do not overgeneralize, and;
  • Be careful: Correlation does not equal causation.

–Sean Kelly

 

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Lack of Earmarks Makes Congress Harder to Lead

Scott Frisch and I have an Op-Ed in Roll Call today focusing on the impact of the earmark ban on the ability of Congress to do its work. As of right now it is among the “most emailed” stories on the Roll Call site. Click on the graphic to give it a read.

most emailed

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Roll Out the Barrel (We’ll Have a Barrel of Funds)

More than a few commentators have weighed in recently suggesting that perhaps it is time to consider bringing back earmarks. Considering the legislative constipation that is gripping Congress it could not hurt.
Bloomberg Businessweek is the latest to float the idea that earmarks might provide some impetus for Congress: 
Political hacks used to say pork was the political grease that
lubricated legislative deals. Only now do we see how true that was.
Would it really be so terrible to reintroduce some congressionally
sanctioned bribery? That would let members lay claim to the odd million
in the interest of striking a deal worth much more.

We are loathe to think of ourselves as “hacks” (most of our contemporaries probably think we are), but the sentiment is sound.

The simple fact of the matter is this: The easiest vote to cast in Congress is NO. 
This is especially true when legislation does not contain the promise of something of import for a member of Congress and his or her constituents. 
If members of Congress can vote NO repeatedly and without consequence it should be no surprise that Congress fails to act on most all important issues.
A Case in Point
The Labor, Health and Human Services bill is perhaps the
most difficult of the appropriations bills to pass. It contains funding for a
variety of programs that are opposed by conservative Republicans, and contains
provisions on hot-button social issues like abortion and stem cell research.
Using earmarks and other forms of persuasion the Republican leadership was able
to piece together a majority in support of the House version of the Fiscal Year
2006 Labor-H Appropriations bill. The House passed their version of the bill by
a vote of 250 yeas to 151
nays
; 206 Republicans and 44 Democrats voted for the bill while 10
Republicans, 140 Democrats, and 1 independent voted against the bill.
On the Senate side the bill was passed by a vote of 94-3,
and the House and Senate met in conference to reconcile the differences between
the two versions of the bill.  A decision was made in conference to remove
$1 billion dollars in earmarks from the bill in favor of increased funding for
the National Institutes of Health, and other initiatives favored by Senators
Spectre (R-PA) and Harkin (D-IA), leaders of the Senate subcommittee.

When the bill returned to the House the Conference Report on
the bill was defeated in the House 209 yeas to 224 nays.
This time 22 Republicans voted with 201 Democrats (all voting Democrats) and 1
independent to reject the bill. In all, 85 members who had previously supported
the bill in the House changed their votes when the bill returned to the House
floor from Conference.  The one major difference between the original
House version and the Conference version was the $1 billion dollars in earmarks
that were removed from the Conference Report.  Stripping the earmarks upset the delicate balance necessary to pass a
controversial bill.

In
2012 the House didn’t even consider the FY 2013 LHHS bill on the floor– the
Appropriations Committee could not even vote out a bill out of committee.

It has been years since Congress passed all of the Appropriations bills following regular order. Republican House leaders have resorted to omnibus and “minibus” bills and continuing resolutions to fund government. 

Forget authorizing legislation. Congress is all but impotent.

Perhaps adding a little fiber to the diet might help? 

.

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Earmarks Emerging from the Shadows

By almost any measure the 112th Congress was the least productive in several generations, perhaps in the history of the institution. According to a recent poll public approval of Congress is only 9%. Public Policy Polling “found that found is that Congress is less popular than cockroaches, traffic jams, and even Nickelback.”

Wow. People would rather listen to Nickleback than watch Congress? That is pathetic.

These facts, combined with the beginning of the 113th Congress, have led several media outlets to look more closely at how Congress can improve its efficiency.

For some the answer is: Earmarks.

Over at Forbes, Rick Ungar links the failures of the last Congress to the decision to impose an earmark moratorium:

The moratorium on earmarks went into existence in February 2011. Since
that time we have seen some of the greatest legislative fails in the
history of the nation, highlighted by the debt ceiling fiasco of 2011,
the inability to pass a jobs bill, an ever-increasing vacancy rate in
the federal judiciary as one nominee after another is shelved and, of
course, the current fiscal cliff clunker that might be the most
embarrassing and damaging display of congressional incompetence of all.

NPR’s All Things Considered ran a story asking “Could Reviving Earmarks Get Congress Going Again?” Quoting the ever-colorful former-Senator Alan Simpson highlights the fact that earmarks are a necessary component of the congressional process: 

 “[Lyndon Johnson] came up to Pop one time and said, ‘Milward, what can I
do for you? I need your vote … surely you must have a dam or
something out there you need in Wyoming,’ ” Simpson tells Jacki Lyden,
host of weekends on All Things Considered. “I’m not talking about purity; I’m just talking about reality.”

At Slate Matthew Iglesias points out that the fiscal cliff highlights the fact that earmarks help members of Congress make difficult decisions:

That’s not to say we should pine for a return to bribery and graft, but
watching the prolonged fiscal cliff deadlock (and other Obama-era
legislative battles) it was hard not to miss a little old-fashioned
earmarking and pork.

We would be remiss (actually we would just be modest and who wants to be modest?) if we did not point out that we predicted from the beginning that the earmark moratorium would be damaging, and that we pointed out that the moratorium was an epic fail months ago.

Since the 113th Congress will also observe the earmark moratorium we predict continued dysfunction.

To be sure congressional dysfunction goes beyond the earmark moratorium (e.g., exceptionally high levels of ideological extremity and partisanship), but in the absence of the salve of earmarks there is little else to lessen the friction and allow Congress to do the people’s work.

But at least people are talking openly about earmarks again, and that is a hopeful development.

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Its Just that time of year

Hey Folks, its Christmas!

Well now its the day after Christmas in China. I felt like a posting was needed, with me not posting for a whole month now. Lets just say a lot of things have stayed the same, which is mainly the reason why I haven’t been posting. I’m doing a short update since I have pictures from my Work Christmas party for the students. Lastly I just wanted to announce I found this old Series I read before and reread it, and the last part is always a masterpiece cause it is one of the few stories to make me cry as much as I do reading it. To cry on what is suppose to be one of the happiest holidays of the year makes me feel annoyed but yet Im still crying. Thats how good it always gets me. well lets upload a couple of pictures from the party.