In the Public Interest

Dixville Notch, NH

Dixville Notch, NH — I finally visited Dixville Notch, population — 40 people with around 28 voters. You may remember that every four years, the voters of Dixville Notch cast their ballots for the Presidential Primary by 12:01 a.m. on election day. By 12:05 a.m. they are counted, the voting is complete and the nation…

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“Leave No Child Behind” George Bush Sr and Children

“One thing I’m going to do,” the gentleman said to a large audience, “is to raise the level of public debate on how best to help our children. I’m going to talk and talk and talk until our country is working together to reach our children.” That was George Bush speaking, while campaigning for the…

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Corporate Welfare

Lo, the poor taxpayer! At all levels of government, thousands of companies are feeding at the taxpayers’ trough. Washington has become a burgeoning accounts receivable for large corporations on welfare. So numerous and diverse and circuitous are these programs — subsidies, bailouts, giveaways, loan guarantees, tax expenditures (tax breaks), inflated contracts, product promotion, protections from…

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Federal Railroad Administration

The Federal Railroad Administration (FR) would win any award for bureaucratic camouflage. Its most important purpose is to regulate the safety of the nation’s railroads — the track, equipment, operating conditions hazardous materials and other factors that now account for about 1300 fatalities and over 25,000 injuries per year. Yet the public almost never hears…

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Beneath the Ashes – Mt. Pinatubo

This is a story of a father, his two sons and the largest volcanic eruption in the 20th century. William Shernoff., a California attorney was reading about the explosions of Mt. Pinatubo in the western area of Luzon, Philippines during the week of June 9th, 1991. Rivers of lava were pouring down the mountainsides, burying…

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Presidential Debate Campaign Contributions

The same commentators who criticize Presidential candidates for not addressing fundamental issues are now on Jerry Brown’s back for doing just that. On the recent television debate, hosted by NBC’s Tom Brokaw, Brown, former two-term governor of California, four times raised the issue of the corruption of money in politics. Four times before Brokaw picked…

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GM Closings

General Motors dropped its biggest lemon last week — a lemon of its making. The giant auto maker announced the closing of 21 plants in North America and the loss of over 70,000 jobs by the mid-Nineties. From 1990 to 1995, 100,000 GM workers will not have their employment and the number of GM workers…

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C-10 Seabrook

Seabrook, New Hampshire — The most expensive electricity in the United States comes from the controversial, troubled Seabrook nuclear power plant in New Hampshire near the Massachusetts border. both as taxpayers and as consumers, ratepayers are paying for John Sununu and company’s technological lemon. The citizens who led the opposition to the construction of the…

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Airbag Dinner

It was an altogether exceptional dinner gathering. The occasion was to honor the eleven major air bag inventors who were personally recognized, one by one, by survivors of vehicle collisions saved by the air bag. Official Washington is not used to such events. Dinners are to celebrate funding of campaigns and mutual backscratching between sets…

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Nick Johnson

When he is not teaching law or writing articles on democracy, telecommunications and broadcasting at the University of Iowa, Nicholas Johnson has a quadrennial hobby he pursues. He asks candidates running for President in the early Iowa Caucus one question. It goes something like this: “I’ve now heard you denounce those powerful special interest lobbies…

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