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Arkansas Times

Posted on November 16th, 2009 at 21:18 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

Will Phillips isn’t like other boys his age.

For one thing, he’s smart. Scary smart. A student in the West Fork School District in Washington County, he skipped a grade this year, going directly from the third to the fifth. When his family goes for a drive, discussions are much more apt to be about Teddy Roosevelt and terraforming Mars than they are about Spongebob Squarepants and what’s playing on Radio Disney.

It was during one of those drives that the discussion turned to the pledge of allegiance and what it means. Laura Phillips is Will’s mother. “Yes, my son is 10,” she said. “But he’s probably more aware of the meaning of the pledge than a lot of adults. He’s not just doing it rote recitation. We raised him to be aware of what’s right, what’s wrong, and what’s fair.”

Will’s family has a number of gay friends. In recent years, Laura Phillips said, they’ve been trying to be a straight ally to the gay community, going to the pride parades and standing up for the rights of their gay and lesbian neighbors. They’ve been especially dismayed by the effort to take away the rights of homosexuals – the right to marry, and the right to adopt. Given that, Will immediately saw a problem with the pledge of allegiance.

“I’ve always tried to analyze things because I want to be lawyer,” Will said. “I really don’t feel that there’s currently liberty and justice for all.”

After asking his parents whether it was against the law not to stand for the pledge, Will decided to do something. On Monday, Oct. 5, when the other kids in his class stood up to recite the pledge of allegiance, he remained sitting down. The class had a substitute teacher that week, a retired educator from the district, who knew Will’s mother and grandmother. Though the substitute tried to make him stand up, he respectfully refused. He did it again the next day, and the next day. Each day, the substitute got a little more cross with him. On Thursday, it finally came to a head. The teacher, Will said, told him that she knew his mother and grandmother, and they would want him to stand and say the pledge.

“She got a lot more angry and raised her voice and brought my mom and my grandma up,” Will said. “I was fuming and was too furious to really pay attention to what she was saying. After a few minutes, I said, ‘With all due respect, ma’am, you can go jump off a bridge.’ ”


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Comments:

  1. I know it’s absolutely not the focus of this news, but the expression “scary smart” makes me cringe. Why should we be scared? I for one am very impressed and proud to see that some kids are braver than most adults.

Company Charged in $8B Troop Food Fraud

Posted on November 16th, 2009 at 21:12 by John Sinteur in category: Mess O'Potamia, Robber Barons

[Quote:]

A company paid more than $8 billion by the United States military to feed soldiers in Iraq, Kuwait and Jordan has been charged with fraud.

Public Warehousing Company, a Kuwaiti company now known as Agility is alleged to have overbilled the United States in its contract to distribute food to soldiers. CBS News reported on the ongoing investigation two years ago

“This indictment is the result of a multi-year probe into abuses in vendor contracts in the Middle East involving the illegal inflation of prices in contracts to feed our troops,” said Criminal Chief F. Gentry Shelnutt, the current Acting U.S. Attorney for the case.


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Windows Mobile Platforms

Posted on November 16th, 2009 at 21:11 by John Sinteur in category: Microsoft

[May 14, 2008:]

Microsoft expects sales of its Windows Mobile platform products will account for 40% of the global smartphone market in fiscal 2012 (July 2011-June 2012), according to Eddie Wu, managing director of Microsoft ODM embedded devices, Asia.

Gee, I wonder how well those plans are going?

[Quote:]

Windows Mobile lost 28 percent of its smartphone market share between the third quarter of 2008 and the third quarter of 2009, according to analysis from Gartner.

According to figures released by Gartner on Thursday, Microsoft’s mobile operating system had 11 percent of the global smartphone market in Q3 2008. A year later, it had 7.9 percent of the market, while the iPhone’s share had risen from 12.9 percent to 17.1 percent, and RIM’s share had risen from 16 percent to 20.8 percent.


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Comments:

  1. This is as good a place as any to say this: can you please do something to clean up the mobile version of your blog?

    Every time I try to access this site from my iPhone, I find two major problems with it: first, I’ve got to tap a subject two or three times before it brings up the article, and the only way I can actually go to any hyperlinked articles, etc., from within those articles, is by holding down my finger on the link until I get the option of opening it in a new window.

    For the record, I’m in the US, use a 32 gig iPhone 3GS, and will sometimes access your site via AT&T’s 3G network and sometimes via my home wireless network. The problems are the same with both access types.

    Either fix the problems, get rid of the mobile version, or give us the option of choosing the non-mobile version.

  2. It should be turned off now – please let me know if this works for you.

  3. Much better. Thank you.