Wednesday, August 09, 2006
before the test...
~Bo
The Security Council
What about Iran?
France, friend or foe?
Is Israel the hero or villain?
What about the Soldiers
Tuesday, August 08, 2006
Gas Prices
Joe Lieberman
New Orleans
Iraq war
Libyan Government sues D.C.
People of the US
More money!!!
Minimum Wage
Leagalizing drugs
AIDS in Africa
War in Irag
Final Exam Question
Voting Rights
Israel Helping There Citizens
lieberman's official campaign site under attack.
Matthew Meadows
Ann Coulter
Help
Government Funding
Teen mothers
-Christina Dixon
War on iraq
Numerous Guns Stolen from Army Surplus store
This is just great. now we have 25 guns out on the streets in God knows whose hands running around our sate. Just goes to show crazy people are. Hopefully these people are found and the firearms are returned to the Surplus store soon, before they are used or sold o the streets.
Heres the link.....
http://www.local6.com/news/9637821/detail.html?subid=22100428&qs=1;bp=t
Oil Shutdown!!
http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/08/08/oilfield.shutdown.ap/index.html
Gun control
"The results under 10-20-LIFE are impressive. In only six years, from 1998-2004, 10-20-LIFE has helped drive down violent gun crime rates 30 percent statewide (see Firearm Involved Violent Crimes). During the 10-20-LIFE era, armed criminals robbed a total of 10,567 fewer people and killed a total 380 fewer than they would have if these crime numbers had remained at 1998 levels. These crime decreases occurred even as Florida's population increased over 2.5 million (16.8 percent) between 1998 and 2004. Punishing criminals who use guns is making our state safer."
I don't understand why more states don't adopt or create a law such as this one. It seems to me that it works well! heres the link.....
http://www.dc.state.fl.us/oth/10-20-life/index.html
Police and Abuse of Power
Wakulla Springs Problem
The Millennium Development Goals
According to the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) Report from 2005, there have been some improvements in some areas of stream poverty, but there is still a lot of work to do to help the poorest people in the world. The MDG shows that there is still more than 1 billion people living in less than a dollar a day in developing countries, more than 115 million children are not able to get primary education, almost every year 11 million children die before the age of 5, and more than 20 people have died from HIV/AIDS around the world. The United Nations (UN) have create the MDG as a promise to the world and as a guidance of what is needed to do and how much is still needed to do by the target date of 2015.
Do you think that it is possible to eradicate extreme poverty in the world? Do you think that by 2015, the UN will achieve their goals?
http://unstatus.un.org/unsd/mi/pdf/MDG%20Book.pdf
Take out loans
Is being poor fair?
Alcohol and College
Deaths: 1,700 college students between the ages of 18 and 24 die each year from alcohol-related unintentional injuries, including motor vehicle crashes (Hingson et al., 2005).
Unsafe Sex: 400,000 students between the ages of 18 and 24 had unprotected sex and more than 100,000 students between the ages of 18 and 24 report having been too intoxicated to know if they consented to having sex (Hingson et al., 2002
Sexual Abuse: More than 97,000 students between the ages of 18 and 24 are victims of alcohol-related sexual assault or date rape (Hingson et al., 2005).
Are college students indulging too much alcohol? From the recent statitics, I would agree they are. Having a good time is alright but when you are endangering your life just because you wanted to party, you might think twice after seeing the consequences.
-Selah Manning
Tour De France
Education - Special Needs, Special Funding
Detroit News Online, covered a story involving a teenage student with very unfortunate mental instabilities. The student, a young man, 17, suffers from more than a few psychological disorders, such as Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, Bipolar Disorder, to name a few. Parents of the young man are fighting for special funding for their son, arguing that their attempts for school cooperation have fallen far from anything acceptable. The student has particular needs, considering his inability to sometimes control his rage or moods, such as little to no classmates. Private education is suggested to be in his best interest and if not possible, considerable accommodation and custom-made education is desired from his High School. However, the High School does not feel responsible financially for his special needs. His parents currently have pulled their son from the school because of the lack of the school's lack of effort in resolving the issue and collaboration.
Take a look at the article, by pasting the link in your browser. Should the public school system be responsible for the extra funding required for special cases, such as the one mentioned above? To what extent should the school be financially obligated, and the parents? Should the State return a portion of tax-funded public education money to the parents of this boy?
R.Mitrosky
Why is America so fat?
Monday, August 07, 2006
Predators on the Internet
"Those words from the adolescent girl on the second floor are music to the ears of the Internet sex predator standing at her front door. Wary that he has been followed, he anxiously eyes the street behind him before he turns the doorknob and enters her home.
He walks in, only to come face-to-face with an NBC camera crew and "To Catch a Predator" host Chris Hansen, who is holding a hard copy of the explicit conversation the man had with the underage girl he has been planning to molest. On camera, for all the world to see, the man's world falls apart." (By Daniella Gallego) http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,207356,00.html
the NBC show works with "Perverted Justice." which is an internet watchdog group that poses as underage children to gather evidence on sexual predators trying to have sex with underage kids. im glad that there is an organization that helps gather evidence to arrest and convict sexual predators on the internet. the show "To Catch a Predator" records the tactics of Preverted Justice and people who are willing to drive to an underage childs house to have sex. i believe this show has brought attention to parents of children to be wary of their children on the internet. it also should imtimidate sexual predators to think twice before they try to have a sexual conservation with an underage kid, knowing that there are organizations that are trying to protect children and gather evidence for an arrest. not everyone supports this effort, others think that "police work should be left to the police."
Long Cycle Theory
However, there is a theory called the Long Cycle Theory that holds that a dominant state loses power after a century, and that a war is then necessary to allow the next dominant state to achieve its position.
Do you think that the United States can be replaced by another country? Which country do you think will replace the U.S.? And for how long do you think that the United States is going to remain being superpower?
World Trade Center
Feedback Posts
Politics and Popular Culture
How Does Government Affect Me
Critical Thinking 9/11 Photo
Textbook Assignment 1
Name the Logial Fallacy
Song Evaluation -- Garth Brooks/2 Pac
Textbook Assignment 2
Spot the Urban Legends
Textbook Assignments 3-10
What I Don't Understand About Political Science
Can You Tell the Difference -- Ideology
Can You Tell the Difference -- Political Parties
Song Evaluation -- Green Day/Darryl Worley
Feedback -- Politics and Popular Culture: Song Evaluation (Worley/Green Day)
1. What did you learn from this activity?
2. Did you enjoy this activity?
3. What would you do to improve the activity?
If you were not present for the activity, please post "I was absent" in comments.
Feedback -- Can You Tell The Difference, Political Parties
1. What did you learn from this activity?
2. Did you enjoy this activity?
3. What would you do to improve the activity?
If you were not present for the activity, please post "I was absent" in comments.
Feedback -- Can You Tell The Difference, Ideology
1. What did you learn from this activity?
2. Did you enjoy this activity?
3. What would you do to improve the activity?
If you were not present for the activity, please post "I was absent" in comments.
Feedback -- What I Don't Understand About Political Science
1. What did you learn from this activity?
2. Did you enjoy this activity?
3. What would you do to improve the activity?
If you were not present for the activity, please post "I was absent" in comments.
Feedback -- Textbook Assignments 3-10
1. What did you learn from this activity?
2. Did you enjoy this activity?
3. What would you do to improve the activity?
If you were not present for ALL of the activities (meaning you missed every one of them), please post "I was absent" in comments.
Katherine Harris
http://www.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/07/20/ivins.mideast/index.html
Isreals Worst Ally
http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/meast/08/05/carter.mideast.ap/index.html
9/11, a conspiracy?
these are not just ordinary people with extreme theories, they are professors. one teaches at Wisconsin and the other at Bringham Young. i do not think people who publicly announce radical theories as this one should be able to teach. 60 state legislatures would agree with me, they are protesting these two professors. the U.S. government did not blow up the towers or the people inside them, nor would a conspiracy of this size be possible. people who believe in conspiracies such as this should be put in a mental institution.
Homeschooling
What do you think about homeschooling?
The UN Security Council
The five permanent members that are the Veto Powers are: China, Russian Federation, France, United Kingdom, and the United States. The veto powers are able to veto any resolution in the Security Council, meaning that if any of those powers say NO, the resolution does not pass, does not matter if the rest of the members in the committee say yes, just one opposing vote from one of the veto power is what it takes to reject a resolution.
What do you guys think about the Veto Powers? Do you think that is right to have them or not?
Sunday, August 06, 2006
Expert Issues Warning About E-Passports
Electronic passports being introduced in the
“Expert Warns That Electronic Passport Flaw Could Allow Criminals to Enter Countries Illegally”
Well you can still copy paper passport and anyone can take advantage of some ones passport and take their picture on some ones passport.Do you guys think that security will be tighter if US. Introduce the electronic passports than regular passports?
Major Alaskan Oil Field Shutting Down
"We regret that it is necessary to take this action and we apologize to the nation and the State of Alaska for the adverse impacts it will cause," BP America Chairman and President Bob Malone said in a statement.
Do we still need to spend money and try to overcome these problems of oilfields in
Anniversary of the first use of the A-bomb
America: A Fat nation with High Gas Prices
Woman sentenced for 911 misuse
A post-Castro Cuba
Egyptian terror group joins Al-Qaeda
I personally think that this will have a very minimal effect on Al-Qaeda as a whole. They have not achieved anything by making this allliance.
It's like the Miami Heat drafting Bill Gates as their next point gaurd. Al-Qaeda has achieved nothing.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5249490.stm
What do you all think about the recent event?
-Alex Baker
Friday, August 04, 2006
Men Not Working, and Not Wanting Just Any Job

The percentage of men who are not working has risen rapidly. joblessness is highest among men in most states.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/31/business/31men.html?pagewanted
=1&_r=1&ei=5087%0A&en=0669dbbbcec50c59&ex=1154750400


Hezbollah fires rockets even deeper into Israel
Textbook Assignment 10
1. What is a coup?
2. What is the underlying condition beneath a system breakdown in a country?
3. Name three different types of violence.
4. What types of countries produce terrorism?
5. Does terrorism work?
6. What is the underlying cause of domestic unrest?
7. Define revolution.
8. Generally, who are the leaders of revolutions?
9. Give an example of a revolution that was successful after 1900.
10. Name one country that currently has a significant revolutionary movement.
Textbook Assignment 9
Textbook Assignment 8
Textbook Assignment 6-7
Textbook Assignment 5
Mr. Quinnell's POS 2001 Blog
Final Exam Review
There will be 30 short answer questions on the final exam. They will be taken from the quizzes and the textbook assignments. The questions that will be chosen for the exam will be the questions that I think are most important things that we have discussed in this class so far.
Essay Questions
There will be 4 essay questions on the midterm exam. You will have to answer 2 of the essay questions on the exam. The 4 questions will be taken from the 6 topics below. The topics listed below are more general than the questions will be on the exam.
Roles of executives
Future international order
Al-Qaeda
Functions of legislatures
The emerging international order
Why does war happen?
Below is an example of what the essay questions will look like on the exam. In order to do well on such a question, you must answer all of the questions asked. Opinion will only be acceptable on the final question of the essay. Note: The question below will NOT be on the exam.
How a bill becomes a law
How does a bill become a law at the national level in the United States? What parts of government are involved in the process and what is the role of each? Who can propose laws? Who enforces laws? Who makes sure laws are Constitutional? In what ways can each branch of government implement policies? Is the process too complicated or too easy?
Essays will be graded as follows:
10-20% Length
10% Essay format
60-70% Answering the topical questions
10% Providing additional information
Thursday, August 03, 2006
Friday Class
I will give out the War & Terrorism quiz, but only Barfield and Raybon need to take it, no one else has six or more quizzes they got credit on. Everyone will need to take the survey.
Bring your textbook, you will need it.
Textbook Assignment 9
1. What is the difference between domestic and international politics?
2. Define sovereignty.
3. Define national interest.
4. What are three possible solutions to keeping world peace?
5. Who were the two superpowers during the Cold War?
6. What is the balance of power?
7. Define hegemony.
8. Define globalization.
9. What are the two general impediments to free trade?
10. What is isolationism?
Bush on Vacation - Again
Why does the president need so much vacation time? Most people who work full-time in America get little vacation time.
Do you all think that the president should be going on vacation when the Isreali-Hezzbollah conflict is taking place?
Share your thoughts.
http://news.aol.com/politics/story/_a/bush-takes-shortest-summer-vacation-yet/n20060803024409990001?cid=771
What about Iraq?
WOW at the heat
Wednesday, August 02, 2006
Tax Cheats Called Out of Control
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0801-04.htm
"I get incensed by people who use tax havens to not pay their taxes while the average guy has to pay his taxes because they are taken out of his pay before he gets it"
FINAL EXAM questions Forum
Matthew Meadows
IRS and Student Loans
Consider if you were anywhere between 18-23 wishing to take out student loans for your education, had wealthy parents that did not support you for whatever reason. Consider also that you live on your own, have a part-time job and are doing your best to support yourself and afford your education. Do you consider it legitamate for the IRS to deny you the right to the same loan amount as an independent because your family backround/finances appear capable to assist you on paper? Should the guidelines be revised to allow special circumstances without appealing to an official on student loans? Should someone have to jump through hoops to receive financial assistance for education just because they already endure the hardship of an upsupportive and/or absent family?
Brazilian Military in Action- Because of Global Warming?
This may be an effect of global warming.
The air force will transport the penguins to the southern end of Brazil and the navy will take them to Antartica.
Take a look...............
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/5233312.stm
Do you all think that this is a result of global warming?
Change the Pledge
Why Health Care costs too much?
Should New Orleans be rebuilt?
Tuesday, August 01, 2006
Wednesday Class
Bring your textbook, you will need it.
Court posts 9/11 trial exhibits online
~Selah
School vaccine season grows more complex
~Selah
Doctors poke and prod Bush, find him 'fit for duty'
Doctors treated a small precancerous lesion on his left arm but indicated it was nothing serious. They told him to use sunscreen and wear a hat. Bush got the works at his annual physical. It took more than four hours and was conducted by a team of nine doctors, overseen by White House physician Richard Tubb and Dr. Kenneth Cooper, the president of the Cooper Aerobics Center in Dallas. The group included skin, hearing, heart, eye and sports medicine specialists.
~Selah
Post-petroleum age nightmare- End of cheap oil?
Can anybody guess what will happen when gas prices start to become 10 bucks a gallon? Economies will become cripple. People will not be able to afford to drive downtown from their sub-urban home. Gas is most likely going to have to be rationed.
Also, without cheap crude oil, energy prices are going to surge and rolling black-outs will occur. I seriously don't know why the United States is not fighting the up coming energy problem fiercely.
Alternative energy solutions on a huge scale need to be implemented. This issue is a lot more important than Iraq.
This article is only one aspect of the whole oil depletion issue. Take a look.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/3777413.stm
What do you all think about the upcoming energy crisis?
To your amazement, most of the world's oil might indeed be right next door in Canada.
the full article can be obtained at http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0406/feature5/fulltext.html
Leonard puts Russian reserves at around 100 billion barrels. Other experts say the companies haven't explored enough to know. Either way, even Russia has its limits, as Leonard acknowledges. He thinks Russia's oil output will crest in 10 to 15 years, putting OPEC firmly in control of prices again. "Around the middle of the next decade, the price of oil is going to go up and stay up," he says. If it does, an unusual kind of oil that exists far from the Middle East will become more alluring. You can get a glimpse of it just north of Fort McMurray, a former fur-trading outpost in the Canadian province of Alberta. Just where the highway crosses the Athabasca River, veins of black, tarry sand streak the riverbanks. On a hot day tar sand is sticky and smells like fresh asphalt—the smell of money the locals call it. No wonder they're smug. The tar-sand deposits here and elsewhere in Alberta hold the equivalent of more than 1.6 trillion barrels of oil—an amount that may exceed the world's remaining reserves of ordinary crude. But this is no ordinary crude. In fact, it's a residue created when conventional oil escaped from its birthplace deep in the Earth's crust and was degraded into tar by groundwater and bacteria. Most of the tar sand lies too deep or in deposits too sparse to be exploited. But oil-sand companies got a boost in the 1990s as technology improved and Canada cut the first few years of the royalties that companies were required to pay. The Alberta government reckons that 174 billion barrels could now be tapped economically. Last year the U.S. Department of Energy agreed and included that number in Canada's proven reserves. The move catapulted Canada to second place in the ranking of oil-rich states, right behind Saudi Arabia—and ahead of Iraq, Iran, and Kuwait. But standing at the edge of a 200-foot-deep (60-meter-deep) pit where giant electric- and diesel-powered shovels devour beds of oil sand, Shell Canada Senior Vice President Neil Camarta acknowledges that there's a big difference between the oil-sand riches and free-flowing crude. "It's not like the oil in Saudi Arabia. You see all the work we have to do; it doesn't just jump out of the ground." Shell's is one of three big operations that together wring more than 600,000 barrels of oil a day from the Athabasca sands. Every step of the way takes brute force. The sand has to be strip-mined, two tons of it for each barrel of oil. Dump trucks the size of mini-mansions haul 400 tons in a single load, in beds heated during the subarctic winters so the sand doesn't freeze into a giant blob. Next to the mine, the sand goes into the equivalent of giant washing machines, where torrents of warm water and solvent rinse out the tar, or bitumen, leaving wet sand that is dumped in tailing ponds. Even then the bitumen is not ready to be piped off to a refinery like ordinary crude. To turn it back into crude oil, the operations either cook it in cokers, where temperatures of 900°F (500°C) break up the giant tar molecules, or heat it to lower temperatures and churn it with hydrogen gas and a catalyst. The result is a clean, low-sulfur crude—"beautiful stuff," says Camarta. But producing it is not so pretty, he acknowledges. "This really is a big, big project," Camarta says of Shell's four-billion-dollar mine and plant, which opened last year. "It has a big footprint too, and we don't hide that—a big environmental and a big social imprint."
Matthew Meadows
Textbook Assignments 6-7
Textbook Assignment 6
Chapters 15 & 16
1. Name two other names for an executive other than president or prime minister.
2. What does it mean when a prime minister dissolves parliament?
3. What does it mean when an American president is impeached?
4. How many members of the government does the U.S. president appoint?
5. What is a cabinet?
6. What are government appropriations?
7. How big is the U.S. bureaucracy compared to other countries?
8. Name three roles of the bureaucracy.
9. What is adjudication?
10. Name three proposed solutions to the problems with bureaucracy.
Textbook Assignment 7
Chapter 17
1. Define law.
2. What are the two roots of law?
3. Define judicial review.
4. What are the key mechanisms of international law?
5. What is the adversarial legal system?
6. What is the inquisitorial legal system?
7. What is an indictment?
8. What did Marbury v. Madison set the precedent for?
9. Since 1969, what has been the general ideology of the American Supreme Court?
10. What did the ruling in Gideon v. Wainwright provide legal support for?
Economic Sanctions?
WWIII
Textbook Assignment 8
2. Define business cycle.
3. What economist do liberals generally agree with?
4. What is inflation?
5. What is the primary purpose behind the Federal Reserve Board?
6. Define entitlement.
7. How much of the U.S. budget goes to mandatory spending?
8. What is the biggest expenditure in the U.S. budget?
9. What is the maximum amount of time a person can spend on "welfare" in their entire life?
10. How does the size of America's welfare state compare to other modern industrialized democracies?