Difference between revisions of "User:RahalMccall69"

From eplmediawiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Eugene Robinson- Bombs, boots and bluster won't work - News)
(Lehigh Valley suburban school districts seeing sharp rise in poor students.)
Line 1: Line 1:
@@@
+
 
President Obama鈥檚 strategy against the Islamic State may be hard to pin down 鈥?maddeningly so, some complain 鈥?but it is likely to work far better than anything his bellicose critics advocate.Perhaps the president will eliminate any confusion when he addresses the nation Wednesday, but I doubt it. Based on what he told NBC鈥檚 Chuck Todd on 鈥淢eet the Press,鈥?there may be no way to reduce Obama鈥檚 fluid and perhaps deliberately ambiguous thinking to a black-or-white, all-or-nothing dichotomy.鈥淭his is not going to be an announcement about U.S. ground troops. This is not the equivalent of the Iraq War,鈥?Obama said. Later in the interview, he added that 鈥渨e鈥檙e not looking at sending in 100,000 American troops鈥?and that 鈥渙ur goal should not be to think that we can occupy every country where there鈥檚 a terrorist organization.鈥滳lear? Kind of.We understand that the president will not announce the deployment of U.S. troops in large numbers and that he does not intend for the United States to re-invade and re-occupy Iraq. But we know that U.S. military advisers and special operations teams have already been active in both Iraq and Syria. And <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/images/guccioutlet.onlinesalecc.php>Gucci Outlet</a>  since Obama described the fight against the Islamic State as 鈥渟imilar to the kinds of counterterrorism campaigns that we鈥檝e been engaging in consistently over the last five, six, seven years,鈥?we can assume there will be some U.S. military presence on the ground, however covert and limited.A strong believer in multilateralism, the president asserted that 鈥渨e have, I believe, a broad-based coalition internationally and regionally to be able to deal with the problem.鈥漈rue? Again, kind of.The 10-nation coalition assembled last week to fight the Islamic State 鈥?the United States plus Australia and NATO members Britain, France, Germany, Canada, Turkey, Italy, Poland and Denmark 鈥?is much less than meets the eye, operationally speaking. Britain, France, Australia and Canada have the will and capacity to project military power overseas. The others, not so much.As far as regional cooperation is concerned, perhaps Turkey can be counted on to help tear down the Islamic State. But assistance from two key powers in the Middle East that also find themselves threatened by the jihadist group 鈥?Iran and Saudi Arabia 鈥?promises to be tenuous and situational at best.To further complicate a situation that already seems hopelessly complicated, every blow against the Islamic State is a blow in favor of Syria鈥檚 Bashar Assad and his murderous regime. But Obama implied on 鈥淢eet the Press鈥?that Assad is a secondary concern and <a href=http://www.alportico.net/gosoc.php> true religion sale</a>  said that 鈥渨hen it comes to our policy and the coalition that we鈥檙e putting together, our focus specifically is on ISIL,鈥?another name for the Islamic State.In internal administration discussions, Obama has reportedly been skeptic-in-chief about the capabilities of the ostensibly 鈥渕oderate鈥?Syrian rebels. On Sunday, the president was less than fulsome in his praise of groups such as the Free Syrian Army, which he noted 鈥渉ave been on the defensive.鈥?He said 鈥渨e鈥檙e going to have to develop a moderate Sunni opposition that can control territory,鈥?indicating that no such opposition now exists.It all sounds kind of circular and vague, implying there is much that may be planned, or already taking place, that we know nothing about. Obama seems to give himself the option of <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/clreplicashoes.php>Christian Louboutin Shoes Sale</a>  confronting the Islamic State directly when he chooses, ignoring it when he feels it can be ignored, using airstrikes when he believes they are needed, cooperating with adversarial or unreliable governments only when he believes it is in the U.S. interest to do so.I don鈥檛 know if it will work. But I鈥檓 confident that the hawkish alternative 鈥?more bombs, more boots, more bluster 鈥?would be a tragic failure.Massive airstrikes in both Iraq and Syria probably would not be enough to destroy the Islamic State without ground support. In Iraq, such support has been inconsistent. In Syria, it could come only from Assad鈥檚 brutal army. If U.S. troops are not an option, should we encourage Saudi Arabia and even Iran to deploy their forces? To me, that sounds like fighting a fire with gasoline.To the hawks, Obama鈥檚 cautious, patient, this-could-take-years approach to dealing with the Islamic State will be emotionally unsatisfying. But, given the complexity of the situation, subtlety and indirection are more promising tools than brute force. Locking the United States into the kind of rigid strategy that critics demand would likely only ensure that this crisis sows the seeds of the next one.Copyright the Washington Post
+
In suburbia, a growing education in povertyParkland, East Penn, others have turned to community groups and churches to get kids food and shelter.June 14, 2014|By Patrick Lester and Dan Sheehan, Of The Morning CallFrom its distinguished alumni CEOs, well-known authors, professional actors to its enviable test scores and championship sports teams, the Parkland School District glows with an aura of affluence and privilege.But amid its McMansions, backyard pools and pristine parks lies a different Parkland, one that has long been hidden but is emerging, family by family, into view. It's the Parkland of the poor.Over the past five years, the district has seen a dramatic rise in the number of students living in poverty. A total of 1,605 students about one in five qualified this school year for free or reduced-price lunches, the benchmark for <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/page.php?sale=Tory-Burch-Bootie>Tory Burch Bootie</a>  determining the level of low-income students in schools. That number could fill more than half the district's eight elementary schools.Parkland, now home to three church-run food banks, isn't alone. Across the Lehigh Valley, suburban school districts are grappling with the challenges of an emerging demographic of families that are dealing with job loss and doubling up with friends and relatives in cramped motel rooms and apartments or even living out of cars.Forty-four percent of the nearly 100,000 public school students in Lehigh and Northampton counties qualified this school year for the federal school lunch program. That's up from about one-third in 2007, according to a Morning Call analysis of state Department of Education records on students qualifying for free and reduced-lunch in 2007 and 2014.The poverty spike comes as districts are coping with budget pressures driven by significant losses in state funding in recent years, and it has prompted school officials to form alliances to meet the challenges presented by poor children.Parkland, East Penn, Salisbury Township and other districts have tackled the trend with new and enhanced programs designed to provide basic necessities toothbrushes, bookbags, food and supply the extra academic, emotional and social support that may be lacking at home.They're teaming with nonprofits to provide those services. They're linking people to social service agencies. They're expanding before- and after-school food and homework programs and, in some cases, starting Head Start classes."Parkland enjoys a good reputation and well-deserved reputation, but we've tried to chip away and let people know that we're a very fortunate school district but have the same problems as everybody else," said Diane Irish, the district's social worker.Consider Michele, who lives with her father, her 13-year-old daughter and her 12-year-old son in a single room at a run-down motel in Upper Macungie Township.Over lunch one afternoon at a township restaurant, Michele said she moved to the motel where her father already lived after <a href=http://www.radiorcs.com/page.php?sale=Jimmy-Choo-Shoe-Outlet>Jimmy Choo Shoe Outlet</a>  her roommate in an Allentown apartment left and she couldn't afford the rent on her own.The children, in sixth and seventh grades, get enough to eat at school through the free and reduced-price lunch program, and outside school through roughly $500 a month in food stamps, she said. The children's father contributes about $400 a month in child support, and Michele's father pays most of the room cost.But living in a shuffle of homes over the past few years has prevented them from settling into a stable routine. The children sleep in sleeping bags on the floor and are far from neighborhoods where they might find playmates.This is especially hard for Michele's son, who has been diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, a form of autism, and relies on a number of <a href=http://www.alportico.net/page.php?sale=Gucci-Sweaters>Gucci Sweaters</a>  medications to stabilize his behavior. He's run into disciplinary problems at school, some of which Michele attributes to his transient lifestyle."If I can get a place of my own, he'll get into it, he'll get his routine down," she said.Michele has worked sporadically, most recently at a temporary job in a warehouse that ended with the holidays. She has had trouble finding steady employment because she must rely on public transportation she can't afford a car any more than she can afford an apartment and has a slim resume.Irish, who worked with poor students in the Allentown School District before moving to Parkland, said most families in such circumstances never expected to be there."You get a snowball effect," she said. "There's some precipitating incident job loss, illness and you start falling behind in bills. It compounds and snowballs and you start shifting into survival mode."Michele seems to be the quintessential victim of circumstances and environment. She never really had a proper home. Her parents, reasoning that the cost of a motel included electricity and cable television, raised her in such places. When her children's father left years ago, she abruptly became a single mother of two with little support."Life doesn't always end on a happy note. Life can be a pain," Michele said.Stories like Michele's are being played out throughout the region.1 |  |  | Featured ArticlesMore:

Revision as of 03:58, 13 September 2014

In suburbia, a growing education in povertyParkland, East Penn, others have turned to community groups and churches to get kids food and shelter.June 14, 2014|By Patrick Lester and Dan Sheehan, Of The Morning CallFrom its distinguished alumni CEOs, well-known authors, professional actors to its enviable test scores and championship sports teams, the Parkland School District glows with an aura of affluence and privilege.But amid its McMansions, backyard pools and pristine parks lies a different Parkland, one that has long been hidden but is emerging, family by family, into view. It's the Parkland of the poor.Over the past five years, the district has seen a dramatic rise in the number of students living in poverty. A total of 1,605 students about one in five qualified this school year for free or reduced-price lunches, the benchmark for <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/page.php?sale=Tory-Burch-Bootie>Tory Burch Bootie</a> determining the level of low-income students in schools. That number could fill more than half the district's eight elementary schools.Parkland, now home to three church-run food banks, isn't alone. Across the Lehigh Valley, suburban school districts are grappling with the challenges of an emerging demographic of families that are dealing with job loss and doubling up with friends and relatives in cramped motel rooms and apartments or even living out of cars.Forty-four percent of the nearly 100,000 public school students in Lehigh and Northampton counties qualified this school year for the federal school lunch program. That's up from about one-third in 2007, according to a Morning Call analysis of state Department of Education records on students qualifying for free and reduced-lunch in 2007 and 2014.The poverty spike comes as districts are coping with budget pressures driven by significant losses in state funding in recent years, and it has prompted school officials to form alliances to meet the challenges presented by poor children.Parkland, East Penn, Salisbury Township and other districts have tackled the trend with new and enhanced programs designed to provide basic necessities toothbrushes, bookbags, food and supply the extra academic, emotional and social support that may be lacking at home.They're teaming with nonprofits to provide those services. They're linking people to social service agencies. They're expanding before- and after-school food and homework programs and, in some cases, starting Head Start classes."Parkland enjoys a good reputation and well-deserved reputation, but we've tried to chip away and let people know that we're a very fortunate school district but have the same problems as everybody else," said Diane Irish, the district's social worker.Consider Michele, who lives with her father, her 13-year-old daughter and her 12-year-old son in a single room at a run-down motel in Upper Macungie Township.Over lunch one afternoon at a township restaurant, Michele said she moved to the motel where her father already lived after <a href=http://www.radiorcs.com/page.php?sale=Jimmy-Choo-Shoe-Outlet>Jimmy Choo Shoe Outlet</a> her roommate in an Allentown apartment left and she couldn't afford the rent on her own.The children, in sixth and seventh grades, get enough to eat at school through the free and reduced-price lunch program, and outside school through roughly $500 a month in food stamps, she said. The children's father contributes about $400 a month in child support, and Michele's father pays most of the room cost.But living in a shuffle of homes over the past few years has prevented them from settling into a stable routine. The children sleep in sleeping bags on the floor and are far from neighborhoods where they might find playmates.This is especially hard for Michele's son, who has been diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, a form of autism, and relies on a number of <a href=http://www.alportico.net/page.php?sale=Gucci-Sweaters>Gucci Sweaters</a> medications to stabilize his behavior. He's run into disciplinary problems at school, some of which Michele attributes to his transient lifestyle."If I can get a place of my own, he'll get into it, he'll get his routine down," she said.Michele has worked sporadically, most recently at a temporary job in a warehouse that ended with the holidays. She has had trouble finding steady employment because she must rely on public transportation she can't afford a car any more than she can afford an apartment and has a slim resume.Irish, who worked with poor students in the Allentown School District before moving to Parkland, said most families in such circumstances never expected to be there."You get a snowball effect," she said. "There's some precipitating incident job loss, illness and you start falling behind in bills. It compounds and snowballs and you start shifting into survival mode."Michele seems to be the quintessential victim of circumstances and environment. She never really had a proper home. Her parents, reasoning that the cost of a motel included electricity and cable television, raised her in such places. When her children's father left years ago, she abruptly became a single mother of two with little support."Life doesn't always end on a happy note. Life can be a pain," Michele said.Stories like Michele's are being played out throughout the region.1 | | | Featured ArticlesMore:

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
extras
Toolbox