C.L.I.C.K. for Justice and Equality is an agent of communication alerting our social community of injustices and inequalities among the socially disadvantaged and disenfranchised individual. C.L.I.C.K. developed and created this website to assist the socially disenfranchised or disadvantaged individual in litigating their issues in Federal and State courts.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Telescope finds space blobs are pubescent galaxies - Yahoo! News

Telescope finds space blobs are pubescent galaxies - Yahoo! News: "Mysterious space blobs aren't infant galaxies as astronomers once thought. Scientists say they mostly consist of galaxies going through puberty, all hot and bothered."

ABC7 eNews




 
>>> Having trouble viewing this newsletter? View as a webpage.

Top Stories

Wednesday, June 24, 2009


Woman injured in home explosion | VIDEO
Authorities now say one person was inside the home that exploded in southwest suburban Romeoville.

Teen dies, girl injured in beach incidents | VIDEO
One child has died while another was hospitalized Wednesday morning after emergencies along the lakefront.

Legendary Chicago journalist dead at 72 | VIDEO
John Callaway was a Renaissance man who could do it all -- and make other people look good.

Teamsters vote rejects city cutbacks
The Teamsters union has voted to reject a move by the city of Chicago to cut its members' pay by one-third by making them take furlough days and cutting their overtime.

RTA could face more cuts
A new round of cuts could be coming for the CTA, Metra and Pace because of the recession.

MORE STORIES

Strange

Suspicious item in luggage: Pickled mangoes

Scan reveals mummy is male

Police close case of snake head in broccoli

Police say 334 bunnies found in woman's yard

Officials want mountain named for gas co.

Consumer

AAA: Weak economy will zap holiday trips

Black & Decker coffeemaker recalled

Walgreens to sell alcohol again

Chicago firm recalls 6,100 pounds of ground beef

New iPhone popular with customers

Healthbeat

Preventing childhood accidents

Could childhood obesity lead to pancreatic cancer?

New test for appendicitis in children

Study: Infants don't need 'special' formula

World's 65 and older population to triple by 2050

MOST POPULAR

Advertisement


TODAY'S WEATHER OUTLOOK

95°F

Today's weather

65°F

Partly sunny, the temperature near the record of 97 and humid with a strong thunderstorm late this afternoon


Hour-by-Hour | 7 Day Forecast | Radar & Satellite

TONIGHT ON ABC

    7:00 PM Wipeout
    8:02 PM I Survived a Japanese Game Show
    9:00 PM Primetime
    10:00 PM ABC 7 News
    10:35 PM Nightline






AAA: Weak economy will zap holiday trips Fewer people will be traveling this July Fourth holiday, auto club AAA said Wednesday, even though gasoline is far cheaper this year and pump prices have begun to fall even more.


Australian fish now available locally Our Hungry Hound is savoring a taste from Down Under. And it's not vegemite.

The Hungry Hound


SUBSCRIPTION OPTIONS

I'd like to receive the following newsletters from abc7chicago.com

Daily Weather | Daily News | 190 North

Sign up for news alerts

 

In Case You Missed It: Meeks Acknowledges Democrat Party Failing Illinois




 
inthenews
Meeks Acknowledges Democrat Party Failing Illinois
Southtown Star - 6/24/09
Democrats don't deserve to be re-elected in Illinois.
No politician should serve more than eight years in office.
It's time to let the entire state government collapse to force a voter rebellion.
Those aren't the thoughts of a Republican looking to gain political advantage or some political commentator seeking to generate controversy.
They're the comments of state Sen. James Meeks (D-Chicago) who said Tuesday the state's leaders "have failed the people."
"It's unfortunate and wrong for us to be playing on people's emotions like this," Meeks said of the state's threats to cut social service funding to the neediest people in Illinois by as much as 50 percent because of the Legislature's failure to pass a budget.
"It's our fault," Meeks continued. "The Democrats control both chambers and the governor's mansion. We asked the people to send us here and we've failed to do the job. I don't see how any of us can go back to the voters and ask to be re-elected after this.
"This is a failure of the Democratic Party, no doubt about it."
The Legislature is meeting in special session in Springfield in order to pass a budget, but Meeks said there's no reason it should have taken this long.
"What were we doing here (in Springfield) from January to May 31?" Meeks asked. "What were we being paid for if it wasn't to pass a budget?
"You know what they want to do now? They (legislative leaders) want to hand the governor a month-by-month budget and let the state operate that way. That's unfair to social service providers who have to sign leases and hire employees. It's unfair to the governor to make him come back to us each month for money to run the state."
Meeks is the chief sponsor of a Senate bill that would have raised the state income tax from 3 percent to 5 percent. The measure passed the Senate this spring but never made it out of House committee.
"Senate President (John) Cullerton just held a news conference down here saying the Senate passed a budget bill and as far as we're concerned we've done our job," Meeks said, referring to the measure he sponsored.
"The governor is still trying to pass his 1.5 percent income tax hike as a two-year temporary measure, but the House doesn't even want to vote on that. They need Republicans to support it at this point and the Republicans aren't going to do it.
"As far as Cullerton and the Senate Democrats are concerned that doesn't do enough. It doesn't provide enough money for all the things this state needs to do. If we're going to pass an income tax hike, if we're going to take the heat from voters, let's pass something we can be proud of and defend."
Meeks said the Democrats should have never allowed the state to reach the point where it was running out of money.
"We didn't need any Republican votes to pass a budget bill during the regular session," Meeks said. "We could have done that ourselves. The Democrats had enough votes because the people put their faith in us."
Meeks said he has told the governor to "let the whole thing collapse. Force the state to shut down."
That seemed to contradict his concerns about social service providers who need money to help some of the most vulnerable people in the state, such as the developmentally disabled, children in day care programs, homebound elderly and mentally handicapped.
"There would be very short term suffering but long-term solutions," Meeks said. "In the long run all of those people would get the help they need because legislators would be forced to work 24/7 to get the job done.
"We would have to solve the problem because the people of Illinois would demand it and all the elected officials would be worried that they would lose their jobs.
"There would be an uprising by people all across the state, and that's what we need at this point. We need pressure to bring true reform to Illinois government."
Meeks said the problem now is that too many legislators have no fear of a backlash at the voting booth.
"This is the best argument ever for term limits," Meeks said. "The president of the United States, the most powerful government official on earth, serves for only 8 years. That's enough time to do your job.
"We have people here who have been in office 28, 30 years and that's too long. We need people who come here to do a job and leave."
Meeks has been campaigning for an income tax increase to provide money for public school funding reform since he first ran for the Senate as an independent in 2002.
I believe his frustration over the failure of Democrats to pass the reforms they've been promising in political campaigns for decades is genuine.
I'm not sure I want to see the "whole thing collapse." But maybe that's what it will take to really bring about change in government.
Throwing governors in prison certainly doesn't seem to do the job.

 

Crain's Daily News Alert prepared for Top Executives



 

CHICAGOBUSINESS

— POWERED BY CRAIN'S —

Daily Business Briefing

CRAIN'S LISTS SEND LETTERS TO THE EDITOR MULTIMEDIA WEEKLY JOB CHANGES

TOP HEADLINES Wednesday, June 24, 2009

· Sears Tower owners propose 5-star hotel

· Dog vs. Dawg fight over restaurant name goes to court

· Boeing analysts look askance at 787 delay

· Chicago broadcaster John Callaway dies

· Iconic ice cream seller to open on State

· CME seethes over Senate wheat findings

· Quinn mulls smaller tax hike on biz to woo GOP votes for his budget

· Boutique exchange sets up in CME's shadow

· Cat debuts hybrid bulldozer

· Freed wins round in legal tussle with Block 37 tenant

· Investor marketing Gold Coast, Lincoln Park buildings 

· Daley's bad patch; Jack Ryan resurfaces: Hinz blog

· High-end crowd watches low-brow flick: Taking Names blog

· Few emerge from bankruptcy; health debate declared dead: Enterprise City

· Will we see the return of Webio?: Biz of Sports blog 

Final Markets

Dow Jones

8,299.86

-23.05

-0.28%

NASDAQ

1,792.34

+27.42

+1.55%

Crain's Index

69.20

+0.91

+1.33%

» View Other Top Headlines

ADVERTISEMENT

Crain's Blogs. Now You're Talking. Introducing three blogs sure to pique your interest each business day: government and business, after-hours with Chicago's elite, and the business of sports.Click here to read what Greg Hinz, Shia Kapos and Ed Sherman are saying today. And talk back, we'd love to hear from you.

OTHER HEADLINES

· Jewel-Osco parent warns of lower-than-expected earns Reuters

· Fed board maintains status quo New York Times

· Nike, Hall of Fame sued over Jordan's clothes line Chicago Sun-Times

Crain's Chicago Business | 360 N. Michigan Ave. | Chicago, IL 60601

ADVERTISEMENT

TODAY'S FEATURES

Special Feature

Chicago Business Today - June 24

Sears Tower owners propose environmentally friendly upgrades to the skyscraper, as well as new hotel. Virgin America plans to be in Chicago "in a big way." Chicago ranks as one of the most expensive cities for parking. A South Side ice cream institution coming to State Street.Read More


· Check, Please! visits Keefer's for lunch

· Enterprise City - a small business blog

· John Buck's Spring Fling 2009

· Inside the Leather: Ed Sherman's golf blog

Ad for Crain's

SIGN UP FOR CUSTOM ALERTS

Industries

» Account Settings


WBBM Newsradio 780 LISTEN LIVE: Traffic, weather and news from our news partner WBBM-AM.

NKorea threatens US as world anticipates missile - Yahoo! News

NKorea threatens US as world anticipates missile - Yahoo! News: "North Korea accused Washington of seeking to 'provoke a second Korean War' as the regime prepared to hold maritime military exercises off the eastern coast. U.S. and regional authorities were watching closely for signs that North Korea might fire short- or mid-range missiles during the June 25 to July 10 timeframe cited in a no-sail ban for military drills sent to Japan's Coast Guard."

SC Gov. Sanford admits affair after going AWOL - Yahoo! News

SC Gov. Sanford admits affair after going AWOL - Yahoo! News: "After going AWOL for seven days, Gov. Mark Sanford admitted Wednesday that he had secretly flown to Argentina to visit a woman with whom he was having an affair. Wiping away tears, he apologized to his family and gave up a national Republican Party post, but was silent on whether he would resign."

N. Korea threatens US; world anticipates missile - Yahoo! News

N. Korea threatens US; world anticipates missile - Yahoo! News: "North Korea threatened Wednesday to wipe the United States off the map as Washington and its allies watched for signs the regime will launch a series of missiles in the coming days."

Report: SC gov was in Argentina, not hiking trail - Yahoo! News

Report: SC gov was in Argentina, not hiking trail - Yahoo! News: "South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford was in Argentina during a dayslong unexplained absence, not hiking the Appalachian Trail as his staff told the public when state leaders raised questions about his whereabouts, the governor told a newspaper."