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  • Supporters of cyber terrorism bill want you to be scared, very scared

    Zach White

    President Dwight Eisenhower famously warned citizens about the growth of a military-industrial complex before he left office. Zach White More than 50 years later, with multiple trillions of dollars pumped unquestioningly into bloated war efforts over the past few years, much of it going to defense contractors, who "coincidentally" have contributed billions in lobbying funds in that same time frame, it's hard to imagine what that crazy old coot was talking about. It's not like anyone questions the patriotism of an individual...

  • Restoring the American Dream

    Franke Wilmer

    Our founders gave us the most incredible political system ever invented, one grounded by the rule of law, majority rule and protection of minority opinions and dissent. They could not agree to renounce the slave trade, they did not extend political participation to women and non-property owners, and they dispossessed America's First Nations from their land and resource base. But they gave us a system that would enable us to be better people, collectively, than they were. Indeed, they expected it. They invented the American...

  • Let's shop Havre, not the Internet

    Erica Farmer, OD, Northern Montana Hospital

    Zach White's incomplete editorializing in his "Shop the Planet" article in the Havre Daily News on Aug. 7, compels me to write a response. I'm sorry to learn that the local opticians were unable to fulfill his optical needs. I would like to highlight, however, a few facts that are important for the readers to know. Inserting a lens into a spectacle frame carries a small risk of damaging the frame, especially when the frame is brittle. To the credit of all the local opticians they were cautious about working on a very...

  • Helena delegation should stand for life, liberty

    Tristan

    The 2011 session in Helena no more than ended and the 2012 campaign season was in full swing. Candidates have hit the ground running. The economy continues to be the number one issue across the nation. The lines can sometimes a get a little blurry as you try to sort out the difference between government's role in growing the economy vs. the government getting out of the way and allowing free enterprise to work at its best. There is one issue, however, that has been brought once again to the forefront, and in this case, there...

  • Confessions of a former plastic bag fan

    Tristan

    I am a bag lady. I am a budding recycling vigilante. Pam Burke I am a jumper-on-er of the "re-use and save" bandwagon. I now shun plastic bags at the store in favor of my newly purchased re-usable bags. It's a non-slackerish and good thing to do. It's totally out of character. Sometimes I don't feel like myself. The people who know me are a little shocked that I have fully embraced an action that requires me to abstain from using a free convenience that makes my life easier because, hey: Free. Easy. Two of my favorite words....

  • Who is corrupting whom with political spending

    Carl Graham

    This week opened with news that Montana's Attorney General filed briefs with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to revisit the 2010 Citizens United decision and give Montana's restrictive campaign finance laws a pass. With all due respect, I think our AG is either stuck in a time warp or doesn't understand the basics of a marketplace and especially a marketplace of influence or ideas. Carl Graham Montana's campaign finance laws date back to when copper barons outright owned much of our state's legislature and most of its media...

  • Harem, scarem: or, my life in the seraglio

    Sondra Ashton

    My friends, Cheryl and her husband Dave, are touring Spain and Portugal this summer. They will stay the nights in monasteries, fortresses and castles. In one stronghold, many of the bedrooms were, once upon a time, occupied by the master's harem. Cheryl said, "I certainly am not going to sleep in one of those rooms. I want no part of a harem." Personally, give me the harem room. I've seen the movies. I could stand to be waited on hand and foot. I can see myself lounging...

  • Rocky Boy Chairman can do better

    John DeMontiney

    As a retired engineer with the federal government, I am privileged to get telephone calls and messages about Rocky Boy's Indian Reservation tribal affairs from relations and other tribal members. We talk about the glory days of the Joe DeMontiney era and about sitting tribal council ineptness and rudderless leadership. It appears the sitting tribal leaders are more interested in advancing themselves, and they draw and maintain a salary of $90,000 a year. I have no insight into what our chairman's daily operations are. Bruce...

  • Who's corrupting whom with political spending?

    Carl Graham

    This week opened with news that Montana's Attorney General filed briefs with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to revisit the 2010 Citizens United decision and give Montana's restrictive campaign finance laws a pass. With all due respect, I think our AG is either stuck in a time warp or doesn't understand the basics of a marketplace and especially a marketplace of influence or ideas. Montana's campaign finance laws date back to when copper barons outright owned much of our state's legislature and most of its media outlets....

  • Pamville News: The what and the why

    Pam Burke

    Pamville News reporters have been scouring the news wire to bring you, the discerning public, the latest in the most important issues. And speaking of public — the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas is bucking Texas redneck traditions with a Texas-sized red face. Seems the guests at their commencement ceremony this year were handed programs with a missing L, making it the School of Pubic Affairs. School officials did their best to correct t...

  • In defense of air traffic controllers

    Tristan

    I think it's high time we quit bad-mouthing air traffic controllers. A few weeks ago, investigators from the Federal Aviation Administration corroborated allegations by a former ATC, a Mr. Evan Seeley (pronounced "stoolie"), that some of his colleagues were low-life scum. Seems when flight traffic thinned out at a certain, gruff New York airport, ATCs watched movies on laptops, gambled online, threw stilettos at helpless rats, sharpened pencils with their teeth, and ate cucumber sandwiches laced with dill seed. The reports,...

  • It's been a stupid hair week. That's so aaargh!

    Pam Burke

    I cut my hair last weekend and, since the moment I put the scissors down, every time I've looked at or gotten distracted by my hair, I've thought this phrase first: "What the ... aaargh!" I spent 20 minutes this morning fixing my hair. I had a PTSD flashback to junior high days and fully expected to burn my forehead with the curling iron, break out in zits, lose my breasts and hear my mom yelling, "You're gonna be late for the bus — again!" — 20 minutes. Tuh-wen-tee min...

  • The case of disappearing socks, another wash day mystery

    Sondra Ashton

    Everybody has had this experience. You fill the washer with soap and water and stuff in a load of dirty clothes. The washer chugs, agitates and spins, rinses and spins again, finishes the load of wash. You pull the clean damp clothing from the washer, give each article a brisk shake and throw them one by one into the dryer. You turn on the dryer and go sit with a cup of coffee while it tosses the clothing around through the heated air like bingo balls in a cage. When the dryer...

  • When citizens of the world have a voice

    Zacdh White

    The United Nations estimated in January 2011 that two billion people were using the Internet. About 300 million have since joined them. With about one-third of the world's population accessing a global communications network, exchanging thoughts and ideas, it will soon be hard to imagine how we built functioning democracies without it. Zach White A recent video from advertising firm Leo Burnett Worldwide describes a campaign to save a library in Troy, Mich., their Detroit office worked on. According to the video, the local...

  • A large, 3-topping solution

    Pam Burke

    Sometimes the only reasonable solution to life's problems is too much pizza. Sure, I have it from good sources that, in times of need, prayer and meditation are highly beneficial, but — and I don't mean to be hyper-critical — they seem overly complicated and seriously flawed. If I go the prayer route, there's that whole dilemma of whom to pray to and in what language, format or respectful posture (and honestly the thought of tackling that makes my head feel like one major ane...

  • Rescue, restore, reconsider: Our historic buildings

    Caleb Hutchins

    Earlier this month I was pleased to see Holden's Hotwheels open for business in a new location at 1st Street and 5th Avenue. What pleased me wasn't that it was a new building, but that it was very old. The building at 422 1st St., was built around 1914 by J. K. Bramble, a lawyer and the founder of the weekly newspaper, the Hill County Democrat. Over the the last 98 years the Bramble building has housed a dry goods store, an auto parts store, two different newspapers, and surprisingly, a bordello in the 1960s and '70s. Check o...

  • Bringing the afterschool message to D.C.

    Tim Bruard

    This past week, I joined hundreds of fellow afterschool program directors, as well as afterschool students (including my daughter Emily) and other advocates from across the country spending two days in Washington, D.C., for the 11th annual Afterschool for All Challenge, sponsored by the Afterschool Alliance. I was there to learn from and share with colleagues and also to bring a message to members of Congress about the importance of making sure our children get the support they need in the out-of-school-time hours. Tim...

  • Havre should have its own House District

    Andrew R. Brekke

    Recently Hi-Line voters had the rare opportunity to voice their opinions on how Havre and north-central Montana legislative districts should look for the next 10 years when the Montana Districting and Apportionment Commission held a public hearing here last week. Since that time, a lot has been said around town and in the paper regarding which proposal has the most merit and best represents all of our interests and accusations are beginning to fly about movements to cut Havre's representation and sever the rural voice....

  • Like a pig at the trough, I want it all

    Sondra Ashton

    My friend Kathy invited me to be her guest at her swank condo on the beach in Mexico. I would even fly on her companion ticket. The whole trip would hardly cost anything. I said the only thing I could say — YES! Yet, as the day to leave approached, I felt strangely ambivalent. I wanted to go and I wanted to stay. I could imagine how the breeze wafting off the ocean would smell as I climbed down the ramp off the airplane onto the tarmac. Hugs from Carmen and Ana would await o...

  • Language tools make the world even smaller

    Zach White

    Learning a new language can be useful for business, a foreign vacation or as a fun hobby, while learning about a different culture and our own language in the process. But if you're not an enrolled student, in high school or college, the best options you usually have are phrasebooks or Berlitz tapes. Zach White The computer program Rosetta Stone has dominated the independent language-learning world in recent years, but their software packages cost hundreds of dollars — cheaper than a college course or tutor but still a r...

  • Freedom from the cost of motor vehicle crashes

    Mary Owens, Kathy Fanning

    This July 4, thousands of Montanans hit the roads to visit family, watch fireworks, get out of town and relax. That special day reminded us of the precious freedoms our forefathers fought so hard for; so many freedoms, in fact, that we could not begin to list them all. The freedom to go where we choose, the freedom to say what we want to say, and the freedom to gather and celebrate are just a few. All you have to do is turn on the nightly news to see that so many of the freedoms we enjoy are not shared across the globe. We...

  • Don't be like Havre Daily, follow the story on Vibrant Futures

    Rick Dow

    The role of the press in our country is quite unique. They are called to be the most inquisitive amongst us. Their importance and power is specifically enumerated in the First Amendment to our U.S. Constitution: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press … ." In the words of Socrates (470 BC - 399 BC) the press should be counted on to "follow the story wherever it leads." Rick Dow I would like to thank t...

  • A large, 3-topping solution

    Pam Burke

    Sometimes the only reasonable solution to life's problems is too much pizza. Sure, I have it from good sources that, in times of need, prayer and meditation are highly beneficial, but — and I don't mean to be hyper-critical — they seem overly complicated and seriously flawed. If I go the prayer route, there's that whole dilemma of whom to pray to and in what language, format or respectful posture (and honestly the thought of tackling that makes my head feel like one major ane...

  • Montana shouldn't pay for EPA's mistakes

    Sen. Ed Walker

    Take a good, long look at your latest electricity bill, because there's a very good chance it could be skyrocketing in the near future. The culprit is a new EPA regulation called the Utility Maximum Achievable Control Technology (UMACT) rule. On paper it's supposed to control mercury and a host of other emissions from coal-based power plants. In reality it sets a standard that many plants can't possibly meet by the 2015 deadline, forcing them to shut down and forcing your electricity bills to go up. Sen. Ed Walker Why would...

  • When the robot meets the road

    Zach White

    So the world's first privately funded rocket, the SpaceX Dragon, docked with the International Space Station and splashed down on June 1 without a hitch. While most people won't be taking futuristic transportation into orbit too soon, those in some parts of the country may soon get a taste of futuristic trips around town. Amid all that excitement last month, not too many people heard about the first license in the country being granted for a driverless car in Nevada. Zach White Ubiquitous tech giant Google got a license in...

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