Peon Quotables

Wisdom never kicks at the iron walls it can't bring down. —Olive Schreiner Hazelden.org

Each man with a new idea is a crank until the idea succeeds. --Mark Twain source: Hazelden.org

We do not live an equal life, but one of contrasts and patchwork; now a little joy, then a sorrow, now a sin, then a generous or brave action. --Ralph Waldo Emerson

Not the power to remember, but the power to forget is a necessary condition for our existence. --Sholem Asch

Showing posts with label Green Jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Green Jobs. Show all posts

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Video: AP Interview With President Obama On Foreign Relations And The Economy


President Obama will be traveling to Russia over the weekend with a primary goal of getting talks started on a new START Treaty (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty).

AP: Why are you meeting with Putin? Answer: 'Prime Minster Putin still has a lot of sway in Russia...'

Questions are also posed to the President with respect to Iran and North Korea.


AP asks the President to address the concerns of Americans who are concerned that this will be a 'jobless recovery'. One thing the President rightly mentions is that for many Americans, jobs have 'well-paying jobs' have been moving out of the country for quite some time, and he wants to that change looking to new energy jobs as the answer.


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Saturday, June 27, 2009

Your Weekly Radio Address


Transcript Here


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Saturday, May 16, 2009

Your Weekly Radio Address



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Monday, April 27, 2009

High Paying Green Jobs Going Off Shore


Can you say 22,000? It is being reported that that is how many green jobs have sailed to India since the first of the year.

The low-wage green jobs are staying here, but the 'high dollar' green tech jobs are going, going, going. It's distressing but how can be it be curtailed?

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Earth Day 2009: President Obama Speaks In Newton, Iowa





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Green Day Green Jobs Hey Hey: Happy Happy Earth Day



I watched a PBS show on Sunday that showed some 'green roofing' projects in the City of Chicago.

Nice view aye?




From Organizing for America.

Van Jones: Green Jobs for a Green Future


From WhiteHouse.gov, Van Jones, the Special Advisor for Green Jobs for the White House, provides a glimpse of the new energy economy that's on the way -- green roofing:

Green roofing is just one of the countless green job opportunities that can be created with a new energy economy. As a reminder, at 1:00 PM Eastern today we'll be hosting a live online chat with Majora Carter, a pioneer in the green jobs sector who has worked with businesses and communities around the world to help unlock their green-collar economic potential.

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Monday, March 2, 2009

Pictures from PowerShift 09














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Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson addresses PowerShift 09




Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar at PowerShift 09.

Congressman Markey at PowerShift 09.

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PowerShift 09: EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson




See also Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar at PowerShift 09.

See also Congressman Markey at PowerShift 09.

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More from PowerShift 09: Congressman Ed Markey




See also Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar speaking at PowerShift 09 Digg!

Saturday, January 31, 2009

President Obama's Weekly Radio Address


It's time to move in a new direction.





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Friday, January 16, 2009

American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan: President-elect Obama's remarks in Bedford Heights, Ohio


Source: The Wall Street Journal


Obama’s Remarks on the Economy in Ohio

The prepared remarks of President-Elect Barack Obama in Bedford Heights, Ohio at an economic town hall-style event.

I want to start by thanking the folks here at Cardinal Fastener for the tour you just gave me. The story of this company – which began building wind turbine parts just two years ago, and is now poised to make half its earnings that way – is that a renewable energy economy isn’t some pie-in-the-sky, far-off future. It’s happening all across America right now. It’s providing alternatives to foreign oil now. It can create millions of additional jobs and entire new industries if we act right now.

The need for this action has never been more urgent. We’ve started this year in the midst of a crisis unlike any we’ve seen in our lifetime. Last month, we lost more than half a million jobs – a total of nearly 2.6 million in 2008. Another 3.4 million people who want and need full-time work have had to settle for part-time jobs. With each passing day, families here in Ohio and across America are watching their bills pile up and their savings disappear. And economists from across the spectrum tell us that if nothing is done, and we continue on our current path, this recession could linger for years – and America could lose the competitive edge that has served as the foundation for our strength and standing in the world.

It’s not too late to change course – but only if we take dramatic action as soon as possible. The way I see it, the first job of my Administration is to put people back to work and get our economy working again. That’s why I’ve moved quickly to work with my economic team and leaders of both parties on an American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan that will immediately jumpstart job creation and long-term growth. And I’m pleased that Congress has seen the urgency as well, and is moving quickly to consider such a plan.

It’s a plan that will save or create three to four million jobs in businesses large and small across a wide range of industries – and 90 percent of these jobs will be in the private sector. And I want to be clear – we’re not looking to create just any kind of jobs here. We’re looking to create good jobs that pay well and won’t be shipped overseas. Jobs that don’t just put people to work in the short-term, but position our economy to be on the cutting edge in the long-term.

That starts with new, clean sources of energy. We know that the possibilities here are limitless. Here in Ohio and across America, we’ve seen old factories become new clean energy producers. We’ve seen entrepreneurs turning solar energy into electricity, and corn and soybeans into bio-fuels. Our scientists and engineers are hard at work developing cars that use less gas, homes and appliances that require less energy, schools and offices that are greener and more efficient than ever before.

But we also know that we are nowhere near realizing the full potential of their work. Take the example of wind power alone: I’m told that if we don’t act now, because of the economic downturn, half of the wind projects planned for 2009 could wind up being abandoned. Think about that. Think about all the businesses that wouldn’t come to be, all the jobs that wouldn’t be created, all the clean energy we wouldn’t produce.

And think of what’s happening in countries like Spain, Germany and Japan, where they’re making real investments in renewable energy. They’re surging ahead of us, poised to take the lead in these new industries.

This isn’t because they’re smarter than us, or work harder than us, or are more innovative than we are. It’s because their governments have harnessed their people’s hard work and ingenuity with bold investments – investments that are paying off in good, high-wage jobs – jobs they won’t lose to other countries.

There is no reason we can’t do the same thing right here in America. That’s why, as part of our Recovery and Reinvestment plan, we’re committing to double the production of renewable energy in the next three years, and to modernize more than 75% of federal buildings and improve the energy efficiency of two million American homes.

In the process, we’ll put nearly half a million people to work building wind turbines and solar panels; constructing fuel-efficient cars and buildings; and developing the new energy technologies that will lead to new jobs, more savings, and a cleaner, safer planet in the bargain.

Here at Cardinal Fastener, that could mean going from operating at 50 percent capacity to 90 percent capacity and creating even more good, made-in-America jobs right here in Ohio.

With our Recovery and Reinvestment Plan, we’ll also create hundreds of thousands of jobs by improving health care – transitioning to a nationwide system of computerized medical records that won’t just save money, but save lives by preventing deadly medical errors. And we’ll create hundreds of thousands more jobs in education, equipping tens of thousands of schools with 21st century classrooms, labs and computers to help our kids compete with any worker in the world for any job.

We’ll put nearly 400,000 people to work by repairing our infrastructure – our crumbling roads, bridges and schools. And we’ll build the new infrastructure we need to succeed in this new century, investing in science and technology, and laying down miles of new broadband lines so that businesses across our nation can compete with their counterparts around the world.

Finally, we won’t just create jobs, we’ll also provide help for those who’ve lost theirs, and for states and families who’ve been hardest-hit by this recession. That means bi-partisan extensions of unemployment insurance and health care coverage; a $1,000 tax cut for 95 percent of working families; and assistance to help states avoid harmful budget cuts in essential services like police, fire, education and health care.

Now, given the magnitude of the challenges we face, none of this will come easy. Recovery won’t happen overnight, and it’s likely that, even with these measures, things will get worse before they get better.

But if anyone doubts that we can dig ourselves out of this hole, I invite them to come here to Ohio and look what you’ve done at Cardinal Fastener. I know it hasn’t been easy – and it hasn’t been without risk. But you’ve set your sights on the future, and you haven’t looked back. In an economy that’s losing jobs, you’re creating them. And they’re the kind of jobs that don’t just support families and sustain communities – but also help transform our economy, spurring growth not just today, but for decades to come.

That’s what we’ve always done in moments like this. We’ve looked ahead to the next big idea, that next new breakthrough. We’ve experimented and innovated, and when we’ve failed, we’ve picked ourselves up and tried again. And I know that if we can summon that determination and that great American spirit once again, we will meet the challenges of our time and build a better future for our children.

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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan: President-elect Obama to be in Bedford Heights, Ohio on Friday, January 14, 2009

source: USA Today



Obama's transition team just announced the trip. According to a statement sent to reporters:


President-elect Obama will tour the Cardinal Fastener & Specialty Company, a growing company with innovative production practices that manufactures parts used to construct wind turbines. President-elect Obama will discuss how companies like Cardinal Fastener and workers like those in Bedford Heights would benefit from an American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan, which would aim to create nearly half a million American jobs by investing in clean energy like wind power.


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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Inside the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan: "A down payment on our economic future"



Source: my.barackobama.com

by Christopher Hass - Tuesday January 13 2009 02:14:58 PM

Last week, President-elect Barack Obama gave a major speech outlining his American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan.

At Change.gov, some of the leading members of the Transition’s policy teams to sat down to talk about the plan, why it’s necessary, how it will work, and how they incoming administration will ensure that programs are both efficient and effective:

In the video above, Transition team members discuss the impact that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan could have on healthcare, education, and infrastructure, as well as job creation and the elimination of waste. They also discuss President-elect Obama's plan to provide a $1000 tax cut for 95% of working families in an effort to provide financial relief.

But as Mona Sutphen, incoming White House Deputy Chief of Staff explains:

Ultimately, this is about you, and your participation is essential. Because this isn't just about confronting the current crisis, it's a down-payment on our economic future. We're counting on you to get involved and stay involved.

Today President-elect Barack Obama attended the weekly lunch of Democratic Senators at the Capitol to discuss his plan, during what will likely be his final visit to the Senate before the inauguration next week.


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Thursday, December 11, 2008

Try saying infrastructure ten times real fast: Americans on board for funding infrastructure building to create jobs


New polling by Rasmussen indicates that Americans are with President-elect Obama's plan to fund public works projects the build and rebuild infrastructure thereby creating jobs.

Sixty percent (60%) of adults favor the mega-infrastructure plan, while 24% are opposed. Another 16% are undecided.

Even a third of Republicans (34%) are in favor of the plan, along with 83% of Democrats and 61% of unaffiliated voters.

Women are more undecided than men. While 57% of women favor the plan, 19% oppose it, and another 25% are not sure. Meanwhile, 64% of men are in favor of the plan, with 29% opposed and just seven percent (7%) unsure.

More than half (56%) of adults believe the investment will create a substantial number of new jobs. Only 19% disagree. One in four voters (25%) are not sure yet. While over half of Democrats (69%) and unaffiliated voters (53%) say the plan will create a large number of jobs, just 43% of Republicans agree. source: Rasmussen



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Thursday, August 21, 2008

Connecting to white working class voters whose manufacturing jobs are long gone.

WASHINGTONPOST.COM

Obama's Factory Factor


By Harold Meyerson

Thursday, August 21, 2008; Page A15

Just as the ghost dance of the Sioux failed to bring back the buffalo, so the declining dollar and the high price of gas have failed to bring back American manufacturing. To be sure, with the dollar down, exports are up, and with the price of shipping goods from Shenzhen to Los Angeles rising with the cost of oil, Chinese imports have slowed. Nonetheless, as the New York Times' Louis Uchitelle reported Monday, most of the rise in U.S. exports has come in corn, wheat and other agricultural commodities, not in aircraft or machinery.

Will America ever get its manufacturing back? Not unless we move to level a steeply tilted playing field: China and a host of other nations offer generous subsidies to companies locating their plants there, while the United States shuns such mercantilist strategies. But even if we moved toward mercantilism, we'd still have to confront the global economic order of the past quarter-century. American banks and corporations have already made immense capital investments, bringing their technology and expertise to nations with far cheaper workforces. There's no evidence that they've hedged their bets with contingency plans to reinvest in Ohio.

Besides, once you shutter enough factories, reopening or rebuilding them -- and their equivalently shuttered supplier and transportation networks -- is no simple matter. Nor is reacquiring skilled crafts workers in industries such as precision machine tool manufacturing, which have largely been offshored. Two years ago, I interviewed J. Bradford DeLong, a Berkeley economist who had served in the Clinton Treasury Department, for the American Prospect (a magazine of which I'm an editor). He expressed concern that American manufacturing had a tipping point after which, if it were cut back far enough, it might not be capable of again becoming an export engine that fueled national prosperity. "I worry that a lot of manufacturing capacity we could get back now we may not be able to get back in a couple of years," he said. It's looking now as if he was right.

The problem with the decline in manufacturing isn't simply that it has helped turn us from an exporting, creditor nation to an importing, debtor nation. It's also that manufacturing jobs tend to pay more than the service and retail jobs that have replaced them. The loss of several million manufacturing jobs during the Bush presidency coincides with the first economic recovery in American history in which the average family's income actually declined.

As it happens, the Americans most affected by these changes are the Americans most able to sway the outcome of the presidential election: the beleaguered workers of our onetime industrial heartland. Barack Obama can claim the allegiance of the black workers so affected, but it's the white workers clustered in these swing states who will determine our next president.

When you compare Obama's economic positions to those of John McCain, this should be no contest. McCain has supported every offshoring, free-trade accord, past or pending, that has decimated the Midwest; Obama has expressed skepticism that such accords serve the interest of ordinary Americans. Obama further supports making it easier for workers to join unions, giving tax credits to companies that create jobs stateside and enacting a "green jobs" public investment strategy that, if large enough and explicitly committed to domestic production, could help revive the Rust Belt.

But positions are one thing and narratives something else. The Democratic Party has a compelling story to tell about African Americans and women -- groups, suffering from huge and historic discrimination, that the party has championed and whose interests it has helped advance. For the white working class, the Democrats can point to discrete pieces of economic legislation (some, like retraining programs for jobs that don't exist, hardly worth pointing to), but they offer no such narrative.

Yet if Obama cannot tell this story, of workers deprived of economic opportunity and security through no fault of their own, cannot convey his empathy with these workers and his outrage over Wall Street discarding them like so many gratuitous spare parts, he probably cannot win the election. Obama needs to extend the Democrats' historic concern for fairness beyond racial minorities, women and gays to an abandoned working class. His proposal to offer tax credits to employers that create jobs in the United States is a step in the right direction, and it's even better that he spoke of it yesterday to a group of southern Virginia workers who'd lost their jobs in plant closings. It's their story he needs to tell and their concerns he has to address -- not just to win the White House, but, should he win, to rebuild a nation in which broadly shared prosperity is fast becoming a distant memory.

for source - click here

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Sunday, August 17, 2008

On the Road with Barack Obama: Town Hall in Reno, Nevada

Road Blog: Town Hall in Reno, Nevada

by Obama Road Blog, Sunday, August 17, 2008 at 05:07 PM

“You can get the government that you deserve.” – Barack Obama

It was a beautiful day in Reno at the town hall at Earl Wooster High School, home of the Colts. Over two-hundred attendees, mostly union members and local activists, sat at picnic tables for the event.

Barack walked among the tables, sharing his observations about what he’s learned on the road. “What you learn traveling America," he said, "is that it’s big and full of lots of different kinds of people, but they all want and need the same things for themselves and their families.”

One of the most interesting things about the long campaign season has been meeting and revisiting many of the same people across the country over the course of several months, or in some cases, an entire year.

Introducing Barack today was one such person – Patty Chastain. Patty was a precinct captain during the primary caucuses. As a real estate agent, Patty moved to Nevada five years ago -- before the housing market collapsed. With the market in its current state, Patty is struggling to make ends meet and living month-to-month. Having health problems and rising medical bills, she is very concerned that she will become a financial liability for her children. This is a familiar story in Nevada, where foreclosure rates rank the highest in the nation, and the subsequent economic fallout affects everyone. Patty is only one member of a generation of parents who are worried about what they are leaving behind for their children.

Here are Barack’s opening remarks from today’s event:

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The (new) West Wing

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