Just how many???

Author: kontan  //  Category: Ramblings

How many kids should one person get to have on the government’s dime? I know someone who is on number four. It irritates me to no end. Two children live with the grandparents. I just can not believe that they have been so stupid and now another baby is expected in November. This will make three kids they are responsible for. One is hers and the other two his with her. His other two have a different mother and do not live with him. The grandparents are at their wits end as it is. I know the gov’t can not step in and say we will not pay for anymore, but dang it! It is ridiculous that taxpayers have to pick up the tab for this and the babies have to struggle through life b/c of irresponsible parents!

Saw a GREAT blog sticker…”If you can’t feed ‘em, DON’T breed ‘em!”

Common sense here…If you do not have a job you do not need to be having more kids! Accidents happen, but NOT FOUR TIMES! Sooner or later you should figure out what causes it and be more careful! Next point…GET A FREAKIN JOB! How long should one be out of work before enough is enough? One month? Two? Six months? A year or more? How about two? You can’t tell me that in a period of several months there is not a single job out there. We all have decisions to make and when you continually make bad one’s the consequences will beat you down.

OK…stepping down from my soap box now.

Depression in MS

Author: kontan  //  Category: Ramblings

Great article on the Depression era and MS found here. Posted below. Also check out the Colmer letters.

Depression and Hard Times in Mississippi:

Letters from the William M. Colmer Papers

by Kenneth G. McCarty

In March 1933, a tall, lanky, sandy-haired man stepped off the train at the Washington, D. C. station. No one greeted him, no band played, hardly anyone knew he had arrived. William M. Colmer had come to the nation’s capital to witness the inauguration of Franklin D. Roosevelt and then to represent the people of the sixth congressional district of Mississippi in the Seventy-third Congress.

Colmer also had come to Washington in the midst of the Great Depression. And he voted like a New Deal Democrat. He proudly told this writer in 1972 he was not a New Dealer, yet the record reveals he voted for every New Deal measure except one, including the Fair Labor Standards Act, which established the minimum wage.

How do we explain this New Deal voting record from a man generally viewed as an ultra-conservative when he left Washington forty years later? Colmer understood he had to support his party in order to gain leadership positions. He supported the Democratic party, and Democratic congressional leaders rewarded him with an appointment to the important Rules Committee in 1939. In time, he became its chairman.

The Great Depression

Colmer also understood that Mississippi and the nation faced the greatest depression in its history and that the depression created special problems that required emergency action by the federal government. 1

When Colmer took his seat in Congress in 1933, Mississippi and the nation were struggling with an economy stagnated beyond belief. Unemployment was at an unprecedented high. Jobs were virtually non-existent. Banks failed daily. Prices of farm products fell to an all-time low. People waited patiently in soup lines for a handout of food. Families lost their homes and businesses because they could not pay their property taxes.

According to an article in The Literary Digest, a national news magazine, on a single day in April 1932 one-fourth of the real property in Mississippi, including 20 percent of all farms and 15 percent of town property, went under the auctioneer’s gavel and was sold to pay taxes. The sales, conducted by 74 sheriffs, included about 40,000 farms. Most of the property went to the state of Mississippi which already owned about one million acres.2

Letters Describe Plight

In supporting New Deal legislation, Colmer was also influenced by his constituents who wrote him thousands of letters describing their plight, giving him their views on all issues before the Congress, and imploring him to influence the federal government to solve their problems. Letters came from rich, poor, black, white, male, female, young, old, educated, uneducated, professionals, farmers, laborers, and businessmen.

As you will see, some letters were well-written; others with their incorrect grammar, punctuation, and spelling, paint a portrait of the educational level of our citizens in the 1930s and suggest a desperate need for educational reform. Yet, educated or not, constituents made their views known to Colmer. He read their letters and responded. Included in the selection of constituent letters reprinted here are a few letters from Colmer as examples of his attempt to assist.

The letters come from the Colmer Papers in the William D. McCain Library at the University of Southern Mississippi. Except in a few instances where words were added in brackets, the letters were not edited. Their spelling, grammar, and punctuation were left intact. The only change is that the writers’ names were replaced with their initials. Let the letters speak for themselves. Read the letters.

Mississippians wrote Congressman Colmer hundreds of letters during the depression. They also wrote their other congressmen and senators, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and the numerous New Deal agencies. What can we learn and conclude from these letters? Undoubtably, Mississippians suffered severely from the depression. Without jobs and money they could not purchase the basic necessities, including food and clothing.

Social Security Act

Most Mississippians did not feel alienated from their government, but believed that it could and should solve their economic problems and free them from their poverty and misery. In their letters, they particularly urged Washington to provide immediate relief, jobs, and an old-age pension. President Roosevelt and the New Deal did respond with relief funds, numerous job programs, and the Social Security Act of 1935.

These programs did mitigate the suffering of many Mississippians, but not all. Job relief programs were not adequate, never remotely close to the demand for jobs. As a result, many Mississippians remained jobless throughout the depression.

Mississippians who wrote Congressman Colmer saw and experienced little improvement in the economy until 1940. World War II changed Mississippi’s economy forever by bringing industry and jobs and ushering in an unparalleled prosperity. In the war years, many Mississippians earned more money in a week than they had earned in a year during the depression.

Prosperity, however, did not visit all Mississippians. People who were too old to work or physically unable to work continued to suffer economic hardship. The Social Security Act scarcely benefited older Mississippians. Benefits under the original act bear little resemblance to benefits under social security today. The original act provided for a maximum pension of $30 a month based on a 50 percent federal-state match of funds to people over sixty-five.

Moreover, the law gave each state the power to decide eligibility requirements and the monthly payment to recipients. The payment of maximum benefits to all Mississippians over sixty-five in 1935 would have cost almost as much as the entire Mississippi budget for the year.

Mississippi, therefore, limited payment to paupers — those people who owned nothing and who had no means of support whatsoever. Not only did this limit severely restrict eligibility, but even those Mississippians drawing pensions only received an average monthly payment of around $6.40 a month in 1940 and around $9.00 a month in 1944 at a time when the price of goods rose drastically.

As the last letter writer, Mr. C. A. P., stated, many old people did not enjoy the prosperity of World War II and struggled to survive. Continued pressure in the following decades by senior citizens would ultimately lead to significant improvements in social security benefits.

Posted December 2000

Kenneth G. McCarty, Ph.D., is professor emeritus of history, University of Southern Mississippi, and a member of the Editorial Advisory Board for Mississippi History Now.

Notes

1. William M. Colmer Oral History. Interview by Kenneth G. McCarty, 1973. William D. McCain Library, University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

2. “One-Fourth of a State Sold for Taxes,” The Literary Digest, 93 (May 7, 1932), 10.

motivation

Author: kontan  //  Category: Ramblings

Nothing like incoming family to motivate one to clean. I took the day to take care of a few things and feel refreshed…ready to face students tomorrow. Although I may find myself exhausted. I spent a good part of my day cleaning. Floors, windows, dressers. There is still laundry to fold. (You know, I think I could say that statement every single day.) But my kitchen and living room look great. I even cleaned the laundry room! I need to fold clothes and then hit the garage before this weekend. The garage is a site to behold. We seriously need a storage shed. Actually, I needed to have conducted a garage sale this past weekend, but I didn’t feel the weather would cooperate. That and time. May is not the month to attempt anything.

Tweety’s birthday is coming up. I have NO idea what to get her. She will be six. Very few hints have been given as to what this young adventurer wants. All I have really gotten out of her is that she wants pretty colored stuff. I have searched the toy dept and T-R-U for ideas. Nada. Hoping for inspiration. No, I can’t just buy her Barbie and be done with it. She has a ton and has said she really doesn’t play with them. I’m sure something will come to mind…

Monday madness

Author: kontan  //  Category: Ramblings

Welcome to the week and thanks for stopping by my place. May is a busy month and it is a race to the finish at school. Two teaching weeks remaining, then exams. Not sure why I’m counting the days until summer. I plan on teaching summer school. Guess I’m counting down to change.

All is well with my world today. Tiki is fine. I was concerned that something may be wrong. Just below her incision is a dark red spot, looks like clotting. I took her to the vet this morning and was reassured that it was OK. It is just where she’s been licking and chewing. Basics…my dog gave herself a hickey. Stitches come out Thursday.

Had a great day yesterday helping the local animal shelter with an adoption day at pet smart. Seven dogs and several cats were brought for showing. The volunteers have to keep the dogs contained and give information as needed. Here are several dogs that need homes. Blackjack and two of the heeler pups were there. Blackjack liked to play with a small heeler pup that didn’t appreciate the enthusiasm. Both heeler pups found homes. There was a blue tick mix that was so sweet. I could have brought him home if I didn’t think Djembe would have a duckfit. The four adult dogs may find homes. They have such sweet personalities. It was great to help out and I hope it is something I have the opportunity to do more often.

Time to use the rest of my day wisely.

Have a great week!

114685741278520906

Author: kontan  //  Category: Ramblings

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

A new teacher was trying to make use of her psychology courses. She started her class by saying, “Everyone who thinks they’re stupid, stand up!”
After a few seconds, Little Davie stood up.
The teacher said, “Do you think you’re stupid, Little Davie?”
“No, ma’am, but I hate to see you standing there all by yourself!”

Have a GREAT weekend!

Why did the squirrel cross the road?

Author: kontan  //  Category: Ramblings

Why did the squirrel cross the road?

It sure as hell wasn’t to get to the other side because the blasted thing didn’t know which way he was going when I ran over him.

Yep.

That was the start of my day. Headed to work for a 7:15 meeting when Skrat darts back and forth in front of my husband and then right in front of me. Dang it! I tried not to hit him, but the other option would have sent my car spinning and I just didn’t think that was a good idea. I thought I was going to miss him but the dull thud revealed otherwise. I hate that.

Otherwise decent day. Students presenting articles today. I have one class that just doesn’t “get it”. Smallest class of the day, last class of the day…maybe it is my fault. Maybe I give them too much credit. Anyway, they didn’t do so hot. Had my TST dept meeting (TST is teacher support team…Alabama calls it BBST, Georgia, something involving BS…other states have their acronym. Anyway, met with my group…sort of. One didn’t bother showing and hasn’t made it to a meeting yet. I referred three kids to the next level of intervention. There are several others who probably need it but they refuse to do what is asked of them now so I will not move them up. I think it is to a point now that you save who you can and hope for the best regarding the others. That sounds horrible. Truth hurts. Not in the greatest of moods. I’m sleepy and I miss my puppy.

Tiki is at the doggy doc. She is getting “fixed”. I really thought about whether we should breed her or not. Obviously I decided not. I just don’t want to pimp out my dog you know? I know it isn’t like that, but when it gets right down to it that’s what you’re doing. My mother in law breeds dogs. She just sent one of hers to a doggie bordello. OK, that’s just what I call it. She has an arranged relationship if you prefer. Oh my. I really am in a foul mood. Not really. So Tiki is at the doggie doc and I can pick her up tomorrow. Hope all goes well. I’m nervous for her. I know the vet we use will treat her great, but I really hate that I had to board her tonight. Our vet is about 20 minutes away and I just did not have time to drive Tiki to the vet then get to work so they said they would keep her tonight. She’s not used to sleeping alone. :-(

25 and counting

Author: kontan  //  Category: Ramblings

My counter pencil says 25 days left. Only 20 school days. Some of my students have given up. Some can’t afford to give up. I don’t know how to make them care. I told them at the half that they had to get it in gear, retake the exam or they were in danger of taking this course in summer school…there is NO other option it is not offered in the regular school year for repeaters. I really believe they think we will just pass them on. I CAN’T DO THAT! My failure rate does not look like it will be high this semester. It frustrates me because it could be at 1%!!! I have one single student that simply does not have what it takes to pass. LONG story there. You know, I take that back. It IS possible that he could pass with serious modifications and a lot of extra credit.

Let me focus on the bright side…I do not dread going to work everyday. It’s teacher appreciation week and we get goodies everyday. There are only three teaching weeks of school left and I have only 2 chapters left that HAVE to be covered.

Here’s what my fellow ninth grade teachers ask each other when it gets really rough.
Does your dog love you? Yes.
Does your spouse love you? Yes.
Do your kids love you? Yes.
Then it’s a good day and nothing else matters.