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Archive for the ‘Current Events’ Category

You are currently browsing the archives for the Current Events category.

4 Oct 2008

Don’t Vote!!!

There’s a great video here about voting and registering to vote! The voter registration deadline in Texas is MONDAY October 6th. you may not be able to register for this election, but you can still make a difference. A lot of your friends, who you just saw at homecoming, aren’t registered to vote. Maybe because they moved to another town to go to college, or maybe cause they’re just lazy. Send them a link to this video, or this post, or link them to this post on facebook, or MySpace, or something!

Do your part.

4 October, 2008 at 11:28 by mrosman

Tags: Register, Register to Vote, Vote
Posted in Current Events | 2 Comments »

2 Oct 2008

Veep Debate!

Joe Biden and Sarah Palin debated tonight in St. Louis, Missouri!

Sarah Palin even made a joke about getting extra credit for watching the debate!

Did you see the debate? What did you think?


2 October, 2008 at 21:16 by mrosman

Tags: debate, Joe Biden, Sarah Palin, St Louis, Veep, Vice President, VP, VP debate, Washington University in St Louis
Posted in Current Events | 3 Comments »

26 Sep 2008

Debate On!!!

Tonight at 8:00 John McCain and Barack Obama will debate each other – face-to-face – for the first time!

Just Wednesday, however, McCain threatened to back out of the debate in order to focus on the economy and the discussion going on in congress. Just a few minutes ago – McCain announced he WILL attend the debate! They’re meeting in Oxford, Mississippi, home of the University of Mississippi.

Do you think the debate will change any person’s mind? Or will it reinforce what they already believe? Also, what’s more important, what the candidates SAY, or HOW they say it?

It’ll be worth watching – entertaining television to say the least! (Seriously) I’ll be watching it on DVR a few hours later (or Saturday morning). They’re showing it on CNN and MSNBC (and maybe more channels).

Was there a clear ‘winner’ and ‘loser’? Did the candidates appear respectful of each other? What did you learn from the debate?

Let me know what I missed in the comments!

If you write up a debate summary with some of your own analysis and turn it in on Monday, I’ll give up to 50 possible points!!!

26 September, 2008 at 11:08 by mrosman

Tags: CNN, debate, DVR, McCain, McCain Obama debate, MSNBC, Obama, Oxford, possible points, University of Mississippi
Posted in Current Events, Electoral Process | 7 Comments »

24 Sep 2008

Which way do you lean?

http://glassbooth.org


Take the quiz, figure out where you lean politically!

Liberal or Conservative? Somewhere in between?



Many of you will find that you agree more with a third party candidate:

(Libertarian, Green Party, R. Nader, etc…)




Find three issues of that party that you agree with
Summarize what that party believes about those three important issues
(You can do this in Microsoft Word or your own sheet of paper)
Do NOT copy and paste!

 

Democrats http://democrats.org
Green Party http://gp.org
Libertarian http://lp.org/
Republicans http://gop.org


24 September, 2008 at 10:18 by mrosman

Tags: Barack Obama, Bob Barr, Democrat, Glassbooth, Green Party, Homework, John McCain, political party, Ralph Nader, Republican
Posted in Current Events, Electoral Process, Homework | 8 Comments »

21 Sep 2008

A More Perfect Constitution

This week we’ll spend a lot of time talking about how we can change the Constitution. Every year dozens of amendments are proposed to the Constitution an in the entire history (230+ years) of the United States, we’ve only approved 27 amendments. Of those 27, the first 10 (the Bill of Rights) were more like an extension to the original Constitution. In fact, several amendments have been passed by congress and not passed by the states. Obviously its pretty difficult to amend it!

However, the Constitution is far from a perfect document. We have an Electoral College that prevents the people from directly electing the President, a Senate that isn’t truly democratic, and a Supreme Court that isn’t democratic at all! Some political scientists even argue that so many Americans are disinterested in the political system because an antiquated Constitution alienates them!

If you WERE actually able to amend the Constitution, what would you change?

I found a list of recently proposed amendments to the Constitution.

Some of the more interesting ones ( along with the Congress that voted them down) are:

109th Congress (2005-2006)

  • To ensure reproductive rights of women
  • To allow non-natural born citizens to become President if they have been a citizen for 20 years
  • The “Every Vote Counts” Amendment – providing for direct election of the President and Vice President, abolishing the Electoral College

108th Congress (2003-2004)

  • To lower the age restriction on Representatives and Senators from 30 and 25 respectively to 21
  • To restrict marriage in all states to be between a man and a woman
  • To allow Congress to pass laws for emergency replenishment of its membership should more than a quarter of either house be killed

107th Congress (2001-2002)

  • To specify a right to “equal high quality” health care
  • To allow for any person who has been a citizen of the United States for twenty years or more to be eligible for the Presidency

106th Congress (1999-2000)

  • To provide a new method for proposing amendments to the Constitution, where two-thirds of all state legislatures could start the process
  • To declare that life begins at conception and that the 5th and 14th amendments apply to unborn children

105th Congress (1997-1998)

  • To provide for the reconfirmation of federal judges every 12 years
  • To prohibit the early release of convicted criminals

Sanford Levinson, professor at the University of Texas, says we need to make some significant changes to the Constitution!

Larry J. Sabato, professor at the University of Virginia, makes of list of 23 amendments that should be made to the Constitution!

Some other interesting ideas:

  • War Making Limitations
  • Non-Natural Born Presidents
  • Proportional Representation in the Senate
  • Extending the length of House Terms
  • Term limits for members of Congress
  • End Lifetime tenure for Supreme Court Judges
  • Mandatory retirement for Federal Judges
  • Improving/Removing the Electoral College
  • Automatic Voter Registration
  • Mandatory National Service in the Military

What do you think? Should we add something new to the Constitution? What should we amend? Or should we simply have another Constitutional Convention and start all over?

And remember Thomas Jefferson’s ideas on the Constitution:

Every constitution, then, and every law, naturally expires at the end of nineteen years. If it be
enforced longer, it is an act of force, and not of right.
– 1789

Download the assignment (.doc) here:

Amending the Constitution activity

You will use Microsoft Word, the textbook, and the internet to complete the assignment. I will let you know how to turn the assignment in at the end of class. Do not print it!

Take some time, when you’re completed with the assignment, to post some comments on MrOsman.com!

(Don’t forget your next test is on Wednesday the 24th)

21 September, 2008 at 20:22 by mrosman

Tags: 106th Congress, 107th Congress, 108th Congress, 109th Congress, 1789, 27 amendments, amendment process, Amendments, assignment, Automatic Voter Registration, Bill of Rights, citzenship, conception, Constitution, Constitutional Convention, early release of criminals, Electoral College, emergency replenishment, End Lifetime tenure for Supreme Court Judges, Every Vote Counts, Extending House Terms, federal judges, in class assignment, Larry J Sabato, life begins at conception, Mandatory National Service in the Military, Mandatory retirement for Federal Judges, Non-Natural Born Presidents, political scientists, President, reproductive rights, Sanford Levinson, school prayer, Senate, state legislatures, Supreme Court, Thomas Jefferson, unborn children, University of Texas, University of Virginia, War Making Limitations
Posted in American History, Current Events, Executive Branch, Federalism, Homework, Judicial Branch, Legislative Branch, Pop Culture | 19 Comments »

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