Sunday, September 11, 2016

Michelle Obama's Personal Staff

Please read this entire thing...and assuming its statements are true, this is 

absolutely and totally ridiculous.  The rest of the nation is facing pay cuts, lay 

offs, repossessions, and tight budgets...and the White House is apparently 

showing total lack of regard for taxpayer money.  Economic stimulus doesn't do 

the nation any good if it is all spent in one location!






This is disturbing!

If you've seen the first part before be sure to read the end ...

It's the last paragraph that's scary..

About Michelle:
 
Written by Dr. Paul L. Williams

"In my own life in my own small way, I have tried to give back to this country that has given me so much," she said.  "See, that's why I left a job at a big law firm for a career in public service"

Michelle Obama

No, Michele Obama does not get paid to serve as the First Lady and she doesn't perform any official duties.  But this hasn't deterred her from hiring an unprecedented number of staffers to cater to her every whim and to satisfy her every request in the midst of the Great Recession.  Just think, Mary Lincoln was taken to task for purchasing china for the White House during the Civil War.  And Mamie Eisenhower had to shell out the salary for her personal secretary from her husband's salary.

Total Personal Staff members for other first ladies paid by taxpayers:

Mamie Eisenhower: One-- paid for personally out of President's salary.

Jackie Kennedy:         One

Rosaline Carter:         One

Barbara Bush:            One

Hilary Clinton:            Three

Laura Bush:               One

Michele Obama:        Twenty-two

How things have changed!  If you're one of the tens of millions of Americans facing certain destitution, earning less than subsistence wages stocking the shelves at Wal-Mart or serving up McDonald cheeseburgers, prepare to scream and then come to realize that the benefit package for these servants of Ms. Michelle are the same as members of the national security and defense departments and the bill for these assorted lackeys is paid by YOU, John Q. Public.

Michele Obama's personal staff:

One...  $172,200 - Sher, Susan (Chief Of Staff)

Two...  $140,000 - Frye, Jocelyn C. (Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of Policy And Projects For The First Lady)

Three...  $113,000 - Rogers, Desiree G. (Special Assistant to the President and White House Social Secretary for Mrs. Obama)

Four...  $102,000 - Johnston, Camille Y. (Special Assistant to the President and Director of Communications for the First Lady)

Five...  $100,000 - Winter, Melissa (Special Assistant to the President and Deputy Chief Of Staff to the First Lady)

Six...  $90,000 - Medina, David S. (Deputy Chief Of Staff to the First Lady)

Seven...  $84,000 - Lilyveld, Catherine M. (Director and Press Secretary to the First Lady)

Eight...  $75,000 - Starkey, Frances M. (Director of Scheduling and Advance for the First Lady)

Nine...  $70,000 - Sanders, Trooper (Deputy Director of Policy and Project for the First Lady)

Ten...  $65,000 - Burnough, Erinn (Deputy Director and Deputy Social Secretary)

Eleven...  $64,000 - Reinstein, Joseph B. (Deputy Director and Deputy Social Secretary)

Twelve...  $62,000 - Goodman, Jennifer R. (Deputy Director of Scheduling and Events Coordinator For The First Lady)

Thirteen...  $60,000 Fitz, Alan O. (Deputy Director of Advance and Trip Director for the First Lady)

Fourteen...  $57,500 - Lewis, Dana M. (Special Assistant and Personal Aide to the First Lady)

Fifteen...    $52,500 - Mustaphi, Semonti M. (Associate Director and Deputy Press Secretary To The First Lady)

Sixteen...  $50,000 - Jarvis, Kristen E. (Special Assistant for Scheduling and Traveling Aide To The First Lady)

Seventeen...  $45,000 - Lechtenberg, Tyler A. (Associate Director of Correspondence For The First Lady)

Eighteen...  $43,000 - Tubman, Samanth a (Deputy Associate Director, Social Office)

Nineteen...  $40,000 - Boswell, Joseph J. (Executive Assistant to the Chief Of Staff to the First Lady)

Twenty...  $36,000 - Armbruster, Sally M. (Staff Assistant to the Social Secretary)

Twenty-One...  $35,000 - Bookey, Natalie (Staff Assistant)

Twenty-Two...  $35,000 - Jackson, Deilia A. (Deputy Associate Director of Correspondence for the First Lady)

Total. $1,591,200 in annual salaries

There has NEVER been anyone in the White House at any time who has created such an army of staffers whose sole duties are the facilitation of the First Lady's social life.

One wonders why she needs so much help, at taxpayer expense.

Note: This does not include makeup artist Ingrid Grimes-Miles, 49, and "First Hairstylist" Johnny Wright, 31, both of whom traveled aboard Air Force One to Europe .

Copyright 2009 Canada Free Press.Com

http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/12652

Yes, I know, The Canadian Free Press had to publish this, perhaps because America no longer has a free press and the USA media is too scared that they might be considered racist or suffer at the hands of Obama.


        Sorry America !

 
 
Remember the three R's:
Respect for others.
Respect for self.
Responsibility for your actions. 

Copyright 2009 © Canada Free Press.Com 28/01/2010.

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Fact-Check on President Barack Obama’s final State of the Union

Summary
President Barack Obama’s final State of the Union address came up short of the facts on several topics:
  • He embellished his record on jobs, citing “more than 14 million new jobs,” without mentioning that’s only private sector jobs and only since the job losses hit bottom in February 2010.
  • Obama similarly omitted part of his presidency in boasting of nearly 900,000 manufacturing jobs “in the past six years.” Over his entire time in office, manufacturing jobs have gone down by 230,000.
  • And he said he had cut the country’s deficits by “almost three-quarters.” But that’s measured from fiscal 2009, which included some increased spending by Obama.
  • He repeated his now years-long claim of crediting the Affordable Care Act for a slowdown in health care spending, which economists have linked mainly to the economy. In fact, the growth rate jumped in 2014, when the law’s coverage provisions were implemented.
  • Obama claimed, like he did in 2014, that the U.S. has “cut carbon pollution more than any other country on Earth.” That’s true in terms of total tonnage but not in terms of percentage reductions.
  • He said that the U.S. spends “more on our military than the next eight nations combined.” That’s close enough in terms of dollars, but as a share of the nation’s economy, the U.S. is only the fourth highest of the top 15 countries.
Analysis
Obama opened his Jan. 12 State of the Union address with a promise: “Tonight marks the eighth year that I’ve come here to report on the state of the union. And for this final one, I’m going to try to make it a little shorter.” And he sort of succeeded — if we only count the seven, not eight, official SOTU addresses. According to data from The American Presidency Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara, the latest speech clocked in at 58 minutes and 44 seconds, more than a minute shorter than 2013’s 59-minute-51-second address. (And several minutes below Obama’s average of one hour, two minutes and 45 seconds.)
But Obama’s 2009 speech, which the project notes was technically not a State of the Union, was only 51 minutes and 44 seconds.
Now we’ll look at what the president actually said in his 58-plus minutes.

Jobs & the Deficit

As he has done in the past, Obama embellished the statistical record of his presidency by selective omissions.
Jobs — He crowed about “more than 14 million new jobs,” when the net gain in total employment since he first took office is actually just under 9.3 million. What he didn’t spell out is that he was omitting the more than 4 million jobs lost during the first 13 months of his presidency, and ignoring losses of state and local government jobs as well.
Though he did not make it clear, he was actually referring to the change only in private sector jobs, and only since the job losses hit bottom in February 2010. And as of December that gain indeed stood at 14.1 million.
Unemployment rate — The president also referred to “an unemployment rate cut in half.” Actually, the jobless rate when he took office was 7.8 percent, and it has dropped to 5 percent as of December. It’s only “cut in half” if measured from the worst point of his presidency, which was the 10 percent rate recorded in October 2009.
Manufacturing — Obama also cherry-picked when he spoke of manufacturing jobs. The president said, “That’s just part of a manufacturing surge that’s created nearly 900,000 new jobs in the past six years.” The gain was 878,000 to be exact, measured from the low point in his presidency.
But of course, he has been president for seven years, not just six. And over his entire time in office, the U.S. has lost 230,000 manufacturing jobs, dropping from 12,561,000 jobs in January 2009 to 12,331,000 in December 2015, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Deficit — He also boasted that “we’ve done all this while cutting our deficits by almost three-quarters.” That’s close to true if measured from the $1.4 trillion deficit run up in fiscal 2009. The final figure for FY 2015 — which ended Sept. 30 — was $438.9 billion.
So that’s still 31 percent of the 2009 figure, which is closer to a two-thirds reduction than a three-quarters reduction.
More important, it ignores Obama’s own contribution to that record 2009 deficit. As we’ve shown before, Obama’s early initiatives increased FY 2009 spending — and thus the deficit — by as much as $203 billion. So his claim to have reduced the deficit by three-quarters is akin to a merchant who raises his price one day and declares “75 percent off” the next.

Health Care Inflation

Obama again credited the Affordable Care Act for slow growth in health care inflation that economists have pinned largely on the economy, and that started before the ACA was even passed.
“Nearly 18 million people have gained coverage so far,” Obama said of his health care overhaul. “And in the process, health care inflation has slowed.”
As we have written severaltimesnow, health care spending has grown at historically low rates in recent years. From 2009 to 2012, total national health care expenditures rose at rates around 4 percent per year, and dipped as low as 2.9 percent in 2013. For 2014, the latest figure available, health care spending growth jumped up to 5.3 percent (see Table 1of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ health care expenditures data).
The journal Health Affairs noted in 2012 that the growth rates were the lowest since CMS started compiling the National Health Expenditure Accounts data in 1960.
But what impact would the ACA have had on spending growth rates? Note that the slowdown began in 2009, a year before the health care law was enacted. And the latest figure for 2014 — a year in which the major coverage provisions of the law went into effect, including the establishment of the health care exchanges and expansion of Medicaid — actually went up.
In fact, experts have said the lower rates of growth have been largely a reflection of the sluggish economy. A 2013 analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation said that “much of the decline in health spending growth in recent years was fully expected given what was happening more broadly in the economy.” CMS’ experts said in 2014 that the ACA had had a “minimal impact.”
The health care law could have had some effect on the slower growth: Drew Altman, CEO of KFF, wrote in 2013 that the law could be having an indirect effect, and the White House Council of Economic Advisers’ November 2013 report said that the ACA’s reductions in Medicare spending would have a “spillover effect” on spending overall.
Obama ties an increase in the number of insured to a slowdown in health spending, but back in 2014 CMS’ experts projected the opposite: a bump up in the growth rate in the future, due to expanded insurance coverage under the ACA. CMS estimated an average growth of 6 percent per year for 2015 through 2023, “largely as a result of the continued implementation of the ACA coverage expansions, faster projected economic growth, and the aging of the population.”
And 2014’s growth rate of 5.3 percent moves health care spending toward that very projection.
As for Obama’s claim that “nearly 18 million have gained coverage so far,” that’s an administration estimate based largely on the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index Survey through September 2015. The administration says 15.3 million gained insurance coverage through the individual marketplace, including the state and federal exchanges, and Medicaid, and another 2.3 million young adults have gained coverage due to the ACA’s September 2010 provision requiring insurers to keep them on their parents’ plans until age 26.
These are estimates, and the more robust and official numbers from the CDC’s National Health Interview Survey only go through June 2015. But they show a drop in the uninsured of 17.8 million from 2009, a year before the ACA was enacted (46.3 million), to the first six months of 2015 (28.5 million).

Cutting Carbon Emissions

As he did in his 2014 address, Obama claimed that the U.S. has “cut carbon pollution more than any other country on Earth.” That’s true, at least in terms of the total tonnage of emissions reduced. However, other countries have reduced their emissions by a larger percentage than the U.S.
We most recently checked this claim in December when Secretary of State John Kerry said “the United States of America has already reduced its emissions more than any other country in the world.”
As we pointed out then, the U.S., the second largest emitter of carbon pollution, reduced its emissions by 583 million metric tons between 2003 and 2012. That’s more than any other country, according to Energy Information Administration data. But that’s also a 10 percent reduction, and other nations including France (10.7 percent) and the United Kingdom (12.9 percent), to name a few, saw larger percentage reductions during that time period.

Military Spending

The president said that the U.S. spends “more on our military than the next eight nations combined.” That’s not quite accurate but close enough in terms of raw dollars, based anApril 2015 report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute on military expenditures of the top 15 spenders.
That report shows that the U.S. spent $610 billion on defense in 2014, while the next eight nations spent a combined total of $646.4 billion. (The spending amounts for three of the eight countries — China, Russia and Germany — are estimates.)
Also, the report makes a couple of points worth noting, including that military spending in the U.S. has been on the decline while “China, Russia and Saudi Arabia continued to make substantial increases in military expenditures” in 2014.
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, April 2015: While the USA remains clearly the world’s largest military spender, at nearly three times the level of second-placed China, its expenditure dropped by 6.5 percent in 2014, largely as a result of budget deficit control measures put in place by the US legislature under the 2011 Budget Control Act. US military spending is expected to fall again in 2015 but at a slower rate. … In 2014 China, Russia and Saudi Arabia were the second, third and fourth highest military spenders, respectively. China’s expenditure rose by 9.7 percent, Russia’s spending was up 8.1 percent and Saudi Arabia’s by 17 percent.
Also, as a share of the nation’s economy, the U.S. spends 3.5 percent of its gross domestic product — which is only the fourth highest of the top 15 countries. Saudi Arabia (10.4 percent), United Arab Emirates (5.4 percent) and Russia (4.5 percent) spend more on the military as a share of GDP than the United States.
— by Eugene Kiely, Brooks Jackson, Lori Robertson, Robert Farley and D’Angelo Gore

Sources

Jackson, Brooks. “Obama’s Spending: ‘Inferno’ or Not?” FactCheck.org. 4 Jun 2012.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Office of the Actuary, National Health Statistics Group. Table 1: National Health Expenditures, Aggregate and Per Capita Amounts, Annual Percentage Change and Percent Distribution, Selected Calendar Years, 1960-2014. Accessed 13 Jan 2016.
Department of Health and Human Services. Secretary Burwell previews third Open Enrollment. press release. 22 Sep 2015.
Altman, Drew. “How ACA may be holding down costs.” Politico.com. 26 Sep 2013.
FactCheck.org. “Facts of the Union.” 29 Jan 2014.
FactCheck.org. “Climate Change Review.” 14 Dec 2015.
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. “Trends in World Military Expenditure, 2014.” 13 Apr 2015.

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Lunch Time on the Bayou

Lunch Time on the Bayou
Two alligators happen upon one another in the Louisiana swamp.
The first alligator says "Hay-ee I sure go for me a nice tasty nigger right about now."
The second alligator replies, "Not so, my firend, I not eatin' me no more of them niggers, no sir, not for me!"
The first alligator asks, "How come for why you not eat you no more niggers hunh?"
The second alligator tells him, "You see there, Leroy, whhen you grabs de nigger and you shakes de shit outta him, then yoou takes him down under de water to eats him after while,  non?"
The first alligator says "Mais Oui! Yes!!, that for sho nuff how you gets him, uhn."
The second alligator finishes, "Once you shake all de shit out de nigger, all you's gots left is lips, skins, and sneakers!"

The first alligator says "Hay-ee I sure go for me a nice tasty Coon-ass whitey French Cajun right about now!!"

The second alligator says "Mais Oui, oh yes, dey much more filling!!!"

Contact
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Je-l-l-udes

J-e-l-l-udes

Well folks, of course this is the perfect time to say, that I would like to talk to you... about... Cosby!!

America's Favorite Pudding-peddler, Gelatin-gaffer and all-around 'role-model' and educator who will drug your lovely daughter with Je-l-l-udes 

Methaqualone  (quaaludes in the U.S.A.) is one of the most commonly used recreational drugs in South Africa. It is also popular elsewhere in Africa and in India. Commonly known as Mandrax, M-pills, buttons, or smarties, a mixture of crushed mandrax and cannabis is smoked, usually through a smoking pipe made from the neck of a broken bottle. Cosby says have a Coke, grab some weed, break the bottle and have a quaalude smile.



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The Myth that George Washington Carver, a scientist, and a black man in America, invented peanut butter.

The Myth that George Washington Carver, a scientist, and a black man in America, invented peanut butter.

Herein we will discuss whether this is a myth, the "fact" that George Washington Carver, a scientist, and a black man in America, invented peanut butter.

LOL!! Restitution from jif for those with peanut allergies.
Today I found out, contrary to popular belief, George Washington Carver did not invent peanut butter.   The earliest reference to peanut butter being made goes all the way back to the Ancient Incas and the Aztecs, though whether they were the first or not isn’t known (peanuts themselves are known to have been cultivated as far back as 7000-8000 years ago).  Since then, peanut butter has been “invented” numerous times by various individuals throughout history.
Although Carver didn’t invent peanut butter, he did play a significant role in popularizing it and his 1880 “invention” of peanut butter preceded most of the other modern “inventors” of peanut butter.  Carver was one of the greatest inventors in American history, discovering over 300 hundred uses for peanuts with100 or so of those not being related to one another in terms of the end product produced; he also discovered hundreds of uses for soybeans, pecans, and sweet potatoes.
Among the various products he created from peanuts, pecans, soybeans, sweet potatoes, and a few other types of plants were:
  • Antiseptic soaps
  • Face bleach and tanning lotions
  • Various other cosmetic products such as face powders and creams
  • Shaving cream
  • Shampoo
  • Dyes
  • Paints
  • Wood stains
  • Chicken food specialized to increase egg production in hens
  • Milk substitute from soybeans and peanuts
  • Emulsion for Bronchitis
  • Laxatives
  • Goiter treatments
  • Axle grease
  • Charcoal from peanut shells
  • Diesel fuel
  • Gasoline fuel
  • Lamp oil
  • Insecticide
  • Linoleum
  • Lubricating oil
  • Nitroglycerin
  • Colored paper
  • Printer’s ink
  • Plastics from soybeans
  • Synthetic Rubber
  • Laundry soap
  • Synthetic marble
  • Paving blocks from cotton
Among his peanut inventions were:
  • 19 types of leather dyes
  • 18 types of insulating boards
  • 11 types of wall boards
  • 17 types of wood stains
  • 11 types of peanut flours
  • 30 types of cloth dyes
  • 50 types of food products
Among his sweet potato related inventions were:
  • 73 types of dye
  • 17 types of wood fillers
  • 14 types of candy
  • 5 types of library paste
  • 5 types of breakfast foods
  • 4 types of starches
  • 4 types of flour
  • 3 types of molasses
Bonus Facts:
  • Some of the more interesting food related products Carver was able to make from peanuts were: cocoa substitute; mayonnaise; dehydrated milk flakes; cheese; instant coffee; asparagus substitute; pepper;  meat substitutes including Mock Goose, Mock Chicken, Mock Oyster, Mock Pig,  and Mock Veal.
  • Joseph L. Rosenfield in 1928 invented the churning process that gives peanut butter the smooth texture we have today.  He originally licensed this process to Pond Company, who makes Peter Pan peanut butter.  In 1932, he started his own peanut butter company which he named Skippy.
  • Carver did not patent the vast majority of his inventions; in fact, he only patented three.  He believed his discoveries with food products were all gifts from God.   “God gave them to me.”  He would say about his ideas, “How can I sell them to someone else?”
  • In 1940, three years before his death, Carver donated his life savings of $60,000 to the establishment of the Carver Research Foundation at Tuskegee, which is an organization dedicated to continuing research in agriculture.
  • The epitaph on the grave of Carver reads as follows: “He could have added fortune to fame, but caring for neither, he found happiness and honor in being helpful to the world.”
  • Not only did he not patent most of his discoveries, Carver once turned down a job to work for Thomas Edison for an annual salary of $100,000 (in today’s currency that would be around 1 million dollars a year), because Edison would have not made the inventions Carver came up with, while he worked there, free to the public.  Carver wanted his inventions available for anyone to use at no cost.
  • Carver also liked to make his discoveries easy for other people to reproduce, including farmers, many of whom were barely literate.  He published many pamphlets giving instructions for farmers to make such things as adhesives, axle grease, bleach, buttermilk, chili sauce, fuel briquettes, instant coffee, inks, meat tenderizers, metal polish, paper, plastics, pavement, synthetic rubber, wood stain, etc.
  • The three patents Carver did apply for were #1,522,176, 1/6/1925, Cosmetics & Plant Products;  #1,541,478, 6/9/1925, Paints & Stains; #1,632,365, 6/14/1927, Paints & Stains
  • Peanut butter is made by:
    • First roasting the peanuts at around 240 degrees Celsius (464 degrees Fahrenheit).  At this stage the peanuts turn from white to light brown.
    • The peanuts are then cooled rapidly so that they don’t continue to cook and so that the natural oils remain in the peanut.
    • They are then blanched with the blancher machine removing the skins and splitting the kernels and removing the heart at the center.  The skins are typically then sold for pig food and the hearts for bird food.
    • The split peanut kernels are then dropped into a grinder where they are slowly ground into a paste.  This is done slowly to make sure the peanuts don’t heat up too much in the grinding process.
    • Additional ingredients are then added to the peanut paste, such as sugar, salt, and hydrogenated vegetable oil.  The purpose of the vegetable oil is to make it so the natural peanut oils do not separate from the butter; though, in some brands of peanut butter, you will still see this happen at times, as with one of the creamier brands of peanut butter, Peter Pan.
  • Despite peanut butter not needing refrigerated, most major brands of peanut butter do not contain any preservatives.
  • Over 50% of all peanuts grown in the United States are used for making peanut butter and other peanut spreads.
  • Carver played a huge role in the recovery of the South’s economy, which had formerly been based primarily on the production of cotton and tobacco, which depleted soils and had the secondary side effect of having near the entire southern economy based on just two crops; one of which was being threatened by weevils in Carver’s time.
  • It was Carver who developed a system for rotating specific crops in the South which would allow for the fields to be used in a sustainable fashion and provided a more diverse income source for farmers.  This rotation included alternating nitrate producing legumes, such as peanuts and peas, with cotton.  He later discovered that pecans and sweet potatoes also enriched the depleted soils and so proceeded to recommend those in the rotation.  *note: crop rotation methods have been around for thousands of years.  Carver simply put forth a specific system which would allow the South to still grow cotton and tobacco in large quantities, while at the same time be able to grow other crops to sell that would replenish the soil with the nutrients the cotton and tobacco used up.
  • He then successfully campaigned to get the farmers to use this system.  After that, he invented numerous ways for these crops to be used to make them valuable things to grow; such as with peanuts, which previously were not a valuable crop outside of being used for feed for livestock.  With the South now producing significantly more peanuts than was needed at the time, it created a massive surplus and the prices plummeted.  Not to be deterred, Carver then proceeded to discover over 300 uses of peanuts that made the crops valuable once again.   He did the same thing for sweet potatoes and pecans; this all then created a huge market for these products that the southern farmers were now growing in-mass.  By the time of Carver’s death, peanuts alone had gone from a rarely grown crop, to one of the six largest crops produced in America.
  • Carver also developed many cures and preventative measures for stopping various fungi from killing plants, such as cherry plants.  In the process, he discovered two new types of fungus that now bear his name.
  • Carver’s significant aid to the country didn’t stop there.  During WWI, when textile dyes that had previously been imported from Europe were in short supply, he managed to produce over 500 shades of dye from products such as soybeans and peanuts, which were readily available in America.  This didn’t just help the textile companies, but also diverted cash that used to go to Europe from America, but now went to American farmers.
  • Also during WWI, his method for creating synthetic rubber from goldenrod, which is a weed, was a huge boon to the United States Army.  Carver had developed this method with Henry Ford, whom he was close friends with.
  • When Carver’s health declined in 1937, Henry Ford had an elevator installed for Carver in his home as Carver could no longer use stairs.
  • The area in Diamond Grove, Missouri, where George Washington Carver grew up, is now preserved as a park.  It was the first national monument in the United States dedicated to an American with black skin.
  • Carver’s fame skyrocketed after being selected by the United Peanut Association of America to speak to the U.S. House of Representatives on the issue of peanut tariffs.  Initially, he was mocked, primarily by southern congressmen; but by the end of his speech, he was given a standing ovation.  His eloquence and intelligence during this speech endeared him both to the congressman and the general public.
  • During his lifetime, Carver was often mocked by other scientists for his steadfast Christian beliefs and the fact that he believed God guided his research.  This frequent criticism also aided in his rise to fame, as the general public viewed these criticisms as an attack on religion.
  • Carver compiled a list of eight cardinal virtues for all his students to try to emulate.  These were:
    • Be clean both inside and out.
    • Neither look up to the rich nor down on the poor.
    • Lose, if need be, without squealing.
    • Win without bragging.
    • Always be considerate of women, children, and older people.
    • Be too brave to lie.
    • Be too generous to cheat.
    • Take your share of the world and let others take theirs.
  • George Washington Carver was born in 1864, near the end of the Civil War, in Missouri, at the farm of Moses Carver, who owned George’s mother Mary and father Giles.  Moses Carver had purchased Mary and Giles for $700 in 1855.  His mother and he were kidnapped by Civil War raiders and sent to Arkansas.  Moses Carver hired John Bentley to find George and reclaimed him by swapping a racehorse for him, but his mother was never found.  George was raised by Moses and Susan Carver as if he were their own son.  George struggled to get a proper education, owing to the color of his skin, but eventually found a schoolhouse and later, at the age of 30, a University that would take him. He was the first black man at Iowa State University.
  • Carver earned a Bachelor of Science degree in 1897 from Iowa State University and a Master of Botany and Agriculture in 1897.  He then became a member of the faculty at Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanics and later at the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute for Negroes, where he remained until his death in 1943.  While there however, he was frequently known to tender his resignation for various reasons, generally stemming from wounded pride.
  • Early in life, Carver had a mysterious illness that made him somewhat frail.  He was not expected to live into adulthood.  All 10 of his sisters and his one brother died prematurely from similar ailments.
Expand for References:


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Constable accidentally kills 12-year-old girl during eviction

Constable accidentally kills 12-year-old girl during eviction

PENN TOWNSHIP , Pa., Jan. 13 (UPI) -- A law enforcement officer fatally shot a 12-year-old girl as he served an eviction order in Penn Township, Pa., authorities said.
Police said the girl, identified by relatives as Ciara Meyer, was standing behind her father, Donald Meyer, 57, as Constable Clarke Steele arrived Monday morning in their apartment to evict them. Meyer allegedly pointed a rifle at Steele's chest and Steele responded by shooting Meyer with his handgun.
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The .40-caliber bullet traveled through Meyer's arm and struck his daughter, killing her. She was pronounced dead at the scene, police said.
Meyer was hospitalized and charged with aggravated and simple assault, terroristic threats and reckless endangerment. Police later said his rifle had one round in its chamber and carried a magazine of 30 rounds.
Relatives of the Meyer family said the girl has home from school Monday because of illness. Court documents indicated the eviction notice said the Meyers owed $1,780 in back rent and other costs.

A 12-year-old girl was shot and killed by a central Pennsylvania constable who was serving an eviction notice Monday in Duncannon.
According to the Associated Press, the constable fired at an armed tenant, but the bullet passed through the man's arm and fatally struck his daughter.
State police say the man first pointed a loaded, .223-caliber rifle at Clarke Steele, a uniformed constable, Monday at the Pfautz Apartments in Penn Township, Perry County, about 10 miles northwest of Harrisburg, the York Daily Record reported.

Police said the constable, who was enforcing a district judge's eviction order, then drew his .40-caliber weapon and fired once. The bullet went through the suspect's arm and killed the girl, who was standing behind her father.
The girl was pronounced dead at the scene, AP reported.
State police told the Associated Press the suspect's rifle was found "with a loaded chamber and a magazine containing 30 rounds."
The man being evicted, Donald Meyer, 57, was flown to Hershey Medical Center for treatment, AP reported. He has been charged with aggravated and simple assault, terroristic threats, and recklessly endangering another person. 
A phone listed in his name wasn't working Tuesday and court documents don't list an attorney who could respond to the accusations, AP said.
In Pennsylvania, constables are elected officials with limited law enforcement powers. They serve warrants, transport prisoners and perform other duties for Pennsylvania's district courts, the lowest level of the judiciary.