Thursday, September 4, 2008

This is a man's world


But do women make better leaders?

JOHN MCCAIN'S choice of Sarah Palin as his vice-presidential candidate has brought the question of gender back into the American presidential race. The Republicans hope that Ms Palin, the governor of Alaska and a self-dubbed “hockey-mom”, will sway disillusioned supporters of Hillary Clinton as well as independent voters. In a recent survey conducted by the Pew Research Center, Americans say that they think women are more likely to have the qualities needed to make a good leader. In the end, however, more would still opt for a man in charge.

http://people-press.org/

By the way, what did you think of Palin's speech Wednesday night? My quick analysis, hard-hitting on Obama (a recent chariteristic of VP choices), nothing said about "women's issues" and light on any new Republican policies. Maybe the best line of the night came when she contrasted Obama with McCain, "who has built a career about bringing change."

Monday, September 1, 2008

Counting on Levee Luck?

While most of the afternoon Monday had it looking like New Orleans may have dodged major damage from Hurricane Gustav, this is still a developing story. Three years ago, it wasn't until a day after Katrina that the levees broke.

Ellen Livingston, on her blog teachingthelevees.org, writes:

"It is sobering to think that decisions already made will make the difference between life and death in the coming days. On the surface, things do seem different and at least some of the lessons of Katrina learned. We are already seeing what appears to be a well coordinated evacuation effort, with busloads of residents being whisked away to higher ground from all over the Gulf Coast. I keep hearing the word “contraflow” on news coverage — a word I don’t recall hearing three years ago — meaning that every available lane of traffic out of New Orleans has been re-routed to help with the evacuation. Mayor Ray Nagin has told residents in no uncertain terms to flee the “mother of all storms.”

As I watch television from my home in suburban New York, I can tune in to a channel dedicated to evacuation instructions for Gulf Coast residents. It posts maps of evacuation routes and lists of pick-up points for residents of every Gulf Coast county.

Only time will tell what Gustav will leave in its wake. As I speak, Florida Governor Charlie Crist is on CNN explaining that “we have learned from our mistakes of the past.” All most of us can do at this point is hope so — and be ready to do our own part to help the people of the Gulf Coast if we are needed."

Here's hoping and praying that the levees will hold, but it is an appropriate time to revisit a Political Warrior from last November entited "AP Students Can Take On An Army."

Linked here is who a group of Louisiana AP Government Students are battling for their right to free speech:



From the "Teaching the Levees.org" blog here is the story of the PSA Students ran and posted on YouTube and Levees.org that has been taken down (or has it?) by a "cease and desist" letter written by lawyers for the Army Corps of Engineers.

_______________


"Why Levees.org removed PSA from YouTube"
Levees.Org was served an order to Cease and Desist from the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) on November 10, 2007. We were ordered to remove our funny student-made Public Service Announcement (PSA) from YouTube. If we refused, the ASCE promised “appropriate legal action.”
We stand behind every word of our PSA. But had we fired back with a rejection of the Cease and Desist, ASCE would likely have sued Levees.org not in Louisiana, but rather in Virginia where they are based. In that forum, it would have been difficult and expensive to find legal representation. Levees.Org does not possibly have the personnel, the resources nor the scope to take on a legal battle with a large powerful organization such as the ASCE.

Further, Levees.Org in no way wanted to bring harm to Newman school who was copied on the Cease and Desist.

So we removed our PSA video from YouTube late Tuesday night Nov 13, when the webmaster, my 17 year old son returned home from his State Cross Country meet.
Sandy Rosenthal, Exec Director, Levees.Org
_______________
By the way, cease and desist is is a legal term used primarily in the United States [citation needed] which essentially means "to halt" or "to end" an action ("cease") and to refrain from doing it again in the future ("desist"). The recipient of the cease-and-desist may be an individual or an organization.

The term is used in two different contexts. A cease-and-desist order can be issued by a judge or government authority, and has a well-defined legal meaning. In contrast, a cease-and-desist letter can be sent by anyone, although typically they are drafted by a lawyer.
________________

Full blogging coverage of the fansinating story of the power of students and the constitutional right to get the words out can be found here:

http://www.teachingthelevees.org/


Sarah Palin: McCain's Folly?

John McCain’s choice of Governor Sarah Palin is not the first time folly was attributed to an Alaskan pursuit. Alaska, in our eyes, has always been about folly. Originally purchased from the Russians back in 1867, Alaska was quickly labeled “Seward’s Folly” after the Secretary of State who negotiated the impractical real estate deal. And then, as argued by many, there is the folly of drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). Alaska and folly seem to go together.

What is folly?

fol·ly n

1. thoughtlessness, recklessness, or thoughtless or reckless behavior
2. a thoughtless or reckless act or idea (often used in the plural)
3. eccentric or overelaborate design, for decorative rather than practical purposes

Encarta® World English Dictionary © 1999 Microsoft Corporation.

Accordingly, the McCain narrative seems to enjoy folly. His reckless temperament is perceived by some a plus. His maverick stance, at the same time both loyal and combative, is a critical part of his campaign message. Somehow a Romney pick may have surprised more. It would have been too predictable. It would have contradicted McCain’s folly.

Will voters, however, praise his folly?

the question many are asking is “can we afford to have a VP with Palin’s lackluster credentials a heartbeat away” from the presidency?

Gazing through the following list might help to answer that question. Do you recognize any of them?

Elbridge Gerry, Daniel D. Tompkins, Richard M. Johnson, George M. Dallas, William R. King, Hannibal Hamlin, Schuyler Colfax, Thomas A. Hendricks, Levi P. Morton, Charles W. Fairbanks, Charles G. Dawes, John Nance Garner, Alben W. Barkley.

Of course these are former Vice Presidents of the United States. They help us understand what folly really means. The real folly is that we pay so much attention to the VP picks in the first place. Whether it is Joe Biden or Sarah Palin, do not expect these VP candidates to make much difference now or later.

John McCain’s discovery in Alaska is not the only place we can find folly.
________________

Breaking news on Monday, Palin confirmed her 17-year-old daughter is pregnant. Both McCain and Obama found common ground that Bristol Palin's pregnancy should be "off-limits."

http://www.suntimes.com/news/elections/rnc/1138831,CST-NWS-react01web.article

Do you agree? Is Palin's daughter and her pregnacy relevant to the campaign?

Convention Comentary

Barack Obama's acceptance speech in front of 84,000 in Denver last week was historic. But will it give him a bump in the polls? And how will the RNC measure up as its opening was taking a back seat to developments with Hurricane Gustav?

Here, with the help of the 2 Regular Guys at CBS2School is a convention primer, just in time to view the GOP in Minneapolis and for use in breaking down last week's DNC:

There is no better show of democracy’s promise then our quadrennial political circus commonly known as the National Party Conventions. These conventions come with a cast of characters and attractions larger than life as the major political parties try to assemble tents big enough to host a wide collection of November voters. Each of these conventions stages three rings of political theater that exhibit important lessons to our civic experience: democratization, nomination and celebration.

Obama Makes Campaign Stops On His Way To DNC VIDEO: CNN's Anderson Cooper On The Media
Obama Makes Campaign Stops On His Way To DNC VIDEO: Political Theater In Denver
Obama Makes Campaign Stops On His Way To DNC VIDEO: On The Floor Of The Convention
Obama Makes Campaign Stops On His Way To DNC VIDEO: Stiff Security In Denver
Obama Makes Campaign Stops On His Way To DNC VIDEO: Vast Variety Under Dems' Big Tent

Democratization
Despite a Constitution committed to the consent of the governed, our early elections were designed for and by a political aristocracy. It was a one ring circus lodged in a smoke-filled room. The party leaders both chose the nominees and voted for them in the elections. We the people could only hope the elections were in our best interests since few participated and the Ringmaster was not one of us. This soon changed.

As free citizens, we demanded more. In addition to gaining the vote, we wanted a role in selecting our candidates as well. And we did it all in the big top. The National Party Conventions were set up to allow direct representatives of the people, delegates, to pick the respective presidential candidates. The delegates became the roadies setting up for democracy’s greatest traveling show and one of our great choosing days.

After the turmoil of the Democrat’s 1968 convention, the McGovern Commission assured that Democratic delegates reflected diversity across all demographic spectrums. The Republican delegates, less concerned about uniting diverse factions under a big tent, appeared to be more exclusive but still took measures to empower grassroots party members at their conventions. Thus, the National Party Conventions became living testaments to the internal democratization of our political process.

Nomination
More than a display of democracy’s expanding capabilities, the National Party Conventions perform death defying acts. The conventions are the finale of the first act in the presidential campaign as the delegates at this show must finally choose the nominee for president of their party.

Attracting the nomination of one’s political party is a notable feat and a giant first step in winning a general election. After a long and arduous journey through state primaries and caucuses, the delegates once and for all make their choice. But this has not always been easy. In 1924, it took Democratic delegates 103 ballots to finally settle on Dark Horse candidate John W. Davis.

Today these conventions appear more like the anticipation of the human cannonball. On paper it is an extraordinary stunt, but in reality…the outcome is virtually certain.

These party conventions must also walk a careful tightrope when writing their respective platform positions.

The platform is where the party delegates stake their claim to party priorities. The planks of the platform will be the issues on which the party and its candidates will run. They are the cotton candy of a campaign.

In some years sticky debates ensue. Back in 1968, Democrats fought over their position on Vietnam. In Chicago that year, “the whole world was watching” the greatest show on earth. Platforms provide a foretaste to a political agenda one could expect when electing a candidate. Although these national party conventions may include acts which you have already seen with an outcome you already anticipate, they are essential to a process whereby we choose our “last best hope.” Everybody loves a good circus.

Celebration
Beyond putting democracy on display and nominating a candidate, the third and final ring to this political circus involves nothing more and nothing less than a national celebration. These are political parties after all, and you cannot do the political without having a party.

The grandstands are full. There is loud music and plenty of carefully planned eye candy. Animals abound everywhere, Republicans preferring elephants and Democrats donkeys. Party leaders, fat cats and celebrities fill the big top. There are balloons. The message is simple, join our fun.

Four nights of television coverage mutate into one long political ad. The lion tamer to this political uproar is the national media. Whipping up trouble where they can while sitting down with the wild and unruly kings of the jungle their goal.

But the TV coverage now just scratches the surface as hopes of higher ratings becomes the quadrennial sport.

The ratings have fallen as the drama of the three rings has fallen prey to other amusements and pastimes. Gavel to gavel coverage has been supplanted by highlight reels and sound bites. Subsequently the National Party Conventions have become tightly scripted pseudo events which in the end reveal little while inspiring fewer and fewer viewers. These events were once a national showcase, a spring board toward the general election. Now the party and its candidates, at best, can hope for a bump. Still we celebrate in the arena.

Grand Finale
The National Party Conventions still exhibit three important lessons to our civic experience: democratization, nomination and celebration. They signal that soon we the people will have another chance to select one of us to be the ultimate Ringmaster.

The campaign has always been about poetry. Of this spectacular event Walt Whitman wrote: “If I should need to name, O Western World, your powerfulest scene and show, . . . the quadrennial choosing.”

National Party Conventions are more than ballyhoo, they are rituals that truly matter. The Romans had their bread and circuses. Our grandstand, however, has no reserved seating only general admission. The big prize from this political arcade is nothing more and nothing less than the leader of the free world.

The National Party Conventions are democracy’s greatest show on earth.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Is the message MSM old news?



Becky was among the 2.9 million Americans that got their text message from Barack Obama. Has the "Youdia" repaced the Mainsteam Media (MSM).

Well, maybe not yet as CNN scooped the 3 am text message with "Breaking News" just after midnight. OMG, I don't think that Wolf Blitzer excited Becky the way the late night text message did.

Whether Obama wins or not, this may already be a change election in the use of personal media. "Old media" may have won over the texters, YouTubers and Bloggers, but only by a couple hours.

This was, after all, the first time a presidential campaign choose to deliver the announcement via the “new media” (texting and emails to supporters) rather than going to the mainstream media first - regardless of how it played out. Obama’s vice presidential selection “cone of silence,” was impressive.

If you are focused on the text message itself, say online strategists, you are missing the boat. Andrew Rasiej, the co-founder of techpresident.com, a web site which tracks how the presidential candidates are using the web, says getting contact information of supporters was of paramount importance.

The text campaign “was very effective in achieving its primary goal which was to build up Obama’s already massive database of supporters and develop yet another way they can be reached and mobilized during the final run up to the election,” Rasiej said.

What will the Obama campaign do with these cell numbers?

“[They] can start to mash all the data they have collected from multiple places, such as their e-mail list, their … contributors, their donors, and now these cell phone numbers, with voter files and … give themselves the potential to identify key activists who might volunteer to make calls, canvas, or help with GOTV (Get out the vote),” Rajeiv said. “This info will also help them identify people who are still making up their minds or haven’t fully committed, and the campaign can redouble its efforts to make the final sale.”
The Christian Science Monitor "Vote Blog" reports on "New vs. Old Media."
Is the MSM going to be a thing of the past? Did you get the message?












Friday, June 20, 2008

Summer's Supreme Issues



Back from an early summer blogging break, I thought it was time to highlight some interesting, important and moving current events. Read through this potpouri and share your thoughts here.


In the last two weeks, the Court has released major decisions about three of the country’s most controversial issues--justice for accused terrorists; capital punishment and gun control. With each of these outcomes decided by a Court split 5-4, we are reminded of how important this presidential election will be in determining the future of the Court. The 2Regular Guys at CBS2School.com take aim on the issue here.



NOTE EDIT: In the DC decision, the Supreme Court has moved closer for the first time of incorporating (see archived posts) the Second Amendment and the ruling could now have pressing impacts on gun laws in cities like Chicago. The incorporation of cases by judicial precendents tie the bill of rights to the states. DC v. Heller is not an incorportation case because the case involved laws in DC --which is not a state.

Here's what the NY Times said:


"Because the case before the court arose from the District of Columbia and thus involved only federal law, the court did not resolve the important question of whether the Second Amendment’s protections apply to state and local laws. "


https://webmail.ipsd.org/owa/redir.aspx?C=d4ebebd78a5a40748afa2d8f89f4f344&URL=http%3a%2f%2fwww.nytimes.com%2f2008%2f06%2f27%2fwashington%2f27guns.html

Writing for the narrow majority, Justice Antonin Scalia said that an individual's right to own a gun is at the home of the Second Amendment's principle.


"The inherent right of self-defense has been central to the 2nd Amendment,'' Scalia wrote.


In his dissent, Justice Stephen Breyer focussed on the first part of the amendment -- a well-regulated militia....


"Self-defense, alone, detatched from any militia related objective, is not the amendment's concern,'' Breyer wrote.

The average age of the nine Supreme Court justices is now 68 with John Paul Stevens as the most senior member at 88. Add this with the clear ideological split among the justices and you’re left with a recipe for serious change in the next four years.


The recent majority decisions favoring Habeas Corpus rights for enemy combatants (see below), opposing the death penalty for those who rape children and opposing a hand-gun ban in Washington, D.C. all featured one thing in common…Justice Anthony Kennedy (see archived post).


The Court was perfectly divided between four liberal justices and four conservatives in each of these cases with Justice Kennedy evidently casting the deciding vote for all three.Should Justice Kennedy unexpectedly step down in the next four years, either McCain or Obama would face an amazing opportunity to reshape the ideology of the Court overnight.


We might also expect that if a liberal justice leaves under McCain’s presidency (or vice versa with Obama) Justice Kennedy’s swing vote on the Court could become irrelevant as the Court could be shifted pointedly in a different ideological direction.


But recent political maneuvers by both presidential candidates reveal the complexities of Supreme Court politics.


John McCain says that he would prefer a justice with the ideological perspective of a Justice Scalia if presented with an opportunity to fill a USSC vacancy. His vocal opposition to the extension of rights to enemy combatants and the Courts decision to block the execution of a child rapist seem to back this assertion.


But McCain has made these statements during his attempt to attract the base Republican back into his corner. Are we to believe that he will appoint a conservative justice who would further erode the campaign finance reforms that came to define McCain’s status as an independent maverick?


Likewise, Obama has recently been a little more coy about the subject of the Court. With his vocal support of the extension of rights to enemy combatants we might have assumed that he would want to appoint a liberal justice if given the opportunity. But he has also criticized this week’s decision to limit the death penalty and has tempered his criticism of the Court’s decision to nix D.C.’s hand gun ban. Are we to believe that he might actually appoint a “swinging” justice or is Barack just trying to move to the ideological center as November 4th nears?

Court backs Gitmo inmates

The U.S. Supreme Court decided last week that enemy combatants held at Guantanamo Bay deserve the right to habeas corpus in order to challenge their detentions in court. In its 5-4 decision, the Court overturned a law passed in 2006 that stripped enemy combatants of the right to ask Federal courts to review the grounds of the detentions.

For some, the case of Boumediene v. Bush represented a victory of civil liberties over the abuse of governmental power. We will evaluate comparative governmental systems with/without judical branches by the Rule of Law. In writing for the narrow majority, Justice Anthony Kennedy defended our law as the rule all others follow:

"The laws and Constitution are desined to survive, and remain in force, in extraordinary times."

Justice Antonin Scalia deeply dissented:

"America is at war with radical Islamists...(the decision) will almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed."

Barack Obama and other critics of the White House policy applauded Justice Kennedy’s majority opinion that the judicial branch must use the right of habeas corpus to preserve the ‘delicate balance of governance’ that is itself the surest safeguard of liberty.”

Obama has elaborated on this by saying that as President he will uphold American ideals by using the Courts more in his fight against terrorism much as the government did to prosecute the perpetrators of the first bombing against the World Trade Center in 1993.

But for others—including John McCain-- the decision by the USSC represents judicial meddling that makes it more difficult to protect Americans from acts of terror. They cite Justice Scalia’s assertion that the granting Habeas rights to enemy combatants “will almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed.”

McCain has said the White House policies have helped prevent another terrorist attack on U.S. soil and that fighting terrorists through legal prosecutions is a naïve tactic.While the rhetoric from both sides is fresh, the basic principles behind these contrasting ideas are not. During the 17th Century British political philosophers—Thomas Hobbes and John Locke—also wrote about the government’s most essential purposes.

Most Americans are familiar with John Locke’s call for government to protect life and liberty, we are also reminded that Thomas Hobbes claimed government’s most essential duty was to ensure the safety of its people.

It’s worth remembering that in the most recent debate about Habeas Corpus, Obama and his supporters are resurrecting the ideals of Locke by calling for a renewal of liberties while McCain and his supporters are asking for us to look at the realities of a tough world and the role of our government to protect its citizens.

On November 4th one side is guaranteed to win a battle in this war of ideas, but the tension between these two sets of beliefs will certainly continue for as long as democratic governments strive to both protect citizens from harm while protecting their liberties.

Who do you side with -- Locke, Kennedy and Obama or Hobbes, Scalia and McCain?
____________________________

7 Words, 3 Words....Words to live by in remembrance

Last month, we lost two men influential in coming to an understanding of our political culture. For decades, George Carlin amused and shocked us with his irreverent views of politics, religion and the English language.

With Carlin’s death, we were reminded about his use of bruising satire to critique governmental policies meant to instill morals. Carlin’s most notorious comedy routine mocked the FCC’s edict against the use of profanity on television and radio broadcasts.


Carlin’s performance of “The 7 words that you can never say on television,” landed him in a Milwaukee jail for indecent speech and became the subject of a US Supreme Court (FCC v. Pacifica) case when a disc jockey played a recording of the stand-up act on air.The indecency charges against Carlin were dropped when a judge ruled that his performance was protected free speech. But the USSC decided in 1978 that the FCC can punish any radio and TV station that plays indecent speech (not obscene...a different three-pronged standard) when children might be listening.


He later went on to make it a classic bit. We will listen to an edited version of it in class this fall.




The loss of Tim Russert will be felt for a long. He was more than a notable journalist and TV personality. Tim Russert was the standard bearer for responsible journalism. He was a Cronkite to this generation.


Finding a trustworthy voice in this business is not always easy. The importance of an independent news media is not a luxury in a democracy, it is essential. This was best defined by Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell in his opinion in the case Saxbe v. Washington Post (1974):




“An informed public depends upon accurate and effective reporting by the news media. No individual can obtain for himself the information needed for the intelligent discharge of his political responsibilities. For most citizens the prospect of personal familiarity with newsworthy events is hopelessly unrealistic. In seeking out the news the press therefore acts as an agent of the public at large. It is the means by which the people receive that free flow of information and ideas essential to intelligent self-government."


Tim Russert was that agent for many of us. When Tim Russert reported the news the citizenry became better informed and better educated. He was a journalist who moonlighted as an historian and teacher. A Russert interview was like an archaelogical dig. The trite and trivial were not interesting. The essential marrow of democracy was all he looked for.


Beyond journalism Tim Russert was deeply religious, a baseball fan and dedicated to his family. Tim Russert wrote a best selling book about his father entitled Big Russ and Me.


He, like George Carlin (absent the irreverance) was wonderful at keeping important issues simple and not gatekeeped from us, the viewing (or listening) public. On Meet the Press, Russert played the classic media watchdog role. His classic simple analysis of the historic presidential election night of 2000 came down to three words (or one word x3): Florida, Florida, Florida.

In tribute to both George Carlin and Tim Russert the 2 Regular Guys at CBS2School.com offer a take on take on the seven things you simply cannot say when running for President:


1. “I’m too old.” If elected John McCain will become President at the age of 72. Don’t expect him to fess up anytime soon.


2. “I don’t know.” Many candidates should have given this response to a Tim Russert zinger, but few ever dared to admit being stumped.


3. “I’m raising taxes…big time!” You’re more likely to hear candidates quote George H.W. Bush’s “Read my lips” pledge than to quote Walter Mondale’s failed attempt to explain the merits of a big tax hike.


4. “Nixon was my mentor.” Vice President for eight years, twice elected President. Opened doors with China, but still no protégées after all of these years.


5. “First on my agenda—pay raise!” Yes, either Obama or McCain will nearly double their salary when elected President. No, neither will ever speak about the financial jackpot as an incentive for winning the White House.


6. “My platform will be up for sale to the highest bidder.” Insert your Haliburton joke here.


7. “I'd rather be a rock star.” While we compare Barack to a rock star, the thought of Obama ditching the campaign to front a rock band is a true audacity.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

We're not stupid, it's the economy




While many may be gearing up for an election based on Iraq, Iran, and National Security we might want cool our jets and gear up for a full fledged economic debate. It was 1992 when Bill Clinton campaign strategist James Carville posted a simply stated sign in the office with a phrase that now has legendary status.



"It's the economy, stupid!"



And so it was during the opening week of the 2008 Presidential General Election Campaign that first Barack Obama, followed by John McCain, sparred on their plans to spur a slumping economy.



Obama hit McCain on the economy and gas prices:

Obama took part of his speech from headlines across the nation, noting that the average price of gas just hit $4 a gallon for the first time. The news followed an unusually sharp spike in the unemployment rate on Friday.

Repeatedly linking McCain to Bush, Obama said, "our president sacrificed investments in health care, and education, and energy, and infrastructure on the altar of tax breaks for big corporations and wealthy CEOs."

Obama criticized McCain for originally opposing Bush's first-term tax cuts but now supporting their continuation. He said he would increase taxes on oil companies while McCain would reduce them.

"At a time when we're fighting two wars, when millions of Americans can't afford their medical bills or their tuition bills, when we're paying more than $4 a gallon for gas, the man who rails against government spending wants to spend $1.2 billion on a tax break for Exxon Mobil," Obama said. "That isn't just irresponsible. It's outrageous."

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25063183/

McCain said small businesses would bear the brunt of Obama's proposed tax increases. He called for phasing out the alternative minimum tax and allowing businesses to write off some new investments.

"I don't want to send any more of your earnings to the government," the Arizona senator said.

"I believe that the best way to help small businesses and employers afford health care is not to increase government control of health care but to bring the rising cost of care under control and give people the option of having personal, portable health insurance," McCain told the NFIB group. Workers would be able to keep their insurance "even when they move or change jobs," he said.

Obama said the McCain plan would help only the wealthy.

"He's offering a tax cut that won't ensure that health care is affordable for hardworking families who need help most," Obama said. "And his plan could actually put your coverage at risk by undermining the employer-based system that most Americans depend on."

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25076642

Traditionally, Democrats (like FDR, JFK and Bill Clinton) benefit from economic-based elections. Traditionally, teenagers like you are not considered. But this could be a Change election (one that brings in new voting blocs). Is the econonomy your number one issue?

Bloomberg reports that while the nation's unemployment rate is officially inching toward 6 percent, it is over 18% for teens:

"June 7 (Bloomberg) -- American teenagers looking for summer jobs are facing the worst prospects in five years as retailers and restaurants trim payrolls in response to a slowing economy.

The teenage jobless rate soared to 18.7 percent in May, the highest since June 2003, from 15.4 percent the month before, the Labor Department said yesterday. The increase was the biggest since the department began keeping the statistics in 1948. Overall, the unemployment rate rose half a point to 5.5 percent.

Bookseller Borders Group Inc., clothing store Talbots Inc. and movie-rental chain Blockbuster Inc. are among the companies trimming payrolls as consumers rein in spending. The tough job market for teens is another sign of the widening effects of the economic downturn that began with a slump in housing and spread to the financial industry. "

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=akGs8tvX5fUk&refer=us

Blog your economic summer story here. Remember, you're not stupid. Your pocketbook, gas tank and your vote (if you are 18 by Nov.5) count.