Friday, May 23, 2008

Could This Be Your State?


I wrote this book review as part of our series on West Virginian authors. I got it in the issue published the Wednesday before the WV primary, just in time to hopefully get people to think before they went to the polls.

Don't vote till you read this book
By Elizabeth Thomas, Staff Writer
Dr. Allen L. Loughry II is a man on a mission to reform politics in WestVirginia one reader at a time. His book “Don’t Buy Another Vote, I Won’tPay for a landslide,” currently in its second printing, is the result of 10years of research and meticulously referenced notes regarding thepolitical and social history of West Virginia.Loughry clearly put his heart and soul into his book, put his money insomething he believes in and his career at risk, to expose the oftensordid, certainly corrupt background of the Mountain state since before itsinception.
The all-inclusive, 623-page volume with 160 noteworthyphotographs covers West Virginia beginning in 1861, two years before itseceded as a separate state. Abraham Lincoln said, “The admission ofthe new state turns that much slave soil to free.” However, as Loughrydescriptively relates, “The people who proudly call themselvesMountaineers have never been truly free from the depredations of politicaland financial corruption.”
Loughry said his passion for politics began at the age of 6 when he livedin Tucker County. His fervor for public service extended through manydedicated years resulting in his four separate law degrees including aDoctor of Judicial Science and a Master of Laws in Law, both from The American University, Washington College of Law; a Master of Laws in Criminology and Criminal Justice from the University of London, a Doctorof Jurisprudence from Capital University School of Law, as well as studying law at the University of Oxford. Loughry’s extensive resume can be viewed on http://www.reformwv.com/.
His current position is as a law clerk toJustice Elliott “Spike” Maynard of the West Virginia Supreme Court.Maynard has apparently been supportive of Loughry’s book having said itis “One of the best political books of all time. Loughry is a fearlessreformer who has written the most comprehensive, yet readable book onWest Virginia politics I have ever read.” (for complete quote and others bySenator Robert Byrd, former WV Governor Gaston Caperton and SenatorJohn McCain plus excerpts from the book go to http://www.reformwv.com/.
Loughry is nonpartisan in his revelations of indiscretions and corruption.He minces no words when he says, “If someone is a filthy corruptscoundrel stealing State money from the good people of this State, then itmeans absolutely nothing to me whether he or she is Democrat orRepublican as corruption should not be protected by the veil of eitherparty.”
The title, by the way, came from Joseph Kennedy when campaigning forhis son John Fitzgerald Kennedy, a Catholic in a strongly Protestant state.In the “Logan Banner”, the day after the 1960 primary were the words“flagrant vote-buying, whiskey flowing like water, and coercion of voters.”
Vote buying is still not unheard of, particularly in the southern counties ofWest Virginia. A local reader of Loughry’s book, Joann Ingram, said sherecalls that back in the 40’s or 50’s “little bottles of whiskey were right atthe polls in Middlebourne.”Jim Hileman of Middlebourne also read the book. He said, “Anyone who has an inkling of interest in West Virginia history should read this book.”He agreed that it wouldn’t hurt every high school graduate to read “Don’tBuy Another Vote. I Won’t Pay for a Landslide.”
Loughry would like to make it clear that there are well-meaning men andwomen in West Virginian politics and that West Virginia is not alone instate and local level corruption. He claims that the same kind of book as“Don’t Buy Another Vote, I Won’t Pay for a Landslide” could be written forevery state and territory.Still, while it is not the only state to be corrupt, “it is the one with the mostcorruption, and so should be the one to lead the way to reform,” saidLoughry. He knows of no other state that has as many officials servingtime or has had a nose-biting judge incident.
Loughry has not written“Don’t But Another Vote, I Won’t Pay For A Landslide” to complain, but tooffer a solution.His “Contract with the Voter” on pages 509-514 can be a powerful tool ifpeople use it. Even with Loughry’s intimacy with his one-man revolution,he said it was “empowering” to sit with his delegates in Tucker Countyand get their answers to most of the 50 items in the Contract with theVoter.It can be printed out for use from http://www.reformwv.com/. The book can bepurchased at that address as well.
Loughry and his wife, Kelly, have a son age one and a half. Loughry said,“I want him to grow up in a better West Virginia.” The Loughry boy isnamed Justice.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

"Googleboy" Staats up for top award


It's too late to vote for your top picks in each grade level, but you can still enjoy looking through the entries to Google's Doodle4 Google contest up until May 22. Will your favorites win?


I compiled this article about our local contestant that ran in our May 14 issue:


One can imagine Bridget Hughes’ surprise and delight when she opened the letter from The Doodle 4 Google Team inviting her and her son, Sean Staats, to come, all expenses paid, to the Googleplex in Mountain View, Calif., on May 21.
Proud stepdad, Tony Gallo, will be staying home with their newborn baby.
Staats, a third grader in Carolynn Jackson’s class at Paden City Elementary School, submitted his doodle to the Doodle 4 Google contest that invited all United States residents between the ages of five and 18 who attend grades Kindergarten through 12 to design the Google logo around the theme of “What if. . .?”
The Google logo, seen every time the search engine is opened, is typically altered for special occasions by the professional artists at Google. When the results are tallied for the contest, the winning doodle will be the logo on the Google home page for 24 hours on May 22.
Staats is a regional winner—one of the 40 best entries in the United States out of thousands of submissions and top in his grade level (K-3) for Region Three, comprised of Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. There were 10 regions and each of the four grade groups had one winner.
In each state two doodles were selected in each grade group, for a total of 400 state winners.
Public voting began on May 12 and will end on May 18. To vote, go online to Google’s homepage. While there, people can see Staats' explanation of his drawing: "What if. . . A fish swallowed a Google or boogle. He might get full before 'gle' and just eat the Goo. Poogle! The Goo comes out, the fish goes swimming about."
Staats is competing for big prizes. If he is chosen as one of the four National Finalists (one in each grade group) he will win a trip to Googleplex, a laptop computer, and a t-shirt printed with his doodle. If he is the national winner of Doodle 4 Google he will also win a $10,000 college scholarship and PCES will be awarded a $25,000 grant towards the establishment or improvement of a computer lab.
The West Virginia Primary election may be over, but it can’t hurt to cast a vote for this promising young man and benefit to the community.