SUNDAY, APRIL 22, 2007
Monday Edition: Here Come the Hate Groups
Everybody from the obnoxious
Westboro Baptist
Church crowd that protests at soldier funerals to white-supremacy hate
groups are crawling out of their holes to tap into the Virginia Tech pain.
The Fred Phelps Westboro gang threatened to protest with the message "Hokies in Hell" at a student's funeral in Georgia this weekend. But it struck a
deal with talk-show host Mike Gallagher to talk on the radio tomorrow for three
hours instead of protesting at all 32 funerals. See this note from Gallagher.
Thousands
of college students
have signed petitions against Phelps on Facebook. (See the petition, which had more than 42,000 names when I last checked.)
Over
the weekend, the Anti-Defamation League said white supremacists are also jumping at the
opportunity to spread hate:
"Extremists are using the
Virginia Tech shootings to spread a message of hate against immigrants,
particularly Asians," said Abraham H. Foxman, ADL national director. "They are using the shooter's Asian
ethnicity as an excuse to pile on hate against Asians, Blacks, Jews and
immigrants. It is yet another example of
how the neo-Nazis and haters are seeking to create an atmosphere of
divisiveness around the immigration debate and to engender fear of minority
groups living in America."
Some white supremacists groups have
posted virulently anti-immigrant, racist and anti-Semitic videos on YouTube,
the popular mainstream video sharing site, with deceptive titles such as
"Virginia Tech Shooting Update" that make them appear as if they were
legitimate news clips dealing with the aftermath of the shooting.
Every year, the Southern
Poverty Law Center publishes a map of the spread of hate groups.
Al's Morning Multimedia
The Collegiate Times has done an outstanding job covering the Virginia Tech story on the Web. Take a look at
all the multimedia, including videos, graphics and galleries.
Whatever
you do, look at The Collegiate Times' print edition. Do not miss Friday's front
page. Outstanding.
A Pill to End Menstrual
Periods
The
New York Times says that next month, the Food and Drug Administration is expected to approve a birth-control pill that would eliminate a woman's menstrual period. But the story
says women don't seem as interested as drug companies thought they would be.
Thefts Force New Scrap Laws
A pound of copper is worth about $1.75 at your local scrap
yard. A pound of brass could bring $1.50. A pound of aluminum is worth about 50 cents.
Now, iron prices are rising.
Those high metal prices are the magnet that have lured so
many thieves to steal everything from cell-tower bases, grave markers, aluminum
siding from houses, wiring from houses, manhole covers to air
conditioners. Just click here to see some of the open cases around the country right now. In some places, lawmakers are considering new
scrap laws.
The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that legislators want to make it
a felony to steal more than $500 worth of scrap metal:
Hard hit by scrap-metal thieves are builders, who find homes under
construction vandalized, and utility companies, who find their substations ransacked.
Just this week, three people were arrested outside Savannah and charged with stealing 700 pounds
of copper from a Georgia Power substation. Police estimate the copper was worth
$1,700.
Recycling companies themselves are sometimes burglarized for their
metals.
Georgia legislators, who are
considering a bill this session to stiffen penalties for scrap theft, have been
told the crime can be deadly. A man was electrocuted while pulling metal
components from an electric substation, after he apparently grabbed a live,
high-voltage wire, said state Sen. Seth Harp (R-Columbus), the bill's sponsor.
Last year, it was copper and brass that thieves wanted.
But now, iron prices are rising, and that makes manhole covers attractive. Steal
a manhole and you have a big dangerous hole in the road.
Recyclers are sometimes victims. The AJC story
says it is often difficult to figure out what is stolen and what it
legitimately recycled:
"The challenge is that legitimate
scrap and stolen materials are nearly identical," [Bryan ]McGannon,
[spokesman for the Washington, D.C.-based Institute of Scrap
Recycling Industries,] said. "It would be like me giving you two $5
bills, then having you tell me which one is stolen."
The
AJC story continues:
Recognizing their role in stopping thefts, metal recyclers are
trying to work with police more closely, said Maria Zack, a lobbyist for auto
and scrap recyclers, and a coalition of almost 40 other utility, homebuilding
or telecom companies who have an interest in the legislation.
For almost 10 years, the state has required
recycling companies to get a copy of a peddler's driver's license. Now
recyclers are forming coalitions to work with police, Zack said, and trying to
stop repeat offenders.
"The recyclers actually came up with this bill," she
said. "We want to crack down on the crime."
Frank Goulding, vice president of marketing for Newell Recycling
in East Point,
said with $300 million in annual sales, the company can't afford to be cavalier
about the way it conducts business.
If police issue a bulletin describing a particular metal theft,
it's immediately sent to the employees who operate the scales, and are among
the first to see the incoming metals.
Beyond police alerts, some items ought to be instantly recognized
as stolen, he said.
"If an individual came in with a sewer cover," he said,
"we wouldn't buy it."
Here is what
the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries recommends [PDF] to its members in
order to minimize the risk of buying stolen material.
Recycling Beer Kegs
The
beer industry is over a barrel. When you buy a keg of beer, you have to put
down a deposit for the keg, which is made of nickel, chrome and stainless
steel. But the key is worth more in scrap than the retailer collects as a
deposit. So, there is a problem brewing: People are stealing and recycling kegs.
The recycling industry is
telling members [PDF] not to buy kegs. Last year, The Wall Street Journal reported that the problem
is particularly acute in England, where the British Beer and Pub
Association estimates that a quarter-million kegs were liberated in the country
in 2005.
We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.
Editor's
Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story
excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as
original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly
from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided
whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends upon the
accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and
inaccuracies found will be corrected.
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