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Politics : Proof that John Kerry is Unfit for Command -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (375)8/15/2004 7:35:02 PM
From: calgal  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 27181
 
Teresa's Son Runs Buddhist High School
Teresa Heinz Kerry once hinted at tensions with her first-born son, a 37-year-old blacksmith who seeks an anonymous life with his wife and child in rural Pennsylvania.

Story Continues Below

But if H. John Heinz IV is noticeably absent from his stepfather John Kerry's presidential campaign and in news photos of the high-wattage Heinz-Kerry clan, his activist interests — the environment, youth, local programs — mirror much of the focus of his family's $1.5 billion Heinz Endowment charities.
Heinz Kerry's eldest son lives with his physician wife, Kristann, on a wooded 163-acre farm near Philadelphia, refusing all inquiries about Kerry's campaign, the Heinz foundation or his own work and ambitions.

He operates a small Buddhist high school for troubled teens nearby, and makes reproduction ironwork in a studio on his secluded property, land he has conserved so it can never be developed.

On a much larger scale, Teresa Heinz Kerry has steered money to the environment, education and local art and cultural groups as chairwoman of the Pittsburgh-based Heinz Endowments.

Heinz Kerry told the Washington Post in a 2002 profile that John started "hating her" after his daughter Astrid — her only grandchild — was born in 2000. She did not elaborate and her eldest son did not comment afterward. But he continues to serve with her on the board of one of the Heinz charities.

John Heinz surfaced briefly in the news at a 2001 cocktail gala for a Heinz enrichment program for Pittsburgh children, warranting a small notice in a Pittsburgh newspaper, but generally asks friends and family to help guard his privacy.

Heinz Kerry plans to honor that request throughout the campaign, a spokeswoman said.

Heinz, a handsome, lean man with closely cropped dark hair, declined an interview with The Associated Press.

"We're just a little community school and obviously it doesn't do us any favors if people find out about it," said Peter Ryan, who with Heinz co-founded Tinicum Art and Science, a Buddhist alternative school, in Bucks County about five years ago.

Several districts send students to the school, which mixes a classic liberal arts curriculum with Zen precepts on "mindfulness" or self-awareness and electives ranging from martial arts to yoga to metalwork.

Former neighbor Michael Carr, a lawyer, represented Heinz when he sought township approval for the school.

"My recollection was that he had done some ... work for the family foundation, and that he was interested in trying to get involved in some hands-on educational programs," Carr said.

The hangar-like school, a former woodworking factory, sits on an undeveloped field with giant sunflowers at the entrance. Inside, meditative music plays and a sign asks visitors to remove their shoes. "They've never caused a bit of trouble," said neighbor Glenna Higgins, 84.

In Boston last month, Heinz skipped the family photo op at the Democratic National Convention, leaving his two brothers, Andre and Chris, to share the stage with stepsisters Alexandra and Vanessa Kerry. He has no announced plans to join the campaign. "He's a very serious person, and he does not like his privacy meddled with," his mother has said.

Heinz was 24 when his father, Republican U.S. Senator H. John Heinz III, died in April 1991 along with six others in a helicopter-small plane collision above a suburban Philadelphia elementary school. Already a trained blacksmith, Heinz soon afterward moved to Virginia, where he worked for a year as a volunteer blacksmith in Colonial Williamsburg.

"He's a great guy," said shop master Ken Schwarz, who remains a Heinz friend. Heinz sells his ironwork though a Web site.

Many people in Ottsville, population 3,645, seem unaware a Heinz heir lives among them. "We've been here 10 or 12 years and we've never heard of him," said John Roberts, who owns the Ottsville Inn.

That's not unusual in Bucks County, a longtime haven for writers, artists and others seeking a retreat from New York, about an hour away, or Philadelphia. The area's full- or part-time residents have included authors James Michener and Pearl Buck and the activist Abbie Hoffman.

"We have lots and lots of people that are famous or very prosperous or in some ways notable," said R. Foster Winans, director of The Writers Room of Bucks County, which has received small donations from John Heinz and the Heinz Family Foundation. Like most people who know Heinz, he declined to discuss him.

"They could live in Princeton, they could live in the Hamptons, but they live here because we leave them alone," Winans said.

URL:http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2004/8/15/114525.shtml



To: calgal who wrote (375)8/15/2004 10:03:54 PM
From: American Spirit  Respond to of 27181
 
townhall.com is a rightwing propaganda site as well. anyplace that features Anne Coulter is a den of iniquity and lies. USA Today did the right thing to kick COulter out. Her slander is exactly what's wrong with the spirit of America these days. Too many believing in totalitarian type political smear campaigns and propaganda.



To: calgal who wrote (375)8/15/2004 10:15:50 PM
From: calgal  Respond to of 27181
 
Re-Post:
A Tour of Duty or a Ton of Dooky?
Doug Giles (archive)
townhall.com



To: calgal who wrote (375)8/15/2004 10:15:59 PM
From: calgal  Respond to of 27181
 
Trade politics
George Will (archive)
August 15, 2004
townhall.com



To: calgal who wrote (375)8/15/2004 10:16:14 PM
From: calgal  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 27181
 
Sunday, Aug. 15, 2004 5:17 p.m. EDT
Enviro Kerry May Lose Coal States
John Kerry's enthusiasms for job-destroying environmental regulations could cost him the battleground states of Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia where coal mining is a major industry.

Already Kerry is attempting to reposition himself on these issues. Kerry now claims that he disagrees with Al Gore's anti-coal mining policies such as his support of the Kyoto Treaty, which would have devastated both the industry and the U.S. economy.

Story Continues Below

Though kerry's voting record and public pronouncements placed him solidy in the Gore camp, Kerry has sought to portray himself as a friend and supporter of coal miners, pledging to protect their jobs and health and even moderating his position on clean air.

According to the Los Angeles Times, Kerry has wooed the miners unions and spent a lot of time in West Virginia which Bush won in 2000, becoming the first Republican presidential candidate to win the state in 72 years. The Times reported that the Massachusetts senator went to West Virginia the night he clinched the nomination and has been back four times since.

Bush, who the Times recalls visited West Virginia early and often in the 2000 campaign, and has returned 11 times as president, has eased regulations for extracting coal from Appalachia's mountaintops and made it easier to modify or renovate older coal-fired power plants without installing expensive pollution controls.

Terry Holt, Bush's campaign spokesman, denied that Kerry was a better friend to coal than Gore, citing his vote last year for a bill designed to combat global warming. The bill, which failed to pass the Senate, would have had "a significant negative impact on the coal industry," according to the Energy Department.

The Times noted that Kerry has long advocated stringent pollution controls that are not popular with the coal industry. On the campaign trail, he insists that the nation does not have to choose between coal and clean air, claiming that by doubling the nation's investment in clean coal technology to $10 billion over 10 years coal can burn more cleanly. But President Bush has asked for $310 million to $470 million a year to achieve the same goal.

Kerry told listeners during a speech two weeks ago in Wheeling, W.Va., that by learning to burn coal more cleanly, the nation could help reduce its dependence on foreign oil.

"I want a nation that depends on its own ingenuity, not the Saudi royal family," Kerry said.

"You've got coal to be dug right here - it can be mined. But we've got to make sure we do it clean."

As for the Kyoto Accord Kerry has flip-flopped, going from his previous support of the treaty which threatens to destroy the coal mining industry to claiming it is now too late for the United States to achieve the treaty's aggressive targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions. But he continues to advocate to bringing the United States back to the negotiating table on the treaty, which was signed by most other developed nations but has been unable to win approval of the Senate.

Carol Raulston, spokeswoman for the National Mining Assn., told the Times she was suspicious of Kerry's conversion to coal. Even though Kerry has accepted the necessity of generating electricity from coal, she said "... one has to wonder, if West Virginia and Ohio were not swing states, if there'd be as much interest in this by his campaign."

Mike Carey, president of the Ohio Coal Assn., criticized Kerry's 1999 vote against a measure sponsored by Sen. Robert C. Byrd (D-W.Va.) to overturn a federal judge's ruling that mountaintop mining violated federal environmental laws.

According to the Times, mountaintop mining - removing the top of mountains to get at seams of coal - has become the mainstay of Appalachian mining. The president's support of the process helped him capture West Virginia in 2000, and his administration has since rewritten regulations to protect it.

Carey said he was determined not to let Kerry "backpedal" on votes such as this one.

"My goal . is to make sure [miners] are not duped by campaign reinvention," Carey told the Times "I'm going to make it a top priority to get this message into the hands of every coal miner in Ohio."

URL:http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2004/8/15/172052.shtml