Mark Graham Plan of Excellence

April 12, 2011

Should Dayton get a Space Shuttle?

Filed under: Mark's World,MGPoE,Politics — Mark Graham @ 10:56 pm
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Ok, so let me preface this by saying that I’m a proud Daytonian, and absolutely believe a shuttle should have come to Dayton – which by now Charles Bolton has informed the world that Dayton will, in fact, not receive a shuttle. While this is truly disappointing to me, and a lot of other people I know, I need to take a realistic look at this: Should Dayton have gotten a Space Shuttle?

For me, the answer is simple – it comes down to numbers. If I were NASA, I would want the shuttle to go where it is going to be viewed the most – that’s fair, and I can’t blame them for that. So, let’s break it down:

Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex – draws over 1.5 million visitors per year.
The California Science Center – draws around 1.5 million visitors per year.
Air and Space Museum in New York City – gets over 915,000 visitors per year.
National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian draws close to 9 million visitors per year.

So clearly the winner here is the National Air and Space Museum of the Smithsonian should get best of breed – they blow everyone away!

Next on the list is clearly Kennedy Space Center – with over 1.5 million visitors per year, who can argue with that, right?

Then that leaves us with NY – they get over 915,000 visitors per year – that’s an impressive number. So clearly they should get the last shuttle right?

If you were wondering, the answer should be ‘NO’. The most conservative number that I could find about visitors visiting the National Museum of the United States Air Force was over 1,000,000 visitors per-year. Sorry, that blows away New York!!!!

What got me interested in doing this article was when Richard Kasier said “Sadly politics played a role in this decision.” I thought, really? Did they? Does Dayton get that many visits compared to NY, CA, and DC? – They don’t – except DC, clearly.

While I took the most conservative number in my report of Dayton’s National Museum of the United States Air Force – I took the most liberal number for each of the other museums (i.e., the higher of all of them). If I took Dayton’s highest number, like I did with all of the other Museums, I would have come up with a number around 1.5 million – way, way higher than NY’s highest visitor count of more than 915k/year.

Sadly, Chuck Schumer, and his cronies, played a HUGE role in this decision – and it was a poor decision for the American Public – Dayton would have done far more justice than NY. NY, one of the largest cities in the world – yet Dayton beats it regularly in museum visits.

January 27, 2011

Large or Small?

Filed under: Politics — Mark Graham @ 7:32 pm
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Is 100,000,000 a large number?  Or is it really a small number? I think this video will help clarify it for us:


January 26, 2011

So can he be President or Not?

Filed under: Politics — Mark Graham @ 7:28 pm
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President ObamaYou know, there is a lot of speculation as to the nationality of President Barack Obama.  President Obama’s argument is that he was born in Hawaii, which would automatically give him US Citizenship, and therefore, eligible to run for the President of the United States.  The, what I’ll call, conspiracy theories suggest that President Obama was born in Kenya, and therefore not eligible to become President.

Now comes the Mark Graham Plan of Excellence Argument: It doesn’t matter, either way he is eligible to become President of the United States.

Now before you go on a rant suggesting that I’m a huge liberal, I can assure you I am not.  I’m quite conservative, but I take a realistic approach to issues and review them and create a solution or answer.  Thus the Mark Graham Plan of Excellence.

So let’s dive into this a little more shall we?  Who is eligible to become President?  The constitution is fairly straight forward with this, or perhaps not.  It says the following:

No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty-five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.

Ok, so you have to be a natural born Citizen, you must be at least 35 years old, and have to be a resident of the United States for 14 years.

Where everyone is getting hung up is the term natural born citizen.  Unfortunately, that is where the ambiguity starts.  There isn’t a real definition of the term ‘Natural Born Citizen’ – likewise, there is a lot of ambiguity of the requirement of being a 14 year resident – does that mean if you left the country for a day in the last 14 years you are not eligible to become President?  Of course not but I digress.

So my argument is centered around US Birthright law.  There are two ways to get a citizenship automatically upon being born.

Jus Soli: This is where if you are born in the United States, you are automatically given citizenship, and therefore you are completely eligible to run for President of the United States.  Even if both your parents were foreigners (legal or not), you are instantly given citizenship to the US because you were physically born here.

Jus sanguini: This is where one of your Parents, in this case President Obama’s mother, is a US Citizen and you are born outside of the US or one of its territories.  Because Obama was born to a female US Citizen, he was instantly given US Citizenship.

Particularly, my argument centers around 8 U.S.C. Section 1409 paragraph (c) and 32 CFR 584.5 which says (summary) if a female ‘natural born US Citizen’ has a child that was born out of the United States, to a foreigner, and out of wedlock, that child would receive the same “nationality status of his mother”.  Thus, if Obama’s mother was a natural born citizen, Obama would inherit that trait as his citizenship and should be considered a natural born citizen.

So why is there this big conspiracy?  Because courts have yet to rule on people running for President with citizenship by Jus sanguini. Given a proper challenge in court, I think the courts would decide that anyone with a Jus sanguini citizenship would be eligible for Presidency, given the spirit of the law.

I mean how far are we going to take this ‘natural born citizen’ thing?  What about a child that wasn’t born naturally – lets say a US Mother and US Father have a child, in the United States, by In Vitro Fertilization?  That certainly isn’t natural, so should the child be eligible for the Presidency?  Give me a break!

January 25, 2011

Not your ordinary first post.

Filed under: Mark's World — Mark Graham @ 8:01 am
Tags: ,

While I’d like to say this is my first blog post, that would be a blatant lie.  I’ve blogged many, many times before – and always end up stopping at some point or another.  So while this is my first blog post, for this site, it isn’t my first blog post.

Oh don’t misunderstand me, I’m not at all suggesting that I’m good because I’ve blogged many, many times – I’ve just done it.  But this time is going to be different! No really, it is… I’m not going to promise that I’m going to stick with it – because history shows I won’t.  Why is it going to be different?  Because, um, yeah — I don’t know I just have a feeling that it will be, somehow.

Anyway, what you can expect to find here is anything that is on my mind – politics, religion, local events, things that I like, things that  I hate – you know, what most people blog about, and no one really cares.

So why start a blog you ask?  Because I want to share my tidbits of craziness wisdom with the world.  You’re going to meet the real Mark, even if you don’t want to.

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