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To: SJackson; oldglory; MinuteGal; mcmuffin; sheikdetailfeather

You nailed it. The extremist zealot kooks on the left and on the right are merely flip sides of the same coin. bttt


33 posted on 07/21/2006 7:47:30 AM PDT by Matchett-PI ( "History does not long entrust the care of freedom to the weak or the timid." -- Dwight Eisenhower)
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To: Matchett-PI
You nailed it. The extremist zealot kooks on the left and on the right are merely flip sides of the same coin. bttt

Tom Roeser's blog nailed it, not me. He's a local Chicago commentator, but worth a read if you're not familiar with him.

About Tom

Thomas F. Roeser, president of his own corporate relations firm, and Op Ed contributor to the Chicago Tribune, is radio talk show host, writer, lecturer, teacher, and former vice president of The Quaker Oats Company of Chicago, whose newspaper columns have appeared in the Chicago Sun-Times and the Wall Street Journal. A former John F. Kennedy Fellow, Harvard, and Woodrow Wilson International Fellow, Princeton, New Jersey, he has served as Distinguished Professor of Public Policy at Roosevelt University, Chicago. He is a Senior Fellow of The Heartland Institute, the Chicago-based free market research center. He is the author of the book, Father Mac: The Life and Times of Ignatius D. McDermott, Co-Founder of Chicago’s Famed Haymarket Center (McDermott Foundation, 2002), and Chicago correspondent of The Wanderer, the nation’s oldest Catholic newspaper. He writes daily for his own blog, www.tomroeser.com.

Roeser is a former assistant to the Secretary of Commerce who formed the nation's first program to assist minority entrepreneurs (now the Minority Business Development Agency) and later served as Director-Public Affairs for the Peace Corps. For 27 years he formed and operated the government relations department for The Quaker Oats Company--serving for many of them as Vice President. He has been Adjunct Professor of Public Policy at the Wharton School of Finance, University of Pennsylvania; the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University; Loyola University of Chicago; DePaul University, the University of Illinois-Chicago, and St. Johns College, Oxford.

He was born in Evanston, Illinois and attended elementary and secondary schools in Chicago, graduating from St. John's University at Collegeville, Minnesota. After an extensive experience covering politics in Minnesota, he became a research-publicist to the Minnesota Republican Party; then an aide to two U.S. congressmen and a governor. He returned to Chicago to launch The Quaker Oats Company's government relations department in 1964 and continued his education with post-graduate studies at DePaul and Loyola Universities.

He took a leave of absence from Quaker in 1969 to form the nation's first unit of government dedicated to fostering minority enterprise. Roeser gave President Richard Nixon a strategy that coordinated the 116 government programs which could be utilized for minority entrepreneurs. He then recommended the abolition of his own federal agency. This controversial challenge to the permanent bureaucracy led to Roeser's reassignment as Director-Public Affairs for the Peace Corps.

He returned to Quaker in 1971 and served as vice president until retirement in 1991, and since that time has been representing a variety of clients on public policy issues.

As the first corporate government relations executive to become a Kennedy Fellow at Harvard, he designed the course "Influencing the System" which shows how nine constituencies intersect to produce public policy. He later received a Woodrow Wilson International Fellowship at Princeton, NJ, and in addition to his work at Quaker took the course to many private colleges across the nation.

On radio, Roeser (a member of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, AFL-CIO) hosts his own program of talk which airs on WLS-AM (ABC) Sunday. He has been a senior correspondent and talk show host for Catholic Family Radio, a network with outlets in Chicago, Los Angeles, Denver, Minneapolis, and Milwaukee. He is an occasional commentator on "Chicago Tonight" which is seen on WTTW-TV, Chicagoland public television.

Long active in Chicago civic organizations, he was a founder of Project LEAP (Legal Elections in All Precincts), Chicago's anti-vote fraud organization, and is chairman of the City Club of Chicago, one of the city's oldest civic reform organizations. He is a director of the Better Government Association, and the United Republican Fund of Illinois, serves on the Chicago Committee of the Council on Foreign Relations, and is a Board member of Haymarket Center of Chicago. He has been program chairman for Rotary One, the founding chapter of Rotary International, the first service club in the world. In addition, he is a director of The Rockford Institute and serves as member of the Fellowship of Catholic Scholars. He serves as program chairman of the Chicago Legatus chapter (an organization of Chicago area Catholic CEOs and senior business executives). He is married to the former Lillian Prescott, the father of four grown children and grandfather of thirteen.

In 1988, he and Mrs. Roeser were named by John Paul II as Knight and Lady of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulcher of Jerusalem.

36 posted on 07/21/2006 7:52:35 AM PDT by SJackson (The Pilgrims—Doing the jobs Native Americans wouldn’t do!)
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