Monday, March 30, 2015

Indiana SB 101 : What Is It? Wikipedia Link On Its GLBT Discrimination Controversy:

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana_SB_101

I saw the news coverage on the Indiana SB 101 Religious Freedom Act but haven't read the actual bill. The Indiana Lt. Governor was interviewed and raised some concerns that people would possibly perceive the state to be non-inclusive to young professionals, a more preferable demographic to boost their homeowners' population for public schools' funding, and to attract an age group with less pre-existing health conditions.

The PTA can not raise enough for all the ESL, challenged students. Typically, they only received a quarter of what they truly require for their public schools. It's not enough to help impoverished students who can not afford the vaccinations and prescription eyeglasses to become literate.

Where will the additional funding come from, to design a safer public school building, designed for lock-down procedures to prevent high fatality rates in the event of mass shootings, or those drug cartel, drive-by shootings?

I'm actually also concerned about the Indiana, nuclear power plants there getting enough federal funding to safely update all their equipment, provide bilingual (Spanish, English) safety protocols training and hire more Hispanic-American, bilingual supervisors to protect those who may not be completely fluent. I hope this SB 101 controversy won't cause the Obama Administration to lower their federal funding for those projects in Indiana.

Truthfully, they're going to require increased law enforcement there to run mandatory, identity verification, background checks on all the employees, monitor their activities in secure areas with updated surveillance equipment, and perform those comprehensive drug tests, with three independent laboratories.

It's going to cost a lot for the newest biometric, identification systems, with secured, highly-redundant, Oracle databases, data centers  there, which is a critical necessity, with the increase in terrorism globally. What happens in the world also tends to negatively impact the most impoverished within Indiana.

Due to my old age now, I still remember that Meryl Streep movie, "Silkwood." The last thing any impoverished, pregnant mother would need would be a nuclear meltdown, or accident occurring in that environment. The underpaid laborers are similar to the Appalachian coal miners. Their lives do indeed matter, despite their underprivileged, socioeconomic statuses.

I hope the federal government can also share information without charge to local law enforcement there regarding nuclear power plants' security. They have a subscription fee for those databases at the D.E.A. S.O.D.

Indiana does not receive enough federal funding, because of their inclusion of impoverished, migrant, farm workers, including molested, pregnant, preteens, teenagers who are illiterate, challenged, disabled, homeless and battered. Therefore, Indiana is unable to provide the compassionate, year-round, bilingual, I.B. boarding schools for their migrant, farm workers.


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