My original blog after it has been cleaned up a bit. Not that this groundbreaking work, but I found some old posts, photos and clips that I may reuse.
30 November, 2005
Christmas comes early for the GOP
Rep. Pelosi has endorsed Rep. Murtha's plan for early exit of Iraq:
“We should follow the lead of Congressman John Murtha, who has put forth a plan to make America safer, to make our military stronger, and to make Iraq more stable. That is what the American people and our troops deserve.”
Full Text
Que in the wonderful photo above, this will provide the GOP with the full ammo to attack again, and will win in 06.
28 November, 2005
Not only whould have voted for Bush, but she's from Indy
Like George W. Bush, for one. 50 thinks the president is "incredible ... a
gangsta." "I wanna meet George Bush, just shake his hand and tell him how much
of me I see in him," 50 told GQ. If the rapper's felony conviction didn't
prevent him from voting, 50 said he would have voted for Bush.
50 article
thanks drudge
by the way, that is Vivica A. Fox, ex-Arlington H.S.
Jumped the Gun
27 November, 2005
As much as things, some things stay the same ...
Updated: Nov. 27, 2005, 8:39 PM ET
Hall semifinalist arrested on outstanding warrant
ESPN.com news services
PLANO, Texas -- Former Dallas Cowboys receiver and current ESPN studio analyst Michael Irvin was charged with misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia after police searched his vehicle during a traffic stop, Plano police said Sunday.
Irvin
Irvin, a semifinalist for the Pro Football Hall of Fame, was arrested on an outstanding warrant for speeding in Irving after being pulled over Friday afternoon for speeding in Plano, the Plano Police Department said. Police spokesman Mike Johnson said he didn't know what kind of paraphernalia was found.
Irvin paid a fine on the speeding ticket and posted bond on the drug paraphernalia possession charge. He was released about an hour after he was pulled over.
"We are reviewing the facts of the situation and have no comment at this time," ESPN spokesman Josh Krulewitz said.
In 1996, Irvin pleaded no contest to felony cocaine possession in exchange for four years of deferred probation, a $10,000 fine and dismissal of misdemeanor marijuana possession charges.
Irvin, a member of three Super Bowl championship teams with the Cowboys and known as "The Playmaker" during his 12-year career with Dallas, retired in July 2000. He has been paired at ESPN with veteran host Chris Berman, Tom Jackson and Steve Young on the main set of Sunday NFL Countdown since 2003.
Irvin holds Cowboys records for catches (750), receiving yards (11,904) and 100-yard games (47), including a team-record seven in a row in 1991.
In September of this year, Irvin and former Cowboys teammates Troy Aikman and Emmitt Smith were together added to the Ring of Honor together, a recognition of the players most associated with the Cowboys' last Super Bowl titles.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
26 November, 2005
Socrates would be so proud
Teacher's vocabulary quiz slams Bush, GOP
Associated Press
BENNINGTON, Vt. -- A high school teacher is facing questions from administrators
after giving a vocabulary quiz that included digs at President Bush, Republicans
and the extreme right.
Bret Chenkin, a social studies and English teacher at
Mount Anthony Union High School, said he gave the quiz to his students several
months ago. The quiz asked students to pick the proper words to complete
sentences.
One example: "I wish Bush would be (coherent, eschewed) for
once during a speech, but there are theories that his everyday diction charms
the below-average mind, hence insuring him Republican votes." "Coherent" was
considered the right answer.
Principal Sue Maguire said she hoped to speak
to anyone who complained about the quiz and any students who might be concerned.
She said she also would talk with Chenkin. School Superintendent Wesley Knapp
said he takes the situation seriously.
"It's absolutely unacceptable," Knapp
said. "They (teachers) don't have a license to hold forth on a particular
standpoint."
Chenkin, 36, a teacher for seven years, said he isn't shy about
sharing his liberal views with students as a way of prompting debate, but he
said the quizzes are being taken out of context.
"The kids know it's
hyperbolic, so to speak," he said. "They know it's tongue-in-cheek." But he said
he would change his teaching methods if some are concerned.
"I'll put in
both sides," he said. "Especially if it's going to cause a lot of grief."
The school is in Bennington, a community of about 16,500 in the southwest
corner of the state.
my take:
I have taught middle school Social studies for the past five years, I came in after the Bush/Gore fiasco and was entertained by the last election. But one thing I will not do is allow my political beliefs to known or affect my teaching. It's simple:
If I tell my kids I am Republican and spout Republican talking points/propaganda, they will either
a) become GOPers because they may be foolish enough to respect my views, highly doubt the respect angle, or
b) become democrats out of spite and to go aganist me because I am the evil authoritarian figure, most likely.
A real teacher will keep thier political views out of the classromm, except, except for the common belief that our job/duty/most of all responsiblilty is to teach our children to think for themselves. If you want to be some cheap liberal thug and use a methane rich line as Chenkin did
"sharing his liberal views with students as a way of prompting debate."No, that is the cheapest, lamest cop-out like some student pinched for cheating, "Oh, I got called out on this one, so make up this song and dance." More or less he is a second rate teacher betraying the rest of the profession.
25 November, 2005
and who ever thought of Buckley as a prophet
We know the jajaweed of Sudan is commiting geonicide on Black Christians in Sudan, a little more to dwell on ...
November 25, 2005
Christians Afoot
By William F. Buckley
I am mindful that Samuel Johnson enjoined the preachers of his time not to
inveigh against those who were absent from church on Sundays by scolding those
who were not absent. Notwithstanding Dr. Johnson's stricture, I here berate
those who fail to heed the atrocities in China and North Korea, by appealing to
those who have heeded these barbarisms, drawing attention to the inattention
that the Christian world seems to be paying them. There is no means of putting
away from memory the experience of the Jews in the last century, objects of
discrimination of various and imaginative kinds, culminating in genocide.
Meghan Clyne of the New York Sun cites a report on North Korea compiled by
David Hawk, the author of "Hidden Gulag: Exposing North Korea's Prison Camps."
Hawk and his South Korean researchers obtained dozens of eyewitness accounts of
persecutions of Christians.
President Bush, in his speech in Japan last
week, didn't say that Christians in North Korea were in large numbers
imprisoned, but he spoke of "satellite maps of North Korea (that showed) prison
camps the size of whole cities."
Michael Cromartie, chairman of the U.S.
Commission on International Religious Freedom, which issued Hawk's report,
"called on Mr. Bush to include the specific findings of the North Korean report
in his diplomatic discussions with Chinese and South Korean officials ... and to
urge leaders of both Asian nations to take a firmer stand against their
communist neighbor." He is proud of the report, citing the difficulty in
bringing together reliable information from within that ideological mudhole.
The report tells, among many other accounts, of a woman in her 20s who was
washing clothes in a river. A fellow washerwoman saw a small Bible fall out of
her basket and reported her to the authorities. She was executed by firing
squad.
That martyr got off lightly. Nine years ago in South Pyongan
province, a unit of the North Korean army was assigned the job of widening a
highway connecting Pyongyang to the nearest seaport. Demolition of a house
standing in the way revealed, hidden between two bricks, a Bible and a list of
25 names: a Christian pastor, two assistant pastors, two elders and 20
parishioners. The 25 were all detained and, later that month, brought to the
road construction site, where spectators had been arranged in neat rows. The
parishioners were grouped off to one side while the pastor, the assistant
pastors and the elders were bound hand and foot and made to lie down in front of
a steamroller. As if following a script written in early Roman history, they
were told they could escape death by denying their faith and pledging to serve
Dear Leader Kim Jong II and Great Leader Kim Il Sung. They chose death.
Ms.
Clyne quotes Mr. Hawk's report: "Some of the parishioners ... cried, screamed
out, or fainted when the skulls made a popping sound as they were crushed
beneath the steamroller."
Anti-Christian activity is not as rabid in China,
but it is everywhere evident, and it has not been noticeably reduced by recent
rumors that the Vatican may withdraw the papal nuncio from Taipei and move him
to Beijing. The Vatican has so far persisted in recognizing the state of Taiwan,
which is something most other diplomatic entities shrink from doing. As everyone
knows, the determination by the Chinese to obtain sovereignty over Taiwan is of
a pitch comparable to the Vatican's devotion to St. Peter's Basilica.
The
Vatican's desire for diplomatic relations with Beijing makes almost difficult
any remonstrance over Chinese treatment of Catholics, though such is being
attempted, as when the Italian newsweekly L'Espresso published a two-page
article based on an interview with two Chinese priests. The article had not
identified the priests, out of fear for their safety, but authorities
interrogated the reporter's interpreter to learn their names. The priests have
since been arrested.
In the interview one of the priests spoke of a previous
detention, during which attempts were made by Chinese authorities "to evaluate
whether I had become patriotic." China is officially and aggressively atheist,
and such Christianity as is vestigially permitted is doctrinally emasculated.
(Christ did not rise from the dead; his mother was not a virgin.) Worship is
allowed, according to one Associated Press dispatch, "only in
government-controlled churches, which recognize the pope as a spiritual leader
but appoint their own priests and bishops. Catholic Chinese who meet outside
sanctioned churches are frequently harassed, fined, and sometimes sent to labor
camps."
The government's Catholic Church claims 34 million believers. The
Cardinal Kung Foundation, a U.S.-based religious monitoring group, says the
unofficial church of Chinese loyal to Rome has 12 million followers.
How
ought western diplomats to have treated Nazi officials in pre-war Germany? There
is enduring speculation on that subject, but none, we'd guess, that argues that
simply to ignore religious persecution is one acceptable way to confront it.
Copyright 2005 Universal Press Syndicate
Line Up Another Democrat for the Pres Run
N.M. Gov Admits He Wasn't Baseball Pick
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.
Gov. Bill Richardson is coming clean on his draft record _
the baseball draft, that is, admitting that his claim to have been a pick of the
Kansas City A's in 1966 was untrue.
http://www.breitbart.com/news/2005/11/24/D8E325882.htmlAfter reading this article, it pretty takes an arrow out of the quiver of the GOP attack machine. He has been a quiet name mentioned and would be at least an idela VP canidate. Don't forget he has been getting tougher on immigration, another hot issue.
24 November, 2005
Happy Thanksgiving
23 November, 2005
Adults Not Allowed to Make Choices .... Again
Vote is 4 to 3; ordinance takes effect March 1
By Lesley Rogers Barrett
CARMEL, Ind. -- Smokers can still light up in most taverns, but Carmel restaurants will go smoke-free under restrictions narrowly approved Monday by the City Council.
With a vote of 4 to 3, Carmel became the first Hamilton County community to approve a smoking ban. The Indianapolis City-County Council passed a similar smoking ban in May, and last month the city of Greenfield approved a ban. All three ordinances will take effect March 1.
SMOKING ORDINANCE
Beginning March 1, smoking will be banned at most Carmel restaurants, at some taverns and at places such as shopping malls, health-care facilities, child-care centers, common areas of residential buildings and laundromats.Cigar bars and taverns that don't allow customers under 21 and don't employ anyone under 21 are exempt. Some family-owned and -operated businesses are exempt, as are private clubs.The fine is $50 for first-time offenders of the ordinance. Subsequent violations carry fines between $75 and $500.
Anti-smoking advocates praised the ordinance, saying it will improve the health of employees and patrons. Robert Lubitz, a doctor at St. Vincent Hospital, said secondhand smoke is the third-leading cause of preventable death.
"Smoking causes deadly diseases, and it robs the health of our community," Lubitz said.
Several Carmel tavern owners spoke at the meeting, offering a range of opinions. Kevin Rider, owner of Woody's Library Restaurant, 40 E. Main St., will have to go smoke-free under the ordinance because he allows patrons under 21 in the restaurant portion of his establishment.
However, taverns like Mickey's Irish Pub, 13644 N. Meridian St., and Old Town Tavern, 29 W. Main St., can continue to allow smoking.
There was a push to include all taverns in the ordinance, but the council ended up exempting establishments that don't allow patrons or employees under the age of 21.
Rider said he's disappointed in the ordinance, which he said creates an uneven playing field. But he said he expects his restaurant business to increase.
"I'll find ways to exploit the no smoking," Rider said.
Mickey's owner Bill Adkins said if the council approved a ban to include all taverns, he would immediately sell his 11-year-old business.
He said he tried a "smokeless Thursdays" promotion last year, but ended up losing money. "The nonsmokers did not come," Adkins said.
But Carmel resident Emily Walesky said she would go out to taverns and restaurants more -- and spend more money -- if they were smoke-free.
"I have asthma," Walesky said. "I cannot breath when other people around me choose to smoke."
Lynn Resinger, Indianapolis, called the ordinance a "forced compliance law" and said it takes away the rights of Americans.
"People have become so complacent with their freedom . . . they are giving it away to the government," Resinger said.
Fines begin at $50 for a first-time violation, and the ordinance will be enforced by the Department of Community Services and the Carmel Fire Marshal. Police officers will not enforce the ordinance.
Voting in favor of the ordinance were council members Brian Mayo, Fred Glaser, Ron Carter and Mark Rattermann. Council president Kevin Kirby and members Rick Sharp and Joe Griffiths voted against the measure.
13 November, 2005
Vasher Sets Record
11 November, 2005
you could wish to be this energetic at this age
I have been in the bar business since 92, and I've met plenty of interesting characters along the way. Any bartender worth thier weight in Rose's Lime juice will tell you that fact. But the lovely couple you see in the picture are just outsanding. Every Friday or Saturday night they are in the annex dancing and flirting with other couples.
They're not married, just two people who found each other as life moved on. She has her red wine and artsy outfits, she painted a picture for my first born, and he has a cigar and his suspenders. Every once and while he wears one of those rastafari hats with the fake dreds.
The smiles you see are as genuine as are they.
10 November, 2005
Oh When the Saints, Come Marching In ... to LA Baby!
from: http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2219883
NFL, Coliseum in preliminary stages for return to L.A.
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES -- The NFL and city officials have reached a preliminary agreement on terms to bring a team back to the Los Angeles Coliseum, commissioner Paul Tagliabue said Thursday.
But Tagliabue, in a 15-minute session with reporters on the steps of City Hall, didn't identify a potential tenant or speculate when Los Angeles might get the team.
He also spoke positively about a team playing at a facility proposed for the Angel Stadium parking lot in Anaheim and didn't rule out the Rose Bowl in Pasadena as a possible home field, either.
As Tagliabue entered a limousine, he was asked if he could assess the significance of what he had just announced. He replied, "I'd rather not try."
The commissioner did say: "It's the first time we've had agreement on term sheets. We're one step closer, two or three steps closer. Whether it's 2009, 2010, or 2000-whatever, our goal is to have definitive agreements on all subject matters well before our league meetings in March."
The Los Angeles area, the second-largest television market in the country, has been without an NFL team since the Raiders moved from the Coliseum back to Oakland and the Rams moved from Anaheim to St. Louis before the 1995 season.
After announcing plans in the spring of 1999 to put an expansion team in the Coliseum, the NFL was unable to reach an agreement with the Los Angeles backers and instead awarded the 32nd franchise to Houston that October.
Houston businessman Bob McNair and his backers offered to pay $700 million for the new franchise and spend another $310 million on a stadium, making it the NFL's first billion-dollar deal. The Texans began play in 2002.
Tagliabue said significant progress has been made in the past year regarding the Coliseum. His statement came following a meeting with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and before a session with Anaheim Mayor Curt Pringle.
"I think the critical thing now is we're at the point where it's recognized, certainly by us, that the time is right," Tagliabue said. "We have to get agreements finalized. We'll be pursuing agreements in Anaheim. We're going to work with both communities for an agreement."
He said there have been no in-depth discussions on whether the region would get an expansion or existing team.
Tagliabue said last month that future expansion was unlikely anywhere but Los Angeles.
He also said it was important to make sure Southern California, the nation's top-ranked college team, was comfortable with any agreement, since the Trojans have made the Coliseum their home since 1923.
Tagliabue planned on meeting with USC coach Pete Carroll later Thursday. The commissioner met with Gov. Arnold Schwarzennegger late Wednesday.
Tentative plans call for the NFL to finance construction of a $500 million stadium inside the Coliseum, home to the Rams from 1946-79 and the Raiders from 1982-94.
City Councilman Bernard Parks said after listening to Tagliabue that he believes the Coliseum will eventually get an existing team rather than an expansion team.
"The NFL is going to have a say on who's going to come here. The Coliseum has no role in selecting a team," Parks said.
Asked when it might happen, Parks replied: "I don't know. Nobody's signed anything. They've got to say they're coming."
That being said, Parks expressed optimism.
"In my judgment, I don't believe these business people waste their time and money," he said. "They've spent a lot of time and money."
While Tagliabue didn't rule out the Rose Bowl, the Pasadena City Council voted 5-2 with one abstention last June to pursue a plan for the stadium that doesn't involve the NFL. Carson dropped out of contention in May when city officials decided to build a mall on its proposed site.