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Common Sense
Friday, 12 September 2008
It's quiet, a little too quiet
Topic: Days of Jeff's Life
DQ has been very quiet lately. Usually you can't get him to shut up, but he's just been sitting at a picnic table keeping to himself while we wait for the bus. The only story I have to relate this time concerns the tractor. He was "fixing" it a little while back, and now it's completely dead. It leaks (gushes) oil where he fixed it, and on Sunday (9/7) it wouldn't shut off. The driver had to rip out the fuel line to get it to shut off. Now of course, it won't start up again.

Posted by Josh at 6:12 PM PDT
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Thursday, 11 September 2008
Weird Wednesday Recap
Topic: paranormal

Monster Quest took a look at giant squids, and whether or not they could be the truth behind the myth of the Kraken.

Ghost Hunters Case #1 was local (for TAPS)- the Slater Mill in Rhode Island. They made contact with a 9 year old boy who worked at the mill by using a K2 meter, which lights up when magnetic fields are detected. The ghost was able to light up the meter for "Yes" when asked questions. Playing back the tapes at the end of the investigation revealed a biy shouting "Hello!" when they asked him to shout as loud as he could into their recorder.

Case #2 was an old inn that recently had a fire. They caught no evidence of a haunting, but they did uncover the truth behind the legends at the the building. 


Posted by Josh at 1:00 PM PDT
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Wednesday, 10 September 2008
7 Years
Topic: random
Today is 7 years since the last day we were free. On September 11, 2001 our freedom came under direct assault. They attacked us because they hate our freedom. They attacked us so they could push through the (un)PATRIOT Act. The traitors responsible MUST be brought to justice.

Posted by Josh at 8:06 PM PDT
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Tuesday, 9 September 2008
Pay My Mortgage Please!
Topic: government issues

Think by defaulting on your mortgage or going into bankruptcy will get you out of repaying your loan? Think again! Now you're paying your (and someone else's) with your tax dollar. That's right, the government is taking over mortgage giants Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the latest move in a trend of letting irresponsible lenders off the hook for careless business practices. In response, here's the email I sent to my Congressman Dave Reichert (R-WA 8):

In the tradition of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, I am requesting that Congress offer my family a taxpayer funded bailout. Sure, we've made some mistakes over the years and we certainly can recover on our own. However, without a taxpayer funded bailout our finances are such that we can only make a minimal impact on the local economy. A taxpayer funded bailout will strengthen the economy. An appropriation of just $100,000 will get us back into solvency. That's a bargain compared to some corporations! For the price of only one Pentagon toilet seat Congress can jumpstart the economy in Graham, Washington.

Feel free to copy this and send it to your Congressman at www.house.gov.


Posted by Josh at 8:33 PM PDT
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Monday, 8 September 2008
DQ Walks the Plank
Topic: Days of Jeff's Life

Saturday DQ was working (!) on building a deck for his side job and he stepped on a loose board and fell through. He was dangling (his words, not mine) and got a bruise on his leg.

Also, DQ is now driving a new riding mower, the Gray Ghost. It came from behind the Camp Lakeview office and probably hasn't been used in years. Why he needs a mower is beyond me.


Posted by Josh at 7:57 AM PDT
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Sunday, 7 September 2008
My Case For Secretery of State
Topic: government issues

Here's why I should be Secretery of State, since I'm not old enough to be President or VP: I'll get us out of our sticky situations with Iran and Russia. Imagine you are Iran, with a country that you know hates you on BOTH sides- in Afghanistand and in Iraq. You feel trapped. Here's what I would do. I'd meet with Iran and Israel together. Here's what we'd all do. Iran agrees not to build nukes, recognizes Israel's right to exist, and leaves Iraq alone. Israel gives back the occupied territory to Palestine and works out a sharing agreement regarding Jerusalem. The US agrees to get out of Iraq and Afghanistan, stop financially supporting Israel, and our scientists will work with Iran's to develope new energy technologies so they won't need peaceful nuclear stuff. But it won't pass the Senate so no deal.

Now for Russia, a little trickier. Get together with Russian and Georgia. Georgia and the US agree to recognize independence in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which then merges with Russia's North Ossetia and becomes independent Ossetia. Russia agrees to get out of Georgia and Ossetia. The US dismantles NATO since we don't need it anymore. Again, a nice idea but the Senate won't pass that treay either because in order to get something we have to give something. IN our imperial world we just take. No wonder everyone hates us!


Posted by Josh at 8:57 AM PDT
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Saturday, 6 September 2008
NFL Preview
Topic: sports

My first annual NFL predictions! With a game alreadyin, the 2008 season is officially underway.

AFC North: A toss-up between the always good Pittsburgh Steelers and the upstart Cleveland Browns. Last year the Steelers won by tiebreaker and it could be that close again this year. My pick- Steelers 11-5, Browns 10-6.

AFC East: Once again, this division belongs to the New England Patriots. The Pats won it by 9 games as the first team to finish 16-0. They won't win quite that many games this year, but are still a force to be reckoned with and will run away with the division again at 13-3.

AFC South: The Indianapolis Colts are facing some competition this year in what could be football's toughest division. Last year's last place team (Houston Texans) finished 8-8 and is improving more this year. The Jacksonville Jaguars and Tenessee Titans both made the playoffs last year and likely won't miss a step this season. But, you can't bet against Indy. I Like the Colts at 12-4, Jags and Titans at 10-6, Texans at 9-7.

AFC West: Chargers all the way! Only theDenver Broncos will be close enough to get a sniff of the Chargers, and they won't be that close. Chargers win the west at 12-4.

NFC North: So many questions in this division. How will the Packers look without Brett Favre? Can the Lions play a whole season like the first half of 2007? Can the Bears bounce back? Are the Vikings for real? I don't know the answer to any of those questions, but I will venture to guess that the Minnesota Vikings will take first at 9-7, followed by Green Bay at 9-7.

NFC East: Another tough call, although  the Redskins take themselves out of the equation with yet another coaching change. The Giants look to repeat as champs, the Eagles look to bounce back, and the Cowboys look to win a playoff game. My pick- Cowboys in first at 11-5, Giants at 10-6.

NFC South: Once again, a tough call because this is such a weak division. Only the Tampa Bay Buccaneers finished above .500 last season- and just barely. After much deliberation, I predict the New Orleans Saints in first at 10-6.

NFC West: For years, this division belonged to the St. Louis Rams, and then when they faded the Seattle Seahawks took over and have held it since. Now the Arizona Cardinals are trying to make some noise. They may come close, but the Seahawks will repeat as division champs again at 10-6.


Posted by Josh at 1:08 PM PDT
Updated: Saturday, 6 September 2008 3:25 PM PDT
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Friday, 5 September 2008
Post-Convention Analysis
Topic: election news

Ah, late summer in 1968. Oh, it's 2008 and we're still having 60's-esque dischord? The Dmocrats gathered in Denver, follwed by the Republican coven meeting in St. Paul. Both cities saw their share of protests, and both cities were plagued by overzealous "law" enforcement arresting those bold enough to excercise their First Amendment rights. I know of at least one case in each city where SWAT teams raided homes and confiscated signs and/or sign making material. Journalists covering protests in St. Paul were among those earlier arrested this week.

As for the conventions themselves, the only thing unexpected that happened was scaled-back Republican festivities caused by a hurricane a thousand miles away. Much to the relief of most attendees I'm sure, Bush and Cheney canceled their appearances in Minnesota to be with the hurricane victims along the Gulf Coast. They didn't get my memo to show up early and stick around for the storm. I really feel for those folks down there. Not only did they lose everything (again), but now they have Bush and Cheney hanging around them. Now on with the analysis!

The Democrats

The party that was unable/unwilling to take on Bush and was too inept to field a candidate who could beat him is now tryng to convince us that they can and should lead America. Based on the fact that they ran and won in 2006 on the promise to get us out of Iraq I don't trust the Ass Party to do anything good for this country. Their thinking is that liberal policies will undo the last 8 years when what we really need is a truly conservative fiscal and foreign policy, a liberal social policy, and leave everyone alone.

During the nomination roll call a motion was put forth to suspend the count and award nomination to Barack Obama. Oddly enough, the motion was put forth by none other than Hillary Clinton. How democratic! I heard a rumor that had they done the actual count, Obama wouldn't have had enough delegates to win it on the first ballot. In front of over 80,000 people Obama delivered his acceptance speech. As usual, lots of pretty words that mean nothing came out of his mouth.

In his speech, he sums up the problems facing America today, and realizes that not all of them are caused by government action. But the government wasn't responsive enough. Apparently he fails to realize the connection between government help and things getting worse, and that most of the time constitutionally the government CAN'T help.

In an uncharcteristic statement for a Democrat, he acknowledges we have freedom to make our own lives AND must repspect others. I find this amazing because the liberals are known for wanting us to live in their little nanny state.

He then contradicts his message of "hope" (hope for what we may never know) by saying that while government can't solve our problems it should do what we can't do ourselves. Namely, government should protect us from harm (there's the nanny state again), educate our children (how did anyone ever learn anything before the government came along?), and invest in new schools, new roads, and new science and technology. Education is NOT an enumerated power given to the federal government by the Constitution. It is and should be an entirely local matter. And who says we aren't capable of educating our kids? Thousands of homeschoolers seem to be doing better than the government-run schools. BUidling news roads is great. As long as it falls within the interstate commerce clause. Investing in new science and technology? Necessity is the mother of invention, not government interference.

To rid us of our dependence on foreign oil, Obama will spend $150 billion of your money to invest in energy. Shouldn't it be up to the energy companies?

Back to education, Obama will invest more in early childhood education and recruit new teachers, and pay them more so we can provide a world-class education for our kids. I thought it was up to the school districts to hire and pay teachers. But paying teachers more money doesn't mean better results. Everyone seems to think teachers are to blame for our education system being broken. I'm young enough to remember thata lot of times it's the kids who just don't want to learn. However, in order to address that problem we need to realize that our precious little babies aren't perfect and may be to blame for something.

Moving on to healthcare, he would make sure everyone has it. If you already have insurance, he can lower your premium! If not, he'll get you the same great benefits that Congress gets. Where is it written that government can set the price for a service like insurance? How will he lower your premium? And if you're old enough to remember a time before health insurance, you may recall that care was better quality and more affordable.

So how do we pay for all this ambitious social reform? Simple. He'll cut your taxes and also close the corporate tax loopholes. And by eliminating programs that don't work (the entire federal budget?) and streamlining those that do, we'll save enough money to balance the budget. Huh? A Democrat who wants to eliminate some programs and cut funding for others? Am I dreaming? And did anyone else notice that Obama-Biden looks a lot like Osama bin Laden?

It sounds like a wonderful plan, and I "hope" we can have all these thing Obama has the audacity to dream about, but without all the government strings attached. That would be "change" we can live with.

The Republicans

All the focus during the primary season was on how divided the Democrats were but there was little talk of a rift in the Republicans. Sure, every time a a candidate dropped out he'd throw his support to John McCain, but over a million followers of Ron Paul will refuse to vote for McCain. Most are split between Obama, Chuck Baldwin, and Bob Barr. This can only hurt the Republicans in what is expected to be a close election, and the party is making no overtures to win these voters back. Far from welcoming them into "the big tent", they went so far as to exclude Paul from a speaking role at the convention while other candidates who dropped out early, like Fred Thompson and Rudy Giuliani got prime speaking slots. The White Elephant Party seems to be shooting itself in the foot by turning away from its traditional values and shunning those who still hold those values.

That said, by endorsing McCain the party seems to be embracing the failed policies of a president with a 25% approval rating. Let them eat cake! McCain is a third Bush term, and by chosing Sarah Palin as his running mate he is essentially chosing a female Dick Cheney. Both have the unmarried pregnant daughter (Cheney's had her baby already) and both use their office for political payback- Cheney in the Valerie Plame case, and Palin, firing the head of the Alaska State Police for refusing to fire her sister's husband while they were going through a divorce. Also,Palin takes away McCain's right to criticize Obama'slak of experience.

Palin might have her shortcomings, but she was a strategic choice for McCain. First, he hopes to capture the Hillary Clinton vote. Second, he assumes guys will do anything for a pretty face. Third, he is wildly unpopular in Alaska, a Republican stronghold. By chosing Alaska's governor as his running mate he's working hard for their 3 electoral votes. Something to counteract Obama getting Delaware.  Now, onward to the convention!

I guess I missed the part where Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee released their pledge delegates. During the roll call,  Romney had 5 votes. It looked like it might be shaping up to be a surprise nomination for someone other than McCain as state after state deferred voting. Usually when a state defers it's because the pledged delegates don't want to vote for the candidate they are pledged to until whatever round of voting when they have free choice. Even McCain's home state of Arizona deferred. But then when it came around to the second round  of voting almost every vote was for McCain. That large group of Paul supporters failed to materialize in the balloting.

McCain's acceptance speech wasn't as eloquent as Obama's, of course. It began as a Bush lovefest, as the entire convention was supposed to be until Hurricane Gustav changed things. He's on our side, fighting for our futures! Does that mean Obama is plotting against us? He says he is the agent of change. Keep in mind, while he and Obama both want "change" what they really mean is the change in your pocket.

Once again, we got the reminder that he's a maverick! So is Palin. They stand up to the party, they fight corruption....yet remain silent when Bush rips the Constitution. He emphasized our need to win the war in Iraq. The same war that saw "mission accomplished" years ago. Who are we fighting in Iraq? People who will stop killing us once we leave.

Despite not even acknowledging Paul and his attempt to lead the party back to its roots, he perhaps is reaching out in his next remark: getting the party back to basics. Don't bet on it. Here's what he says the party believes in: low taxes, spending discipline, open markets, rewarding hard work and risk (he never did say anything about letting anyone lose on a gamble), strong defense, work, faith, service, a culture of life, personal responsibility, rule of law (except party rules), impartial judges. Sounds like what Paul has been sayng for 30 years.

Next, he stated that the government doesn't make choices for you but makes sure you have choices. Once again sounding like Paul. Then, he starts to sound like a Democrat. He wants to help the unemployed find and keep jobs. When someone in a hard-hit industry gets a lower paying job, he wants to make up the pay difference. 

Education-wise, he wants to shake up the failed school system with competition. Parents should have choice. He didn't say if non-government controlled education should be a choice. In another case of the feds doing the jobs of the locals, he wants to "remove barriers to qualified instructors" (WTF?), attract and reward good teachers, and "help bad teachers find a new line of work." 

To solve our energy problem, we need to allow private companies to drill on public land. Now! The government should develop cleaner coal, build nuclear plants, and increase green energy and natural gas. Not the power companies?

Then, the traditional Bush-like trash talk to other countries, particularly Iran and Russia. Russia, like America, invaded a smaller country to gain control over the world oil supply, intimidate its neighbors, and further its imperial ambitions. But Russia is bad, very very bad. Here is America we're virtuous when we do it! Then he started telling war stories. 

So after 2 weeks of pomp and circumstance, we have nothing to show for it but jailed protesters (just a few weeks after criticizing China for doing the same) and a couple of identical candidates with identical plans to lead America to complete ruin. Good luck voting!

 

 

 


Posted by Josh at 1:38 PM PDT
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Thursday, 4 September 2008
Election Results
Topic: election news

I lost my first election but I made a very strong showing with 44%. The final tally was 168 for Amy Cruver, 137 for me, and 6 write-ins. 160 damn dirty Democrats chose not to vote for either of us. For those of you who want to be technical, I got 44.05144694533762057.....% or even more technical, of ALL the abllots, even those who didn't vote for anyone, it was 29%. I'm not getting any more precise than 29%. Do the math yourself if you want a more exact figure. Better luck next time, I guess. Vote for me in '010! Thanks for your support! I guess that was my concession speech.

 


Posted by Josh at 10:17 PM PDT
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Your Weird Wednesday Recap
Topic: paranormal

Before I start, it seems like I get a lot of strange visitors at my door. In 2004 when Alicia was turning 3 we had a crayfish/crawfish/crawdad at our front door. Saturday night there was a bat sleeping on the front porch. Yesterday when I went to take out the trash there was a toad right in front of the porch.

Weird Wednesday started with Monster Quest. Our quest was the Thunderbirds. Native tribes have been seeing these giant birds which snatch people for thousands of years. In the 1970's there was a rash of thunderbird sightings in the Midwest. A 10 year old boy was picked up by one in 1977. There is one film of a thunderbird in flight. Is it a turkey vulture, as the experts claim? Are thunderbirds just regular birds, whose size can't be estimated because of distance and the human mind makes it appear larger? Is it an unknown species? Is it an unusually large example of a known bird?

Next on Ghost Hunters, TAPS traveled to the Iron Island Museum in Buffalo. The locked front door opened and closed while one of the investigaors was speaking to the camera. It is caught on film. There were footsteps in the attic. The voices caught on tape are some of the best ever. They all came from the attic or when they were investigating the attic. We have a man saying, "What do you want?", a woman's voice in what was described as sounding like Polish, and another man's voice saying, "Leave me alone." TAPS declared the building haunted.


Posted by Josh at 7:52 AM PDT
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