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Gentle Reader:



I realize my opinions and the wording used to express them may cause tender souls some distress. Therefore, in the spirit of brotherly concern for my fellow man, I advise anyone who takes offense at any portion of this blog to go piss up a rope.



About Me

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The title of this blog refers to the routine evolution of pressurizing & emptying to sea a human waste tank of an American submarine built prior to the mid 70's. If you don't do it right you wind up covered with excrement. The same can be said for blogging at times. Been there, done that, got the tee shirt. I'm a retired Senior Chief A-ganger from the US Submarine Service. Revert back in the Catholic Church. Recovering alcoholic. Living in Texas. 59 years old, happily married with three children, all eight years of age or under. Fully "retired", the wife works while I take care of the kids and home.

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Friday, April 30, 2010

About those poor illegal aliens...

CASA GRANDE, Ariz (KGUN9-TV) A spokesperson with the Pinal County Sheriff's Office has confirmed a deputy has been shot near I-8 & AZ84 by a suspected undocumented immigrant after encountering 2 in the desert.

The shooting happened around 4:30 p.m. Friday when the dispatch center received a radio transmission from the deputy saying he had been shot by undocumented immigrants. Dispatch did not receive any other radio traffic from the deputy after that transmission.

Authorities from several agencies are checking the area southwest of Casa Grande for at least two men armed with an AK-47 and a handgun.

Video coming into the KGUN9 Newsroom shows several law enforcement helicopters searching the area, deputies speeding through the desert, and a medical helicopter landing near a truck stop. Information being relayed from law enforcement helicopters to news helicopters says that suspects are shooting at the helicopters preventing them from rescuing the deputy.

It's not at all unlikely the deputy is of Hispanic ancestry. Anyone casting this in the same vein as the civil rights movement of the 60's might consider how many black deputies worked under "Bull" Connor (zip is the number).

No further comment from myself other than I'll be praying for the deputy.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

The USCCB, waterboarding and immigration laws.

Now the Catholic bishops are in full voice decrying Arizona's new law dealing with the problem of illegal aliens.

The one problem they exhibit here, as at similar times (such as when they wholeheartedly denounced water boarding as "torture") is a failure to provide guidance as to what actually CAN be done.

If specific measures are found unacceptable then specific substitutes should be cited. Giving the "shipyard salute" when asked what exactly would be acceptable doesn't cut it. Too often that is exactly what happens, the naysayers are loaded with "thou shalt nots" but lacking in just what "thou shalt" is able to obtain a desired goal. That goal can be avoiding another 9/11/01 type massacre or making a border state safer for the legal residents.

"shipyard salute"

When someone objects, let that same "someone" provide a better solution.

Or just STFU and stop being a backseat driver.

A quick observation...

about the oil rig problem in the Gulf.

When it first happened it was deemed no big deal, now we're in full panic mode, desperate to get the thing stopped.

This is the Administration that is so "green" the EPA is now contesting Congress on how far it's authority reaches regarding carbon dioxide emissions.

This is the Administration that believes you should never let a good crisis go to waste.

Yep, total coincidence. No big deal. Anybody believing any conspiracy theories on this needs a checkup from the neck up. Yep.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

B.O. shows his true colors...

So for all of those who thought B.O. would be airing out the stench of political partisanship & corruption once he was sworn in, there's this little nugget. Found via Lucianne.com at http://www.sfexaminer.com/

Obama: Holding me to my promises is just an ‘old Washington game’
By: David Freddoso
Online Opinion Editor
04/27/10 8:39 AM PDT

For those who thought they could take President Obama at his word on taxes, you might have made a mistake. He does not seem too wedded to the idea of keeping campaign promises not to raise “any form of tax” for those making less than $250,000 a year,

When reporters ask him about the promise, he says they’re just playing some “old Washington game.”

In remarks introducing his debt commission today, Obama said he would not ask the commission to abide by his campaign promise when it produces its recommendations.

"Of course this means that all of you, our friends in the media, will ask me and others once a week, or once a day, about what we are willing to rule out or rule in when it comes to the recommendations of the commission. That’s an old Washington game…so I wanted to deliver this message today: we’re not playing that game. I’m not gonna say what’s in, I’m not gonna say what’s out".

To put it another way, "You were all stupid. You trusted me."

But I believe there are a fair number of prolife folks who voted for this guy that are already aware of that sentiment from our Chief Executive.

2012 is a long way off.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Things are heating up...

...in what may be seen as an ongoing persecution of the Catholic Church. A persecution that started increasing in direct proportion to counter cultural statements coming from it's leaders. Those statements would include condemnation of any Catholic voting for a pro-abort Presidential candidate, condemnation of any efforts to formally recognize same sex "marriages", etc. I'm sure you get the drift.

Here's an example of the latest ramping up of the attacks; http://www.newsweek.com/id/236934

The main point of my post on this isn't to refute anything Christopher Hitchens may write. That is routinely done by other bloggers and Catholic apologists and in a far better manner than I could do it.

What I'll call attention to is that this drivel comes from the print edition of Newsweek, not just an entry on a scarcely read blog but an article that will be included in a major magazine taking space in bookstores, newsstands and libraries all over the nation. This Christianity-loathing atheist has been given a bully pulpit and handed a megaphone to have his rants heard.

Ya think that would have happened even ten years ago? If so, I've a portion of a bridge I own that's for sale. Lets meet and see if you might be interested.

I don't remember anything like this (or a lot of other present day madness) happening in the last forty or fifty years. Not in this country.

Those of us who are Catholic should pay attention to how things fall out in the next decade or so. Get active politically and let your voice be heard around the office water cooler. Staying silent will only help our enemies in this.

Just my opinion.

Stupid question time...

About the enforcement of that new Arizona law targeting illegal aliens.

A common cry from the detractors is that it's racist and anti-immigrant.

How is it racist when a good portion of Arizona cops are themselves of Hispanic descent? That's a pretty standard demographic here in the Southwest so although I reside in Texas I'll bet my next retirement check that the question accurately reflects the makeup of Arizona law enforcement.

How is the law anti-immigrant when it specifically targets those who are here illegally? Doesn't a nation have the right/responsibility to control who enters and rubs elbows with the legal citizens? If that had been done we might not have had a massacre on 9/11/01.

They're stupid questions, I know. But no one seems to be asking them. At least no one in the MSM.

And expecting THAT to happen may be the most stupid thing of all.

Like the new look?

Thanks to Nod who pointed out why I've had viewing problems with embedded videos (the template was too narrow). Yes, I am that computer ignorant that the obvious had to be explained. So sue me.

I'll be tweaking this baby in to get it more the way I like it. Any and all suggestions will be greatly appreciated.

Naked political gamesmanship on display.



Check out what he says about 1:55 to 2:05, where he singles out "young people, African-Americans, Latinos, and women...". That comes after the almost obligatory demonization of health insurance companies, Wall Street banks and special interests (and that last category can cover a multitude of heretical sinners who doubt the godhood of The One).

Hey, I thought this guy was going to be the great uniter, the one who fostered an era of bipartisanship, the one who took us beyond considerations of color.

Pardon my vulgarity but; What a walking douchebag of a human being this guy is. He's fostering class envy/warfare based on race & age for nothing more than political gain. He doesn't speak for The People, he speaks to The Gullible.

I'm ready to puke.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

NINE mandatory trash/garbage receptacles???

You. Must. Be. Shitting. Me.

Here's the story from Great Britain. Remember, this is one of the countries our fearless leaders are so hot for us to emulate.

If you don't believe it can happen here, how's YOUR mandatory 1.5 gallon capacity toilet working out for you? I have to flush mine multiple times to avoid plugging it up. That didn't used to happen when we were allowed bigger toilet tanks.

But hey, we'll be able to see it quite nicely in a few years with the mandatory light bulbs G.W. Bush decided we needed to start using.

This is courtesy of the Daily Mail online site via the
Goomba News Network.

Families are facing a nightmare future of recycling confusion.

In a regime set to spread across the country, residents are being forced to juggle an astonishing nine separate bins.

There has already been a storm of protest with warnings that the scheme is too complex and homes simply don't have the space to deal with the myriad bins, bags and boxes.

The containers include a silver slopbucket for food waste, which is then tipped in to a larger, green outdoor food bin, a pink bag for plastic bottles, a green bag for cardboard, and a white bag for clothing and textiles.

Paper and magazines go in blue bags, garden waste in a wheelie bin with a brown lid, while glass, foil, tins and empty aerosols should go in a blue box, with a grey wheelie bin for non-recyclable waste.

The strict regulations have been introduced as councils come under growing pressure to cut the amount of household rubbish they send to landfill.

However, they go far beyond anything previously expected from householders and families.

Retired teacher Sylvia Butler is already being forced to follow the new rules.

She said: 'I'm all for recycling and used to help educate the kids about it during my geography classes but expecting us to cope with nine different bins and bags is asking too much.'

Pressure on councils to enforce recycling schemes includes rising taxes on everything they send to landfill and the threat of European Union fines if they fail to hit EU targets from 2013 onwards.

Compulsory recycling is commonly enforced by bin police who can impose £100 on-the-spot fines for breaches like overfilled wheelie bins, extra rubbish left out, or bins put out at the wrong time.

If people do not pay the fines, they can be taken to court, where they face increased penalties of £1,000 and criminal records.

Officials in Newcastle-under-Lyme in North Staffordshire anticipated trouble when they introduced the nine-bin system last month.

They had to publish step-by-step instructions on how to fold down a cardboard box so that it fits into the green bag.

The council also put a film on its web-site in which a recycling officer demonstrates how to put a tenth container - a biodegradable liner - into the slopbucket.

Mrs Butler, 58, who is secretary of her local residents' association in Newcastle and a former councillor, said the terrace homes in her street had no gardens, yet were expected to accommodate bulky bins for garden waste.

Mrs Butler, who lives with husband Nick, 59, a retired lab worker, said: 'I have had to take my brown bin down to my allotment - there simply isn't room in my back yard to house it.'

Under the previous recycling system in the borough, householders had to juggle with the five containers that have become common in compulsory recycling and fortnightly collection schemes throughout the country.

The new system was introduced by the local council to help boost recycling rates from 26 per cent in 2008 to a target of 50 per cent by 2015.

It means only food waste is now taken each week. All other rubbish has to be stored for a fortnight before it is collected.

Mrs Butler said that whereas previously, only one wagon would collect their recycling, now up to three different lorries and crews do the job.

Samantha Dudley, 34, an office administrator from Newcastle, said recycling bags and their contents blowing in the street were a 'constant problem'.

She said: 'This scheme is supposed to increase recycling but the irony is it is creating more rubbish.

'We are on high ground and although you can tie the plastic bags up, the ones full of plastic bottles simply blow away up the street - even when they are full - if they are not weighed down.'
She added: 'I'm used to organising things with two children but even I find juggling nine different recycling bags and bins difficult. I dread to think how elderly people get on.'

Around half the country now has fortnightly collection systems imposed by town halls that prefer to compel their residents to carry out complex recycling than either organise recycling themselves in waste plants or absorb the cost of landfill taxes.

A report for the Environment Department last week revealed that the burning of household rubbish by those trying to evade recycling rules has now become the greatest source of highly poisonous and cancer-causing dioxins in the environment.

Binmen also frequently refuse to take rubbish containers they view as contaminated. Last week in Andover in Hampshire dustmen refused to take away a bin they said was contaminated with a handful of fruit pips.

A spokesman for Newcastle-under-Lyme council, which is ruled by a coalition of Tories and Liberal Democrats, said: 'If residents report litter problems to us our crews will pick it up that day.'

Some Tory-controlled authorities have been among the cheerleaders for compulsory recycling and fortnightly collections despite criticism from their own party's shadow ministers who have accused Labour of forcing councils to behave like 'bin bullies'.

A number of Tory councils are expected to continue to be among the front-runners in enforcing recycling.

And here is what this idiocy looks like:



Stand by folks, it's coming our way if we don't stay vigilant and on top of the fools in Foggy Bottom.

MSM spin on Arizona's immigration law...

This was found via Lucianne.com at Deutsche Presse-Agentur, which seems to be a German site. It doesn't matter where they're located, the MSM can be counted on to spin what they don't like into something ominously monstrous;

Mexico City - A strict new anti-immigration law enacted by the US state of Arizona is 'an obstacle to the solution of common problems' in North America, according to the Mexican government. No mention made anywhere of what the Mex government might be doing. Our border is a safety valve, allowing the discontented to seek a better life without changing the Mexican status quo.

President Felipe Calderon said Saturday that the draconian law signed by the US border state's Governor Janice Brewer the previous day would hurt US-Mexico relations. "draconian"? The damned thing allows police to check citizenship status only if they have reasonable cause to be suspicious of whoever they're speaking to. How in hell is that "draconian"?

'The criminalization of the migration phenomenon, far from contributing to cooperation between Mexico and the state of Arizona, represents an obstacle for the solution of common problems,' Calderon said. "Criminalization"? Hey amigo, they're here illegally. That means a crime has already been committed. By the illegal immigrant. No illegal immigrant, no crime. It's that simple.

US President Barack Obama also criticized Arizona's initiative. Well that figures, if he has his way they'll all be full blown citizens by 2012 and willing to keep him in office.

Mexico's Secretary of Foreign Relations Patricia Espinosa had condemned the Arizona measure on Friday. She said the government would use all available means to assist Mexican migrants affected by the new law. Isn't that admitting intent to aid and abet criminal acts? Not exactly a gesture to be found in a nation's allies.

So other than illegal drugs and illegal aliens, what the hell does Mexico provide us? Just wondering.

But the main point I'm trying to make is the full attack by this so-called objective media outlet. As previously stated, it makes no difference where the location the MSM will demonize their opponents in a heartbeat.

Which is why the blogosphere is becoming more of a news source. It's also biased as hell but at least dissenting voices are heard.

Boomer Battle Hymn

This was found via "bothenook" over at A Geezers Corner. Dude, you are twisted. For best listening, turn off the playlist down at the bottom left of the sidebar.



And can anyone tell me why videos show up offcenter on this blog? It's damned annoying.

R.I.P. Spc. Joseph T. Caron




Army Spc. Joseph T. Caron
Died April 11, 2010 serving during Operation Enduring Freedom

21, of Tacoma, Wash.; assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, N.C.; died April 11 in Char Bagh, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained when insurgents attacked his unit using an improvised explosive device.

(The following was taken from seattletimes.nwsource.com of Apr. 13, 2010) Joseph T. Caron was headstrong and driven, the kind of guy who knew what he wanted to do and did it. More than anything else, he wanted to be in the military. It was his career of choice.

He came from a family with a long history of military and law-enforcement duty; both his father and grandfather had served.

"He wanted to be just like his dad, just like his papa," said his uncle, Patrick Caron, a construction worker in Roy, Pierce County.

Spc. Caron, 21, formerly of Spanaway, died Sunday in Char Bagh, Afghanistan, when insurgents attacked his unit using a roadside bomb, according to the Department of Defense. Based at Fort Bragg, N.C., Spc. Caron was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division.

Because the two were so close in age, Patrick, who is 24, knew Spc. Caron — or "Joey," as he was called — more as a brother than as his nephew. Along with Spc. Caron's younger brother Josh, "we were always getting in trouble together, getting spanked together, always doing stuff we weren't supposed to," he said.

Growing up, they were outdoors boys, he said, their minds often meandering toward thoughts of hunting, camping or paintball.

Spc. Caron enlisted in the Army shortly after graduating from Spanaway's Washington High, where he'd wrestled and played football. He rooted for the NFL's Denver Broncos and loved to fish.

"He didn't like to lose, didn't like to come in second," his uncle said.

Spc. Caron talked about going to college someday with Army assistance. Sometime down the road, he talked of maybe becoming a law-enforcement officer in small-town Montana.

During a leave last summer, Spc. Caron, along with his father and uncle, went fishing on the Columbia River and exhibited the competitive nature that for many defined his character.

"He had to outdo everybody, had to catch the biggest fish out of the three of us," Patrick Caron said.

At day's end, it was Jeffrey Caron, Spc. Caron's father, who was certain he'd landed the top prize. But sure enough, when the fish were put on the scale, "Joey had the biggest one out of 12 people on the boat. That put a big smile on his face."

On his Facebook page, Spc. Caron chronicled his grueling military experience, honoring fallen comrades and dropping tidbits of inspirational military lore. On Sunday, he said he'd forgotten what it was like to sleep. His last post was a snippet from a song by the Steve Miller Band.

"He was a good soldier," Patrick Caron said. "He knew the risks. He had accepted those risks. He just wanted to fight his way through it."

Spc. Caron is survived by his mother, Tani Hubbard, of Morton, Lewis County; and his father, brother and a sister, Cassie, all of Gresham, Ore.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

R.I.P. Maj. Randell D. Voas


Air Force Maj. Randell D. Voas
Died April 09, 2010 serving during Operation Enduring Freedom

43, of Lakeville, Minn.; assigned to the 8th Special Operations Squadron, Hurlburt Field, Fla.; died April 9 near Kandahar, Afghanistan, in a crash of a CV-22 Osprey.

(The following was taken from wcco.com of Apr. 10, 2010) A U.S. Air Force Osprey crashed in Afghanistan Friday and killed four people, including the pilot from Minnesota.

Forty-three-year-old Major Randell Voas grew up in Eden Prairie. Voas died when the aircraft crashed near Kandahar. Voas graduated from Eden Prairie High School and also received a degree in biology from the University of Minnesota.

"Randy died doing what he loved doing," said Voas' father Dwaine Voas of Burnsville.

Dwaine Voas said his son loved his work and was proud to be supporting America. After college at the University of Minnesota, he entered flight training with the Army. He later became an Air Force pilot, flying a variety of aircraft including the Osprey.

"He loved his family, loved his kids, loved his wife," said Dwaine Voas.

The Voas family lived in Florida, close to Hurlburt Field where Randell Voas was assigned with the 8th Special Operations Squadron. Randell Voas' wife, Jill, is a St. Paul native. The couple has two children. Their daughter is a junior in high school and their son is in the seventh grade.

"Now that it's happened, we've been surrounded by and supported by our faith and by the love that we feel from family and friends," said Dwaine Voas.

A Pentagon spokesperson said this was the first time an Osprey has crashed during operations in a war zone. The Osprey takes off and lands like a helicopter and costs about $70 million per craft. Randell Voas' father said he had no concerns about the safety of the Osprey.

"It's been tested thoroughly. Randy described it to some of his coworkers as it was the Cadillac of aircraft," said Dwaine Voas.

The three other people killed in the crash were two service members and one civilian contractor.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Good question...

Why is the unashamed child abuser Polanski lauded while the repentant Pope is vilified?

The author's answer is also right on the money.

Did she give him a kiss when it was over?

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - A Utah woman has been sentenced to 30 days at home with an ankle monitor for blindfolding her husband and promising him a surprise before hitting him in the head with a hammer three years ago. (Well, it's a safe bet he WAS surprised.)

Amy Teresa Ricks also was sentenced to probation and community service Monday in 3rd District Court. The 37-year-old pleaded guilty to second-degree felony aggravated assault in February.

Prosecutors have agreed to reduce the conviction to a third-degree felony after Ricks completes probation. They also agreed to let Ricks seek expungement of the crime after seven years.

Ricks' husband suffered minor injuries in the May 2007 attack. At the time of her plea, Ricks' defense attorney said the two were still married but were separated.

"Married but separated"? That should have been foremost in the mind of "hubby" before he let himself be blindfolded. The stupid shall be punished.

An example of tabloid journalism...

...can be found right here;
Study Confirms Link Between Autism and Use of Cells From Abortions in Vaccines

I've two autistic sons, aged six and five. Being married to an RN gives me access to insights not available to most other folks with autism in their family. So I know my kids exhibited the disorder LONG before any vaccines were given. End of story.

But for one hell of a lot of people this will scare them away from vaccinating their kids. No I don't advocate the nonchalant use of vaccines obtained via aborted fetuses, no matter how long ago the strain was produced. But Catholic bioethicists who are in accord with the Magisterium have concluded the use of these vaccines are acceptable if no others are readily available. There is also a healthy amount of doubt about the extent aborted fetuses have been used for these medicines.

One of the recurring horror stories I hear is how parents refusing to properly vaccinate their children puts them at risk for disease. This doesn't just happen amongst the poor, as a matter of fact the wife observed quite a few upper middle-class children who had missed scheduled inoculations when she worked at a private practice some years back. It's reprehensible to place a child, especially an infant, at risk.

IMO the honchos at LifeNews.com should have held off on publishing the linked story until there was absolutely no question about the link of autism to vaccines. This story is irresponsible and on a lower level than the tabloids I sighted yesterday telling me about Oprah's supposedly gay lifestyle.

Parents of autistic children spend a fair amount of time wondering what they might have done wrong. I know this not only from my own experience but also from listening to other denizens of the waiting room for the therapists my kids see.

Let me put aside the macho mask for a moment to say it straight & plain; I pray daily for the safety and wellbeing of my children. I worry constantly of how they'll cope after I die (and at 57 yrs. of age, I'll probably kick the bucket long before their mother. Maybe before they've matured to any real degree. That would be true regardless of circumstances but autism just makes it worse). My mind spends one hell of a lot of time hoping my boys will "grow out" of this condition in at least a small degree (and they're high functioning, I'd hate for them to be as bad as many I've seen lately). Autism sucks, it isn't cute and it isn't "just another cross to bear" because that cross is being borne by innocents who wander confused and scared through a world they're at a loss to comprehend.

"News" stories of this sort are irresponsible and abhorrent.

They're abhorrent because they feed directly into the guilt many parents carry at the back of their minds. The fact is NOBODY is certain as to what causes the disorder. There could be multiple factors, there could be single as-yet undiscovered cause. As I've already said, my children exhibited the symptoms of it long before they received any vaccines mentioned in the linked article. Until there is an undeniable link to this scourge the self-appointed disseminaters of vital news need to just STFU and wait like the rest of us for more reliable information.

Just my opinion. Thanks for listening.

Palin for President. A bad idea?

It will be if she runs as a third party candidate. Here's the story this post is based on;

Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) -- In a new interview with a radio show set to air next week, pro-life former Alaska governor and vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin says she will run for president against pro-abortion Barack Obama "if it's right." Palin has been speaking before pro-life groups in an effort to build support from the movement.

In an interview with "100 Huntley Street," a daily Christian talk show based in Ontario, Palin said she "doesn't know politically what is next for me."

Palin said she would consider a bid to "pursue" the presidency in 2012 if she believes it is the best thing to do to help average Americans with the challenges they face.

"If I can help provide some encouragement, some inspiration, some hope for them to get through their battles and make good decisions and get through a challenge, because that's what we've been able to do, then I am going to stay focused on that," Palin said.

"Whether that's on a local level in my own little town of Wasilla, or in the Oval Office, if it's right, then we will pursue that," she added.

"I do believe that it is a wise thing for us to put our lives in our Creator's hands," she said. "I put my life into God's hands and say, I'm going to do the best that I can every day to bring positive change to people that perhaps need some help. Need opportunity, too."

"That's what I'm going to do, day to day, not necessarily knowing what will bring to my family, to my country, to my life, in the next year, two years, three years down the road," she added.

The comments are considered the most serious since Palin said in February on Fox News that it would be "absurd" not to consider a potential presidential run.

Palin told the Christian radio show she and her family has had an "exciting and full ride" since her running with Senator John McCain in 2008.

Like it or not, only the two major parties have enough of a power base and the resources to field successful contenders for the Oval Office. If the Republicans were in more of a decline than they already are I'd say there would be an opportunity for a third party to take over. But that isn't the case. They're more like the Democrats than not but still maintain SOME discernible differences (the recent Senate vote on Obamacare being a good example).

Currently she is no favorite of the Republican leadership. Her best bet is to continue stirring up the grass roots, appearing at Tea Party events, speaking out often and with clarity. Should she continue to do that the GOP will be reluctantly forced to acknowledge the appeal of her ideas & positions. IF that happened we might see former Gov. Palin on a national ticket.

But if she goes the route of a third party candidate we'd better suck it up and prepare for another eight years of B.O.. A third party candidate, no matter how strong the appeal to conservatives, will only dilute opposition to the regime in power.

Just my opinion.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

"Go granny go..."

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - An elderly Des Moines woman used a handgun to ward off a man who bashed in the front door of her home. Beatrice Turner said the man pounded on her door early Tuesday. Despite being told he had the wrong house, the man used his fists to break through the wood door.

The 89-year-old Turner said she grabbed a handgun and told the man she would shoot if he came inside. When the man entered, she fired a single shot.

A neighbor called police, who found 37-year old Nelson McAlpine standing on Turner's front lawn. The uninjured McAlpine was arrested on a charge of second-degree burglary.

McAlpine is being held in the Polk County Jail in lieu of $10,000 bond. It wasn't immediately determined if he has a lawyer.

I wonder at her failure to empty the gun and reload. Maybe at 89 you don't worry about that so much.

Women on subs revisited...

WASHINGTON (AP) - Navy Secretary Ray Mabus (MAY'-buhs) says he's getting little or no resistance inside the Navy since announcing he's going to let women serve aboard submarines.
Mabus says sailors and officers don't seem worried about ending the long-standing ban. He says the experience of female sailors aboard surface ships shows that men and women can work in close quarters.

Submarines are among the few remaining places where military women are prohibited.

Mabus also says he's hearing little complaint within the Navy about his recent order banning smoking aboard subs.

No, you won't get any complaints regarding placing women on subs if you speak to; A) asskissing officers looking to further their careers at the expense of the fleet. B) horny young enlisted men in the lowest paygrades who think with their dicks when this subject is broached.

The folks that should be polled would include; A) senior officers who are unpopular because of their outspoken opinions, B) senior elisted men who have served both at sea and ashore at a repair facility where women are present in large numbers.

But talking to those last two categories only insures a lot of straight, unvarnished truth being dished up. Can't have that now, can we?

I'm reminded of when Adm. Zumwalt was CNO and a poll was put out regarding changing the dress uniform for the "bus driver look" we endured in the 70's and 80's. Supposedly there was overwhelming support for discarding the "crackerjack" style (which has since been reinstated). I know this poll was done, I was one of the sailors questioned. I also know that yours truly made no bones about wanting to keep the old style uniform. There's always been a thought at the back of my mind that my answers and those like mine were placed in the "circular file" somewhere in the Pentagon. Probably that same file used for naysayers regarding split-tailed sailors on subs.

My God, I'm glad I'm fully retired from the military!

Thoughts on starry-eyed clerics...

The Catholic News Agency has an article today about the bishops of Arizona and their reaction to the immigration legislation headed for signing by the governor there. Big surprise, they're against it. Here's a link to the story; http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/religious_leaders_urge_arizona_governor_to_veto_anti-immigrant_bill/

One thought always hits me when I read something like this, i.e. an article detailing the objections religious leaders have towards things like enforcement of immigration laws, the death penalty, waterboarding, etc. That thought can be expressed, "So where are their concrete and practical suggestions for alternatives?"

They're few and far between, as seen in this particular case. Clerical hearts are bleeding gallons for the poor "undocumented worker" but give no thought to the plight of any Americans dealing with the illegals. There is no recognition of the tremendous strain placed on services such as hospital emergency rooms, food supplement programs, etc. just to give an example.

No suggestions whatsoever as to how the nation should deal in a practical, humane manner with this problem. I understand life sucks for the illegal alien, if it didn't they wouldn't be mobbing our borders trying to get in. Hell, if I were a mestizo living in EBF Mexico you can bet I'd be doing whatever would be necessary to get my ass out. I get it.

But compassion aside, there are real problems associated with the flood of illegals who come here. Those problems MUST be addressed, if the religious leaders of our country want to fully perform their duties to their ENTIRE flock they'll start making suggestions along with issuing criticism. Therein lies the problem, the harsh condemnation is never accompanied by any kind of suggested practical alternative.

If an alternative IS suggested (and here I'm thinking of capital punishment) that alternative is currently NOT practical. According to the starry-eyed clerics living in La-La Land, life in prison is the solution. But there is no recognition of how often LIP gets scuttled when some creep becomes a "model" prisoner, thus earning parole. Too often the story ends with the felon murdering some other innocent before getting gunned down by the cops. So LIP isn't practical, not in this country at this time for the reason I cited and others. Check back in about fifty or so years and maybe things will be different.

One more example of this can be found in the topic of waterboarding. Yep, it's damned unpleasant. But in all the hoopla raised by the bleeding hearts absolutely NOBODY comes up with an alternative that effectively renders the same results. If there are any alternatives suggested they're so ridiculous as to make your eyes bleed (my favorite was a response from a seminarian on a blog who stated the only recourse was to pray. Got it.)

In the examples I've given there is absolutely no thought shown by the wailing religicos of the responsibility the government has towards the safety and well being of it's citizens. THAT is what really stands out for me. It's as if those of us who reside in the USA as responsible, law abiding citizens are deliberately ignored.

Yes, there is a responsibility for our government to act in a humane, charitable manner towards any lawbreakers. That whole "whatever you do to the least, you do to me" mindset is valid. But at the same time concern is shown for the outcasts/criminals of society there should be a recognition of the needs for safety and protection for the rest of us.

That lack of recognition works against the religious leaders who speak out on these issues. Were they to be more evenhanded in the focus of their compassion they'd have a hell of a lot more support.

Just my opinion.

R.I.P. Senior Master Sgt. James B. Lackey




Air Force Senior Master Sgt. James B. Lackey
Died April 09, 2010 serving during Operation Enduring Freedom

45, of Green Clove Springs, Fla.; assigned to the 8th Special Operations Squadron, Hurlburt Field, Fla.; died April 9 near Kandahar, Afghanistan, in a crash of a CV-22 Osprey.

(The following was taken from www.fox30jax.com of Apr. 12, 2010) GREEN COVE SPRINGS, Fla. --Nearly half of James Lackey's life was spent defending our country. And that's how he lost his life on Friday.

Senior Master Sgt. Lackey was flying in a CV-22 Osprey when it crashed in Afghanistan. The Taliban claims it shot down the aircraft but the Pentagon says the crash is still under investigation.

Lackey's family took the news of his death especially hard. The pastor at his church, Roger Peadro, says the family is mourning in private.

"You know that it's a possibility for this type of incident to happen but you never really expect it," Peadro told Action News.

Lackey spent several years living in Green Cove Springs before joining the Air Force. That's when he moved to Fort Walton Beach, where his wife and three sons now live.

A memorial will be held for Lackey and another serviceman on Friday, near Fort Walton Beach.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

R.I.P. Cpl. Michael D. Jankiewicz




Army Cpl. Michael D. Jankiewicz
Died April 09, 2010 serving during Operation Enduring Freedom

23, of Ramsey, N.J.; assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, Fort Benning, Ga.; died April 9 in Zabul, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained when the CV-22 Osprey he was flying in crashed.

(The following was taken from www.northjersey.com of Apr. 15, 2010) RAMSEY — Faint sniffles and the soft clap of combat boots against the black top stood out in the stark silence just after noon Thursday when the black hearse carrying Cpl. Michael Jankiewicz inched down East Main Street.

Nine of his Army Ranger brothers led the way — passing by Jankiewicz’s former high school, beneath a 30-foot by 50-foot American flag the Ramsey Fire Department hung above Main Street and over the railroad tracks that bisect this small town. The soldiers marched onto North Central Avenue, past borough hall, and rounded the corner onto Darlington Avenue where Jankiewicz, with his family trailing in a limousine, was delivered to the Van Emburgh-Sneider-Pernice Funeral Home.

Six days ago, the young man who dreamed from the age of 3 of serving his country, died when the U.S. Air Force Osprey he was flying in crashed. Jankiewicz had just begun his second tour of duty in Afghanistan; he had also served twice in Iraq.

“Michael was a character,” said his cousin Scott Heuer. The Army “was an adventure to him … he wanted to be out there doing what he did.”

At Ramsey High, Michael dressed in fatigues and took pride in his knowledge of history, friends said. They described him as being kind to everyone, the glue that held them together and a person they could go to for advice.

“This would be the way he would probably want to die,” said Megan Fitzpatrick, who
took Thursday off from student teaching to welcome her former schoolmate home. “It
just happened too soon.”

In the middle of the workday, in the middle of the week, hundreds of people dropped what they were doing to line the procession route. Many had never met the 23-year-old. A few could find connections through siblings or their own children – as is often the case in small towns. But young and old alike, they all shared the same reverence.

“What he stood for and what he did for this country is the ultimate sacrifice,” said Chris Rotella, who took a break from working from his Ramsey home to watch the 15-minute “I’m just proud to be an American,” said Maura Boyd, of her reason for bringing her 5-year-old daughter Shelby. “It’s nice to see the community come together.”

Veterans and family members of others who are serving in the military proudly displayed their allegiance, wearing jackets, t-shirts and hats representing their branch of the military. Nearly everyone along the route held tight to an American flag.

“It’s extremely important for the family to know that people loved their son and support what he was doing,” said Tom Egan, a Vietnam Veteran from VFW Post 850 in Glen Rock. “When the family passes and sees this outpouring of support … it’s the beginning of the closure process.”

To the Ramsey High School students who lined the sidewalk three and four people deep, it brought world history to their doorstep.

“This is a close knit town,” said Principal Richard Lio. “A lot of these kids don’t even know him – but at the same time, they know him.”

“I know he walked the same halls. Him and I had the same history teacher,” said Maddie Messina, a senior at Ramsey High. “And he went to Iraq.”

“This gives them a real good idea of what it’s like to serve your country,” said Matt Certo, assistant principal.

In front of borough hall, a 10-foot by 15-foot American Flag flapped off the side of a Westwood fire truck. In January, that town held its own procession for Sgt. Christopher Hrbek, who was also killed in Afghanistan.

“The Ramsey Fire Department asked if we would join in,” said Jaymee Hodges, Hrbek’s step-father. “They came down and were so supportive to us … so it’s our honor to be here.”

When the procession reached its destination, Jankiewicz’s family huddled in the Van Emburgh-Sneider-Pernice parking lot as the white flag-draped coffin was unloaded by Army Rangers. They wept and hugged as their brother, son, grandson, nephew and cousin was taken inside.

“My family couldn’t be more proud of Michael,” said Heuer, his cousin. “It was just a beautiful display of love and respect. And we couldn’t ask for more.”

Monday, April 19, 2010

R.I.P. Sgt. Sean M. Durkin




Army Sgt. Sean M. Durkin
Died April 09, 2010 serving during Operation Enduring Freedom

24, of Aurora, Colo.; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, Fort Carson, Colo.; died April 9 at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington of wounds sustained when enemy forces attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device near Forward Operating Base Wilson, Afghanistan, on March 27.

(The following was taken from mcall.com of Apr. 13, 2010) An Easton native who was serving with the Army in Afghanistan died Friday of wounds he suffered March 27 when his vehicle was hit by a bomb.

Sgt. Sean M. Durkin, 24, of Aurora, Colo. died at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., according to the Department of Defense.

Durkin, who grew up on South Side Easton but moved to Colorado with his family in 2003, was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, Fort Carson, Colo.

He had been recuperating at Walter Reed after losing both legs to amputation and his family and doctors were cautiously optimistic about his recovery, said Michael Yount, pastor of Phillipsburg Alliance Church where the Durkins were active before moving from the area.

But Durkin's condition rapidly worsened from a fungal infection, said Yount, who visited Durkin last week.

"Up until Thursday, it looked like he was going to make it," the pastor said.

Durkin enlisted in February 2006 and served in Iraq from March to November of 2007. He was deployed to Afghanistan in August.

"He always wanted to be in the Army since he was a little kid," Yount said, remembering Durkin as a sweet and ambitious young man who would attend Wednesday night prayer services at the church whenever he visited the area.

Yount said Durkin had to repeat basic training because he broke his foot during his first effort. Then, at the end of his second go-around, he broke it again. Those injuries never quenched his ambition to serve.

Yount said his church will hold a memorial service in about 30 days. It hasn't yet been scheduled because Durkin's sister is expecting a baby.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Hmmm, the things that make you go "Hmmm"...

Washington D.C., Apr 18, 2010 / 07:40 am (CNA).- A federal judge’s ruling that the National Day of Prayer is unconstitutional had no legal basis and was not in keeping with American traditions of expressing “dependence on the Almighty,” critics said.

On Thursday U.S. District Judge Barbara B. Crabb in Madison, Wisconsin declared unconstitutional a 1988 federal law giving the president the authority to designate the first Thursday in May as the National Day of Prayer.

Her decision came in response to the case filed by the Madison-based atheist group Freedom from Religion Foundation, which argued it was unconstitutional because it endorses school prayer.

Judge Crabb agreed with the group, saying that atheists feel marginalized by the law, CNSNews.com reports.

Granting that many people are not harmed by the proclamation, she ruled that individuals who do not pray and feel marginalized by the government’s message of prayer suffer “a distinct harm.”

The American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) had represented 31 members of Congress in an amicus brief defending the National Day of Prayer.

Jay Sekulow, chief counsel of the ACLJ, said the decision was badly thought out.

“It is unfortunate that this court failed to understand that a day set aside for prayer for the country represents a time-honored tradition that embraces the First Amendment, not violates it," he commented, according to CNSNews.com.

Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas), a former judge and one of the 31 Congressmen backed by the ACLJ, said in his view it was “obvious” that Judge Crabb “had not received a very good education” in American history.

He cited Benjamin Franklin’s exhortation to prayer at the Constitutional Convention and his motion that prayers be held in Congress every day.

Sekulow thought the case would “very likely” go to the U.S. Supreme Court, especially because the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals has been “difficult at times on religion cases.”

“I think we will carry the day, but it is going to be a close case,” he continued, warning that the issue could be decided by the next appointee to the Supreme Court.

“An issue like this underscores the importance of why it's so critical for the nominee to answer direct questions about their judicial philosophy, how they view the role of judges, and their view of the rule of law,” Sekulow continued.

President Barack Obama, his press secretary Robert Gibbs, and National Day of Prayer Task Force Chairman Shirley Dobson were named as defendants in the suit. According to CNSNews.com, Judge Crabb dismissed the case against Dobson.

Dobson, the wife of Focus on the Family Founder Dr. James Dobson, also cited American history as justification for the practice.

“Since the days of our Founding Fathers, the government has protected and encouraged public prayer and other expressions of dependence on the Almighty,” she said in a Thursday statement. “This is a concerted effort by a small but determined number of people who have tried to prohibit all references to the Creator in the public square, whether it be the Ten Commandments, the Pledge of Allegiance, or the simple act of corporate prayer -- this is unconscionable for a free society.”

Joel Oster, senior counsel with the Alliance Defense Fund (ADF), said the Day of Prayer was “America’s heritage.”

“ADF urges the Obama administration to appeal this terrible ruling that not only undermines the National Day of Prayer, but the underlying heritage and tradition of the American people which dates back to the nation's founding,” he continued.

In 1952 President Harry Truman signed into law a joint resolution of Congress to set aside a National Day of Prayer. Congress amended the law in 1988 to establish a more particular date.

According to the ADF, all 50 governors and U.S. presidents have issued proclamations in honor of the National Day of Prayer.

CNSNews.com said that President Obama last year issued a proclamation for the National Day of Prayer but refused to host ceremonies at the White House as previous administrations had done. He said that the statute is simply an “acknowledgement of the role of religion in American life” that is similar to other ceremonial practices that courts have upheld in the past.

Okay, so far this is just another activist judge who will probably get slapped down by the Supremes. Just MHO. But there was a picture that accompanied the story, a photo of the judge. Now for some reason I thought she looked familiar, couldn't quite place it but the face rang a bell;





And then I remembered this shot from an old Christopher Lee flick;






Seperated at birth?

DUH!! NOW I get it!

Obamanomics explained so anybody can understand (H/T to Harry @ Garbanzotoons)


Unforseen/unintended results...

The family and I were driving to Mass, yours truly began opining about the true uncertainty of life in general,

"Take this volcano eruption in Iceland that's disrupting air travel in Europe. The number of flights are diminished so the security is able to be more thorough. Let's say that Al Queda had a 9/11 style attack planned that is now derailed because of tighter security. This then follows along till 2012 and B.O. is able to cite a lack of Islamic attacks as proof of his effectiveness, he is reelected and has four more years to push his ideology. God help us all."

"OR, lets say that this decrease in air travel hits the economy hard so we never recover and when 2012 comes, B.O. and his crew get ushered out the door because of it. We elect a politician with strong conservative beliefs. All because of the weather."

"OR the ash that's suspended in the atmosphere causes drastically colder weather. All thoughts of "going green" go out the window as John Q. Public clamors for more oil for the house furnace. We start drilling within our borders like crazy, opening every refinery we can as fast as we can. When the weather rights itself after a few years we have a super glut of cheap oil, the Arab nations go broke, terrorism is no longer funded by oil and Al Queda & Co. are completely out of business."

"OR the volcano that's erupted proves to be the start of a worldwide chain reaction where every volcano begins erupting and the planet finally comes apart like a rotten apple with a firecracker that explodes within it."

"Nobody really can foretell the results. And this was a completely unforeseen, natural event."

The wife's only comment, "Lovely, just lovely."

For some reason she didn't seem impressed.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Today at the slaughterhouse...

My parish hosted the Catholic Pro-Life Quarterly Mass today at 8:30am. Buses headed out for a Rosary Procession to a local abortion center, we then returned to the church for closing Benediction & Eucharistic Adoration.

Funny thing, the abortion center was locked up tighter than a drum. As one prolifer put it, that's the equivalent of closing a shop in a mall on Saturday. The prevailing opinion is they knew we were coming and didn't want to deal with the added crowd of peaceful protesters. I'm sure the cops didn't either.

Shutting down on whats normally a busy day will cost them a few bucks, as will any woman who might have had her "procedure" rescheduled and now will take time to think on the subject more thoroughly. That extra thought might lead to a few cancellations.

Not bad, not bad at all.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Child discipline 101

Every Catholic boy's source of PTSD, but it'll keep you in line!





Found this via Drudge;

TEMPLE, TEX. -- In an era when students talk back to teachers, skip class and wear ever-more-risque clothing to school, one central Texas city has hit upon a deceptively simple solution: Bring back the paddle.

Most school districts across the country banned paddling of students long ago. Texas sat that trend out. Nearly a quarter of the estimated 225,000 students who received corporal punishment nationwide in 2006, the latest figures available, were from the Lone Star State.

But even by Texas standards, Temple is unusual. The city, a compact railroad hub of 60,000 people, banned the practice and then revived it at the demand of parents who longed for the orderly schools of yesteryear. Without paddling, "there were no consequences for kids," said Steve Wright, who runs a construction business and is Temple's school board president.

Since paddling was brought back to the city's 14 schools by a unanimous board vote in May, behavior at Temple's single high school has changed dramatically, Wright said, even though only one student in the school system has been paddled.

"The discipline problem is much better than it's been in years," Wright said, something he attributed to the new punishment and to other discipline programs schools are trying. Residents of the city's comfortable homes, most of which sport neighborly, worn chairs out front, praise the change.

"There are times when maybe a good crack might not be a bad idea," said Robert Pippin, a custom home builder who sports a goatee and cowboy boots. His son graduated from Temple schools several years ago.

Corporal punishment remains legal in 20 states, mostly in the South, but its use is diminishing. Ohio ended it last year, and a movement for a federal ban is afoot. A House subcommittee held a hearing on the practice Thursday, and its chairman, Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-N.Y.), is gearing up for a push to end the practice once and for all. She plans to introduce legislation within weeks.

"When you look that the federal government has outlawed physical punishment in prisons, I think the time has come that we should do it in schools," she said.

A joint American Civil Liberties Union-Human Rights Watch report last year found that students with disabilities were disproportionately subjected to corporal punishment, sometimes in direct response to behavioral problems that were a result of their disabilities. Many educators and psychologists say that positive tools, such as giving praise for good behavior and withholding it for bad, are far more effective for discouraging misbehavior.

Those techniques "encourage them to behave well in the future," said report author Alice Farmer. Paddling "makes students lose respect for their teachers."

Rules about paddling vary from district to district, but typically only administrators, not teachers, can mete out the punishment, which is done in private. Usually, a long, flat wooden paddle is used to give as many as three blows across the student's clothed rear end, although Farmer found students who had been hit many more times. Boys are overwhelmingly the target.

Not everybody in Texas is gung-ho about paddling. The practice has been banned in the state's big cities, and its use varies from campus to campus in districts that allow it.

In Alvin, a formerly agricultural city of 23,000 that has been swallowed by Houston's suburbs in the past decade, the policy is on the books but not used in many schools.

"I don't think it's that simple anymore," said Terry Constantine, who added that she hasn't swung a paddle in her 16 years as an elementary school principal there. "We look for our parents to work with us now."

At Alvin High School, where the technique is used, Principal Kevon Wells said he had paddled students about six times this school year. If a student continued to misbehave, he said, he wouldn't do it again. "I'm not into beating kids," he said.

But in Temple, a city just outside Fort Hood that shakes with the air horns of the trains that pass through its rail yards, many residents say they hope that the old-fashioned solution can address what they see as rising disrespect among youth. They say their discipline problems aren't different from those in any other school system in the country: students showing up late for class, or violating the dress code, or talking during lessons. Those habits were unheard of in the days when schoolteachers routinely swung a paddle, they say.

"Back then, you wouldn't throw spitballs, because you were afraid of the consequences," said Darr Kuykendall, a worker for a plumbing supply company.

"A lot of kids have tempers," said Abby Jones, a junior at Temple High School. "Those kids that would be paddled would think of it as a threat . . . and maybe would be better."

Parents also pushed for the change because many paddle their children at home and wanted consistent discipline in the classroom, said John Hancock, assistant superintendent of administration for the Temple schools, who has been an educator for more than 40 years.

"We're rural central Texas. We're very well educated, but still there are those core values. Churches are full on Sundays," Hancock said. "This is a tool we'd like in the toolbox for responding to discipline issues."

Hancock, an urbane, sturdily built Colorado native who wears horn-rimmed glasses, said the school system had banned corporal punishment about six years ago because a state law change made what was permissible uncertain. Follow-up made clear that schools could paddle, he said.

Since the policy was changed in May, the school system has paddled only one student, and that was at the request of his parent, Hancock said.

Many districts, including Temple, which is nearly evenly divided among white, black and Hispanic students, require parental consent before the punishment is given. Temple also requires the student's consent, Hancock said, and the punishment is considered equivalent to an out-of-school suspension.

Residents said restoring paddling is less about the punishment and more about the threat.

"It's like speeding," said Bill Woodward, a graphic designer. "Are they going to give you a speeding ticket, or . . . a warning? I'd speed all day if I knew it was going to be a warning."

Yep, as my paternal grandmother was oft quoted as saying, "If you pat them low enough, hard enough, they'll behave."

FWIW, I believe every child is different. Some you can easily put through college, others you'll need to put through a wall.

R.I.P. Sargeant Roberto E. Diaz Boria




Army Sargeant Roberto E. Diaz Boria
Died April 08, 2010 serving during Operation Iraqi Freedom

47, of San Juan, Puerto Rico; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 65th Infantry Regiment, 92nd Maneuver Enhancement Brigade, Puerto Rico National Guard, Cayay, Puerto Rico; died April 8 in Mombassa, Kenya. The circumstances of his death are under investigation.

(The following was taken from www.hoa.africom.mil) CAMP LEMONNIER, Djibouti, Apr 12, 2010 — A Puerto Rico Army National Guard sergeant was remembered during a memorial service April 11, 2010. Sergeant Roberto Diaz Boria, 1st Battalion, 65th Infantry Regiment, died April 8 while stationed in Mombasa, Kenya. The cause of death is under investigation.

The service was filled to capacity. Among those attending were fellow 1-65th members, joined by representatives from the camp's joint forces including the Air Force, Navy, Army, and several coalition partners. The U.S Ambassador to Djibouti also attended.

Diaz, a team leader with Charlie Company, was remembered during the ceremony as a top performer who constantly sought opportunities to be a good leader to his fellow soldiers.

He always had a genuine interest for his soldiers' wellbeing, said Captain Luis Loyola, the Headquarters/Headquarters Company Commander.

"Without a doubt in our minds, we have lost a great leader, a great human being, and a true friend," Loyola said.

Battalion Commander Major Alberto Irizarry also commented on Diaz’s effect on his fellow Soldiers.

"He loved to be surrounded by people and friends. He was the spark of any activity and enjoyed making friends," said Irizarry. "We will miss you."
Fellow Solder Sergeant Robert Creighton spoke of Diaz as a top shelf NCO, a wise man and a good friend.

"I will always remember 'D' as caring, generous and super friendly," said Creighton." [He was] always up for a challenge and eager to lead the way."
Specialist Nelson Vazquez, also spoke of his best friend and the times they spent together during drill weekends and off duty time.

"[Being with him] was the best time of my life," said Vazquez, who is friends with Diaz’s family.

Diaz enlisted in the Air Force in 1988 before serving in the Navy Reserve. He later joined the Army and became a member of the Puerto Rico Army National Guard in February 2009.

During the service, the company first sergeant called the Last Roll.

1st Sergeant Roberto Diaz called for attendance. "Sergeant Creighton … Specialist Vazquez … Sergeant Diaz … Sergeant Roberto Diaz … Sergeant Roberto Diaz Boria …"

Each attending member whose name was called answered, but when Diaz was called for the third time, Navy Petty Officer 1st Class David Fedora sounded taps.

The Last Roll is a final tribute paid by soldiers to their fallen comrade. Its origin is from the accountability roll call conducted by unit first sergeants following combat. The Last Roll is called with conviction held by soldiers that all unit members will be accounted for and none will ever be forgotten.

R.I.P. 1st Lt. Robert W. Collins




Army 1st Lt. Robert W. Collins
Died April 07, 2010 serving during Operation Iraqi Freedom

24, of Tyrone, Ga.; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, Fort Stewart, Ga.; died April 7 in Mosul, Iraq, when enemy forces attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device.

(The following was taken from www.thecitizen.com of Apr. 13, 2010) A Tyrone man who gave his all for his country will be laid to rest here Saturday.

Army First Lieutenant Robert Collins, 24, died April 7 in Iraq when his vehicle was struck by an improvised explosive device near Mosul in northern Iraq, military officials said.

Lt. Collins, a 2004 graduate of Sandy Creek High School and a 2008 graduate of West Point Military Academy, is expected to be flown into Peachtree City’s Falcon Field Airport sometime Thursday. The funeral will be 10 a.m. Saturday at New Hope Baptist Church in Fayetteville.

Citizens are encouraged to participate in Thursday’s procession by lining the route and waving flags to honor Lt. Collins as the motorcade passes by.

Besides Lt. Collins, who was the platoon commander, the roadside explosion also killed the vehicle’s driver, Pfc. William A. Blount, 21, of Petal, Miss., according to a press release from the U.S. Department of Defense.

The incident happened near Tall Abtah, northern Iraq (near Mosul) on April 7. Collins and Blount were both assigned to the 1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, Ga.

Lt. Collins’ unit was based in Tall Abtah and among its tasks were operations to improve security and the quality of life for the Iraqi people, he wrote on a recent update to his platoon’s Facebook page. The 2nd platoon also helped provide security for the recent national election in Iraq.

In the note, Collins wrote proudly of his soldiers’ accomplishments and expressed thanks for the continuing support from those stateside.

Former Sandy Creek classmate Andre Lecour, in a personal blog post, said Collins “was compassionate and at the same time had a great sense of humor that could not be matched.”

“Robert would always be there for people when they needed help, be it in class, personal life or just to give someone a laugh to make them feel better,” Lecour said. “When I was at my lowest of lows, Robert would be there for support.”

Collins was recalled by one commenter at www.TheCitizen.com as standing out from the crowd as a youth.

“He knew early on the direction he wanted to take and he became an exceptional soldier,” the poster wrote.

Another person called Lt. Collins his “hero in high school” as they got to know each other on the football team.

“I can honestly say that knowing Robert Collins made me a better person. Back then he was just my hero. ... Now Robert is a hero to all of America.”

Lt. Collins is survived by his parents, Lt. Col. (ret.) Burkitt “Deacon” Collins and Lt. Col. (ret.) Sharon L.G. Collins along with Nicole Williams, his childhood sweetheart and girlfriend of eight years among other extended family members. The family’s church is Hopewell United Methodist in Tyrone.

The family will receive friends Friday evening from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Parrott Funeral Home and Crematory in Fairburn, and online condolences may be made at www.parrottfuneralhome.com.

There will be an opportunity for citizens to honor Lt. Collins during the procession following the funeral. The procession will leave New Hope Baptist Church in Fayetteville on New Hope Road; south on Ga. Highway 85 through Fayetteville; and west on Ga. Highway 54 west through Peachtree City. Once in Coweta County the procession will continue on Ga. Highway 34, then the Hwy. 34 bypass to the gravesite on Roscoe Road.

Lt. Collins will be escorted at all processions by motorcycles from the Patriot Guard of Georgia, a group dedicated to honoring fallen American heroes.

The family is asking donations in Lt. Collins’ memory to be made to the 1LT Robert Wilson Collins Patriot Spirit Scholarship, c/o Bank of Georgia, 100 Westpark Drive, Peachtree City, Ga. 30269.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Slander the troops and be honored for it...

This was found on the Washington Times site, via Lucianne.com. I believe naming even a garbage scow after a man who denigrated our military for his own personal gain to be a slap in the face of our armed forces. Murtha was a corrupt (remember Abscam), treacherous (Haditha comments) coward. I realize he had earned the Purple Heart in Viet Nam as a Marine, undoubtedly he truly deserved that honor. But IMO all his courage and integrity must have vanished soon after taking office in D.C.. Here's the story;

The late Rep. John Murtha, Pennsylvania Democrat, has achieved his highest undeserved honor. Navy Secretary Ray Mabus has decided to name the Navy's newest San Antonio Class amphibious transport-dock LPD 26 the USS John P. Murtha. This is a slap in the face to every service member who bridled when Murtha publicly accused Marines in Iraq of intentionally killing women and children in cold blood.

Murtha made his views known after details emerged about a firefight in Haditha in November 2005 in which 24 Iraqis were killed. Murtha accused the Marines of engaging in premeditated murder and agreed with MSNBC's Chris Matthews that this was "exactly" like the 1968 My Lai massacre in Vietnam. Charges later were brought against eight Marines but have since been dropped against all but one. However, Murtha's theatrical rush to judgment still rankles Americans in uniform, whose views on the congressman range from disappointment to the belief that he gave aid and comfort to the enemy.

"This dishonors every Marine who will serve aboard that ship," a Navy officer told The Washington Times. "And it sends a poor message to the acquisition community that politicians can have ships named after them just for sending pork back to their districts." Milblogger "CDR Salamander," who served in the Navy for 21 years, told us this was "a naked political move" and "nothing about this man will be inspiring to the crew assigned to the ship."

To his credit, Murtha was a combat-wounded veteran of Vietnam, but he is hardly unique in that respect. The USNS Benavidez is named for Army Master Sgt. Roy P. Benavidez, who, wounded and under heavy assault, saved the lives of eight men at Loc Ninh in South Vietnam in 1968. He was awarded the Medal of Honor. Likewise the USNS 1st Lt. Harry L. Martin, which is named for a Marine who was mortally wounded on Iwo Jima while leading his men in a counterattack against a massed Japanese suicide charge. The USNS Shughart is named after Sgt. 1st Class Randy Shughart, killed at the Battle of Mogadishu in 1993. These are the types of veterans who should be given such an honor, not a political hack whose most successful defensive maneuver was saving his pork-laden earmarks from surprise attacks of fiscal responsibility.

The idea to name the ship after Murtha probably did not originate with the Navy secretary. Some speculate that this is House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's parting salute to one of her loyal hatchet men. San Antonio Class vessels traditionally are named after cities, and this is the first such ship to be named after a person. Because this recommendation breaks protocol and tradition, the Navy Department should release the documents that pinpoint its origins and the process by which it was decided.

It's doubtful that the ship naming will do much to honor Murtha. The brave Marines and sailors who serve aboard this vessel probably will refer to it only as LPD 26 or come up with a colorful nickname like "Porky Pig" or the "Fat Bastard" (the Marine favorite). Perhaps Murtha could still be useful in supplying the ship's slogan: "Cold Blooded Killers."

I've always sympathized with the crew of the USS Jimmy Carter, fortunately most of the present crew is probably too young to appreciate their poor luck. As for Murtha, I wouldn't name a shitbarge after that fat turd.

Below is the address for any mail to be sent to SecNav on this matter. Unfortunately I'm unable to find an email address.

Office of the Secretary of the Navy
2000 Navy Pentagon
Washington, D.C. 20350-2000

R.I.P. Pfc. William A. Blount



Army Pfc. William A. Blount
Died April 07, 2010 serving during Operation Iraqi Freedom

21, of Petal, Miss.; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, Fort Stewart, Ga.; died April 7 in Mosul, Iraq, when enemy forces attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device.

(The following was taken from nems360.com of Apr. 10, 2010) JACKSON — Army Pfc. Anthony Blount was looking forward to coming home next month for the birth his first child, a little girl to be named Avery Elizabeth.

However, the 21-year-old Petal, Miss., resident won't get the chance. He and another soldier died Wednesday in Iraq after the vehicle they were in hit a roadside bomb, according to Blount's brother-in-law, Nate McRae.

The U.S. military announced Wednesday that two American soldiers died while conducting a patrol in northern Iraq. The names were not immediately released, which follows Defense Department policy of withholding identities until a time after relatives have been notified.

"Anthony was one of most the hilarious people I've ever met. The guy was funny as hell," McRae said. "He was a really great spirit. And he was the last boy that could carry on his grandparents' name."

McRae said he tried to discourage Blount from the joining the Army nearly two years ago, but the Petal High School graduate was intent on serving in the military.

"He's extremely honorable," McRae said. "All of his commanding officers said he was just an amazing soldier. It's a tremendous loss."

Blount's wife, Amanda, is eight months pregnant.

Stephen Garrard, a director at Moore Funeral Home in Petal, confirmed Blount's death but said arrangements had not been completed.

Blount was outgoing and popular, McRae said.

"He was an amazing guitar player. He taught himself to play. He loved video games and hanging out with his friends," McRae recalled.

R.I.P. Sgt. Kurt E. Kruize




Army Sgt. Kurt E. Kruize
Died April 04, 2010 serving during Operation Iraqi Freedom

35, of Hancock, Minn.; assigned to the 367th Engineer Battalion, U.S. Army Reserve, St. Cloud, Minn.; died April 4 in Baghdad of wounds sustained in a noncombat-related incident.

(The following was taken from www.startribune.com of Apr. 7, 2010) Heading home to the waiting Army chaplain and sergeant, Lyle Kruize clung to the hope that his son in Iraq was OK.

But reality hit hard.

"I knew those guys weren't just coming to visit," Kruize said. "When I came into the
house, I knew."

Army Reserve Sgt. Kurt E. Kruize, 35, of St. Cloud, died Sunday after apparently being crushed between two trucks during his second tour of duty. The chaplain and
sergeant who came to break the news had few details and said the Army is investigating, Lyle Kruize said.

"They called it a freak accident," he said. "From what I was told, he was standing
between a trailer and a truck, so we're presuming he was crushed."

"It's hard when you know you're never going to see him again," Lyle Kruize said.

Growing up in Hancock, a small town about 100 miles west of St. Cloud, Kurt Kruize
spent endless hours outdoors, fishing and hunting. He would fish the nearby lake from early morning to dark if his parents let him,his father said. As soon as he could hunt, "dad got skunked and son got a nice four- or six-point buck," his father recalled.

Kurt Kruize joined the Army Reserve while he was a junior at Hancock High School,
where he played football and basketball. "He always talked about wanting to go into the service," Lyle Kruize said. "He said, 'I want to serve my country, Dad.'" After he graduated in 1993, he went into basic training and served in the 367th Engineer Battalion headquartered in St. Cloud. "He always liked what he was doing regardless of what they had him do," he said.

Lyle Kruize said his son was first deployed to Iraq five or six years ago and worked as a fuel truck driver. "He didn't talk a lot about it except to say there was intense combat at times."

When he was called again for deployment to Baghdad in January, Kurt Kruize didn't flinch. It was tough leaving his four children -- 13-year-old Austin, 10-year-old Annabelle, 5-year-old Raven and 2-year-old Tamika --and his wife, Billie Jo, Lyle Kruize said. "'But my country has called me again,'" he remembered his son saying.

"Those kids were his pride and joy," Lyle Kruize said. Together they would craft
wooden toys and play games.

He worked for Viking Coca-Cola Bottling Co. in St. Cloud, his father said. "I presume he was going to stay in the Reserves until he got his 20 years."

Funeral arrangements are pending. Kurt Kruize's body arrived at Dover Air Force
Base in Delaware on Tuesday. In addition to his wife, four children and father, Kurt
Kruize is survived by his mother, Beverly Kruize of Hancock; a brother, Darren of
North Carolina; two sisters, Tammy Angrimson of Paynesville and Kari Stadfuiss
of Big Lake; and a niece, Torrie Kruize of Paynesville.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

R.I.P. Lance Cpl. Curtis M. Swenson




Marine Lance Cpl. Curtis M. Swenson
Died April 02, 2010 serving during Operation Enduring Freedom

20, of Rochester, Minn.; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, III Marine Expeditionary Force, Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii; died April 2 while supporting combat operations in Helmand province, Afghanistan.

(The following was taken from www.startribune.com of Apr. 5, 2010) Friends and family members were grieving Monday for a 20-year-old Marine from Rochester, Minn., whose death Friday in Afghanistan was called "a horrible loss" by his family pastor.

Lance Cpl. Curtis M. Swenson, a 2007 graduate of Rochester Mayo High School, was killed in Helmand Province when the vehicle he was riding in hit an improvised explosive device, according to a post on the Support Our Marines Inc. Facebook page.

Swenson, who joined the Marines after graduating from high school in June 2007 and who also had been deployed to Iraq, was a mortar man with the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, based out of Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, according to Kaneohe Bay media officer Sgt. Scott Whittington. His unit was sent to Afghanistan in November to conduct counterinsurgency operations in partnership with Afghan forces.

A Facebook memorial page set up in his honor by his sister, Emily Swenson, 19, a 2009 Rochester Mayo graduate, had more than 1,500 members late Monday and was drawing hundreds of sorrowful comments from friends and strangers alike.

"Everyone who knew and loved him is welcome to join, along with anyone else," Emily wrote on the page, which is called RIP LCPL Curtis Michael Swenson. "Every thought and prayer means so much to my family and I."

The Rev. Norman Wahl, senior pastor of Bethel Lutheran Church in Rochester, the Swenson family's place of worship, said Curtis Swenson was very active in church activities and volunteer work. "He was heavily involved in the youth program," Wahl said, citing his participation in volunteer work trips to California and Montana, and youth ski trips to Duluth.

He also played on the church's softball team, the Bethel Believers, who play in a league of local churches. "The last game he ever played in was the championship game," which this team won, Wahl said. "He hit two home runs, and one of them was a grand slam."

"He was very much looked up to by younger church members," Wahl added, describing Swenson as a young man who worked hard and didn't complain.

"The church community holds his family in our prayers," Wahl said. "Such a horrible loss."

Mayo Principal Tim Dorway remembered Swenson as "a nice, nice young man. He was well-liked by his classmates."

Dorway said counselors at the school remember him as "a strong student" who was eager to join the Marines after graduation.

"We're thankful to him for his service," Dorway said.

Swenson's parents, David and Kay, could not be reached late Monday. He is also survived by his wife, Katie.

Arrangements were pending with Macken Funeral Home in Rochester, an employee there said. Swenson's remains were being sent to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, the employee said.

R.I.P. Lt. Miroslav S. Zilberman




Navy Lt. Miroslav S. Zilberman
Died April 02, 2010 serving during Operation Enduring Freedom

31, of Columbus, Ohio; assigned to Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron (VAW) 121, based at Naval Base Norfolk, Va.; died after his E-2C Hawkeye crashed into the Arabian Gulf on March 31, 2010. The recovery effort was abandoned on April 2, 2010 and his body was not recovered.

(The following was taken from www.wbdj7.com of Apr. 8, 2010) NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - Hundreds of mourners gathered at Naval Station Norfolk to honor a Navy pilot killed when his plane crashed into the North Arabian Sea on March 31.

Lt. Miroslav "Steve" Zilberman was remembered as a hero Thursday during a memorial at the Virginia Navy base.

Speakers said the actions of the Columbus, Ohio, resident save the lives of 3 crewmembers. They bailed out of the troubled E-2C Hawkeye before it hit the water and were rescued.

The plane was returning to the aircraft carrier Dwight D. Eisenhower from a mission to Afghanistan when 1 of its engines lost oil pressure and had to be shut down.

Zilberman's widow, Katrina, was presented with the Distinguished Flying Cross at the conclusion of the memorial.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

"Girls will be boys and boys will be girls, it's a mixed up, muddled up, shook up world...

I've forgotten where I originally saw this. I cut & pasted for a later edit and then had a complete brainfart when it came to noting the source. Whatever, it's a real story, you've probably already seen it on other blogs. Here's my take on it;

A school superintendent in New Jersey says a "misunderstanding" led an elementary school teacher to mandate that all students -- including young boys -- dress as women in a now-canceled fashion show to honor Women's History Month.

Maple Shade Township School Superintendent Michael Livengood said the show, which had been scheduled for Friday at Maude Wilkins Elementary School, has been canceled.

"I wish the letter had been clearer and had been worded differently," Livengood told FoxNews.com, referring to a letter sent home to the children's parents last week informing them of the assignment. "But it was a misunderstanding. It was meant to demonstrate students' awareness in women's roles, and along with that, their changes in fashion over time."

In a 16-page packet sent home with students, teacher Tonya Uibel alerted parents that all students in her third grade class would have to participate in the activity, since it would be graded as an "end of unit" assignment. The packet also included suggestions of how students may dress, including fashions from the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s like bellbottoms, poodle skirts and cheerleader outfits. (This nitwit evidently didn't live through those times. Having boys OR girls dress in anything from those days should constitute child abuse.) Photographs of fashion icons like Twiggy and Madonna are also included.

"If your child is a young man, he does not have to wear a dress or skirt, as there are many time periods where women wore jeans, pants and trousers. However, each child must be able to express what time period their outfit is from. Most of all, your child should have fun creating their outfit and learning about how women's clothing has changed!" (Folks, this is a public school teacher. Since so many of them receive federal money in one form or another you can just think of it as your tax dollars at work.)

Livengood said students will now be asked to a draw a picture of a person dressed in clothing from a specific time period as the lesson plan's culminating project.

He said the school's principal, Beth Narcia, had not received "one single" complaint pertaining to the event from parents. But one parent told FoxNews.com she contacted Uibel directly after her 9-year-old son came home "in tears" after getting the assignment. (Yeah, I'd go for the "direct" approach also. It wouldn't take my son coming home in tears either. Teaching a boy to cross dress just goes right up my butt.)

"My son was very upset," said Janine Giandomenico. "He said, 'Mommy, please don't make me do this.'"

Giandomenico said her son has Asperger's syndrome, a social interaction disorder, and she feared he would expose himself to ridicule from other students if he participated in the show.

"My husband and I are very open-minded, but this is a decision for my son to make when he's old enough to understand it," Giandomenico said. "I thought it was wrong. I felt like I had to say something."

She said she also found it "very odd" that the event was scheduled to coincide with an anti-bullying "Day of Silence" organized by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, which is encouraging students nationwide to remain mute during classes on Friday to call attention to verbal and physical abuse of gay students. (Purely coincidence of course!)

Instead of dressing in historical garments, Giandomenico said she suggested to Uibel that students create skits to memorialize significant moments in history pertaining to women. She also questioned why the fashion show idea was approved at all.

"They chose this route," she said. "And I'm positive that my little boy was not the only one who felt uncomfortable doing this. I'm just being honest. So I felt I had to open my mouth."

In a letter dated Monday, Narcia informed parents that the show, which was to be videotaped, had been canceled. She apologized for "any confusion or frustration" the assignment may have caused.

"I wanted to clear up any misconceptions about the clothing show," the principal wrote. "It was never our intention to have boys dress up as women. (Oh sure!) There are many different time periods that had women and men dressing in pants, suits, and even sweat suits. Students were just asked to dress as a time period, not as a woman. The children were then being asked to identify their time period of dress."

Calls to the school seeking comment were referred to Livengood.

Stacy Bowen, a mother of two young children in Bucks County, Pa., said she contacted the school's principal after seeing Giandomenico's Facebook posts on the matter.

"I was just so outraged," Bowen said. "I find it completely alarming that a school would do this."

Bowen said she also found it "ironic" that the event was scheduled on the "Day of Silence." ("ironic" is putting it mildly")

"It's a step out of line," she said. "You're forcing boys to participate in this, yet you stand for anti-bullying. They may feel pressured to do it when they don't want to."

Bowen, whose children are ages 2 and 5, said she would take matters into her own hands if a similar event were held in her school district's classrooms.

"I would've kept my child home," she said. "It's a step too far to portray boys in this manner"

Keep it up and soon the kids won't know if they're girls or boys. There's only one song to close this post out with (turn off the playlist at the bottom left before viewing).

Blog Archive

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