Monday, December 31, 2007

New Year's Resolution


With the new year upon us, I decided what better time to start a new reading plan, so I purchased a new Bible, called the One Year Chronological Bible, NLT. I'm already familiar with the NLT (New Living Translation) as it is what I currently use, but what makes this Bible unique is that it is arranged in chronological order - in the order the events actually occured. In addition, it is divided into 365 daily readings, so you can start and finish the entire Bible in one year, in the order the events actually happened, without having to flip back and forth between passages. Although I've read much of the good book, I can't claim to have read it cover to cover, so I'm hoping this will aid in my desire to do so.


Chronological or not, if you're unfamiliar with the NLT version, I highly encourage you pick one up. I am not particularly good at deciphering a lot of big words, or ancient sentence structure as found in some of the other traditional versions, so the NLT, in today's language, is the perfect balance for me of readable, understandable text and biblical integrity. I often cross reference between the NLT version and a New King James version, and I'm always amazed at how much more the NLT actually makes sense to me.

Sunday, December 30, 2007

"To every man is given the key to the gates of heaven. The same key opens the gates of hell."

I recently rented and watched a movie called Beyond the Gates. Admittedly, I am a little behind on new releases, so forgive me if this is old news to you.


It doesn't take much of a movie for me to be entertained, but this was much more than just mindless entertainment. If you have any conscious whatsoever, this movie makes you question a lot of things. It was definitely one of the best movies I have ever seen.


At the end, I found myself wondering "How does this happen? How can I be so oblivious to the goings on in the world? I was one of the binge drinkers of the General's previous post while this stuff occurring!" My wife looked at me and exclaimed, "we were in college when this happened!" ...yes, unfortunately we were.


Now, I had heard of Rwanda before, but I never took the time to fully comprehend what had taken place. This film opened my eyes, in a fantastically disturbing way, to what truly went down. From how evil humans can be to one another, to the sad effects of a broken government system (theirs, ours, and others), and to the horrific decisions that people had to make.

I strongly encourage everyone to watch this movie. In addition to the movie's website, PBS Frontline has a great site for information regarding the events.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

In a Rut? Can't Change?

I just finished a disturbing article in the NY Times that gave me reason for pause. It also seemed apropos considering New Years is right around the corner. The main thrust of the article, based on studies on lab rats, is that those of us who binge drink/drunk during adolescents and early adulthood are likely handicapped with a reduced ability to deal with, and adapt to change. "The binges activate an inflammatory response in rat brains rather than a pure regrowth of normal neuronal cells. Even after longstanding sobriety this inflammatory response translates into a tendency to stay the course, a diminished capacity for relearning and maladaptive decision-making." I can definitely see this effect at work in my own life. The good news is they found that exercise and, of course, sticking to one or two rather than 10 or 15, can significantly reduce the effects. Sarge, you willing to sell the Bowflex?

Friday, December 28, 2007

Danger Zones


Between this and the recent tiger attack, I'm reconsidering my Friends of the Zoo membership.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Monday, December 24, 2007

Shopdropping

Karl Marx, the anarchist Mikhail Bakunin and Che Guevara adorn a shirt slipped onto a rack at a Target store in California.

While reading this article in the New York Times on the recent phenomenon of "shopdropping" by Anarchists and their religious counterparts, I thought of Sarge's Majority Rights group. Could this be a tactic to get the word out? I don't know boys, it just might be high time to get out of the Lazy Boys and get the creative juices flowing. Barnes and Noble, Target...where ever consumerism takes place is the battlefield. Hooah!

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Cloaca

Several years ago I visited New York to see my old roommate, David. We went to school together in London. He's a very talented artist, and as artists tend to do, he keeps up with goingsons in the art world. During my visit David shared with me a book of Belgian artist Wim Delvoye's art installation, Cloaca. Cloaca is a mechanized digestive system that essentially mimics how food is broken down within, and excreted from, animals including humans. Unfortunately, I missed the show by a week. David said the aroma in the room was pretty ripe, so maybe that's a good thing. Local restaurants sponsored the show by donating meals. Although I couldn't find images of them, Delvoye also creates beautiful poop mosaics from Cloaca's waste.

Hell Yeah!

I thought many of you might find Monster Trucks.net a useful website. Merry Christmas.

General Ursus Goes to Vegas

In front of Binion's
You know how the General Rolls

I'll never find love again.
Hoover Dam

Monday, December 17, 2007

Advocate for Majority Rights

Since politics didn't seem to get a rise out of anyone (except for a Hillary supporter) I'll try a different route.

I've decided to become a Majority Rights Activist. I haven't determined exactly what this means yet, but thought maybe some of the other canteen soldiers would be interested molding the definition. Basically, it's standing up for the shrinking rights of the emasculated majority. This has nothing to do with race, sex, or age, the typical things one thinks of when minority rights are considered, but rather just simply calling foul on the ridiculousness that occurs every day in our society. A few examples to better illustrate my point are as follows:

Our city is trying to pass a new development code which includes a clause that all multi-family residential and commercial buildings are required to provide for both long term, and short term, bicycle parking. This includes a specific type of rack, and an enclosed, lockable space for the long term parking. Since when did the majority of our streets have adequate bike lanes, and since when did even a small fraction of our population commute by bicycle? Last I checked, bicycles are not considered vehicles, at least not by the tax assesors. Currently, places are not required to have a certain number of motorcycle parking spaces - which is a far more common means of transportation. What happens if I decide to skateboard to work one day, must my employer provide a designated spot to store my board as well. This is ridiculous.

To date, my office has recieved 38 "Christmas" cards, yet only 8 of them actually say "Christmas". The rest are the typical watered down Happy Holidays, Seasons Greetings, Happy New Year, or any number of other PC phrases. This is an argument that I won't bore you with the merits of because we've all heard it before, and everyone seems to agree with it - yet still only 18% of the Christmas cards sent have the courage to mention Christ. True, not everyone is a Christian, or believes in the true meaning of Christmas, and to them I say, "have the guts to admit that you don't believe by simply not celebrating."

Ameristar Casino, and many others, offers hourly childcare. Yes, hourly childcare at a casino. Amazingly, these services are offered under the innocent guise of family friendly, educational opportunites, just like your typical Small World Montessori. But let's call this what it is, a spot for neglectful parents to drop their kids off while they gamble away their paycheck. I don't think any of its patrons will be winning the Parent of the Year Award anytime soon. Someone has made a fortune off this concept - theses particular facilities are located in casino's across the country, and amazing only in casinos. This is ridiculous and crazy. They would probably claim that they're providing a safe venue for these children that might otherwise be left in inadequate conditions, but I say they are enticements to weak minded parents.

The above are just a small sampling of the different types of issues that a Majority Rights Activist could embrace and challenge. Really, it's just asking "says who?" when something silly arises, relying on old fashioned common sense, and determining between right and wrong as God defined for us.

Ironically, I googled majority rights activists and got nothing related, but found all sorts of things when I changed to minority.

Just think, the Canteen Soldiers could be pioneers in a whole new movement. This just may be our ticket to success! I call dibs on the patent and trademark for the concept and name.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Huckabee for President

See for yourself where Mike stands on the issues.









Thursday, November 29, 2007

Team Hoyt




Excerpts from the full story:

Dick and Rick Hoyt are a father-and-son team from Massachusetts who together compete just about continuously in marathon races. And if they’re not in a marathon they are in a triathlon — that daunting, almost superhuman, combination of 26.2 miles of running, 112 miles of bicycling, and 2.4 miles of swimming. Together they have climbed mountains, and once trekked 3,735 miles across America.

It’s a remarkable record of exertion — all the more so when you consider that Rick can't walk or talk.

At Rick’s birth in 1962 the umbilical cord coiled around his neck and cut off oxygen to his brain. Dick and his wife, Judy, were told that there would be no hope for their child’s development.
"It’s been a story of exclusion ever since he was born," Dick told me. "When he was eight months old the doctors told us we should just put him away — he’d be a vegetable all his life, that sort of thing. Well those doctors are not alive any more, but I would like them to be able to see Rick now."

A group of Tufts University engineers came to the rescue, once they had seen some clear, empirical evidence of Rick’s comprehension skills. "They told him a joke," said Dick. "Rick just cracked up. They knew then that he could communicate!" The engineers went on to build — using $5,000 the family managed to raise in 1972 - an interactive computer that would allow Rick to write out his thoughts using the slight head-movements that he could manage. Rick came to call it "my communicator." A cursor would move across a screen filled with rows of letters, and when the cursor highlighted a letter that Rick wanted, he would click a switch with the side of his head.

When the computer was originally brought home, Rick surprised his family with his first "spoken" words. They had expected perhaps "Hi, Mom" or "Hi, Dad." But on the screen Rick wrote "Go Bruins." "So we learned then that Rick loved sports," said Dick.

In 1975, Rick was finally admitted into a public school. Two years later, he told his father he wanted to participate in a five-mile benefit run for a local lacrosse player who had been paralyzed in an accident. Dick, far from being a long-distance runner, agreed to push Rick in his wheelchair. They finished next to last, but they felt they had achieved a triumph. That night, Dick remembers, "Rick told us he just didn’t feel handicapped when we were competing."

They have been competing ever since, at home and increasingly abroad. Generally they manage to improve their finishing times. "Rick is the one who inspires and motivates me, the way he just loves sports and competing," Dick said.

And the business of inspiring evidently works as a two-way street. Rick typed out this testimony:
"Dad is one of my role models. Once he sets out to do something, Dad sticks to it whatever it is, until it is done. For example once we decided to really get into triathlons, dad worked out, up to five hours a day, five times a week, even when he was working."

Rick’s own accomplishments, quite apart from the duo’s continuing athletic success, have included his moving on from high school to Boston University, where he graduated in 1993 with a degree in special education.

http://teamhoyt.com/ for more

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Bush: 'Worth it to try' on Mideast peace


WASHINGTON - Hours after opening a Mideast conference, President Bush said Tuesday he was worried about the consequences if the search for peace failed but declared, "It is worth it to try."

Bush cautioned it would take time for Israelis and Palestinians to reach an agreement. The goal is to reach an accord within 14 months by the end of Bush's presidency.


Are you fucking kidding me!!!! 14 months!!!! Excuse me I have to puke!!!





On other issues Bush said:

—Vice President Dick Cheney is "in good shape" despite a history of heart problems, including an episode of atrial fibrillation Monday that was corrected when doctors administered an electric shock to restore his normal heartbeat. Bush said his father had a similar condition and "jumped out of an airplane at age 83."

If only Cheney would do the same!!!


In opening the high-stakes Mideast peace conference, Bush read a joint agreement among Israeli and Palestinian leaders who pledged to reach a peace pact by the end of 2008. Negotiations would begin within weeks to establish a democratic Palestinian state that will live alongside Israel.

Oh thats good.....

Negotiations on the joint statement had broken down Monday night over one paragraph that the parties believed went too far into issues that are to be negotiated.

No way!! Just when you thought the negotiations were going good.


On Tuesday morning, Bush pulled Abbas and Olmert aside to impress upon them the need to issue a joint statement at the conference, and representatives from all three sides were dispatched from a larger meeting of the principals and their advisers to finish drafting it. They came to an agreement about 25 minutes later by simply taking out the disputed paragraph.

Wow that was easy!! Maybe it would only take 14 months to reach an agreement if the Israelis and Palestinians used this method to solve problems....... Ya think????

Monday, November 26, 2007

Are Smokers a Protected Class?

Shannon & Parks (980 AM) were discussing the recent attention Truman Medical Center has received regarding it's stance on employing smokers. I didn't listen long enough to get all the facts on this particular instance (not that either Shannon or Parks are a reliable source), but was able to gather the basic tenants of the discussion:

Should employers be allowed to discriminate against smokers?

At first blush, I would say "no" they can't, for a variety of reasons; but after 30 seconds of careful consideration, I now say "absolutely yes!"

Those that disagree with me are quick to throw out the slippery slope argument - "if you allow discrimination against smoking, what's next, can you discriminate against fat people too? How about ugly people, or people with bad breath? Where do you draw the line?"

To all of the above questions my answer is still yes - as an employer, you should be able to discriminate against them.

Before I go on, I must make it clear that I'm not an advocate of discriminating against the federally defined Protected Classes ... I'll save my thoughts on each of those for another time.

First, nobody is entitled to any particular job. It seems our society is becoming more and more of the mindset the it is our right as citizens to have certain things. Our right to have a job, our right to own a home, our right to have nice clothes, our right to have our butts kissed by service workers, the list goes on and on. Unfortunately though, the fact remains that none of theses things are our rights, but privileges to be earned, and then opportunities to be kept.

Each job, and each employer, has a certain set of requirements that don't always have to be pure skill sets, education, etc. These requirements can be personality attributes, physical appearances, health considerations, or whatever else that particular employers deems worthy or necessary for the position they have created - provided it meets all applicable laws.
It's widely accepted that people are associated with what they do for a living. Like it or not, that's one of the initial questions people ask each other upon first meeting and many things are assumed based on the answer. It's not unreasonable to believe that the same thing works in reverse for employers - assumptions are made and images are formed about the company based on the people that work there and how they behave or appear.

If you have ever applied for health or life insurance on your own, you know that it costs a lot more if you are a smoker, or if you are in poor health, or if you don't meet any number of other requirements the providers have. Companies who provide these benefits generally pick up some or all of the costs, which ultimately effects how each employee's wallet looks. If my employer could either pay more, or provide better benefits because they adopted a firm no smoking policy, I would be a huge supporter. For those co-workers of mine that smoke, they could either quit smoking or quit choosing to limit the benefits available to those that don't by finding a different job. If my company wanted to take it a step further and add a reasonable fitness or body weight requirement and increase my pay even more, again I would be a huge supporter. In fact, even if they didn't increase my pay or benefits, but added these policies just because they were concerned about the "image" of our organization - I would be okay with that too. (It would be unheard of them to do it for the personal health gains the employees might receive - how dare they want their employees to be healthy!) Yes, the obvious question again is - where do they draw line, what's to keep from requiring a 10% body fat maximum? And the answer is obvious as well - when people stop wanting to work there and they find themselves without productive employees, the restrictions and requirements will loosen.

Is a health club that doesn't hire fat people considered discriminatory? Should we call foul on the modeling agency that doesn't hire ugly people? How about the white-collared financial institution that has a strict policy against visible tattoos? What about a dental hygienist with yellowing teeth and miserable breath? If you owned a cigar bar, would you hire someone who didn't enjoy cigars? Unfortunately, I will probably not land a job at the new hip and fashionable store - they say bland, I say timeless. A slippery slope indeed, where do we draw the line?

Regardless of which side of the fence you sit on, it boils down to a simple question: Would you rather smoke than have a job? If you say "yes", you don't deserve to be hired. Ironically the woman who stirred this whole pot and brought about the media attention, was most upset about the whole situation because, "money is tight and I really needed the income." Hmmmm... if she can't figure out that smoking costs money and therefore contributes to the money problem, there's a strong chance that there are other reasons that she was fired.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Alice in Chains - Would? (Live Jools Holland 1993)

Captain Spaulding

Ya'll think us folk from the country's real funny-like, dontcha?

Pearl Jam

Go Eddie!!

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Revisiting Quantrill's Guerilla War on Kansas Today


The New Powers In College Football Carry Old Baggage

As Showdown Looms,
Kansas and Missouri Fans
Re-Fight the Civil War
By ADAM THOMPSON
November 20, 2007; Page A1

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- As the universities of Kansas and Missouri prepare to play the most important football game in their 116-year-old rivalry, trash talking is rampant here in a metropolis that straddles both states.

Yet this isn't just the usual back-and-forth about which quarterback or defense is superior. Nor is it centered on the inevitable jokes about how many Kansas (or Missouri) students are needed to change a light bulb. Rather, this trash talking is focused on which state's residents behaved more abominably amid the Civil War.

Fans go back to the history books and start calling people names for things that started 150 years ago," says Kevin Worley, a Kansas City-based documentary filmmaker who isn't immune to that tendency himself. A die-hard Missouri fan, Mr. Worley suspects that "there's this ancestral hatred of Kansas bred in me" by a lineage traceable to soldiers who marched with Confederate general Jo Shelby.
[Kansas v. Missouri]

To most of the nation, the showdown Saturday between second-ranked Kansas and fourth-ranked Missouri will most likely determine which team will play in the national championship game. (To reach that final, the victor Saturday would need to win one subsequent game.)

But to many here on both sides of the state line, the game is merely a proxy for a war that never really ended. Perhaps no other football rivalry in the nation pits against each other states that once fought as brutally as did Kansas and Missouri. Evidence that the feud is ongoing can be seen on the back of Dave Hickerson, a Missouri fan who this weekend chomped a cigar in a Kansas City bar called the Velvet Dog.

He sported a University of Missouri football jersey that bore the name not of Chase Daniel, the team's spectacular quarterback. Rather it said Quantrill. A Missouri hero and Kansas villain, William Quantrill led a Rebel guerrilla unit that in 1863 burned and pillaged Lawrence, home of the University of Kansas, in the process slaughtering about 150 people, including children.

"I don't think there's anything redeeming to be said about [the jersey] except that it" angers Kansans, says Mr. Hickerson.

But Kansans have their own T-shirt that they hope will offend Missourians. The shirt says: "Kansas: Keeping America safe from Missouri since 1854." The shirt features a drawing of abolitionist John Brown, who before his famous raid on Harpers Ferry led murderous raids against farms and families in pro-slavery Missouri. "They're the slave state. We're the Free State. Look who won out in the end," says Heather Knox, a 25-year-old accountant and Kansas alumna who lives in Kansas City, Mo.

On the gridiron, theirs is the oldest major college rivalry west of the Mississippi River. Neither team is usually a contender for the national title; their showdown more often determines third- and fourth-place in the six-team North division of the Big 12 conference. But bitterness on the football field goes back a long ways. The two sides can't even agree on their series' all-time record. Missourians say the series is tied 53-53-9, while Kansans say they own a two-game lead. The point of contention is their 1960 meeting, which the Jayhawks won with ineligible players. That loss killed Missouri's best chance at a national title, and the Tigers have never again reached No. 1 in the polls.

The game Saturday will take place in a neutral site in the city -- Arrowhead Stadium, home of the Kansas City Chiefs professional franchise -- but nothing about it is expected to be neutral. A night-time kickoff means that fans will have plenty of time to drink beforehand. Arrowhead officials, who typically replace about 15 of the stadium's 80,000 seats following a Chiefs game, expect the Kansas-Missouri brawl to leave as many as 500 seats destroyed. Tickets with double-digit face values are selling for $300 online.

Neither school has ever won a national football championship. Indeed, neither team has finished atop their conference since 1969. To fans on both sides, it is maddening to think that the biggest obstacle toward doing so this year is their oldest nemesis. "I hate Kansas more than everything," says Mr. Hickerson. On weeks when they're not playing each other, "I hate Kansas so much, I would rather have Kansas lose than have Missouri win."

This hatred dates back to the 1850s, when the Great Plains state of Kansas became a beachhead for men around the country committed to ending slavery. Many, however, hid behind that noble cause, all the while killing, pillaging and raping their way across the culturally Southern state to the east, Missouri. These Kansas guerrillas called themselves Jayhawkers -- supposedly a combination of two birds, the jay and the hawk.

Today, it is a sore point among Missouri fans that the University of Kansas mascot is the Jayhawk. Matt Gaunt, a development officer for Missouri's agriculture college, concedes that his state's fighters committed atrocities as well, but notes that Missouri never named a team after them. Some argue that Missouri's mascot -- the Tigers -- are named after some pro-Union forces in an otherwise Confederate state.

But the hometown of the Missouri Tigers, Columbia, is still known as "Little Dixie," and many in Missouri remain proud of their Confederate past. It's enough to start former Missouri player Brandon Barnes, who is African-American, wondering whether Tiger fans are "hating the Jayhawkers for something I might celebrate." But then he remembers the time that Jayhawk fans threw ice at him and footballs at the Missouri team bus. "We hate each other for a reason," he said, as he sat in a Kansas City bar on Saturday.

On chat boards, fans of both teams are weighing in. "Definition of Jayhawk = murderer, rapist, low-life scum. Kansas fans are so stupid they think that name is something to be proud of!," said a post on a Kansas City Star message board.

A University of Kansas poster wrote on a fan board: "The Jayhawkers defended Kansas against terrorists and helped make Kansas a free state just before the start of the Civil War."

Here in a city where the line between the two states is virtually invisible, many Missouri fans won't live in Kansas, and vice versa. When Jayme Salinardi, a lawyer, proposed moving to a Kansas suburb that offered first-class public schools, his wife, Missouri-born Heather, refused. "I'm not living on the Kansas side," he recalls her saying. He finally prevailed -- by finding a house that is only one block from Missouri.

The game this Saturday will provide the perfect capper to a college football season where up has been down. Traditional powers like Notre Dame have stumbled badly while upstarts like South Florida have joined the Tigers and Jayhawks in making once-unthinkable runs for the top. Neither Kansas nor Missouri was expected to win the six-team Big 12 North division. That crown was supposed to belong to the Nebraska Cornhuskers, a team that is 5-6 and that lost to Missouri and Kansas by a combined score of 117-45.

Not everyone sees the upcoming game as bearing great historical overtones. Corby Jones, a star quarterback for the Tigers in the mid-1990s, sat in a sports bar Saturday watching with glee as Missouri beat Kansas State, setting the stage for this week's mammoth showdown with Kansas, an 11-0 team that before the season started was expected to finish fourth in the Big 12 North division.

But even if Missouri, 10-1, loses, Mr. Jones, a lawyer, won't be leading any campaigns against Kansas or its fans. "It's a football game," he said. "It's not war."

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Canteen Sitdown @ Jerry's Steakhouse 11/3/07


Mr. Wilson
FistfullaSteel
General Ursus
How we roll
Sil and Jones
Sil
Sarge

My Photoshop Inspiration

Remember those Pushead drawings we loved so much on Zorlac decks?

Saturday, November 17, 2007

My First Photoshop Lesson

IT'S A GODDAMN EVIL SKULL!

Thanks goes out to Sil for his stellar pedagogy.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Old Freemont and The Rat Pack


A tribute to my visit to Sparky's in Las Vegas. Nothing like betting it all on red...well almost "it all" and winning. The Pussy Cat Dolls at Caesar's will always occupy a place in my heart. Go see the Rat Pack tribute show at the Greek Isle.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Long Dark Teatime



Having lived away from true winter (at least true cold) for a decade, I really notice my mood going into winter. This is only my second since moving back to the Midwest. Last year felt novel, interesting. This year feels real. And feels quiet, slow. Sleepy. Time to hunker down.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

English as a Second Language

If we're not careful, the title of this post will also soon become the title of a required class for high school graduation. Wait - I'm being too optimistic, it will probably just be an elective.

This has been all over the internet lately, but was emailed to me by a friend today as well. The good Colonel definetly gets it right:


On Wed, 6 Jun 2007 23:35:23 -0500, "Colonel Harry Riley USA ret" wrote:

Senators,

Your vote against an amendment to the Immigration Bill 1348, to make English America's offical language is astounding. On D-Day no less when we honor those that sacrificed in order to secure the bedrock character and principles of America . I can only surmise your vote reflects a loyalty to illegal aliens.

I don't much care where you come from, what your religion is, whether you're black, white or some other color, male or female, democrat, republican or independent, but I do care when you're a United States Senator, representing citizens of America and vote against English as the official language of the United States

Your vote reflects betrayal, political surrender, violates your pledge of allegiance, dishonors historical principle, rejects patriotism, borders on traitorous action and, in my opinion, makes you unfit to serve as a United States Senator... impeachment, recall, or other appropriate action is warrented.

Worse, 4 of you voting against English as America 's official language are presidential candidates: Senator Biden, Senator Clinton, Senator Dodd, and Senator Obama.

Those 4 Senators vying to lead America but won't or don't have the courage to cast a vote in favor of English as America's official language when 91% of American citizens want English officially designated as our language.

This is the second time in the last several months this list of Senators have disgraced themselves as political hacks... unworthy as Senators and certainly unqualifed to serve as President of the United States.

If America is as angry as I am, you will realize a back-lash so stunning it will literally rock you out of your panties... and preferably, totally out of the United States Senate.

The entire immigration bill is a farce... your action only confirms this really isn't about America ; it's about self-serving politics... despicable at best.

"Never argue with an idiot; they'll drag you down to their level and beat you with experience." ~ anonymous
The following senators voted against making English the official language of America :

Akaka (D-HI)
Bayh (D-IN)
Biden (D-DE) Wants to be President?
Bingaman (D-NM)
Boxer (D-CA)
Cantwell (D-WA)
Clinton (D-NY) Wants to be President?
Dayton (D-MN)
Dodd (D-CT) Wants to be President?
Domenici (R-NM) Coward, protecting his Senate seat...
Durbin (D-IL)
Feingold (D-WI) Not unusual for him
Feinstein (D-CA)
Harkin (D-IA)
Inouye (D-HI)
Jeffords (I-VT)
Kennedy (D-MA)
Kerry (D-MA) Wanted to be President
Kohl (D-WI)
Lautenberg (D-NJ)
Leahy (D-VT)
Levin (D-MI)
Lieberman (D-CT) Disappointment here.....
Menendez (D-NJ)
Mikulski (D-MD)
Murray (D-WA)
Obama (D-IL) Wants to be President?
Reed (D-RI)
Reid (D-NV) Senate Majority Leader
Salazar (D-CO)
Sarbanes (D-MD)
Schumer (D-NY)
Stabenow (D-M)

"Congressmen who willfully take actions during wartime that damage morale, and undermine the military are saboteurs and should be arrested, exiled or hanged."
~ President Abraham Lincoln

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Friday, October 26, 2007

Tourette's Guy, Best Of

Body Carving


I can remember being with a friend when he passed out getting a simple tattoo, but I won't name names (B-dub). Imagine what this twisted girl must be feeling right about now!
What will these crazy kids come up with next?!
P.S. note the friend with the PBR - dead give away that these are some tough chicks.









Unions & Hookers

This was sent to me from a fellow construction type, I thought Sparky and Mr. Wilson might get a special kick out of it! Enjoy:
A dedicated Teamsters union worker was attending a convention in Las Vegas and decided to check out the local brothels.
When he got to the first one, he asked the Madam, "Is this a union house?"

"No," she replied, "I'm sorry it isn't."


"Well, if I pay you $100, what cut do the girls get?"


"The house gets $80 and the girls get $20," she answered. Offended at such unfair dealings, the union man stomped off down the street in search of a more equitable, hopefully unionized shop.



His search continued until finally he reached a brothel where the Madam responded, "Why yes sir, this is a union house. We observe all union rules."



The man asked, "And if I pay you $100, what cut do the girls get?"
"The girls get $80 and the house gets $20."


"That's more like it!" the union man said. He handed the Madam $100, looked around the room, and pointed to a stunningly attractive blonde. "I'd like her," he said.



"I'm sure you would, sir," said the Madam.

Then she gestured to a 92-year old woman in the corner, "but Ethel here has 67 years seniority and according to union rules, she's next!"

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Finally - someone who actually knows the difference between hatred and tolerance, and they write for the SF Chronicle of all papers.

Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence: Perpetually Juvenile

By Cinnamon Stillwell

While the famously liberal city of San Francisco is known for its anti-military shenanigans, it's the anti-Christian and, in particular, anti-Catholic sentiment emanating from activist elements of the city's gay population that's been getting all the attention as of late.... The latest instance of such sentiment originated with an all too familiar source: San Francisco's notorious Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence. The "sisters" are a group of gay men who dress up as nuns — of the drag-queen variety — in an attempt to parody Catholicism and, in a larger sense, Christianity, for what they perceive as its intolerance towards homosexuality. Their motto is "go forth and sin some more" and members have adopted satirical names such as "Sister Chastity Boner" and "Sister Constance Craving of the Holey Desire." ...I walked past one of the sisters standing outside a bar on Polk Street last weekend, joking loudly, with beer in hand, about going to "receive communion" later that day.

Receiving Holy Communion is exactly what two members of the group set out to achieve earlier this month. The sisters attended Mass at San Francisco's Most Holy Redeemer Parish on Oct. 7 and, in effect, forced Archbishop George H. Niederauer to deliver the Eucharist to them as his rather stunned congregation looked on.

Holy Communion, as described in a Chronicle article on the subject, is "a sacrament, and Catholics believe the consecrated bread and wine are the 'Body of Christ' and the 'Blood of Christ.' It is to be taken reverentially, as it is considered the source of Christian life." But the attitude of the sisters was hardly one of reverence for the church or its traditions. In fact, their publicity stunt was conveniently filmed and later disseminated to the media, although the sisters claim this was not their intention.

On the spot

Obviously, the point was to put the archbishop in an uncomfortable position whereby he could either refuse to comply, thereby handing the public a gold mine of alleged Catholic "intolerance," or go along with the ruse. The archbishop chose the latter route, and, frankly, it's hard to imagine what else he could have done in the situation. According to Rev. Jim Bretzke, professor of moral theology at University of San Francisco, a Jesuit Catholic university, "the sisters ... (did) not meet the criteria the church has for denying Communion."

Nonetheless, many Catholics were upset about the incident, seeing it as a desecration of the church. As Bill May, chairman of San Francisco's Catholics for the Common Good, put it, "They were there to make a statement and embarrass the archbishop and, in doing so, they desecrated what is most sacred and dear to every Catholic in the world." A disingenuous letter sent afterwards to Archbishop Niederauer by one of the perpetrators, "Sister Delta Goodhand," thanking him for his "inclusiveness," did little to assuage the feelings of those on the receiving end of the group's mockery.

Responding to the outrage, Archbishop Niederauer later apologized for giving the sisters communion, calling their actions "deeply offensive." In a statement at the Catholic San Francisco Web site, Neiderauer noted that this had been his first visit to the Most Holy Redeemer Parish and that, not having previously encountered members of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, he failed to recognize them as such. Given that the church is located in the heart of San Francisco's most well known gay neighborhood, the Castro District, and that it touts itself as an "inclusive Catholic community," Niederaurer might have been better prepared.

However, he was clearly caught by surprise and faced with a conundrum. He concluded that, "Someone who dresses in a mock religious habit to attend Mass does so to make a point. If people dress in a manner clearly intended to mock what we hold sacred, they place themselves in an objective situation in which it is not appropriate for them to receive Holy Communion, much less for a minister of the Church to give the Sacrament to them."

Prudent response

While there has been little mention of the incident in the wider media, O'Reilly has been keeping up the pressure with his television show. In the process, he has expressed disappointment with the leadership of the Catholic Church, which has remained largely silent on the matter. However, the situation has put church leadership in something of a bind. Much like Archbishop Niederauer, it could not respond aggressively without appearing to overreact and, therefore, provide ammunition to its critics. The church may very well have taken the most prudent approach, even if it was one that left many Catholics unsatisfied.

Frustration about the blatant double standard when it comes to mocking Christianity is indeed growing, and not without reason. Anger over the sisters' publicity stunt comes on the heels of a widely publicized and tasteless advertisement for San Francisco's Folsom Street Fair, an annual event for purveyors of sadomasochism and exhibitionism. The ad featured a group of leather-clad men and women sitting around a table festooned with sex toys, in a manner obviously modeled after painter Leonardo Da Vinci's depiction of Christ and his disciples, "The Last Supper." The advertisement was clearly intended to mock Christianity and it succeeded in that goal. Similar expressions of ridicule were found at the Folsom Street Fair itself, where stands selling sex toys with Jesus and, in some cases, Buddha heads, were captured online. (zombietime.com/folsom_sf_2007_part_1/).

Such hostility towards Christianity is by no means shared by San Francisco's entire gay community. In fact, I had an enlightening conversation with a taxicab driver last week who described himself as gay and conservative and who shares some of the traditional views held by practicing Christians in regards to marriage and adoption.

Hatred of Christianity?

But where anti-Christian sentiment does arise in the local gay community, it tends to originate in the perception that Christianity, by adhering to its own orthodoxies, is promoting hatred. But, as I've noted previously, disapproval is not synonymous with hatred. The very nature of organized religion is to present human beings with a set of standards by which to live, and this includes taboos. Reform is a necessary part of this process and, indeed, various liberal Christian and Catholic parishes have sprung up around the country. But many gay activists are not content with this state of affairs. It seems that until the Catholic Church bends to their will and, essentially, dispenses with all its traditions, they will not be satisfied.


In the spirit of tolerance so often claimed by such activists, it might behoove them to allow the devout their own beliefs, even where they find them offensive. For it was never written in stone that Americans are to be free of offense, despite what the arbiters of political correctness would have us believe. One is not compelled to like or approve of the lifestyle or actions of another, as long as violence or incitement to violence is not employed in the process. And, again, registering disapproval is not tantamount to promoting violence.

In contrast, it's the antagonism expressed towards Christians by their critics that often veers dangerously close to hatred. In an earlier column, I noted a T-shirt worn by a salesclerk in a San Francisco gift shop that read, "So many right-wing Christians, so few lions." One can only imagine the reaction had another group been substituted for Christians. It seems that, for some, anti-Christian bigotry has become the last acceptable prejudice.

Anti-gay prejudice in Muslim world

While the urge to mock tradition and make light of the Judeo-Christian foundations of Western civilization is strong among San Francisco's gay activists, little is said about a religion in which homosexuals are not only disapproved of, but actively oppressed. In Islamic societies such as Iran, Saudi Arabia, and, increasingly, the Hamas-run Gaza Strip, where Sharia law rules the day, gays are routinely arrested, tortured, subjected to lashings, stoned to death, hanged or beheaded.

Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's recent visit to Columbia University shed light on this sad state of affairs when he made the rather sinister claim that "In Iran, we don't have homosexuals, like in your country." (The two Iranian gay teenagers who found themselves on the receiving end of a public hanging in 2005 might have begged to differ had they been allowed the freedom of speech accorded their inhumane leader by the denizens of academia). The audience at Columbia responded with laughter and, indeed, Ahmadinejad came off as something of a rube in the process. But there are serious issues involved that needn't be swept aside in order to avoid giving offense.

What's more likely is that fear of incurring violence is at the heart of the matter. Gay activists need not worry that an archbishop or a nun is going to kidnap and behead them, even if they desecrate the Catholic Church. But were such an "infidel" to do the same in a mosque, it's more than likely that his life would be threatened from that point on, as has been the case with various reformers, critics, and simple satirists.

If groups such as the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence spent half as much time criticizing Islam for its abuses against gay rights as they do Catholicism, then perhaps their attempts at activism might be seen as truly groundbreaking. As it is, their juvenile behavior is redolent of a son desperately rebelling against his father, a teenage girl telling her mother she hates her because she can't stay out as late as she'd like, and other similarly adolescent expressions of fury.

When we start seeing sex toys with Muhammad's likeness on them being sold at the Folsom Street Fair or sisters infiltrating mosques in burqas, then perhaps we can call these activists and their supporters brave. Until then, perhaps it's time for the sisters to grow up.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Mess Hall Time

Calling all Canteen soldiers for an evening of R&R at Jerry's Steakhouse in Raytown along 350 Hwy - Saturday, November 3rd.

P.S. - Jerry's is a registered Missouri Lottery Pull-Tab and Keno retailer.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Favorite Quote

"He that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves and sharpens our skill. Our antagonist is our helper." - Edmund Burke

As one who is often accused of being somewhat of an antagonist, I take comfort in the fact that it just might mean I'm a really good "helper";)

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Check it Out!

I got this Caminetto at Cigar and Tabac off Metcalf today. Can't wait to break it in.

Holy Shiite!

I just watched High Fidelity for the umpteenth time today. Jack Black at his best.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

It's all in the wording

The Mrs. and I spent the afternoon in a lively debate regarding an occurrence at our Sunday School class this morning, so she suggested I include it in on the Canteen. According to her, I am simply too critical, pessimistic, and always looking for details to pick apart. I believe this is thinking for myself rather than blindly accepting what another has to say, even if they are saying it for the greater good. I also believe it is possible to agree in general with something, but to disagree on the finer points of the matter. Before I go on, I must explain that I agreed with 99.9% of what was taught this morning, but this one detail could have major implications to someone who took it at face value.

The topic in question arose while studying Romans Chapter 5, specifically verse 2. It reads, "...and rejoice in hope of glory of God." Our teacher explained that the word "rejoice" also meant "boast" in a Greek word study that they had done. They went on to say that, as Christians, we should be boastful of God's grace and His glory. This is the detail where my ears perked up.

I don't doubt the Greek word study that was done, but in today's English (which we were speaking) "boast" has a negative connotation that comes with it, it corresponds with pridefulness, bragging, and a sense of being better, or having something better, than others. The word "rejoice," as found in at least 4 different translations, simply means to be joyful about, none of these other negative meanings are associated with the word that is actually printed in the Bible(s) that we were all reading out of. Why then was it necessary to do a word study to find an alternate meaning? What more comes out of using the word "boast" in place of it?

When I questioned this point I was reminded that it was important to look at the root meanings of the words used in the Bible if one wanted to dig deep into the meanings, and that in the Greek language, the word "boast" did not have the negative connotations that it does today in English. Absolutely! That's why we're not reading Greek versions of the Bible today, it would make no sense to us. It's hard enough to keep up with our own language as the meaning of words change from time to time depending on the context they were used. Take for example "bad". There was a time when it clearly meant good, or better yet cool. 50 years ago nobody would bat an eye if I said I were feeling "gay," but today most people would choose a different word, even though "gay" would be gramatically correct.

But more importantly, I was especially sensitive to this mis-wording because of it's implication. Christians are often seen as prideful, boastful, and yes, as hypocrites. So to say that we should be boastful of God's grace really struck a nerve. I don't believe it does any good, at any time, to be boastful, especially concerning spirituality. This does not mean one shouldn't be proud and confident in their faith, just that Christians should be sensitive to how others may already view them, so to purposefully take a boastful approach to spreading the word stands the chance of doing more harm than good.

Christians who boastfully exclaim their faith (we all know the type) are looked upon with great scrutiny from those of no, or different, faith. Even the non-believers know the difference between right and wrong, so even the seemingly small sins (bragging, gossip, etc.) of the boastful Christian are magnified and used against them as reasons to not want to be a Christian. See Romans 2: 23-24.

I realized I've rambled on for quite some time now, but I see this as a major stumbling block in modern day Christianity. I'm curious as to your thoughts. Do you scrutinize Christians more than others, do you especially scrutinize "boastful" Christians? Do you use those individuals to reaffirm your spirituality, or lack there of? Does a prideful approach to spirituality turn you off, or make you wish for what they had? Is there a Christian person in your life that has had a major impact in your life, positive or negative, and if so, what was their approach?

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Rives



I had dinner with this guy tonight at Grinders. He is a slam poet and I thought you might like to listen. Hallmark brought him in for Word week.

Gorilla Goes Country

The General getting two-step lessons from comely young female primate in preparation for upcoming Hoedown.

Photo by Sparky

Friday, October 5, 2007

Gay Last Supper

Homosexuals Mock 'Last Supper' With Sex-Toy Twist

I'm always puzzled why people with same-sex desires wonder why their life-style isn't more broadly accepted when they give people opposed to their life-style so much ammunition. It reminds me of an Onion article from a few years back entitled Gay-Pride Parade Sets Mainstream Acceptance of Gays Back 50 Years.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

That's Entertainment!


How many of you all know folks who got Halo 3 ASAR (As Soon As Released)? Seems to me video games are creeping up with TV, movies (& books & board games) as a popular, mainstream pastime. Mountain Dew has Halo 3 labels. My 18 year old (GIRL!) cousin pretty much grew up on Star Wars shooters--and Mario, of course.
For me, my step-dad (yes, over sixty) and my brother (mid-20's) both had the big release fired up on their 360's right away. I'll play it soon, but thought I'd play quickly through 1 & 2. For old time's sake. And you?

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Don't Mess With Rodney

They Call Him MULLEN. WOW If you don't know him you BETTA reckonize

Monday, September 24, 2007

Concert T-Shirt Confounds Man




Earl Whittaker, 35, is a rock music fan with an impeccable memory. Which is all the more reason he's perplexed by a concert t-shirt from 1987 that's been in his closet since he was a teenager, growing up in Oak Grove, a suburb of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The threadbare, three quarter-inch sleeve shirt is typical of those worn by concert-goers for years; the band's name, "Dio," emblazoned on the front, is slightly faded.
But one tour date on back clearly states Auborn Palace, Pittsburgh, PA August 20, a show Whittaker believes he attended, yet, he can't recall ever seeing the band.
"I was a huge [Black] Sabbath and Dio fan back then," he says excitedly. "I'm certain I was at this show. I'll bet it was awesome, but I can't for the life remember a single thing about it."
Whittaker reveals that as a teenager he did his fair share of drugs, such as marijuana and alcohol, which may have contributed to his memory loss. That, and the passage of time.
"I was there," Whittaker says, with a combination of certainty and confusion. "But why can't I remember it?"