No Small Drama Unfolding in Massachusetts . . . hopefully it will never make it to this point . . . info courtesy Mr. Boortz’ column: 


The Massachusetts legislature wants to make sure that their Republican governor, Mitt Romney, doesn’t appoint a (gasp!) Republican to fill the seat of John Kerry should he actually win this thing.  This week they are considering legislation that would call for a special Senatorial election within 120 to 145 days after Kerry’s Senate resignation.  In the meantime, the legislation would forbid the government from appointing a replacement.  Interestingly, the 120 to 145 day time frame is not sufficient for the federal government to make the necessary arrangements to insure that military men and women overseas will be able to vote in the special election.  That’s how much respect Mr. “I just have to get to Washington to vote on this veteran’s bill” has for our military.



Neal Boortz is a lawyer and nationally syndicated radio talk show host.

Excellent article from Neil Cavuto:


Show it! All of it!
Neil Cavuto (archive)

June 26, 2004 | printer friendly version Print | email to a friend Send


When Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ” came out in theaters, many criticized its violence. The fact that some in Hollywood’s film industry leveled this attack absolutely floored me. It just seemed odd that the folks who brought us “Kill Bill” suddenly had a problem with “Kill Jesus.”


 Enough.


 Mel Gibson rightly countered that Christ’s crucifixion wasn’t pretty or nice. It was violent, brutal, ugly and gory to the absolute extreme. It was, as the Pope himself later surmised, “as it was.”


 Sometimes we don’t like gore. When it comes to gratuitous, meaningless, repetitive gore, I agree. Again, just look to Hollywood for that. But meaningful, truthful, powerful gore does have a place. As Gibson discovered, there’s no nice way to portray Christ’s death. Just like Steven Spielberg discovered there’s no nice way to cover the brutality of war or the senseless evil of the Holocaust.


 Sometimes gore is the story. And we have to understand the gore to understand the evil that precipitated the gore. We need to put the gore in perspective. That’s why I think we need to see more gore from the folks who love to dish it out.


 We need to understand the reality of that gore, and we need to understand it again and again. That’s why I differ from my colleagues in the media, even the fine organization with whom I’m associated, FOX News, when I say, show me those beheadings of innocents like Paul Johnson and 33-year-old South Korean humanitarian worker Kim Sun-il.


 Show me the senselessness of their killings. Show me the evil behind their killings. Show me it. Show me all of it. And don’t sanitize it. Don’t blur it, mask it, color it or frame it. Don’t gloss over it and try to make us not see it or be appalled by it. You see, I want us appalled. I want us angry. I want us outraged. I want us sickened.


 Again and again, on the hour, every hour, every day. Don’t get me wrong, I want there to be some warning, for children especially. But I still want it shown. Just like I want people to see Nick Berg’s tragic killing. Just like I want to see — repeatedly — those planes hitting the World Trade Center on Sept. 11. I want the world to see people jumping out of those towers, brave men and women losing everything that day. I want all of us who survived hell to see hell, to see the tears and know the loss. I want us to relive those days, every day, and not forget for a moment the evil that perpetuated it, condoned it and sanctioned it.


 For some, it’s heady stuff. But I say, these are heady, sickening days. The war on terror is that kind of war. It is ugly. It is gory. It is stomach-churning. We do ourselves a disservice as victims when we don’t show our victims. We do ourselves an injustice when we don’t look at the injustice of terrorists.


 That’s why I say, with some caution, to relax our caution. Nothing rouses a nation’s anger in a war more than when we see the victims of a war — our victims, our friends and our countrymen. They did not have to die. But they did. Why should we gloss over the fact that they did?


 I think it cheapens their sacrifice when we try to sanitize their loss. There’s no nice way to say someone was beheaded and butchered. There’s only one way to talk about it, and that’s to show it.


 I want us to get angry, outraged, furious and incensed because this is evil in its purest and simplest form. We must see it for what it is, not cover it up for what it is not.


 Civilized people have a very difficult time understanding uncivilized bastards.


 We should be less civilized and more like the bastards who want us dead.


 So, after giving fair warning to impressionable minds, I want to leave some disturbing impressions of death at its most violent and chilling evil at its most warped.


 It’s not a pretty sight.


 But then again, war never is.




©2004 Creators Syndicate, Inc.

From GeorgeWBush.com:


On Thursday, the campaign launched a web video titled Kerry’s Coalition of the Wild-eyed.  The video featured Democrats who support John Kerry making negative and baseless attacks against the President.  Interspersed in the video were segments of two ads that appeared on a website sponsored by MoveOn.org – a group campaigning for Kerry – in January.


On Friday night, John Kerry’s campaign denounced our use of these ads, and called that use “disgusting.”


The Kerry campaign says, “The use of Adolf Hitler by any campaign, politician or party is simply wrong.”


We agree.  These ads, like much of the hate-filled, angry rhetoric of Kerry’s coalition of the Wild-eyed, are disgusting.



  • Where was John Kerry’s disgust when he hired Zack Exley – the man responsible for encouraging the production of these ads as part of a MoveOn contest – to run the Kerry campaign’s internet operation?
  • Where was John Kerry’s sense of outrage when Al Gore, just yesterday afternoon, compared the Bush Administration to the Nazis saying, “The Administration works closely with a network of ‘rapid response’ digital Brown Shirts who work to pressure reporters and their editors for ‘undermining support for our troops.'”
  • Where was John Kerry’s anger when Al Gore in May spoke of “Bush’s Gulag”?
  • Why has John Kerry not denounced billionaire and Democrat Party donor George Soros for comparing the Bush Administration to Nazis. Soros stated, “When I hear Bush say, ‘You’re either with us or against us,’ it reminds me of the Germans. It conjures up memories of Nazi slogans on the walls, Der Feind Hort mit (‘The enemy is listening’).”
  • Why has Kerry not spoken out against filmmaker Michael Moore who last October compared the Patriot Act to Mein Kampf.  “The Patriot Act is the first step. ‘Mein Kampf’ – ‘Mein Kampf’ was written long before Hitler came to power.”

We created this web video to show the depths to which these Kerry supporters will sink to win in November.


Is this the Democratic Party of Franklin Delano Roosevelt who reassured his countrymen we have nothing to fear but fear itself?


No.  This is John Kerry’s Coalition of the Wild-eyed, who have nothing to offer but fear-mongering.

Shutter Samurai . . .


Like they said in the movie . . . “samurai” means “to serve.”  I met with my potential client at 4:30 and I think things went well.  I measured all their windows, promised to get a quote to them by Friday.  They were a nice couple with a beautiful home the construction of which they contracted themselves.  They told me that it cost them about half what it would have cost having a builder do it.  Wow!  The wife collects Fiestaware, so we chatted about that for a few minutes, and they have two dogs, one of which is an Australian Shepherd — so we had that in common, too.  I emphasized the quality of our product, and our awesome service — hopefully the quote will come in where they want it and we can do business.


When I got home, Jami and her buddy were splashing in the pool so AJ and I got to have a nice dinner and watch “The Last Samurai” uninterrupted.  Before any of you worry about two 8-year-olds splashing in the pool unsupervised . . . well, the pool is 35 inches deep and it’s right by the living room windows, so it was very easy to glance out there every few minutes and make sure that they were okay.  It’s actually a great set-up!


The movie was very good.  I’m not a huge Tom Cruise fan because (a) he’s into Scientology and (b) I thought that whole Nicole Kidman/Penelope Cruz scenario was just shameful.  But I tried to enjoy the movie for its own sake and overlook Mr. Cruise.  The story was pretty good — I’m always a sucker for good war movies.  I’m not sure it qualifies as a “war” movie, but the battle sequences were pretty exciting and the characters were interesting.


I’ve got to go pull a load of towels out of the dryer and get some sleep.  Tomorrow is a busy day — two appointments in the a.m. and then quotes to do the rest of the day so I can deliver them on Friday.  I also need to work on our July budget and cash flow plan.  Ugh.  It’s a chore, but I swear things go so much better when I discipline myself to do it.


Have a good one —

Rain, Rain, Go Away . . .


We’re about to float away.  It’s not raining now, but it must have come a gully-washer in the middle of the night.  The back pasture is now a lake, and the above-ground pool that AJ set up just a few days ago is brimming to overflowing.  All I want to do is read and sleep, but there’s so much work to do (laundry, dusting, etc.) and then I have a shutter measurement appointment at 4:30 this afternoon.


Business is going pretty well.  We have had quite a few appointments.  Some we get, some we don’t.  But that’s okay.  I have discovered that I’ve some new competitors in the area.   I don’t think I can provide better products because we already provide the best!  I’ll have to focus on conveying that, plus our fabulous customer service to potential clients!


Well, I’d better go check on the laundry and get to dusting.  Only a few more hours until my appointment, so I need to make hay while the sun (doesn’t) shine(s).

Thanks a lot, Miss O’Hara!


So, I read a while back in your blog that you’re a big Sydney Bristow/Alias fan.  Wandered into Blockbuster the other night and noticed, Hm!  They have the first and second seasons on DVD.


Well, it’s 3:47 a.m. (Central Time) and I just finished watching the last episode of Season One.  My eyes are red, I’m ditzy with exhaustion, and all I can think about is . . . what time does Blockbuster open so I can get Season Two?????


What a great show!  I never watched it because it conflicted with something else I was watching (Now that I’ve seen it, I can’t remember what the other show was.  Must have been good.  Ha!)  I think I will definitely be an Alias fan now.  Sydney’s great, I’m so glad Will survived his torture session with the Asian “dentist,” and I’m curious to see how Vaughn is going to get out of his underwater “grave” after Sydney stopped the Circumference.  Not to mention how Sydney is going to escape, herself.


What time does Blockbuster open . . . .?

Last night I caught part of what I assume was a re-run of #41’s 80th birthday celebration on t.v.  There was a big party at Minute Maid Park here in Houston with entertainment, salutes, and fireworks at the end.  It looked to be a great party for a great man.  Randy Travis sang that awesome song, “Three Wooden Crosses” and went on to say what a great president #41 had been, and that his son was doing a mighty fine job, too.  I couldn’t help but laugh loudly (despite the fact others in my family were sleeping by this time) when he said some friends of his suggested that he sing a song for John Kerry, too.  So he said he’d sing a few words . . . “born to lose . . . .  “  I just loved it.  The whole crowd went wild and he said, “I thought that would go over well here.”

Now the week of mourning has ended . . .


I know Ann Coulter can be a little abrasive, a little sarcastic . . . but good grief, the woman always makes her point and it’s usually very good.  Her latest article ( http://www.anncoulter.com/ ) had a few comments that startled me, such as The world’s living testament to the limits of genetics, Ron, Jr. . . ., (considering that his father just died, it does seem a little harsh).  However, she was right to point out how the people who bashed President Reagan relentlessly during his time in office are now trying to rewrite history.  Eleanor “I’ve just eaten a lemon, peel and all” Clift said that President Reagan reached out to his political opponents and tried to seek converts, while the current President Bush would like to consign his opponents to oblivion.


Coulter gives numerous examples of President Reagan’s uncompromising believes regarding abortion, gay rights, government programs to feed the hungry, etc.  While I respect President Bush, I worry that he thought he could “chummy up” to Dems like Daschle and Kennedy the way he did Bob Bullock while he was governor of Texas, and subsequently accomplish good for the nation.  Unfortunately, there’s a whole different breed of bottom feeder in D.C.  The majority of politicians are only interested in keeping their jobs in order to enjoy the perks and the pension when it’s all over.  Doesn’t matter if they run the country into the ground while they’re doing it.


I wish that President Bush would walk into the Oval Office one morning, pick up the phone and say “Daschle, we’re gonna’ being doing things a little differently from here on out, because there’s a whole lot of people out there depending on us to do this job right.  And right doesn’t mean what’s most comfortable for us.  It means putting the nation as a whole first.  Not special interests, not our interests.  The NATION’S, because it’s the greatest nation on this earth, and U.N. be damned . . . that’s nothing to be ashamed of.  GOD BLESS AMERICA!”  Click . . . .

A Great Column from Mike Adams:


My apology to the Arab world
Mike S. Adams (back to web version) | email to a friend Send


June 14, 2004


Author’s Note: the following editorial contains mildly offensive language. Given the subject matter, the author is sorry that it does not contain highly offensive language.


Lately, I’ve been hearing a lot about the Iraqi prisoner abuse scandal. The pictures of those “abused” prisoners have been plastered all over the front pages of papers around the country. Some of my conservative friends have interpreted the excessive coverage as proof that papers like the New York Times are actually rooting against America in its current war on terror. Even those who aren’t willing to go that far say that such coverage is helping the enemy to recruit a new generation of terrorists to inflict harm upon our troops.


Despite these views, I have decided to make a formal public apology to the entire Arab world in the aftermath of Abu Ghraib. It is my hope that the following apology will help bring some clarity to the situation and, who knows, maybe even lasting world peace:



Dear Arabs,


I am truly sorry that Americans decided to take up arms and sacrifice their own youth in the defense of Muslims in Bosnia, Kosovo, and the first Gulf War. After we clear up this mess in Iraq, we will refrain from any such activity in the future.


I am truly sorry that I did not hear any of you call for an apology from Muslim extremists after 911. After all, the hijackers were all Arabs.
 
I am truly sorry that Arabs have to live in squalor under savage dictatorships throughout the Middle East. I am also sorry that the “leaders” of these nations drive their citizens into poverty by keeping all of the wealth in the hands of a select few.


I am also sorry that these governments intentionally breed hate for the U.S. in their religious schools while American schools do the exact opposite.


I am sorry that Yasir Arafat has been kicked out of every Arab country and has attached his name to the Palestinian “cause.”  I am also sorry that no other Arab country will offer nearly as much support to Arafat as we offer to them.


I am sorry that the U.S. has continued to serve as the biggest financial supporter of poverty stricken Arab nations while wealthy Arab leaders blame the U.S. for all of their problems.


I am sorry that left-wing media elites would Rather (pun intended) not talk about any of this, thereby perpetuating your anger towards us. It’s probably really bad for your blood pressure. I am also sorry that most of you lack the medical resources to measure your blood pressure. And, of course, I’m sorry that few of you have indoor plumbing. That’s bad for your health, too.


I am sorry that the U.N. cheated so many poor people in Iraq out of their “food for oil” money so they could get rich while the tortured, raped, and poverty-stricken citizens of Iraq suffered under Saddam Hussein.


I am sorry that some Arab governments pay the families of homicide bombers after their children are blown to pieces in pursuit of Arafat’s “cause.”
 
I am sorry that these homicide bombers have as little regard for babies as the local office of Planned Parenthood.


I am sorry that so many people are unable to differentiate between the gang rape rooms and mass graves of Saddam Hussein on the one hand, and the conditions of Abu Ghraib on the other.
 
I am sorry that our prison guards do not show the same restraint that Arabs show when their brothers in arms are killed. By the way, you shouldn’t be sorry about that.


I am sorry that foreign trained terrorists are trying to seize control of Iraq and return it to a terrorist state.  I am sorry we have not yet dropped at least 100 Daisy cutters on Fallujah in order to stop that effort.


I am also sorry that cleaning up the mess in Iraq is taking so long. It only took Saddam Hussein about 30 years to accomplish all he did in the realm of human rights. Come to think of it, that’s about ten years less than the duration of our War on Poverty in the U.S. Come to think of it, I’m sorry we haven’t sent all of our gang bangers from South Central Los Angeles to Fallujah.


I am sorry that every time the terrorists hide, it just happens to be inside a “Holy Site.”


I am sorry that Muslim extremists have not yet apologized for the U.S.S.
Cole, the embassy bombings, and for flying a plane into the World Trade Center, which collapsed in part on Saint Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church, which is one of our Holy Sites.


I am sorry that we have not taken a portion of the diet of Michael Moore and shipped it to one of your starving villages in the Middle East. You need it Moore (pun intended) than he does.


I am sorry that your only supporters are professors, journalists, and other assorted Leftists who also support homosexuals, bisexuals, transsexuals, partial birth abortion, and everything that you abhor in this world. I am sorry that everyone else in America is against you.


Finally, I am sorry that I am going to have to end this apology by asking you to kiss the right side of my conservative butt. I’m probably just having a bad day.


For that I am truly sorry.


Dr. Mike S. Adams (www.DrAdams.org) is author of “Welcome to the Ivory Tower of Babel.” (http://www.dradams.org/ivory_tower.html). He is truly sorry if this editorial offended anyone. Well, not really.




©2004 Mike S. Adams

Appeasing the Law, Danbury Style; Expanding My Literary Horizons (aka Filling in the Gaps of My College Education)


I spent three hours this morning at the local Firestone having my oil changed, truck inspected, and then purchasing a new tire since the vehicle inspector refused to pass my truck.  I guess he was worried about the steel showing through my right rear tire.  Anyway, the oil was overdue (Scott at the Firestone knows without me telling him:  Gimme’ the superduper engine cleaner oil change . . . or as I say when I walk through the door:  “I’ll have the usual . . . “)  The inspection sticker was also overdue.  Yes, it expired January 31, 2004.  But I’ve been busy!  Poor AJ.  He drove the truck to Alvin the other day and took the scenic route through Danbury.  Stopped at the stoplight and a police car passing through the intersection nailed him.


Not only did he get nailed for the out-of-date inspection sticker, but he didn’t have a current insurance card on him, so he got nailed for that, too.  He was so sweet.  He could have read me the riot act and within his rights, too, but he didn’t.  So I got a new insurance card into his hands, got the inspection done, and Danbury tells us that we’ll only have to pay $10 per citation.  I’d say we were getting off cheap, except the tire was $100.


After that ordeal, Jami and I went to the library.  She picked up her favorites:  Nancy Drew and The Boxcar Children.  I decided that there were some holes in my education, and so I checked out Jane Austen’s “Persuasion,” and the collected works of Charlotte and Emily Bronte.  Also some novel of Louisa May Alcott’s that was discovered after her death.  I must be feeling guilty for reading “fluff” the last few months.  Seriously, I read good books, but they are not truly great literature.  So I’m going to exercise the old gray matter there.


Catch you later!