Archive for August, 2005

Good Reading Comes In Threes

Monday, August 29th, 2005


I enjoyed all three of these items and wanted to pass them on:

  • Uncommon Descent is an outstanding blog that promotes belief in Intelligent Design. (Hat Tip: Where Have You Gone, Ronald Reagan.) Among the intresting items I found at Uncommon Descent was an article by Beverly Kelly for the Ventura County Star, called Public Not Buying 'I.D. Is Not Science' Argument. Here's a quick bite of it:
    Intelligent design advocates who purists find so infuriating are not your father's "the world was created in six days" Bible-thumpers. They are, for the most part, credentialed scholars who identify two scientific developments that, they claim, could undermine Darwinism. The first is the molecular biology revelation that life is staggeringly and unexpectedly more complex than evolution can explain. (See Michael J. Behe's "Darwin's Black Box.") The second is a set of mathematical findings that casts serious doubt on the power of natural selection to accomplish macro-evolutionary changes. (See: William A. Dembski's "The Design Revolution.")

    The whole thing is good. Go read it.


  • Homocon recently found his way back to Narnia. Here's some of what he said:
    The writing is better than I remembered -- vivid and descriptive without going completely overboard on depictions of landscape and character history (as in, say, much of The Lord of the Rings which, in my opinion, stretched on far longer than seemed really necessary). The mythology is vaguely Christian (though C.S. Lewis sometimes denied overtly crafting them so . . . but, really, does anybody believe him on that point?)


  • Want to learn how to post like a liberal? Cake Or Death has a great primer. Here's a couple of his ten steps:
    4. Find a leader. The most qualified person would be someone who has lost something dear because of the person/policy you are protesting. A good example would be a mother who lost a son in a war that she doesn't agree with. This is quite possibly the most unimpeachable spokesperson you can have. Once you loose a loved one, your cause becomes bullet proof regardless of what kind of diarhhea comes out of your mouth!

    9. Use props. If say, you're against a war, make crosses of those killed in said war and paint the names of the fallen on them. Post them around your site. It looks really cool. (Nevermind getting permission to use names of soldiers killed who you do not know. Your cause is just. They and the loved ones left befind won't mind at all.)

    The whole list had me grinning... go read all of it.

  • How A Social Moderate Can Win The GOP Nomination In Six Easy Steps

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    Baseball Crank has some advice for Rudy Giuliani.

    The Best of Cindy Sheehan

    Monday, August 29th, 2005

    Mark Goldblatt has an article in the American Spectator that quotes Cindy at her best. A little taste and one of my favorite Cindy rants:

    • "You tell me the truth. You tell me that my son died for oil. You tell me that my son died to make your friends rich. You tell me my son died to spread the cancer of Pax Americana, imperialism in the Middle East."

    Barking Moonbat Alert!

    Blog Summit review

    Monday, August 29th, 2005

    The reviews are in!

    John Behan has this post that contains links to many other posts about the summit.

    After reading all of them....I am really glad I did not go. Heck, Norman left at noon and I would have been right behind him.

    The New Reality Show: “Grief Factor”

    Monday, August 29th, 2005


    Remember when grief and mourning were a private, personal matter for loved ones and family?



    That's Cindy Sheehan and her entourage of cameras and reporters. In the middle with her, competing for the spotlight, is the right Reverend Al Sharpton.

    Don't they look good together?



    Why do I have a warped remix of "Like A Prayer" in my head?



    Just like a dream....
    You are not what you seem......"


    A Piece Of History Gone Forever

    Monday, August 29th, 2005


    I am too young to have known Ernie Pyle or to have been around during World War II when he wrote dispatches from the front lines to readers back home who were starved for information relating to their loved ones serving in the Pacific. He was, by all accounts, revered by his readers for the familial and cordially folksy manner in which he portrayed the sometimes heartbreaking accounts of suffering and death, and at other times the heroic deeds of GI's who rose above the simple call to duty. Ernie Pyle was shot and killed by a Japanese sniper on a desolate Pacific island just at war's end.



    Now, those few people - mostly over 70 - who still have fond memories of the legendary journalist will find a certain sadness in this news:



    Ernie Pyle's Childhood Home Destroyed

    By The Associated Press



    DANA, Ind. -- The Indiana farmhouse where World War II correspondent Ernie Pyle grew up has been demolished, shocking preservationists who had worked for years to keep Pyle's legacy alive.



    The home's demolition in mid-August came after the owners had offered it to the Ernie Pyle museum in Dana, the state or anyone who would take it. (
    link )
    Keeping Ernie Pyle's legacy alive in an era when journalists as a group are held in such low regard would have been a monumental task anyway. This won't make it any easier.



    For more information on his life and a sampling of his superb writing, click here .



    Photo courtesy of Indiana University

    Tim Kaine?s $87 Billion Moment

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    Patrick Ruffini has a great post, lampooning the absurdity of Tim Kaine's "Sportsmen" rollout that I mentioned earlier today: A single moment is sometime all it takes to ruin a campaign. Ted Kennedy's Roger Mudd moment. Mike Dukakis in the tank. John Kerry voting for the $87 billion before he voted against it. Candidate for Virginia governor [...]

    The Blogroll Is Back

    Monday, August 29th, 2005


    I've put the blogroll back down the left side... I'd gotten enough negative feedback about it being a clickable link to convince me that I needed to bring it back to the front page.

    I've also added a couple of graphics and things to the right to try to ballance things out.

    No, I am not going to let the new template get as junked up as the old one was. Not yet, anyway.

    Since I am a natural born follower, I've added one of those niftly little blog polls that everyone else seems to have these days. Scroll down about half way and you'll see it on the left-hand side, under the blogroll. Be sure and click your selection.

    That is all! At ease.

    Warner won?t challenge Allen next year

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    Who predicted this long, long ago? Governor Mark Warner will announce tomorrow that he will NOT challenge U-S Senator George Allen's re-election bid next year. That's the word this evening from the state Democratic Party chairman, Richard Cranwell. Cranwell says he believes Warner is intent on ending his term as governor on what Cranwell calls "a [...]

    First day at law school

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    I remember being in this guy's shoes, getting ready to start classes at Georgetown Law. It was nine years ago, which is very difficult for me to believe (Can it really have been that long ago?). I shared some of the same feelings that he described, although I must admit that none of my thoughts [...]

    Kaine?s gun-show ?loophole?

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    Addison has explained the private party gun sale exception to background checks. You know, the "loophole" about which Democratic candidate Tim Kaine and Democratic Party Chairman Dickie Cranwell disagree. Well, let's say that someone is working on a political campaign and offers to work a candidate's booth at a gun show. Let's say that this [...]

    Everybody Else Is Doing It…

    Monday, August 29th, 2005


    Seems like everybody else is taking this test right now, so I took it too. I think my results are fairly accurate... at least with regard to the apathy it noted.

    If I had to pick a RotN character to say I'm the most like, it would probably be Booger.

    Here's my results:

    Tri-Lamb Material
    60 % Nerd, 43% Geek, 60% Dork
    For The Record:



    A Nerd is someone who is passionate about learning/being smart/academia.

    A Geek is someone who is passionate about some particular area or subject, often an obscure or difficult one.

    A Dork is someone who has difficulty with common social expectations/interactions.



    You scored better than half in Nerd and Dork, earning you the coveted title of: Tri-Lamb Material.

    The classic, "80's" nerd, you are what most people think of when they think "nerd," largely due to 80's movies like Revenge of the Nerds and TV shows like Head of the Class. You're exceptionally bright and smart, and partly because of that have never quite fit in with your peers or social groups. Perhaps you've realized, or will someday, that it is possible to retain all of the things that you like about being brilliant and still make peace with the social cliques around you. Or maybe you won't--it's really not necessary. As the brothers of Lambda Lambda Lambda discovered, you're fine just the way you are and can take pride in that. I mean, who wants to be like Ogre, right!?

    Thanks Again! -- THE NERD? GEEK? OR DORK? TEST



    My test tracked 3 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:
    free online datingfree online dating
    You scored higher than 46% on nerdiness
    free online datingfree online dating
    You scored higher than 55% on geekosity
    free online datingfree online dating
    You scored higher than 96% on dork points
    Link: The Nerd? Geek? or Dork? Test written by donathos on Ok Cupid


    Caption Contest winner

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    Time to announce the winner of this week's Caption Contest. Here's the picture: This week's winner: Summit participants enthusiastically endorsed Norm Leahy’s stirring call to “blog for the children.” Comment by Will Vehrs Honorable Mention entries: Bloggers react to cannonball performed by well-fed pool-goer on the other side of the glass during Saturday’s summit. Comment by Steve Minor Even the old [...]

    Ferguson Jumps Into Smith Mountain Lake Safety Issue

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    Be sure to check out our latest press release. Eric has weighed in on the safety issues concerning Smith Mountain Lake.



    It really amazes me that Mr. Dudley thinks that after three deaths in four weeks, we're "rushing" into anything. As Eric asks, how many have to die before Mr. Dudley understands?

    AlterNet: War on Iraq: Off the Front Lines and For…

    Monday, August 29th, 2005

    AlterNet: War on Iraq: Off the Front Lines and Forgotten: "Hammons says the claim he filed with the VA took 14 months to process; it took another four months to get into the VA medical system. 'My experience with the VA has been horrible. I go to a private doctor for pain meds. If I need to see a doctor here [at the VA], it takes three to four months to get an appointment,' he says. 'I took my son down a slide, which wasn't real smart, and I couldn't walk. I had pain shooting down my arm and leg. That happened in April. I got in the second week of July. That's how it is here.'

    The CVAF receives 95 percent of its funding through grants. 'If the American public actually knew of the deficiencies in VA healthcare, they would be outraged,' says David Gorman, executive director of the Disabled American Veterans (DAV), a 1.2 million-member group that represents disabled veterans. 'It's really changed to become an us against them-type mentality on Capitol Hill. Right now the Republicans have the majority and they flex their muscle whenever they have a chance. It doesn't do the country any good and doesn't do the vets any good.'

    In April, Republican senators, including Rick Santorum, R-Pa., John McCain, R-Ariz. and Tom Coburn, R-Okla., voted to defeat a Democratic effort to add $2 billion to the 2005 VA healthcare budget. The only Republican who voted in favor of the bill was Senator Arlen Specter, R-Pa.

    'Democrats are the ones supporting the troops. Republicans aren't supporting us,' says Bill Huber, Disabled American Veterans Hospital Coordinator in Muskogee, Oklahoma and Korean Veteran. 'I'm 71 years old and I've been around a while. The problem is, veterans don't protest. We take what we get. I'm the president of our DAV chapter and I tell my people to write to their congressmen. They just sit back and let our lobbyists do it. They can't do it by themselves; we have to help them.'"

    (Via AlterNet.)

    The uncooperative manager

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    If you work in the business or government world, at some point you're going to be involved in something which challenges your personal moral compass. It's never a question of if, it's always a question of when. The front page...

    Little White Lies

    Monday, August 29th, 2005

    I was born in Quincy in 1950...My Dad was in the Navy...and my Mother was pretty...Are you doing the math in your head yet?...Here, want a pencil?!

    I don’t tell anyone my real age unless it’s going to save me some money, which happened recently.

    Floyd’s Jacksonville Center for the Arts has a new retail store that features the creative efforts of local artists. A few days ago, I stopped by the Center to drop off some of my books (“The Jim and Dan Stories” and “Muses Like Moonlight”) for sale in the shop, and I discovered that you had to be member to sell items there. I was more than happy to become a member, seeing as how the Center is such an asset to our community, and I fully support its goals, particularly the newly opened folk art school.

    Jeri, a friend who works there, said to me, “It costs $25 to join. Too bad you’re not 55 because then it would only cost $15.”

    “Hmmmm….It just so happens that… I recently turned 55,” I lowered my voice and confessed to her. She was shocked because she, like most of my friends, doesn’t know how old I am, due to the fact that I generally lie about it…usually by only a year.

    But I hadn’t confessed quietly enough. Wayne, the director and another friend (Floyd is a small town), overheard us and said, “What? Colleen! You don’t look 55.”

    “That’s because I hang around with that young guy. You know, my husband, Joe. Joe is 10 years younger than me,” I told Wayne.

    “Is that all?” he asked.

    “NO! I lie about that too! He’s really 11 years younger than me!” I said laughing and stomping a foot.

    So that’s my formula. I shave one year off my age and add one year to Joe’s. It’s information I don’t share freely, but if anyone really wants to know (or if it will save me some money), I will admit the truth.

    I wrote out a check for $15, and a few days later I received a membership card in the mail. I gasped when I opened the envelope and saw the word “senior” written on the card. Being referred to as a “senior” was first (and much worse than the first time I didn’t get carded in a bar or the first time someone called me ma’am)!

    Post Note:
    Summer of Blog 2005!
    Mooalex is hosting the Summer of Blog 2005, which is a gallery of blogger’s summer photos. Loose Leaf has a photo featured, “Taking the Cure,” taken by my sister Sherry’s husband, Nelson, of her and I in Rockport, Massachusetts.

    Russ Potts: Tom D?Amore?s Charlie McCarthy?

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    A recent comment here at CC led me to examine some things about the Russ Potts campaign for Governor as an independent. We've all heard the continuing drumbeat about how candid Russ Potts has been. "Everything is on the table!" How refreshing! Well, I'm here to tell you that it's a bunch of [...]

    Boat Races

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    image copyright Fred First

    While I concede victory to Abby in the Goose Creek Regata yesterday, I must protest to the judges, and I think I have a valid claim: the dog ate my boat before the finish line.

    Results of the Ruffini poll

    Monday, August 29th, 2005
    Patrick Ruffini has analyzed the results of his presidential straw poll, which saw George Allen coming in second, behind Rudy Giuliani. If you are interested, here's how Commonwealth Conservative readers voted.