Archive for August, 2006

Snakes not on a plane

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006

At first I thought it was an earthworm on the floor of our kitchen but it was too skinny to be a worm. And earthworms aren't black. About four inches long, it lay coiled towards the center of the floor but slithered quickly off towards the kitchen sink as I approached and into a small hole between the linoleum and the bottom of the cabinet under the sick.

I opened the cabinet door just in time to see it slither down into the opening between the bottom of the cabinet and the kitchen sink drain pipe and into the crawl space under the house.

It looked like either a baby black snake or rat snake. I wondered if its mother had found her way into our crawl space and hatched her eggs.

Our crawl space is almost deep enough to be a basement -- a little over five feet high. Amy can stand up in the space but I must stoop. I picked up a flashlight and ventured into the crawl space but found no signs of reptile life. I suspect the baby was small enough to crawl in through one of the vents to our crawl space and then found its way up the drain pipe into the kitchen. Mama is probably raising her young in the woods that comprise our back yard.

Which explains why we haven't seen any mice lately.

Josh - I’m not going to write about Martinsville

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006


Josh has his thoughts on the Blogs United conference posted on Raising Kaine . Read it! His words ring true. I hope people can see that this event was special for many reasons. Walls came down and boundaries were crossed. A few of us from both sides shared a unique experience while we talked. We did not see a Republican or a Democrat. We saw fathers, mothers, workers, all concerned about our future. While opinions and political beliefs were not changed, an understanding and dare I say admiration for our fellow bloggers was achieved. I think reading Josh's post shows that. Awesome! What started in controversy turned out to be a groundbreaking event.

This year Alton and his crew sent ripples through the blogoshere. Next year if everyone helps we can make a huge wave. I hope to be there, if not, open four bottles of Beam and raise a glass.

BTW – My email is on the sidebar. If anyone is down my way and wants to hang out at Spark it Up HQ let me know.

Technorati :

VA: Ernesto Strike Path

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006

Update for Virginia Interests...

http://www.emergencyemail.org/ernesto2006.asp

Radars...

http://www.emergencyemail.org/newsemergency/weatherradar.asp?sit=27

THE EMERGENCY EMAIL & WIRELESS NETWORK

http://www.emergencyemail.org

NewsEmergency.com

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006
Rummy in Paradise: When All Else Fails, Trot Out the "Appeasement" Language.



In his recent attempt to label all war critics appeasers of fascism, Donald Rumsfeld continues to sink to new lows. 62% of Americans see through his propaganda and manipulative deceit, tell the truth, and speak out or answer pollsters. As Rummy would say, "My goodness."



Ironically, in his attack, he uses one of the very tendencies of fascism John Dean warns us of. In Conservatives Without Conscience, Dean summarizes research on the authoritarian personality and links tendencies of Rummy and friends to such authoritarian tendencies.



And sure enough, Rummy is only too happy to oblige. First it was Neo-McCarthyism. Now it's this absurd and outrageous claim that war critics are trying to appease "a new type of fascism." Read the article here.



So let's take a look at some characteristics of fascist regimes. Researcher/writer, Dr. Lawrence Britt has studied the common characteristics of fascist regimes and enumerated fourteen defining characteristics of fascism:

1. Powerful and continuing nationalism.

2. Disdain for the recognition of human rights.

3. Identifies scapegoats/enemies as a unifying cause.

4. Supremacy of the military.

5. Rampant sexism.

6. Controlled mass media.

7. Obsession with national security.

8. Religion and government are intertwined.

9. Corporate power is protected.

10. Labor power is suppressed.

11. Disdain for intellectuals and the arts.

12. Obsession with crime and punishment.

13. Rampant cronyism and corruption.

14. Fraudulent elections.



Does that ring a bell? If that doesn't give one pause, then maybe he or she should look for our nation's integrity and reputation either "north, south, east or west," where Rummy and his bosses have left them. Should Rumsfeld want to see a real appeaser (of fascism), he need only look in the mirror. And as Rumsfeld and Cheney ratchet up the coercive repressive rhetoric, they illustrate better than any of us can how truly weak they really are. If they have to stoop to this, then they are really desperate. As for Rummy, the man has no shame and its time for him to go.

More Of The Same

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006
Unemployment is down in Danville. Again. So say the experts:
City's unemployment rate drops
By Bernard Baker, Danville Register & Bee staff writer

The jobless rate in the Danville metropolitan area, which includes Danville and Pittsylvania County, dropped from 8 percent in June to 7.6 percent in July. The unemployment rate was 8.4 percent in July 2005. (
link)
This is a good thing, right?

Well, if only it weren't for that pesky denominator in the unemployment equation:

The [Virginia Employment Commission’s] report, however, also showed that the labor force continued to shrink in the Danville metropolitan area.

The work force number was 50,480 in July. That was down from 51,890 in June and 51,960 in July 2005.

Danville: Still on a glide path to 0% unemployment.

Reading Nature

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006
It seems the flowers in the planters that I devoted my entire spring and summer nourishing, carrying a water bucket each day to, have turned out to be weeds. I've been waiting weeks as the three foot high stalks whose buds seemed almost ready to open, never quite got there. Before it metamorphised into what I imagined three foot high baby breath might look like, I thought I was growing zinnias.

Rumsfeld Gets It Right

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006
Secretary of Defense Don Rumsfeld said yesterday in a speech before the American Legion what many of us have been saying for years:

Rumsfeld Says War Critics Haven’t Learned Lessons of History

By David S. Cloud, The New York Times




SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 29 — Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld said Tuesday that critics of the war in Iraq and the campaign against terror groups “seem not to have learned history’s lessons,” and he alluded to those in the 1930’s who advocated appeasing Nazi Germany.



Comparing terrorist groups to a “new type of fascism,” Mr. Rumsfeld said, “With the growing lethality and the increasing availability of weapons, can we truly afford to believe that somehow, some way, vicious extremists can be appeased?” ( link )
Appeasement is one way of looking at it. Sticking our heads in the sand and wanting it all to just go away is another. Until, that is, another attack occurs. Then, for a brief time, they'll all get serious about stopping terrorism. For a brief time. Then they'll go back to wringing their hands and whining about world opinion and such.



Kind of pitiful really.

I’ve Been Drummed Out Of The Blogosphere

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006
I forgot to mention an amusing exchange I had with Ben Tribbett of Not Larry Sabato Friday night over in Martinsville. We had all assembled for dinner at Chatmoss Country Club (where we were treated to a delightful speech by Lt. Governor Bill Bolling) and afterwards a number of us ended up at a Congressman Virgil Goode Meet-and-Greet over at the Hampton Inn.



By midnight there were some 16 people in the room and Ben and I ended up sitting on a couch with Megan, Republitarian 's wife. Now Ben looked like he'd had a good bit to drink by this time (or maybe he looks like that all the time - I'd only just met him face-to-face) so it may have been the booze talking. But Ben proceeded to inform me that the site you're visiting - From On High - is not a blog...



... it's a website....



... because I don't allow comments to be posted to the blo...website.



He was quite adamant that I cannot be a blogger if I don't allow people (meaning Ben) to leave comments.



I had two responses. (1) "I don't allow comments because anything anyone had to say would reduce the quality of this site. You want to comment? Send me an email." (2) "I'll just have to live with the fact that this doesn't rise to the level of a weblog. I ain't changing it. Now or ever."



He was disappointed. Or drunk. Probably both.



I will say this: Ben holds a lot of boneheaded left-wing attitudes when it comes to politics but with that annoying exception, he comes across as being a great guy. He reminds me of me way back when - kind of confused, wrong on politics, unaware of the ways of the world, liberal. I too was very liberal. He's a good conversationalist and defends his views well. I enjoyed the encounter and now consider him a friend.



But I ain't changin' the weblo ... website, Ben. Not now. Never.



***



Update 11:36am, 08/30/06: Rumor has it that Ben doesn't drink. If that's the case, it would appear that only the other guy involved in the conversation must have consumed too much of Kentucky's finest bourbon whiskey.

That ain’t fair, how come we don’t make that much?

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
Have you ever been told that the reason why other firefighters get paid more is because the cost of living increase? I have. Have you ever been told that by a Chief? I have. Have you ever been told that by a Chief who makes less than a firefighter in another City? I have. I know a firefighter from a Northern Virginia fire department with 20 years of service who makes $82,000 a year. Do you realize

What has the IAFF done for me?

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
What has the IAFF done for me? This is a common question I am asked by members of Local 1132, as well as other Locals in the area. The answer isn't quite that easy. You see, if I weren't busy selling the IAFF to all of my members and working harder to support the IAFF and its members we wouldn't be talking about it. If the members who ask these questions got involved and knew what the IAFF did,

Southwest Virginia Young Democrats

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006

The Southwest Virginia Young Democrats are the proud (I hope) owner of a new website.

Check it out here: www.swvayd.com

Suggestions on ways to improve it are always welcome!

You can teach an old dog new tricks

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
My posts have been a little sporadic the last few days. It's not because I'm on summer vacation. It's actually because I finally decided to start a long term project. Last winter I spent some time thinking about what I...

You can teach an old dog new tricks

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
My posts have been a little sporadic the last few days. It's not because I'm on summer vacation. It's actually because I finally decided to start a long term project. Last winter I spent some time thinking about what I...

You can teach an old dog new tricks

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
My posts have been a little sporadic the last few days. It's not because I'm on summer vacation. It's actually because I finally decided to start a long term project. Last winter I spent some time thinking about what I...

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of much life. Aim above morality. Be not simply good; be good for something.
Henry David Thoreau

_mg_7474

Let's here it for Lilly...she was out for a walk today and in good spirits.  Toonces and I have lowered her phenobarbital.   After I found out from the vet that the mild seizures didn't hurt her, only an aggravation to us humans, we decided a life stoned out of her mind to avoid them wasn't the right solution.   We'd rather see her smile again....and eat....and feel a like part of the family.  I hope we've found the right balance. 

_an_opening

Today, we (the Thugs, Darius and I) had such a good morning strolling through the butterfly weed fields loaded with butterflies and hanging out on an old bridge cooling our heels, that many thoughts entered my mind on what to blog about today.

After a nice dinner (prepared by me) and time out on our back patio just relaxing I decided no....all I am going to say is I feel very blessed....and I am very thankful. What I decided to do tonight was wish everyone peace in their lives and calmness in their hearts.  I wish everyone, if nothing else, just one hour of time to chill and relax...just some time to breathe and appreciate life.

( Click if you want to enlarge any of these small ones)

_eudora_1 _deer_family _darius_in_the_fields _local_butterfly _mg_7395_edited1

_asleeping_tman _a_sleeping_crew

Hybrid phones will become the standard

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006

Swedish-Finnish telecom company TeliaSonera has started selling hybrid phones that will automatically make phone calls via the Internet when in range of a WiFi hotspot, and use the normal cellphone network when not in a hotspot. Some other dual mode phones have been available, but this is the first phone (manufactured by Samsung) that will switch automatically between the two. The firm is targeting in home use first, which is clever, because we make a lot of calls from home. If you have a wireless router in your house, the phone will automatically make VoIP calls, saving money.

Devices like this illustrate the need to design communitywide broadband networks that offer BOTH fiber and wireless connectivity. We are going to want and need both, and communities should plan and design for both.

Hybrid phones will become the standard

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006

Swedish-Finnish telecom company TeliaSonera has started selling hybrid phones that will automatically make phone calls via the Internet when in range of a WiFi hotspot, and use the normal cellphone network when not in a hotspot. Some other dual mode phones have been available, but this is the first phone (manufactured by Samsung) that will switch automatically between the two. The firm is targeting in home use first, which is clever, because we make a lot of calls from home. If you have a wireless router in your house, the phone will automatically make VoIP calls, saving money.

Devices like this illustrate the need to design communitywide broadband networks that offer BOTH fiber and wireless connectivity. We are going to want and need both, and communities should plan and design for both.

The Dancing Outlaw

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
Well, this weekend I finally got to see the famous, or should I say infamous, documentary on Jesco, The Dancing Outlaw. More than any other documentary, this piece on one family in Boone County, West Virginia, has defined Appalachia as a place to the outside world – indeed, with the exception of cartoon portrayals of Appalachians (e.g. The Flintstones) and the film version of Deliverance, this film is arguably the most important work defining how Americans from other regions view Appalachia.

I won’t comment on Jesco at any length. I believe his story, and that of his family is tragic – that they maintain their humor at all, much less an ancient form of dance that has survived, while evolving, a long hiatus from the British Isles, is frankly amazing.

That said, I want to discuss how the film left me feeling a little sick, literally. The filmmaker, at least it seems, intentionally edited his work in such a form as to belittle Jesco and his family, making light of the fact that they are undereducated, part of a cycle of violence, and that Jesco obviously has some variant form of mental illness, probably the result of losing hope given his personal desperation. In other words, the goal of this “documentary” was to publicly embarrass and insult its subjects, not enlighten the world as to the nature of their condition. Humor was not a side note, but the intent of the film. If he had edited a documentary on the ghettos of New Orleans, New York, Boston, or Los Angeles in such a way, public outrage would be astounding – and rightly so. Don’t agree? Imagine a “documentary” in which the intent was to make you laugh at poor, uneducated blacks from New Orleans, with particular emphasis on the one member of the family who could perform an artistic act but was obviously either under grave duress, hopeless, or mentally ill. Now add in the fact that this family was obviously being torn asunder by the anguish of having lost several members very recently, all of them either to murder or automobile accidents.

Yeah, that’d be hilarious.



Now, I want to pause here and note that many of the people who enjoy the film enjoy it by mere virtue of the air of nobility that manages to squeak through the film's editing. Despite all you like Jesco and his family, because they are, in the end, good, decent folks. You like them because they are trying to take advantage of their moment in the sun, like any human being would; they're drawing some pride from being able to tell their stories. And, frankly, you admire them because they draw happiness from the minimum qualities of life - woods, air, food, drink, music, family, and so on - very Taoist.

To say I have mixed feelings is, well, an understatement.

You know what, though? I think everyone should see this film. I do. I think everyone should see these films to see the outcome of the colonial economy that still dominates the coalfields (and, even worse, their wake, once the coal has been mined out). I think everyone should see why our governments damned well have to overhaul the public education systems in impoverished areas, Appalachian and otherwise. And, frankly, I think that everyone, and most especially artists and artistians, should see just how foul a human being can be – and by that I mean the filmmaker responsible for this grotesquery – as a model of what not to do. This film is the kind of documentary published by imperial nations in the early 20th Century, justifying their continued dominance over children-peoples – it is, in other words, propaganda that justifies exactly the kind of economic oppression which continues in Appalachia, and that is exactly what it deserves to be called. And, frankly, the film is a demonstration of the potential for human beings to endure enormous angst and come out smiling. Sort of. I know in this blog's by-line it explicitly states that we're trying to get over Rousseau's sylvan myths - but damned if Appalachia's endemic fatalism doesn't share a helluva' a lot with Taoism and philsophical Buddhism. Crazy.

All that said, I hope someday I get to see Jesco dance. Because damn, that man can step.

Also see:

The Documentary Channel's biography of Jesco White and review of the movie.

The homepage of Jescofest, which benefits the great Mr. White (we just missed it, I fear - it was this past weekend).

The Austin Chronicle's interview with Jacob Young, the filmmaker who launched Jesco to fame.

A Charleston Daily Mail article on Jesco and Jescofest.

An interview with Hank Williams, III on Midwest Excess in which Jesco was discussed at length.

God Bless Jessie White.

Virginia Centrist Closing Shop?

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
Paul informs us he is saying goodbye to blogging . He is not specific in the reason and was silent about it at Blogs United. Could it be..... Good Luck Paul!



Virginia Centrist Closing Shop?

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006
Paul informs us he is saying goodbye to blogging . He is not specific in the reason and was silent about it at Blogs United. Could it be..... Good Luck Paul!