Friday, November 7, 2008
It's official...
She took her first steps yesterday. I was not there to witness the historical event but Kelly called me as soon as it happened.
Last night she took a step or two but was mostly trying to dodge Madison and Ian jumping on the pillows.
It's all down hill from here.
I'm feeling prolific today...
I am proud as hell. (Yes, mom I cursed. Sorry but it had to be done)
My brother and sister-in-law and my sister and brother-in-law did one heck of a job in raising these kids. I was not there witnessing the process take place but I can bet you in the course of their 18 years they never heard Mom or Dad say this is what we believe and you will too. I'll bet they were told to find out for themselves the issues and the facts and to make up their own minds.
Of course living in a house with conservatives probably has some sway on what you believe: although ask William F Buckley if that's the case. His son voted for Obama.
I have always maintained that it would be much easier to be a liberal. Universal Health Care? You bet! Allow all illegals into the country? You bet! Abortion on demand no questions asked? You bet! No more troops in foreign lands? You bet! Throw money at everything? You bet!
The liberals are the children and we are the grown ups. They do what they want to. We do what we need to. They want to eat the whole bag of candy after halloween. We have to make sure that doesn't happen. They want to watch cartoons all day. Nope. Candy for breakfast. I don't think so.
Watching TV or going to movies or listening to music would be so much easier.
Benjamin Franklin once said "If passion drives you, let reason hold the reins." Liberals are passionate without reason, without thought of repercussion.
He also said "When the people find they can vote themselves money,
that will herald the end of the republic."
I see the passion Tod and Tori have for their beliefs, their conviction, and am encouraged that Ben may just be wrong on that last one. At least I hope so.
So, if you listen...
Yea, that one.
I don't know where the McCain staffers are coming from since no one can seem to find any of them, but this is just par for the course for McCain. Something doesn't go your way, blame the other guy. First Bush now Palin. I don't think he understands that the maverick thing will only take you so far. Call me crazy but I think support from your base is normally a prerequisite for winning an election.
He didn't have it.
The proof.
Palin gave it to him. But the ultimate fact that a VP pick doesn't sway an election came into play.
Make no mistake, McCain was a media pick. In 2000 he was the media darling, the "Maverick" who bucked the conservative system. The moderate who reached across the aisle. Bush was closer to being a conservative than McCain was so they touted McCain.
Look at 2008, Romney, Thompson, Huckabee, Giuliani, McCain. Which one of these was the least conservative? You could make a case that Giuliani is and I might agree with you but regardless McCain was certainly in the shallow end of that conservative pool. Which reminds me, we have to close our primaries. I don't want Hippie McTreeHugger voting for my candidate. But I digress, I think Romney would have stood a much better chance against Obama especially with his economics background.
It's all water under the bridge now I guess.
We just need to quit lobbing up 70 year old war veterans for the libs to keep smashing back at us.
I now begin my preparation for 2012. Jindal? Palin? Pawlenty? Putnam? Thune? I'm not sure. I really like Jindal. But do we want to sacrifice an up and comer in 2012 at the altar of Obama? Unless we have Carter era inflation and misery indexes I don't see him not winning another term.
I'm tired.
Thursday, November 6, 2008
I know from funny...
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
I may be more sad today...
Obama was expected. This was not.
He is in my triumvirate of political writers. They are in no particular order, Michael Crichton, Mark Steyn and James Lileks.
You may not know his name but you are familiar with his works: Jurassic Park, The Andromeda Strain, Sphere, Disclosure, Congo, Airframe among others. He was also the Executive Producer of "ER".
He graduated summa cum laude from Harvard. He received his MD from Harvard Medical school. He recieved numerous fellowships in Anthropology and he was a visiting writer at MIT. In short, he was brilliant.
I urge you to take the time to read the next two links. The first is what he wrote about the MSM in 1993. He was quite prescient.
The second is much longer. So put the kids to bed, get a Diet Coke or your refreshment of choice and come back and read it. It is a phenomenal dissertation on the science of Global Warming, its relation to public policy and what a farce that relationship is.
RIP, sir.
To keep listening to the wonderful score by John Williams simply right click on the link and click on Open Link in New Window.
Mediasaurus
Global Warming Schlobal Warming
Well, there you go...
1. The Clinton era is over. By the time she can run again, she'll be 70. Unless she was promised a Supreme Court seat for her obedience, she will now just be the junior senator from New York. That's one good thing.
2. No more John McCain, my friends. His time is finally done as well. What he did to Bush these past 8 years was nothing short of criminal. It's what a 5 year old does when he doesn't get his way. He pouts and whines. He took every opportunity he could to stick in Bush's eye because of his defeat in 2000. At least now he can go back to being the senior senator from Arizona and try to stop us from spending too much. Good luck with that.
3. The race debate has just had quite the paradigm shift. Are the Jesse Jacksons and Al Sharptons of the world going to be able to make a living anymore? If anyone cries racism or oppression all we have to do is point them to the White House. If this country is so inherently racist, Oprah, Charles Barkley, Whoopi, Danny Glover, et al, how could a black man have possibly been elected President? Who will the African American community blame for their plight now?
4. This country has proven it has the attention span of Boo Radley. We, no they, just elected a guy to the most powerful job on the face of the planet whose only job has been a south Chicago community organizer. And nobody is exactly clear on what they do. You see I don't consider being a senator a job. Senators are never held accountable. Even for the votes they cast. There is way too much wiggle room.
5. Another paradigm shift. I'm off to the mall to sell razor blades so people can scrape off their “Question Authority” bumper stickers. Just remember: Dissent is still the highest form of patriotism. Except now it will be practiced by the lowest form of people.
Seriously, though: congratulations to President-elect Obama. Right or wrong, and I hope for more of the former, obviously, he’s my President now, gal-darnit, and I’m not going to spend four years treating him with the contempt the Kos side heaped on Chimpy McPretzelchoker. He could turn out to be a horrible President. He could turn out to be a great one. History pushes people in unexpected directions.
I just hope this isn't a "Wil-e coyote finally catches the road-runner moment". In the cartoon, he finally catches the road runner turns to the camera and thinks, "Now what?".
All those clamoring for hope and change, "Now what?"
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
A friend of mine and I...
I don't agree.
The New York Times is selling this morning for $9.00. In 2002, it was selling for $50.00. GE who owns NBC and MSNBC is selling @ $21 down from nearly $60.
Newspaper circulation is one key measure of public reaction. The top 25 newspapers distributed nearly 18 million papers in 1998. Ten years later, they have lost nearly 4 million paid readers – a 22 percent decline.
Just last week, the Washington Post Co. reported “an 86 percent decline in third-quarter earnings,” and newspaper layoffs are now as common as pictures of Obama with a halo.
Gannett, the publisher of 85 dailies, including USA Today, and 900 other publications, is reportedly laying off 10 percent of its newspaper employees. That’s up to 3,000 workers. The Christian Science Monitor is killing its weekday print edition as of April. And Time Inc. CEO Ann Moore said that company is facing an advertising ‘depression.”
Are these the actions of an industry worried about their bottom line?
They could fix this debacle with one easy solution. Throw some objectivity into the mix.
A quick glance at the 2008 election coverage underscores the obvious disconnect between liberal journalists and their readers. Since journalists love polls, let’s look at some other results. “Voters overwhelmingly believe that the media wants Barack Obama to win the presidential election,” according to Pew. The survey found that by nearly 8-to-1, respondents thought the media had chosen Obama.
That was the common result. A Rasmussen Reports survey said by a 10-to-1 margin the public believe the media are trying to hurt Sarah Palin. Another Rasmussen poll said voters believe the media “are trying to help Barack Obama” – that by a 5-to-1 margin. A Fox News poll discovered six times as many voters think "most members of the media" want Obama to win.
The news media are uniformly behind the Obama candidacy. The latest newspaper endorsement tally by Editor & Publisher shows “Obama in a landslide,” netting 240 endorsements to McCain’s 114. All 57 alternative weeklies also are backing Obama.
E&P even tallies a tidal wave of support for Obama in college papers – 79 to just one for McCain. And that leaves out the almost constant stream of biased news coverage that preceded those endorsements.
So, the MSM can do one of two things. Start to print papers that people actually want to read or suck up to the next administration in hopes of getting a little of the next $700 billion bailout of industries affected so hard by the Bush economy.
Which way do you think they'll go?
Monday, November 3, 2008
On this the eve of...
The return of Lance...
This theme is well known. The show was a big hit in the 1980's along with the tag line, "Let's be careful out there." It was the original gritty cop drama. Fighting, cursing, the whole nine yards.
As for the Lance, look at the gams on that one! I don't know who illustrated these things but that guy was way ahead of his time for the 40's.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
I forgot how much I love...
the smeel of the burnt pumpkin. You know the smell inside the pumpkin while the candle is lit. It is almost a sweet smell. I love that.
Another Halloween come and gone. Loads of booty, but not ill-gotten, ready to be devoured by eager children. Me too. Me too. That's the issue with being a diabetic. You want to just roll around in it like the monacled Monopoly man and his money. But somewhere in the deep recesses of your brain you say to yourself, while moving your hands back and forth in a balancing motion...Hallowwen Candy...walk your daughter down the aisle...Halloween Candy...watch your son graduate from college. And despite how much I try to convince myself, the sugar still enters my system whether someone sees me eat the candy or not. Halloween used to be so joyous. Now it's just cruel.
I don't think the sugarless candy is any better for you. The chemicals they put in that stuff are enough to snuff out Rasputin. I think I would be better off chugging pure cane sugar than eating that stuff.
Oh well, 41 years is a pretty good run.
For dinner on Halloween, we had mummy dogs, fried worms, witches brew beans and pumpkin punch. Is that the cutest thing ever or what? Kelly goes all out and we all love her for that.
I love our house in the Fall. It is always adorned in the fall colors and pumpkins or scarecrows or cornucopias, the horn a' plenty, or any other number of accoutrament that decry Fall. It always smells like fall too. What with the candles and the fires and us feeding the kids pumpkin and spices so their diapers smell like it too.
Halloween marks the beginning of my favorite time of year. I hope I savor it all this year.

