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Topics - Stray Pooch

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16
3DHS / Tebow's Super Bowl ad isn't intolerant; its critics are
« on: February 02, 2010, 03:54:04 PM »
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/02/01/AR2010020102067.html  (Free registration required)

Here's my new favorite female, pro-choice sports writer.

Tebow's Super Bowl ad isn't intolerant; its critics are

By Sally Jenkins
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, February 2, 2010

I'll spit this out quick, before the armies of feminism try to gag me and strap electrodes to my forehead: Tim Tebow is one of the better things to happen to young women in some time. I realize this stance won't endear me to the "Dwindling Organizations of Ladies in Lockstep," otherwise known as DOLL, but I'll try to pick up the shards of my shattered feminist credentials and go on.

As statements at Super Bowls go, I prefer the idea of Tebow's pro-life ad to, say, Jim McMahon dropping his pants, as the former Chicago Bears quarterback once did in response to a question. We're always harping on athletes to be more responsible and engaged in the issues of their day, and less concerned with just cashing checks. It therefore seems more than a little hypocritical to insist on it only if it means criticizing sneaker companies, and to stifle them when they take a stance that might make us uncomfortable.

I'm pro-choice, and Tebow clearly is not. But based on what I've heard in the past week, I'll take his side against the group-think, elitism and condescension of the "National Organization of Fewer and Fewer Women All The Time." For one thing, Tebow seems smarter than they do.

Tebow's 30-second ad hasn't even run yet, but it already has provoked "The National Organization for Women Who Only Think Like Us" to reveal something important about themselves: They aren't actually "pro-choice" so much as they are pro-abortion. Pam Tebow has a genuine pro-choice story to tell. She got pregnant in 1987, post-Roe v. Wade, and while on a Christian mission in the Philippines, she contracted a tropical ailment. Doctors advised her the pregnancy could be dangerous, but she exercised her freedom of choice and now, 20-some years later, the outcome of that choice is her beauteous Heisman Trophy winner son, a chaste, proselytizing evangelical.

Pam Tebow and her son feel good enough about that choice to want to tell people about it. Only, NOW says they shouldn't be allowed to. Apparently NOW feels this commercial is an inappropriate message for America to see for 30 seconds, but women in bikinis selling beer is the right one. I would like to meet the genius at NOW who made that decision. On second thought, no, I wouldn't.

There's not enough space in the sports pages for the serious weighing of values that constitutes this debate, but surely everyone in both camps, pro-choice or pro-life, wishes the "need" for abortions wasn't so great. Which is precisely why NOW is so wrong to take aim at Tebow's ad.


Here's what we do need a lot more of: Tebows. Collegians who are selfless enough to choose not to spend summers poolside, but travel to impoverished countries to dispense medical care to children, as Tebow has every summer of his career. Athletes who believe in something other than themselves, and are willing to put their backbone where their mouth is. Celebrities who are self-possessed and self-controlled enough to use their wattage to advertise commitment over decadence.

You know what we really need more of? Famous guys who aren't embarrassed to practice sexual restraint, and to say it out loud. If we had more of those, women might have fewer abortions. See, the best way to deal with unwanted pregnancy is to not get the sperm in the egg and the egg implanted to begin with, and that is an issue for men, too -- and they should step up to that.

"Are you saving yourself for marriage?" Tebow was asked last summer during an SEC media day.

"Yes, I am," he replied.

The room fell into a hush, followed by tittering: The best college football player in the country had just announced he was a virgin. As Tebow gauged the reaction from the reporters in the room, he burst out laughing. They were a lot more embarrassed than he was.

"I think y'all are stunned right now!" he said. "You can't even ask a question!"

That's how far we've come from any kind of sane viewpoint about star athletes and sex. Promiscuity is so the norm that if a stud isn't shagging everything in sight, we feel faintly ashamed for him.

Obviously Tebow can make people uncomfortable, whether it's for advertising his chastity, or for wearing his faith on his face via biblical citations painted in his eye-black. Hebrews 12:12, his cheekbones read during the Florida State game: "Therefore strengthen your feeble arms and weak knees." His critics find this intrusive, and say the Super Bowl is no place for an argument of this nature. "Pull the ad," NOW President Terry O'Neill said. "Let's focus on the game."

Trouble is, you can't focus on the game without focusing on the individuals who play it -- and that is the genius of Tebow's ad. The Super Bowl is not some reality-free escape zone. Tebow himself is an inescapable fact: Abortion doesn't just involve serious issues of life, but of potential lives, Heisman trophy winners, scientists, doctors, artists, inventors, Little Leaguers -- who would never come to be if their birth mothers had not wrestled with the stakes and chosen to carry those lives to term. And their stories are every bit as real and valid as the stories preferred by NOW.

Let me be clear again: I couldn't disagree with Tebow more. It's my own belief that the state has no business putting its hand under skirts. But I don't care that we differ. Some people will care that the ad is paid for by Focus on the Family, a group whose former spokesman, James Dobson, says loathsome things about gays. Some will care that Tebow is a creationist. Some will care that CBS has rejected a gay dating service ad. None of this is the point. CBS owns its broadcast and can run whatever advertising it wants, and Tebow has a right to express his beliefs publicly. Just as I have the right to reject or accept them after listening -- or think a little more deeply about the issues. If the pro-choice stance is so precarious that a story about someone who chose to carry a risky pregnancy to term undermines it, then CBS is not the problem.

Tebow's ad, by the way, never mentions abortion; like the player himself, it's apparently soft-spoken. It simply has the theme "Celebrate Family, Celebrate Life." This is what NOW has labeled "extraordinarily offensive and demeaning." But if there is any demeaning here, it's coming from NOW, via the suggestion that these aren't real questions, and that we as a Super Bowl audience are too stupid or too disinterested to handle them on game day.

18
3DHS / Observation: The Happiest man in America.
« on: January 16, 2010, 05:14:56 AM »
The Happiest man in America right now is David Letterman.

The SECOND happiest man is whoever is dreaming up the new reality show "So You Think You Can Host the Tonight Show . . . "

I guess Leno is too big to fail - or at least his chin is - or wait, no, it must be his ego . . .


19
3DHS / Another one bites the dust
« on: January 06, 2010, 12:11:45 AM »

20
3DHS / Random Thoughts (not mine but too funny not to pass on)
« on: January 05, 2010, 11:05:46 PM »

1. I think part of a best friend's job should be to immediately clear your computer history if you die.

2. Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you realize you're wrong.

3. I totally take back all those times I didn't want to nap when I was younger.

4. There is great need for a sarcasm font.

5. How the hell are you supposed to fold a fitted sheet?

6. Was learning cursive really necessary?

7. Map Quest really needs to start their directions on #5. I'm pretty sure I know how to get out of my neighborhood.

8. Obituaries would be a lot more interesting if they told you how the person died.

9. I can't remember the last time I wasn't at least kind of tired.

10. Bad decisions make good stories.

11. You never know when it will strike, but there comes a moment at work when you know that you just aren't going to do anything productive for the rest of the day.

12. Can we all just agree to ignore whatever comes after Blue Ray? I don't want to have to restart my collection...again.

13. I'm always slightly terrified when I exit out of Word and it asks me if I want to save any changes - to my ten-page research paper that I swear I did not make any changes to.

14. "Do not machine wash or tumble dry" means I will never wash this thing I have-- ever.

15. I hate when I just miss a call by the last ring (Hello? Hello? Damn it!), but when I immediately call back, it rings nine times and goes to voicemail. What'd you do after I didn't
answer? Drop the phone and run away?

16. I hate leaving my house confident and looking good and then not seeing anyone of importance the entire day. What a waste.

17. I keep some people's phone numbers in my phone just so I know not to answer when they call.

18. My 4-year old grandson asked me in the car the other day "What would happen if you ran over a ninja?" How the hell do I respond to that?

19. I think the freezer deserves a light as well.

20. I disagree with Kay Jewelers. I would bet, on any given Friday or Saturday night, more kisses begin with Bud Light than with a Kay jewelry.

21
3DHS / 2010 situation grows more difficult for Democrats
« on: January 02, 2010, 10:29:58 PM »
FULL STORY:  http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_democrats2010

WASHINGTON – An already difficult situation for Democrats in Congress is worsening as the 2010 political season opens.

To minimize expected losses in next fall's election, President Barack Obama's party is testing a line of attack that resurrects George W. Bush as a boogeyman and castigates Republicans as cozy with Wall Street.

Four House Democrats from swing districts have recently chosen not to seek re-election, bringing to 11 the number of retirements that could leave Democratic-held seats vulnerable to Republicans. More Democratic retirements are expected.

Over the holiday break, another Democrat, freshman Rep. Parker Griffith of Alabama, defected to the GOP. "I can no longer align myself with a party that continues to pursue legislation that is bad for our country, hurts our economy, and drives us further and further into debt," said Griffith, who voted against Democrats' three biggest initiatives in 2009: health care, financial regulation and reducing global warming.


22
3DHS / Weird Fact #2
« on: December 28, 2009, 01:13:47 AM »
There are 10 kinds of people in the world.  Those who understand binary math and those who don't.

23
3DHS / Weird Fact of the Day
« on: December 27, 2009, 06:11:06 PM »
Did you know that mathematically Halloween is the same as Christmas?

OCT 31 = DEC 25.

24
3DHS / I just paid $1.99 for gas.
« on: November 05, 2008, 02:57:38 AM »
This was at a Sheetz Gas station in Fishersville, Virginia.

Woo hoo.

Sure looks better going down than coming up.

25
3DHS / To my friends on the left . . .
« on: November 05, 2008, 01:39:38 AM »
Congratulations on your victory tonight.  It is indeed an historic evening.  My family all voted together today.  Even my son in Massachusetts happened to cast his vote around 9 AM when the rest of us voted.  My middle son lives a little south of us and waited from 7 AM when the polls opened until 8:45 to vote for Obama.  Of the other six of us, Three voted McCain and three Obama.  Our "swing vote" was my eldest, a Mitt Romney Republican who decided that it was time for change.    So if the Pooch family had an electoral vote it went Democrat.

McCain's gracious concession was followed by Obama's amazing speech.  It was a great night for America.  Obviously, I would have preferred another outcome, but your man won the night, and he deserved it based on his brilliant campaign.

As President-Elect Obama observed, this is not the end but only the beginning for his ideas.  Much of what he said was hopeful and encouraging.  That's a good thing given the economy and the political atmospherer that has prevailed over the last several years.  I hope his actions are as good as his stellar rhetoric.  If he leads the country like he has run this campaign we have much to be hopeful about.

As an added bonus, the voters of my current home state have put in the Senate former Governor Mark Warner.  He was a fine, bipartisan Governor who led Virginia so well (with a Republican legislature, I might add) that it was ranked as the best managed state in the union.  He briefly considered a Presidential run but dropped out of the race early.  I may well have been tempted to vote for him had he run.  As it is, the state of Virginia has gone blue and that is, perhaps, not such a bad thing.  A little warning, Virginia Democrats are a bit like Massachusetts Republicans.  They know, out of necessity, how to respect and work with the opposition.

And that, I hope, is where tonight will lead.  I have the audacity, and audicity it is, to hope that the new Democractic majority in Washington will not make the same mistake the Republican majority did in thinking that a call for change is a call to denigrate or just ignore the values, ideals and dreams of half off the country.  Obama said he will be our president.  I intend to support him as best I can.  I hope he will do te same for those of us on the right side of the aisle.

At any rate, congratulations.  I wish President-Elect Obama the best, and I hope he does NOT have the kinds of challenges that faced his predecessor.  I'll pray for him just as sincerely as I did for Bush.  And I'll keep praying for the country too.


26
3DHS / Re-determinator
« on: September 09, 2008, 12:23:04 AM »
California union to seek Schwarzenegger recall

By Jim Christie
Mon Sep 8, 7:24 PM ET
 

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - California's prison guard union said on Monday it will seek the recall of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger after he ordered a pay cut for its members amid the state's protracted budget deadlock.

"We're going to move it as quickly as possible," union spokesman Lance Corcoran said of efforts to launch a referendum to remove the Republican governor, who entered office in 2003 after a recall election of then-Gov. Gray Davis, a Democrat.

Corcoran said a recall measure would likely end up on a special-election ballot next year rather than on the upcoming November ballot. The California Correctional Peace Officers Association must collect the signatures of more than 1 million registered voters to qualify the measure, according to the California Secretary of State's office.

"This is a governor that has been a complete failure," Corcoran charged.

Schwarzenegger's term ends in 2010 and he can not run again.

The 30,000-plus-member union has long been at odds with Schwarzenegger, but his order in July to cut the pay of prison guards to the minimum wage sparked their latest confrontation.

Schwarzenegger also ordered job cuts for an estimated 22,000 temporary state employees and sharply reduced wages for 200,000 other workers after California began its fiscal year on July 1 without a budget.

Corcoran said prison guards should be exempt from the pay cuts in light of their public safety role. They manage the largest state prison network in the United States, overseeing about 170,000 inmates, a system plagued by overcrowding and frequent violence between rival gang and ethnic groups.

The pay cuts ordered by Schwarzenegger have yet to be implemented while state lawmakers continue to haggle over a compromise budget plan. They must close a shortfall that Schwarzenegger has estimated at $15.2 billion, not including a $2 billion reserve he wants to create.

Democrats who control the state legislature have urged raising taxes to balance the state's books. Republicans oppose tax increases, including Schwarzenegger's proposal for a temporary increase in California's sales tax to help fill state coffers, and they are pressing for deeper spending cuts than Democrats say they will accept.

Schwarzenegger spokesman Adam Mendelsohn said the governor was not concerned about a recall initiative.

"This is the latest in intimidation tactic after intimidation tactic used by the prison guard union in their never-ending effort to extract a huge pay raise out of the legislature and the governor," Mendelsohn said in a statement. "The governor will not be intimidated by these selfish tactics worthy of a schoolyard bully."

Political science professor Larry Gerston said a recall would be a "long shot" even if Schwarzenegger's standing with voters continues its recent downward trend in the polls as voters give lawmakers even lower marks on job performance.

"People are frustrated, that's for sure. But I'm not sure the frustration manifests itself enough with the governor," said Gerston, who teaches at San Jose State University.

(Editing by Todd Eastham)

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080908/us_nm/schwarzenegger_recall_dc

27
3DHS / Queen of the Wild Frontier (With apologies to Disney, Davey, etc.)
« on: September 08, 2008, 09:04:22 PM »
Gosh I wish I had written this, but I got it from a member of our Ham Radio Net: 

QUEEN OF THE WILD FRONTIER 

(Tune of Davy Crockett)

 

She goes ice fishing in the frozen land,

Races snow mobiles right beside her man.

Goes moose hunting and flys her own plane,

Will be vice president beside John McCain.

 

Sarah, Sarah Palin, queen of the wild frontier.

 

She sold the Govenor's jet there on E-Bay,

Looked at the limosines, said, "Take 'em all away."

Anywhere she goes, she drives her own car,

She even wants to drill up there in ANWR.

 

Sarah, Sarah Palin, Queen of the wild frontier.

 

She's a hard working Govenor, but she likes to play,

And she's a life time member of the NRA.

She's a great Mother, and a wonderful wife,

Everybody knows she's all PRO Life.

 

Sarah, Sarah Palin, Queen of the wild frontier.

 

She's an enviromentalist, with a plan to go Green,

Let's not forget that she's a beauty queen.

She's a conservationist, she likes clean air,

And she even got rid of the Bridge To No Where.

 

Sarah, Sarah Palin, queen of the wild frontier.

 

Now, the Republican Party is a dancin' a jig,

They know John McCain picked somebody big.

Someone said Obama's a doing good too,

I heard a big shout, "Obama WHO???."

 

Sarah, Sarah Palin, queen of the wild frontier.


Elton K Bass

8-30-2008

28
3DHS / Cool old cold war stories about Alex Haig.
« on: September 05, 2008, 12:01:46 AM »
This from the Straypooch "small world" file.

The hard drive on my old emachine desktop (not the one I use to come on here) died a sudden and tragic death a few days ago.  Kinda sucks, 'cuz the data was old and cool and NOT backed up, but I shoulda knowed better so bad on me.

I wanted to get an old 6 Gig or so IDE drive and there are only two places in town that carry that kinda thing.  One employees my nephew, and I would usually go there, but since I had a service call on the other side of town I stopped in to the other one to have a look.

I went in and started browsing around.  The proprietor came up and asked what I was looking for.  We struck up a conversation about old computers and the good old days and all of that sort of thing.  He had a European accent, but I couldn't quite place it.  I discussed my very first computer, a TI-99.  He said "Oh you probably bought that in the late seventies."  I said, "No, it was 1981.  I remember because I was in Belgium."  "You were in Belgium?"  He said, his face lighting up.  "I come from Belgium!  Where were you?"  I told him I was stationed at SHAPE (Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe) for three years.  "Of course!  Casteau!  I was with NATO too!"  (I always talk about SHAPE being in Mons, Belgium, but it is actually in Casteau.  Kinda like the Washington DC Mormon Temple is not really in DC, but in Kensington, MD.)

What followed was the most interesting conversation I have had in years.  It turns out, this guy was actually in the Belgian military and was Alex Haig's Commo Chief while he (Haig) was SACEUR (Supreme Allied Commander, Europe).  I mentioned the unit I was with (a cover name) and his eyes narrowed and he said "Ooooh, so you were into some pretty hush-hush stuff!"  After exchanging a few stories I won't share (old habit dies hard, even though most of the stuff is declassified and available on the net these days) we had pretty much established our credibility to each other.  He then began telling me some great stories about Haig.

Baader-Meinhoff was a terrorist organization from those days that had about the same ring to it in Europe as Al Quaeda does in the US today.  They attempted to (and very nearly did) kill Haig by blowing up a bridge as his motorcade crossed it.  By incredible fortune, the bridge was blown up just before Haig's car hit it.  The security folks in front got nailed, but Haig's limo driver spun around and drove back to Brussels (about 60 miles IIRC).  This gentleman knew the story first hand.  He was in the car with Haig!  I was told the story when I got over there and even saw the bridge, but this was sure as heck a closer perspective on the subject.  What was scary was that because of terrorist attacks, all senior personnel used random routes decided at the last minute to foil terrorists.   Somebody knew Haig was going to be there and was close enough to the scene to detonate the bridge at (almost) the right time.  The perps were, in fact caught, and gave up a lot of info (voluntarily of course) which helped destroy the organization.  The perps were later found hanged in their cells.  Apparently, the guilt of outing their fellow travellers was so terrible, they couldn't stand it.  On a completely unrelated note, Bill Clinton is a fine, upstanding moral man that I would be proud to see my daughter work for.

Another, less dramatic but damned funny story.  Haig was presiding over a major exercise in Germany.  In the heat of the (fake) battle, a courier came to this guy (the commo chief) with an urgent package for Haig.  When Haig opened it, the guy says, he "turned red as that coke machine (indicating one in his shop) and used every bad word you ever heard!"  Inside of the packet was a complete listing of the "order of battle" for the exercise.  That is, every unit, where they would be deployed, who was backing who, etc.  Classified stuff.  Sent to him by personal courier. 

From the Russian Embassy.

After the exercise was over (and the General had ordered a full scale investigation into the leak) Haig told his commo chief "I'm going to show you something you've never seen."  He had his driver take him to the East German border.  There was a low wall, and on the other side was a small German village in a small valley.  Haig gave the commo chief his field glasses.  (This story would flow more smoothly if I had remembered his name!)  Commodude described a beautiful church in the valley with a big steeple.  But there was a scaffold on the roof with three East German machine-gunners, watching the border.  Haig said "I like to come here now and then and say hello to them."  As commodude watched the gunners, suddenly their eyes got big and the jaws dropped.  Commodude looked around at Haig.  He was giving them a special salute, one which might be more fitting coming from, umm, a REAR Admiral.  ( I gotta say, though, if I had been Ivan and if it hadn't been likely to start WWIII, I woulda put a round into that big ol' General booty.)   So I'm wondering whether it was the border post or his four star stern the General meant when he talked about something commodude had never seen before?

Then commodude showed me something I had never seen before.  (No, it's not that kind of story!)  He said "Let me show the the pen General Haig gave me."  He pulled out a case with a nice, though sort of plain looking pen.  I thought it would have been one of those "four-star" emblazoned pens that the big brass gave out as tokens.  But no stars.  He began scribbling with it and said "See?  A perfectly working pen." and my spy-dee sense started tingling.  He then pulled out some watch-sized batteries and put six of them in the barrel.  Turns out, this was a transmitter.  He pulled out a small, flat AM-FM radio.  He explained to me that the AM scale was perfectly correct, and it received regular AM radio.  THe FM scale, however, was inaccurate.  You could pick up FM, but NOT at the freq indicated on the dial.  The first half of the dial was for straight FM (though, again, not at the indicated freq).  But when you turned the radio dial all the way to the right, it received a higher freq (he told me, but I'm just gonna keep that secret out of sheer, MI paranoia!).  The freq, as you can guess, was the one the pen transmitted on.  He described meetings where someone was carrying on a "private" conversation and someone else (sometimes him) was monitoring in the hallway with an earphone and a perfectly natural FM radio.  Just killing time while the general blabbed . . .

All this is old hat now.  None of it is likely classified anymore, even the James Bond pen set.  I just hold back a few things because it just feels weird to talk about them, even after a quarter century.  But it sure was cool to trade war stories and see the cool gadget!  He worked for Haig in the late seventies, and I worked for Bernard Rogers (Haig's successor as SACEUR) in the early eighties.  He is a Belgian native and I am a US soldier stationed there for a few years.  25 years after I leave Belgium, I bump into him in a small town in Virginia.  Small world. 




29
3DHS / About 35 years overdue - my first rock concert.
« on: August 10, 2008, 08:06:40 PM »
Guess Who I saw last night doing a concert at Busch Gardens Europe (that's in Virginia, folks).

Yeah, you guessed it.  (and if you didn't, you need not wonder why there's no time left for you!)

We have Virginia resident fun passes to Busch Gardens which gives you the whole summer for one admission.  We got really good use out of those this year, having gone four or five times each.  (Some of the kids go with their friends.)  We decided to do BGE for one last time this summer in case it changes drastically with the new ownership.   It is our favorite park (in my case, that includes the Disney's)  because, aside from being accessible and affordable, it is absolutely beautiful.  It proudly boasts of having been voted most beautiful theme park in the US for eighteen straight years. 

Anyway, on our way down our youngest son, Micah, who is doing a separate Virginia Beach/Busch Gardens week vacation with his own budding rock band, (confidentially, they are terrible, and proud of it) calls to tell us that Guess Who is doing a concert there on Saturday.   How cool is that?  I mean, granted, there are only two original band members left in the group (Drummer Garry Peterson and Bassist Jim Kale) but come on it's freakin' Guess Who!  So after a surprisingly sedate day at the park (we did all the coasters but the crowds were so bad we opted to see some shows instead of wait in line for lesser rides) we wandered over a few minutes late to the field to see the show.

Strangely enough, having grown up po' I never had the opportunity (OK, the money) to see a rock concert as a kid.   So last night's concert was an aging rocker's first rock concert.  As we neared the entrance to the field, we could hear the show starting.  Their first number was "Star Baby," one of their later hits.  There was a pretty good turn out, so we were quite a ways back from the stage, but we could still see them up there and the amps were quite enough so that sound wasn't as issue.  No ear-ringing at our distance but my hearing is bad enough already, so I can live without it!  The set was an hour long, and it really was a time warp.  The instrumentation was, of course, dead on, and even the vocals were pretty darn close to the Guess Who I remember.  Their second piece was "Clap for the Wolfman." There were a few of us who recognized the vital importance of clapping during the song, but it just wasn't the same without, well, ya know, the Wolfman.  But it started to heat up on their next song, "No Sugar Tonight/New Mother Nature."  After that they played such hits as "She's Come Undone," "Share the Land," "Hand Me Down World" and others (though I was slightly disappointed that they didn't do "No Time" or "Raindance").   It was a great show, and I think I lost ten pounds moving to the music.  (I know I lost my voice singing along and cheering between songs.)  They finished up with a huge buildup into "American Woman."   It was incredible.  What a blast! 

Incidentally, one of the two original members left, I believe it was Garry Peterson, just became a US citizen on Feb 22 of this year.  How 'bout that?  I understand as part of his naturalization requirements, he had to swear to give up the use of the word "eh." :D

It was a little disconcerting (there's a bad pun hidden in there somewhere but let's not look for it, 'kay?) to find that my middle son, Robert the only offspringness to accompany us last night, had no idea who Guess Who was.  He is usually very well versed in music from several eras because of his performing career (he's the one that was in Japan for Disney). The only song he even knew that they did was their finale (American Woman, of course).  He knew it because Lenny Kravitz did a remake in this era.  Sheesh. Since he wanted to see "Kinetix," a show more along the lines of what he does, we left before the (first?) encore.  As we walked away, we heard them come back onto the stage to perform "These Eyes."  Several of us older folks, wandering away on similar errands or trying to beat the park-closing traffic, were singing along as the sound blended into the noise of the younger park patrons rushing from ride-to-ride, slightly amused at the fogies singing the pretty little song.  I used up a lot of energy at the concert, and I couldn't hack the drive home.  I had to let the son do the second half.  We stopped at his place and I slept for hours.  I even missed church today.  Aging rocker is right. It kind made me reflect that these eyes have seen a lot of love, and that though there may not be No Time left, seasons do change and so did I.


30
3DHS / It's not Barack - it's Buk-AAACCCKKKK!
« on: August 02, 2008, 08:00:25 PM »
Buck-buck-buck-buck-buk-AAACCCKKKK!

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080802/ap_on_el_pr/presidential_debates

Come on, Barack, let's see what yer made of!

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