October 22, 2008

  • What do you think about...

    ...living "off the grid"??  Some sites I read imply that people are preparing for "something"...do they know something I don't?!  ;)   Are some people so obsessed with living off the grid, that they might be a little unstable?

    Some aspects appeal to me~not washing laundry by hand, but we do hang some of our laundry to dry (mostly sheets), as we enjoy the feel and scent--I would not enjoy towels dried outdoors, but I could adapt to it...  I think I would prefer my electric iron to an iron heated in the fire (well, that might be a moot point, as ironed clothing might not matter in an off-the-grid lifestyle, depending...).

    What I would like:

    • the "quiet"--no steady hum of refrigerator or other electrical appliances
    • the simplicity (although, some tasks actually might be more complicated)
    • the feeling of self-dependence
    • *imagining* a feeling of slowing down life; not feeling rushed
    • the family working as a team

    What I would not like:

    • the risk of fire (lanterns, candles, fires, cooking, etc.)
    • the heat!  (we would somewhat adapt, but it would not compare to a/c, LOL!)
    • the cold!  (again, we would somewhat adapt, but cold is cold!)
    • not really having a day of rest--*imagining* labor-intensive tasks that must remain consistent for every-day living
    • outhouses!  :(

    And then, of course, so many questions:

    What about the risks of injury?  There are so many more opportunities for injury in this lifestyle--would I recover from the "what if's", if something happened to my family?

    What about illness?  Running back and forth to the outhouse, or a projectile-vomiting child--could I deal with the logistics of it?! 

    What about cleanliness?  Bathing and laundry (again, depending upon the set-up) could be large tasks, and I could feel pressured to compromise--but, on which one?  Bathing nightly and the labor that might entail, or bathing every other night, but having to wash sheets more often because they get dirty faster?

    These are my first thoughts, LOL!

    :)

     

    **I realize that there could be many variations of living off-the-grid...

     

October 20, 2008

  • Do y'all remember my Stevie Nicks kick?!

    I think I talked about it IRL to my family and friends, LOL...

    I need to blog more--again, I am in this mode of getting on-line to read, but not feeling in the mood to blog!

    Yesterday, I was looking for a song on-line--I would love to find a CD of it, or an old video...  Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker used to do a puppet show on the 700 club and my mom bought a record of "Susie" and "Allie" (the alligator) for my sister and me.  We LOVED that record!  We had every song memorized, and we would take turns being Susie and Allie.

    I sing a couple of the songs to my children--the ones that I remember the best are, "Jesus Takes a Smile" and "I Wonder, When I Grow Up" (I don't even know if that's the right title on that second one!).

    So, I was googling anything and everything to find this music, and I came across Tammy Faye's website.  Got totally distracted, reading her last posts to her fans and listening to a radio interview.  Then, I looked on youtube, where I found a clip from Tammy's 40th birthday, where they do this flashback into their early days on the show--and Tammy is giving this homekeeping tip to all of the moms out there:  unwrap your soap and let it dry out--it will last twice the amount of time!  She finishes by guaranteeing that this is a great tip--and Jim interrupts and asks, "Why don't you do that at home?"  LOL--she cries, "Jiiiimmmm!!!"  He totally blew her "endorsement" of this tip, LOL.  It was too cute.

    For the first time ever, I actually was interested in Tammy Faye's life...I would love to read her books.  As a child, I had no idea who the people were who played Susie and Allie--in fact, I didn't know it was the Bakkers until way after their "scandal"--when my oldest was a baby, I asked my mom about that record and that is when I found out!

    I read that their daughter, Tammy Sue Bakker, sings.  I tried to find a sample of, "Hello, God" on-line, but came across Dolly Parton's "Hello, God" and ended up adding it to my play-list...

    And, if Rebecca and Elizabeth are reading, and think that my next short-term obsession will be Dolly Parton...I'm not feeling it right now, LOL!  (Actually, I was reading up on Dolly a few months ago and all my curiosity was satisfied, LOL!).

    I did call my mom--she is going to find the record and give it to me!  ;)  

October 17, 2008

  • Good reading

    The Common Room has some enlightening posts (sources included) about the two campaigns~it was interesting to read about Obama's lies during the debate on Thursday and about how the media has gone after "Joe the Plumber" and exposed his finances, etc.  Suffice to say:  the media will vet an every-day-guy better than their own candidate!  (And, woe to those every-day-guys who question Obama!).

    You will have to scroll through the homeschooling and family posts (I read it all!), but go check her out~and, she is quite neutral--appears to me that she doesn't care for either side...

October 14, 2008

  • Well-written letter:


     
    My name is Dan Frost. I live in Kokomo , Indiana . I'm  45 years old, a
    Christian, a husband, a father, a veteran, and a homeowner. I don't
    consider myself to be either conservative or liberal, and I vote for the
    person, not Republican or Democrat. I don't believe there are 'two
    Americas ' -- but that every person in this country can be whomever
    and  whatever they want to be if they'll just work to get there - and
    nowhere  else on earth can they find such opportunities. I believe  our       government should help those  who are legitimately downtrodden, and should always put the interests of America first.
     
    The purpose of this message is that I'm concerned about the future of
    this great nation. I'm worried that the silent majority of honest,
    hard-working, tax-paying people in this country have been passive for
    too long. Most folks I know choose not to involve themselves in
    politics.. They go about their daily lives, paying their bills, raising
    their kids, and doing what they can to maintain the good life. They vote
    and consider doing so to be a sacred trust. They shake their heads at
    the political pundits and so-called 'news', thinking that what they hear
    is always spun by whomever is reporting it.
    They can't understand how elected  officials can regularly violate
    the public trust with pork barrel spending. They don't want government
    handouts. They want the government to protect them, not raise their
    taxes for more government programs.

    We are in the unique position in this country of electing our
    leaders. It's a privilege to do so. I've never found a candidate
    in any election with whom I agreed on everything. I'll wager that most of us
    don't even agree with our families or spouses 100% of the time. So
    when  I step into that voting booth, I always try to look at the big picture
    and cast my vote for the man or woman who is best qualified for the job.
    I've hired a lot of people in my lifetime, and essentially that's
    what an election is -- a hiring process.. Who has the credentials? Whom do I
    want working for me? Whom can I trust to do the job right?

    I'm concerned that a growing number of voters in this country
    simply don't get it. They are caught up in a fervor they can't explain,
    and calling it 'change'.

    Change what?, I ask.

    Well, we're going to change America , they say.

    In what way?, I query.


    We want someone new and fresh in the White House, they exclaim.


    So, someone who's not a politician?, I press.


    Uh, well, no, we just want a lot of stuff changed, so we're voting
    for Obama, they state.


    So the current system, the system of freedom and democracy that has
    enabled a man to grow up in this great country, get a fine education,
    raise incredible amounts of money and dominate the news and win his
    party's nomination for the White House -- that system's all wrong?


    No, no, that part of the system's okay - we just need a lot of
    change.


    And so it goes. 'Change we can believe in.' Quite frankly, I
    don't  believe that vague proclamations of change hold any promise for me.
    In recent months, I've been asking virtually everyone I encounter
    how  they're voting. I live in Illinois , so most folks tell me they're
    voting for Barack Obama. But no one can really tell me why -- only that he's
    going to change a lot of stuff.


    Change, change, change. I have yet to find one single person who can
    tell me distinctly and convincingly why this man is qualified to be
    President and Commander-in-Chief of the most powerful nation on
    earth-other than the fact that he  claims he's going to implement a
    lot of change..


    We've all seen the emails about Obama's genealogy, his upbringing,
    his Muslim background, and his church affiliations. Let's ignore this
    for a moment. Put it all aside. Then ask yourself, what qualifies this
    man to be my president? That he's a brilliant orator and talks about
    change?
    CHANGE WHAT?


    Friends, I'll be forthright with you -- I believe the American voters
    who are supporting Barack Obama don't have a clue what  they're
    doing, as evidenced by the fact that not one of them -- NOT ONE of them I've spoken to can spell out his qualifications.
     
    Not even the most liberal media can explain why he should be elected.
    Political experience?  Negligible. Foreign relations? Non-existent.
     
    Achievements? Name one. Someone who wants to unite the country? If you haven't read his wife's thesis from Princeton , look it up on the web.
    This is who's lining up to be our next First Lady? The only thing I
    can glean from Obama's constant harping about change is that we're in
    for a  lot of new taxes.
     
    For me, the choice is clear. I've looked carefully at the two
    leading applicants for the job, and I've made my choice.
    Here's a question - where were you five and a half years ago?
    Around Christmas, 2002. You've had five or six birthdays in that time.  My
    son has grown from a fourth grade child to a high school freshman. Five and
    a half years is a good chunk of time. About 2,000 days. 2,000 nights of
    sleep.. 6,000 meals, give or take.
    John McCain spent that amount of time, from 1967 to 1973, in a North
    Vietnamese prisoner-of-war camp.
    When offered early release, he refused it. He considered this offer
    to be a public relations stunt by his captors, and insisted that those
    held longer than he should be released first. Did you get that part? He
    was offered his freedom, and he turned it down. A regimen of beatings
    and torture began.


    Do you possess such strength of character? Locked in a filthy cell in
    a foreign country, would you turn down your own freedom in favor of your
    fellow man? I submit that's a quality of character that is rarely found,
    and for me, this singular act defines John McCain.
    Unlike several presidential candidates in recent years whose military
    service is questionable or non-existent,  you will not find anyone to
    denigrate the integrity and moral courage of this man. A graduate of
    Annapolis , during his Naval service he received the Silver Star, Bronze
    Star, Purple Heart and Distinguished Flying Cross. His own son is now
    serving in the Marine Corps in Iraq . Barack Obama is fond of saying
    'We honor John McCain's service...BUT...', which to me is
    condescending and  offensive -- because what I hear is, 'Let's forget this man's sacrifice for his country and his proven leadership abilities, and talk some more about change.'


    I don't agree with John McCain on everything -- but I am utterly
    convinced that he is qualified to be our next President, and I trust him
    to do what's right. I know in my heart that he has the best interests of
    our country in mind. He doesn't simply want to be President -- he
    wants to lead   America , and there's a huge difference.


    Factually, there is simply no comparison between the two candidates.
    A man of questionable background and motives who prattles on about
    change can't hold a candle to a man who has devoted his life in public
    service to this nation, retiring from the Navy in 1981 and elected to  the Senate in 1982.
     
    Perhaps Obama's supporters are taking a stance between old and new.
    Maybe they don't care about McCain's service or his strength of
    character, or his unblemished qualifications to be President. Maybe
    'likeability' is a higher priority for them than trust'. Being a
    prisoner of war is not what qualifies John McCain to be  President of
    the United States of America -- but his demonstrated leadership
    certainly DOES.
     
    Dear friends, it is time for us to stand.  It is time for thinking
    Americans to say, 'Enough..' It is time for people of all parties
    to stop following the party line.  It is time for anyone who wants to keep
    America first, who wants the right man leading their nation, to start a
    dialogue with all their friends and neighbors and ask who they're
    voting  for, and why.


    There's a lot of evil in this world. That should be readily
    apparent to all of us by now. And when faced with that evil as we are now, I want
    a man who knows the cost of war on his troops and on his citizens. I
    want a man who puts my family's interests  before any foreign country.

     


    I want a President whose qualified to lead.

     


    I want my country back, and I'm voting for John  McCain.

     


    Semper Fi, Daniel L. Frost Jr. GySgt USMC Retired Kokomo , IN

October 10, 2008

October 8, 2008

  • Newsmax

    Phil Brennan

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    Mystery Contributions Flood Obama



    "Senator Obama is running on an image that is directly the opposite of what he has been doing for two decades. His escapes from his past have been as remarkable as the great escapes of Houdini.”

    — Thomas Sowell

    Cherche la femme (follow the woman), the French advise, when looking for who is behind a scandal. For Americans in this election period it should be Cherche Le Moolah — follow the money, especially all those bucks that have fortuitously adhered to Barack Obama's exchequer throughout his mysterious past.

    A reader gleaned this from the Internet:

    "Around 1979 Obama started college at Occidental in California. He is very open about his two years at Occidental, he tried all kinds of drugs and was wasting his time but, even though he had a brilliant mind, did not apply himself to his studies. 'Barry' (that was the name he used all his life) during this time had two roommates, Muhammad Hasan Chandoo and Wahid Hamid, both from Pakistan.

    "During the summer of 1981, after his second year in college, he made a 'round the world' trip, stopping to see his mother in Indonesia, next Hyderabad in India, three weeks in Karachi, Pakistan where he stayed with his roommate's family, then off to Africa to visit his father's family."

    Who financed this costly world tour?

    On his return, he stopped being Barry and became Barack, and went to Columbia University where tuition is anything but cheap. Who paid it? After Columbia, he went to Chicago to work as a Community Organizer for $12,000. A year. "Why Chicago? " the reader asked. "Why not New York? He was already living in New York."

    There he hooked up with Antoin “Tony” Rezko, recently convicted on fraud and bribery charges. Rezko was born in Aleppo, Syria and was named “'Entrepreneur of the Decade” by the Arab-American Business and Professional Association.

    Two or so years later, Obama entered Harvard Law School. Talk about expensive tuition! Who paid the tuition? After completing law school, he went back to Chicago where Rezko offered him a job. He turned it down to work for Davis, Miner, Barnhill & Galland, which had connections with “Rezar” Rezko's firm. Rezko was one of Obama's first major financial contributors when he ran for office in Chicago.

    In 2003, Rezko threw an early fundraiser for Obama which Chicago Tribune reporter David Mendelland claims was instrumental in providing Obama with "seed money" for his U.S. Senate race. In 2005, Obama purchased a new home in the Kenwoood district of Chicago for $1.65 million (less than the asking price). Where did he get the money for the property? On the same day, Rezko's wife, Rita, purchased the adjoining empty lot for full price.

    The reader reported that “Valerie Jarrett was Michelle Obama's boss and is now Obama's chief adviser and he does not make any major decisions without talking to her first. Where was Jarrett born? Shiraz, Iran!”

    Guess who's in charge of all those “small” Internet campaign contributions for Obama? According to my reader, none other than his two college roommates from Pakistan: Muhammad Hasan Chandoo and Wahid Hamid.

    Now let's follow the moolah a bit further. In an Oct. 4, 2008 Toledo Blade article entitled “Hunting Mr. Good Will. WHO is 'Will, Good'?" columnist Jack Kelly revealed that a Mr. Good Will, who Kelly says lists his employer as "Loving" and his profession as "You" — has contributed an astounding 1,000 times to the Barack Obama campaign, all in amounts of $25 or less which add up to $17,375 — far more than the legal limit of $4,600 or $2,300 each for the primary and general election campaigns — 1000 times!

    Kelly notes that Kenneth Timmerman, my fellow Newsmax columnist, discovered Mr. Good Will after checking no less than 1.4 million individual contributions in the latest Federal Election Commission master file for the Obama campaign.

    While Mr. Good Will claimed he was from Austin, Texas, when Kelly called directory assistance, they could find no listing for him.

    Then there is Mr. Doodad Prowho, who made 786 contributions for a total of $19,500. Like Mr. Good Will, Mr. Pro lists his employer as "Loving" and his profession as "You." Mr. Pro said he is from Nunda, N.Y. Directory assistance found no listing for him either.

    Noting that Obama has raised a whopping $223 million in contributions of less than $200, Kelly wrote that candidates are not required to disclose the names of those who contribute less than $200, and Mr. Obama has not. But he added that the Federal Election Commission does require campaigns to keep a running tally of contributions and to disclose the identity of donors once their total contributions exceed $200.

    This is how Timmerman discovered Mr. Good Will and Mr. Doodad Pro.

    Timmerman, Kelly writes, was particularly curious about 11,500 contributions from overseas totaling $33.8 million. He adds that Sens. McCain and Hillary Clinton required foreign donors to provide proof of citizenship, yet according to Timmerman the Obama campaign did not.

    "More than 1,400 of the overseas entries clearly were U.S. diplomats or military personnel, who gave an APO address," Timmerman wrote. But they accounted for a mere 12 percent of Obama's overseas donors, whose contributions totaled just $201,680.

    "In July and August, the head of Nigeria's stock market held a series of pro-Obama fundraisers in Lagos," Timmerman wrote in Newsmax. "At one event, a table for eight went for $16,800. Nigerian press reports claimed sponsors raked in an estimated $900,000."

    Kelly added, "Making contributions on credit cards via the Internet — as both Good Will and Doodad Pro did — makes it easier for foreigners to contribute. Web logger Pamela Geller (Atlas Shrugs) reported three Palestinians living in a refugee camp in Gaza tried to donate $33,500 to the Obama campaign last year. They were caught only because the amount was far above the legal limit. If foreigners donate in amounts less than $200, their illegal involvement would be virtually undetectable."

    Kelly concluded that were Obama a Republican, "the news media would be demanding he disclose the names of all of his donors — as er, the Republican has done — so we can see if there are among them other Good Wills and Doodad Pros.

    "CNN recently sent a reporter to Little Diomede Island, the westernmost part of Alaska (2.4 miles from Russia) to determine whether Sarah Palin had ever been there to see Russia with her own eyes. But CNN — and the rest of the media — have been incurious about the Obama campaign's fund-raising."

    Finally there is this. According to The Associated Press, Jerome Corsi, the American author of a best-selling book attacking Barack Obama, is being detained in Kenya where Obama, as the son of a Kenyan father, is a national idol. He is being detained because he does not have a work permit, a senior immigration official said Tuesday.

    Corsi, who wrote "The Obama Nation: Leftist Politics and the Cult of Personality," was being held at immigration headquarters in Nairobi after police picked him up from his hotel Tuesday, Carlos Maluta, a senior immigration official in charge of investigations, told The Associated Press. "We still haven't decided what to do with him," Maluta said.

    As I wrote, cherche le moolah.

    Phil Brennan is a veteran journalist and World War II Marine who writes for Newsmax.com. He is editor and publisher of Wednesday on the Web (http://www.pvbr.com) and was Washington columnist (Cato) for National Review magazine in the 1960s.

    He also served as a staff aide for the House Republican Policy Committee and helped handle the Washington public relations operation for the Alaska Statehood Committee which won statehood for Alaska. He is also a trustee of the Lincoln Heritage Institute and a member of the Association For Intelligence Officers.

    He can be reached at pvb@pvbr.com.

     

    Hat-tip to toomanyhats and homeschoolingthem

    © 2008 Newsmax. All rights reserved.

October 5, 2008

  • De ja vu

    I was at the mall last week (alone--so rare!) and stopped in Claire's, a fun jewelry and accessory shop.  I felt like I had stepped back into 1986 at Earcetera (were these only in Texas malls?)!

    Rainbow colored studs, oversized yellow stars, chunky turquoise earrings and orange bracelets,...and neon!  (Cue Wham! "Wake me up, before you go-go")

    And, yes, the clothes are there, too!  Cowl-necked sweaters and shirts, 80's striped and ribbed shirts...  If the Molly-Ringwald-in-Sixteen-Candles-sweaters-and-skirts come back, I am SO there!  ;)

  • I Was Tagged!

    ...by BooksForMe~here are my answers:

    4 Things I Was Doing Ten Years Ago

    -playing with my four-year old

    -decorating my house

    -hanging out with my friend, Dawn

    -teaching first grade

     

    4 Things On My To Do List For Today 
    -go to church

    -buy some candles from Amanda

    -prepare house for the week

    -check calendar and bills for the week


    4 Things I Love About My Husband
    -I can always count on him

    -he puts our family first

    -he makes me laugh and blush

    -his smile

    4 Jobs I Have Had
    -baby-sitter (from age 11-on)

    -Things Remembered at the mall (first "real" job at 16)

    -clothing store at the mall (16)

    -CPI photofinish at the mall (17)


    4 Movies I Have Watched More Than Once
    -Sense and Sensibility

    -Pride and Prejudice

    -Grease

    -Chicago

    4 Places I Have Lived
    -I have always lived in Texas!


    4 Places I Have Been This Year
    -Corpus Christi

    -Houston

    -San Antonio

    -Edinburg

    (again, all Texas, LOL!)


    4 Places I Want To Visit
    -Germany

    -Finland

    -New York

    -Virginia


    4 TV Shows I Watch
    -Reno 911

    -Martha Stewart

    -old Seinfeld episodes

    -Sesame Street

    4 Things You May Not Know About Me
    -when I was little, I was adamant to my friends that I would never have children and they enjoy reminding me of that!

    -I am transitioning into organic nutrition for my family, but I do not think I will ever recycle!  (well, maybe if I had the space...)

    -my best friend is a "tree-hugging liberal" (her words, not mine!)

    -I look like my dad


    4 Things I Love
    -flowers

    -family vacations

    -reading

    -cool evenings on the deck

    4 People I Tag Now
    (I chose the last four people who left a Comment.)
     - homeschoolingthem

    - quilt_cats

    - bethro78

    - DanielleNicole99