Obama may get ASU honor after all
Mike Allen
2 hrs 39 mins ago
Michael M. Crow, president of Arizona State University, tells POLITICO that the school is reconsidering its widely mocked plans not to give President Barack Obama an honorary degree when he speaks at commencement on May 13 and will “honor him in every way possible.”
“There was no intended slight,” Crow said by telephone from his office in Tempe. “We had not yet talked about what honors we might give him as our commencement speaker, and we still have a month to work all that out. We don’t want anyone to think we do not recognize what he has achieved and what he means in America.”
A formal decision has not been made, but it was clear from Crow's comments that the university is headed in that direction. ASU risked becoming a national punch line if it did not quickly retreat from its policy against conferring honorary degrees on a sitting politician.
Past recipients of ASU honorary degrees included an aloe-vera magnate, the director of "Victor Victoria," a Chinese official, a Canadian politician, and lots of donors and fundraisers.
Four days after addressing ASU, Obama will give the commencement address at Notre Dame, which is conferring an honorary degree despite some local criticism of the choice of speaker.
Obama has received honorary degrees from Knox College in 2005, Northwestern University In 2006, UMass Boston in 2006, Xavier in 2006, Howard University in 2007, Southern New Hampshire University in 2007, and Wesleyan University in 2008.
ASU’s student daily, the State Press, touched off a firestorm this week when it reported under the headline, “Obama won’t receive ASU honorary degree":
"University spokeswoman Sharon Keeler said Tuesday that the University awards honorary degrees to recognize individuals for their work and accomplishments spanning their lifetime. ‘Because President Obama’s body of work is yet to come, it’s inappropriate to recognize him at this time,' Keeler said."
Crow said the resulting brouhaha "kind of wounded my heart." He said ASU hasn’t “had a commencement speaker in over 30 years, so this is a big deal for us.”
“Typically, the university’s policy relative to honorary degrees has been that people who are sitting politicians, we don’t given an honorary degree,” he explained. “It’s kind of a local thing. We’ve gotten a huge reaction from a lot of folks as if some decision was made not to give him one. Far from it.”
Crow said he found the criticism ironic because he found Obama's "agenda and objectives,” as outlined in his address to a joint session of Congress, were so aligned with “the institution that we’re business.”
“We’re a true public university that has remained committed to our public mission,” Crow said. “We have egalitarian admission standards and we provide the finest faculty and programs we can put together, and don’t constantly try to cut out the bottom of the class.”
In inviting Obama, the university had said it was "America's largest effort at institutional transformation in public education."
Crow had said in a statement when the school was selected by the White House: "The progressive leadership he has already displayed and the values he espouses are a great example for our students and for the extended community that surrounds us.”
ASU's president said officials now are considering conferring an honorary degree, regardless of local custom. “We intend to recognize him in multiple ways,” Crow said. “As to this issue relative to the honorary degree, we don’t know where it came from.”
Here are some of the previous honorary degree recipients, none of whom was elected president at age 47 in a landslide of electoral and popular votes:
--Blake Edwards, “whose more than 50 films include such memorable titles as ‘Days of Wine and Roses,’ ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s,’ ‘The Pink Panther,’ ‘Victor Victoria’ and ’10.’”
--Wu Qidi, “the Chinese Vice Minister Of Education Who Previously Arranged Lucrative Partnership With China’s State-Owned Enterprises.”
--William Polk Carey, a real-estate investment banker and $50 million donor.
-- Rex G. Maughan, a beauty-products billionaire whose company touted aloe vera and bee pollen as miracle age-reducers.
--Jane Dee Hull, Arizona's first elected woman governor.
-- Alice Wiley Snell, ASU fundraiser.
--John R. Christian, ASU fundraiser.
--Lord John Browne of Madingley, a BP executive.
--The Right Honorable Kim Campbell, Canada’s first woman prime minister.
--Peterson Zah, president of the Navajo Nation.
--Rafael Rangel Sostmann, president of Tec of Monterrey, a Mexican university that had signed a business partnership with ASU.
--Jerry Colangelo, a sports executive involved in plans that would have benefited ASU.
--L. Roy Papp, a mutual fund manager and his wife, Marilyn A. Papp, huge ASU donors who helped establish a Chinese art program.
-- Barbara McConnell Barrett, a former Reagan administration official involved in airline deregulation.
-- Craig E. Weatherup, a huge donor who was the benefactor for the Weatherup Center.
so exactly how much do i give to get an honorary degree?
www.michaelmoore.com, www.georgecarlin.com, www.huffingtonpost.com, www.HCZ.org, On YouTube under, "franklandfields". Enjoy. Peace. :-)
Friday, April 10, 2009
Thursday, April 09, 2009
great idea!
Coming Soon to the Sunshine State: The Sunshine City
By MICHAEL GRUNWALD Michael Grunwald Thu Apr 9, 9:10 am ET
Coming soon to the Sunshine State: the sunshine city.
An NFL lineman turned visionary developer today is unveiling startlingly ambitious plans for a solar-powered city of tomorrow in southwest Florida's outback, featuring the world's largest photovoltaic solar plant, a truly smart power grid, recharging stations for electric vehicles and a variety of other green innovations. The community of Babcock Ranch is designed to break new frontiers in sustainable development, quite a shift for a state that has never been sustainable, and lately hasn't had much development. (Read "Is Florida the Sunset State?")
"Some people think I got hit in the head a few too many times," quips developer Syd Kitson, who spent six years in the trenches for the Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys before entering the real estate business in the mid-1980s. "But I still believe deeply in Florida. And the time has come for something completely different." (See the top 10 green stories of 2008.)
To anyone familiar with southern Florida's planning-nightmare sprawl of golf courses, strip malls and cookie-cutter subdivisions named after the plants and animals they replaced, Kitson's vision for his solar-powered, smart-growth, live-where-you-work city of 45,000 people east of Fort Myers is breathtakingly different. That's why the press conference held today revealing his development plans for the historic Babcock Ranch property will feature representatives from the Audubon Society, the World Wildlife Fund and the Sierra Club.
The history of Florida is littered with spectacular, landscape-changing proposals that never made it past the drawing board. The watery wisp of Everglades National Park known as Flamingo, population zero, was once touted as the next Chicago. Kitson's financial partner, Morgan Stanley, has had a rough time lately, and some locals remain skeptical that he can turn his $2 billion green vision into reality. "We've been hearing a lot of very exciting ideas, but we have no idea how this is actually going to happen," says Conservancy of Southwest Florida CEO Andrew McElwaine.
Then again, Kitson has already cleared two of his most difficult hurdles: getting the land and the right to build on it. In 2006, he engineered a deal with then-Governor Jeb Bush and the previous owners of the 91,000-acre ranch in which the state spent $350 million to purchase 73,000 of the most environmentally sensitive acres - the largest preservation buy in Florida history. Kitson paid about about the same amount for the remaining 18,000 acres, and he says half of that will remain green space within the new community.
Kitson has been promising unprecedented sustainability all along, but today's shocker was the announcement of Florida Power & Light's plan to provide electricity for Babcock Ranch with a 75-megawatt photovoltaic plant nearly twice as big as the current record-holder in Germany. Solar power has been slow to catch on in the gas-powered Sunshine State, but FPL hopes to start construction on the 400-acre, $300 million plant by year's end. The utility expects it will provide enough power for Babcock Ranch and beyond. At $4 million per megawatt - FPL estimates the costs to its customers at about 31 cents per month over the life of the project - it should be more than four times as cost-effective as the nuclear reactors FPL is trying to build near the Florida Keys.
Kitson's slick website also promises "groundbreaking" strategies to promote energy efficiency for all Babcock Ranch buildings. And that's not all: "Ultra-modern electric vehicles will glide along avenues beneath the glow of solar-powered street lamps, plugging in to recharge at convenient community-wide recharging stations. Revolutionary Smart Grid technologies will monitor and manage energy use, while Smart Home technology will allow residents to operate their homes at maximum efficiency." Kitson's goal is to reduce carbon emissions, oil dependence and energy bills, while turning Babcock Ranch into a mecca for clean-energy research and development, attracting high-tech companies that will provide high-wage jobs.
The idea is to create a self-contained community where people can live and shop and work and go to school and have fun without long car trips. Kitson's construction plans start with a walkable and bikable downtown that will include a magnet school, a wellness facility and sustainable retail as well as 8,000 homes - including affordable homes for local workers. "In Florida, everyone has to drive everywhere they want to go," Kitson says. "And everyone thinks the solution to congestion is to build more roads. I think the solution is to design communities so you don't need more cars on the roads."
Of course, talk is cheap. It's no secret that growth has been Florida's primary economic engine for decades. Yet Fortune 500 companies haven't flocked to its sprawling bedroom communities with lousy schools and overpriced houses, and the paving of paradise has left the state with overtapped aquifers, overcrowded hospitals, overstretched services, traffic jams, a dying Everglades and a vanishing sense of place.
Kitson promises to avoid the mistakes of the past. "We're impressed with their commitments," says Wayne Daltry, Lee County's director of smart growth. "Now we have to pound them to keep their commitments. No plan survives contact with reality - and in this case the reality is called the bottom line."
Given the dismal state of the economy in Florida and the dismal environmental track record of developers, it's easy to be skeptical. Kitson already had to lay off some of his southwest Florida staff. But unless the sun stops shining, the current housing collapse won't last forever. Florida is always going to be nicer than Brooklyn or Cleveland in the winter. It's about time someone tried to make growth environmentally and economically sustainable. And it's about time someone tried to use that sunshine for something other than getting a tan.
By MICHAEL GRUNWALD Michael Grunwald Thu Apr 9, 9:10 am ET
Coming soon to the Sunshine State: the sunshine city.
An NFL lineman turned visionary developer today is unveiling startlingly ambitious plans for a solar-powered city of tomorrow in southwest Florida's outback, featuring the world's largest photovoltaic solar plant, a truly smart power grid, recharging stations for electric vehicles and a variety of other green innovations. The community of Babcock Ranch is designed to break new frontiers in sustainable development, quite a shift for a state that has never been sustainable, and lately hasn't had much development. (Read "Is Florida the Sunset State?")
"Some people think I got hit in the head a few too many times," quips developer Syd Kitson, who spent six years in the trenches for the Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys before entering the real estate business in the mid-1980s. "But I still believe deeply in Florida. And the time has come for something completely different." (See the top 10 green stories of 2008.)
To anyone familiar with southern Florida's planning-nightmare sprawl of golf courses, strip malls and cookie-cutter subdivisions named after the plants and animals they replaced, Kitson's vision for his solar-powered, smart-growth, live-where-you-work city of 45,000 people east of Fort Myers is breathtakingly different. That's why the press conference held today revealing his development plans for the historic Babcock Ranch property will feature representatives from the Audubon Society, the World Wildlife Fund and the Sierra Club.
The history of Florida is littered with spectacular, landscape-changing proposals that never made it past the drawing board. The watery wisp of Everglades National Park known as Flamingo, population zero, was once touted as the next Chicago. Kitson's financial partner, Morgan Stanley, has had a rough time lately, and some locals remain skeptical that he can turn his $2 billion green vision into reality. "We've been hearing a lot of very exciting ideas, but we have no idea how this is actually going to happen," says Conservancy of Southwest Florida CEO Andrew McElwaine.
Then again, Kitson has already cleared two of his most difficult hurdles: getting the land and the right to build on it. In 2006, he engineered a deal with then-Governor Jeb Bush and the previous owners of the 91,000-acre ranch in which the state spent $350 million to purchase 73,000 of the most environmentally sensitive acres - the largest preservation buy in Florida history. Kitson paid about about the same amount for the remaining 18,000 acres, and he says half of that will remain green space within the new community.
Kitson has been promising unprecedented sustainability all along, but today's shocker was the announcement of Florida Power & Light's plan to provide electricity for Babcock Ranch with a 75-megawatt photovoltaic plant nearly twice as big as the current record-holder in Germany. Solar power has been slow to catch on in the gas-powered Sunshine State, but FPL hopes to start construction on the 400-acre, $300 million plant by year's end. The utility expects it will provide enough power for Babcock Ranch and beyond. At $4 million per megawatt - FPL estimates the costs to its customers at about 31 cents per month over the life of the project - it should be more than four times as cost-effective as the nuclear reactors FPL is trying to build near the Florida Keys.
Kitson's slick website also promises "groundbreaking" strategies to promote energy efficiency for all Babcock Ranch buildings. And that's not all: "Ultra-modern electric vehicles will glide along avenues beneath the glow of solar-powered street lamps, plugging in to recharge at convenient community-wide recharging stations. Revolutionary Smart Grid technologies will monitor and manage energy use, while Smart Home technology will allow residents to operate their homes at maximum efficiency." Kitson's goal is to reduce carbon emissions, oil dependence and energy bills, while turning Babcock Ranch into a mecca for clean-energy research and development, attracting high-tech companies that will provide high-wage jobs.
The idea is to create a self-contained community where people can live and shop and work and go to school and have fun without long car trips. Kitson's construction plans start with a walkable and bikable downtown that will include a magnet school, a wellness facility and sustainable retail as well as 8,000 homes - including affordable homes for local workers. "In Florida, everyone has to drive everywhere they want to go," Kitson says. "And everyone thinks the solution to congestion is to build more roads. I think the solution is to design communities so you don't need more cars on the roads."
Of course, talk is cheap. It's no secret that growth has been Florida's primary economic engine for decades. Yet Fortune 500 companies haven't flocked to its sprawling bedroom communities with lousy schools and overpriced houses, and the paving of paradise has left the state with overtapped aquifers, overcrowded hospitals, overstretched services, traffic jams, a dying Everglades and a vanishing sense of place.
Kitson promises to avoid the mistakes of the past. "We're impressed with their commitments," says Wayne Daltry, Lee County's director of smart growth. "Now we have to pound them to keep their commitments. No plan survives contact with reality - and in this case the reality is called the bottom line."
Given the dismal state of the economy in Florida and the dismal environmental track record of developers, it's easy to be skeptical. Kitson already had to lay off some of his southwest Florida staff. But unless the sun stops shining, the current housing collapse won't last forever. Florida is always going to be nicer than Brooklyn or Cleveland in the winter. It's about time someone tried to make growth environmentally and economically sustainable. And it's about time someone tried to use that sunshine for something other than getting a tan.
Monday, April 06, 2009
wow
Original 'Schindler's List' found in Sydney
Mon Apr 6, 7:37 am ET
SYDNEY (AFP) – A list of Jews saved by Oskar Schindler that inspired the novel and Oscar-winning film "Schindler's List" has been found in a Sydney library, its co-curator said.
Workers at the New South Wales State Library found the list, containing the names of 801 Jews saved from the Holocaust by the businessman, as they sifted through boxes of Australian author Thomas Keneally's manuscript material.
The 13-page document, a yellowed and fragile carbon typescript copy of the original, was found between research notes and German newspaper clippings in one of the boxes, library co-curator Olwen Pryke said.
Pryke described the 13-page list as "one of the most powerful documents of the 20th Century" and was stunned to find it in the library's collection.
"This list was hurriedly typed on April 18, 1945, in the closing days of WWII, and it saved 801 men from the gas chambers," she said.
"It?s an incredibly moving piece of history."
She said the library had no idea the list was among six boxes of material acquired in 1996 relating to Keneally's Booker Prize-winning novel, originally published as "Schindler's Ark".
The 1982 novel told the story of how the roguish Schindler discovered his conscience and risked his life to save more than 1,000 Jews from the Nazis.
Hollywood director Steven Spielberg turned it into a film in 1993 starring Liam Neeson as Schindler and Ralph Fiennes as the head of an SS-run camp.
Pryke said that, although the novel and film implied there was a single, definitive list, Schindler actually compiled a number of them as he persuaded Nazi bureaucrats not to send his workers to the death camps.
She said the document found by the library was given to Keneally in 1980 by Leopold Pfefferberg -- named on the list as Jewish worker number 173 -- when he was persuading the novelist to write Schindler's story.
As such, it was the list that inspired Keneally to tell the world about Schindler's heroics, she said.
Pryke said she had no idea how much the list was worth.
Schindler, born in a German-speaking part of Austria-Hungary in 1908, began the war as a card-carrying Nazi who used his connections to gain control of a factory in Krakow, Poland, shortly after Hitler invaded the country.
He used Jewish labour in the factory but, as the war progressed, he became appalled at the conduct of the Nazis.
Using bribery and charm, he persuaded officials that his workers were vital to the war effort and should not be sent to the death camps.
Schindler died relatively unknown in 1974, but he gained public recognition following Keneally's book and Spielberg's film.
Mon Apr 6, 7:37 am ET
SYDNEY (AFP) – A list of Jews saved by Oskar Schindler that inspired the novel and Oscar-winning film "Schindler's List" has been found in a Sydney library, its co-curator said.
Workers at the New South Wales State Library found the list, containing the names of 801 Jews saved from the Holocaust by the businessman, as they sifted through boxes of Australian author Thomas Keneally's manuscript material.
The 13-page document, a yellowed and fragile carbon typescript copy of the original, was found between research notes and German newspaper clippings in one of the boxes, library co-curator Olwen Pryke said.
Pryke described the 13-page list as "one of the most powerful documents of the 20th Century" and was stunned to find it in the library's collection.
"This list was hurriedly typed on April 18, 1945, in the closing days of WWII, and it saved 801 men from the gas chambers," she said.
"It?s an incredibly moving piece of history."
She said the library had no idea the list was among six boxes of material acquired in 1996 relating to Keneally's Booker Prize-winning novel, originally published as "Schindler's Ark".
The 1982 novel told the story of how the roguish Schindler discovered his conscience and risked his life to save more than 1,000 Jews from the Nazis.
Hollywood director Steven Spielberg turned it into a film in 1993 starring Liam Neeson as Schindler and Ralph Fiennes as the head of an SS-run camp.
Pryke said that, although the novel and film implied there was a single, definitive list, Schindler actually compiled a number of them as he persuaded Nazi bureaucrats not to send his workers to the death camps.
She said the document found by the library was given to Keneally in 1980 by Leopold Pfefferberg -- named on the list as Jewish worker number 173 -- when he was persuading the novelist to write Schindler's story.
As such, it was the list that inspired Keneally to tell the world about Schindler's heroics, she said.
Pryke said she had no idea how much the list was worth.
Schindler, born in a German-speaking part of Austria-Hungary in 1908, began the war as a card-carrying Nazi who used his connections to gain control of a factory in Krakow, Poland, shortly after Hitler invaded the country.
He used Jewish labour in the factory but, as the war progressed, he became appalled at the conduct of the Nazis.
Using bribery and charm, he persuaded officials that his workers were vital to the war effort and should not be sent to the death camps.
Schindler died relatively unknown in 1974, but he gained public recognition following Keneally's book and Spielberg's film.
Friday, April 03, 2009
good news and progress
Iowa court says gay marriage ban unconstitutional
By AMY LORENTZEN, Associated Press Writer Amy Lorentzen, Associated Press Writer 25 mins ago
DES MOINES, Iowa – Iowa's Supreme Court unanimously struck down the state's gay marriage ban on Friday, making Iowa the third state where same-sex couples can tie the knot.
In its decision, the court upheld a 2007 district court judge's ruling that the law violates the state constitution. It strikes the language from Iowa code limiting marriage to only between a man a woman.
"The court reaffirmed that a statute inconsistent with the Iowa constitution must be declared void even though it may be supported by strong and deep-seated traditional beliefs and popular opinion," said a summary of the ruling issued by the court.
The ruling set off celebration among the state's gay-marriage proponents.
"Iowa is about justice, and that's what happened here today," said Laura Fefchak, who was hosting a verdict party in the Des Moines suburb of Urbandale with partner of 13 years, Nancy Robinson.
Robinson added: "To tell the truth, I didn't think I'd see this day."
Richard Socarides, an attorney and former senior adviser on gay rights to President Clinton, said the ruling carries extra significance coming from Iowa.
"It's a big win because, coming from Iowa, it represents the mainstreaming of gay marriage. And it shows that despite attempts stop gay marriage through right-wing ballot initiatives, like in California, the courts will continue to support the case for equal rights for gays," he said.
It's opponents were equally as dismayed.
"I would say the mood is one of mourning right now in a lot of ways, and yet the first thing we did after internalizing the decision was to walk across the street and begin the process of lobbying our legislators to let the people of Iowa vote," said Bryan English, spokesman for the conservative group the Iowa Family Policy Center.
"This is an issue that will define (lawmakers') leadership. This is not a side issue."
The Rev. Keith Ratliff Sr., pastor at the Maple Street Baptist Church in Des Moines, went to the Supreme Court building to hear of the decision.
"It's a perversion and it opens the door to more perversions," Ratliff said. "What's next?"
Technically, the decision will take about 21 days to be considered final and a request for a rehearing could be filed within that period.
But Polk County Attorney John Sarcone said his office will not ask for a rehearing, meaning the court's decision should take effect after that three-week period.
"Our Supreme Court has decided it, and they make the decision as to what the law is and we follow Supreme Court decisions," Sarcone said. "This is not a personal thing. We have an obligation to the law to defend the recorder, and that's what we do."
That means it will be at least several weeks before gay and lesbian couples can seek marriage licenses.
Gov. Chet Culver, a Democrat, said the decision addresses a complicated and emotional issue.
"The next responsible step is to thoroughly review this decision, which I am doing with my legal counsel and the attorney general, before reacting to what it means for Iowa," Culver said in a statement.
The case had been working its way through Iowa's court system since 2005 when Lambda Legal, a New York-based gay rights organization, filed a lawsuit on behalf of six gay and lesbian Iowa couples who were denied marriage licenses. Some of their children are also listed as plaintiffs.
The suit named then-Polk County recorder and registrar Timothy Brien.
The state Supreme Court's ruling upheld an August 2007 decision by Polk County District Court Judge Robert Hanson, who found that a state law allowing marriage only between a man and a woman violates the state's constitutional rights of equal protection.
The Polk County attorney's office, arguing on behalf of Brien, claimed that Hanson's ruling violates the separation of powers and said the issue should be left to the Legislature.
Lambda Legal planned to comment on the ruling later Friday. A request for comment from the Polk County attorney's office wasn't immediately returned.
Around the nation, only Massachusetts and Connecticut permit same-sex marriage. California, which briefly allowed gay marriage before a voter initiative in November repealed it, allows domestic partnerships.
New Jersey, New Hampshire and Vermont also offer civil unions, which provide many of the same rights that come with marriage. New York recognizes same-sex marriages performed elsewhere, and legislators there and in New Jersey are weighing whether to offer marriage. A bill that would legalize same-sex marriage in Vermont has cleared the Legislature but may be vetoed by the governor.
The ruling in Iowa's same-sex marriage case came more quickly than many observers had anticipated, with some speculating after oral arguments that it could take a year or more for a decision.
___
On the Net:
Iowa Supreme Court: http://www.judicial.state.ia.us/
Lambda Legal: http://www.lambdalegal.org/
By AMY LORENTZEN, Associated Press Writer Amy Lorentzen, Associated Press Writer 25 mins ago
DES MOINES, Iowa – Iowa's Supreme Court unanimously struck down the state's gay marriage ban on Friday, making Iowa the third state where same-sex couples can tie the knot.
In its decision, the court upheld a 2007 district court judge's ruling that the law violates the state constitution. It strikes the language from Iowa code limiting marriage to only between a man a woman.
"The court reaffirmed that a statute inconsistent with the Iowa constitution must be declared void even though it may be supported by strong and deep-seated traditional beliefs and popular opinion," said a summary of the ruling issued by the court.
The ruling set off celebration among the state's gay-marriage proponents.
"Iowa is about justice, and that's what happened here today," said Laura Fefchak, who was hosting a verdict party in the Des Moines suburb of Urbandale with partner of 13 years, Nancy Robinson.
Robinson added: "To tell the truth, I didn't think I'd see this day."
Richard Socarides, an attorney and former senior adviser on gay rights to President Clinton, said the ruling carries extra significance coming from Iowa.
"It's a big win because, coming from Iowa, it represents the mainstreaming of gay marriage. And it shows that despite attempts stop gay marriage through right-wing ballot initiatives, like in California, the courts will continue to support the case for equal rights for gays," he said.
It's opponents were equally as dismayed.
"I would say the mood is one of mourning right now in a lot of ways, and yet the first thing we did after internalizing the decision was to walk across the street and begin the process of lobbying our legislators to let the people of Iowa vote," said Bryan English, spokesman for the conservative group the Iowa Family Policy Center.
"This is an issue that will define (lawmakers') leadership. This is not a side issue."
The Rev. Keith Ratliff Sr., pastor at the Maple Street Baptist Church in Des Moines, went to the Supreme Court building to hear of the decision.
"It's a perversion and it opens the door to more perversions," Ratliff said. "What's next?"
Technically, the decision will take about 21 days to be considered final and a request for a rehearing could be filed within that period.
But Polk County Attorney John Sarcone said his office will not ask for a rehearing, meaning the court's decision should take effect after that three-week period.
"Our Supreme Court has decided it, and they make the decision as to what the law is and we follow Supreme Court decisions," Sarcone said. "This is not a personal thing. We have an obligation to the law to defend the recorder, and that's what we do."
That means it will be at least several weeks before gay and lesbian couples can seek marriage licenses.
Gov. Chet Culver, a Democrat, said the decision addresses a complicated and emotional issue.
"The next responsible step is to thoroughly review this decision, which I am doing with my legal counsel and the attorney general, before reacting to what it means for Iowa," Culver said in a statement.
The case had been working its way through Iowa's court system since 2005 when Lambda Legal, a New York-based gay rights organization, filed a lawsuit on behalf of six gay and lesbian Iowa couples who were denied marriage licenses. Some of their children are also listed as plaintiffs.
The suit named then-Polk County recorder and registrar Timothy Brien.
The state Supreme Court's ruling upheld an August 2007 decision by Polk County District Court Judge Robert Hanson, who found that a state law allowing marriage only between a man and a woman violates the state's constitutional rights of equal protection.
The Polk County attorney's office, arguing on behalf of Brien, claimed that Hanson's ruling violates the separation of powers and said the issue should be left to the Legislature.
Lambda Legal planned to comment on the ruling later Friday. A request for comment from the Polk County attorney's office wasn't immediately returned.
Around the nation, only Massachusetts and Connecticut permit same-sex marriage. California, which briefly allowed gay marriage before a voter initiative in November repealed it, allows domestic partnerships.
New Jersey, New Hampshire and Vermont also offer civil unions, which provide many of the same rights that come with marriage. New York recognizes same-sex marriages performed elsewhere, and legislators there and in New Jersey are weighing whether to offer marriage. A bill that would legalize same-sex marriage in Vermont has cleared the Legislature but may be vetoed by the governor.
The ruling in Iowa's same-sex marriage case came more quickly than many observers had anticipated, with some speculating after oral arguments that it could take a year or more for a decision.
___
On the Net:
Iowa Supreme Court: http://www.judicial.state.ia.us/
Lambda Legal: http://www.lambdalegal.org/
Sunday, March 29, 2009
earth hour and...
last saturday evening, between 8:30pm and 9:30pm, we sat by candlelight, on the porch swing, and had a grand time. it was earth hour. did you turn off your lights too? i certainly hope you did.
last friday we saw the movie, i love you, man, and thoroughly enjoyed it. i give it a solid B+.
my latest film is on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
namaste, peace, and hang in there.
last friday we saw the movie, i love you, man, and thoroughly enjoyed it. i give it a solid B+.
my latest film is on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
namaste, peace, and hang in there.
Friday, March 27, 2009
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
a must see
Where In The World Is Osama Bin Laden?
i saw this movie last evening, and it is, in my opinion, one of the best documentaries i have ever seen. it is done by morgan spurlock and his group of very talented people. it answers some fundamental questions like: how do we end worldwide terrorism? how do we bring peace to the middle east? how can we all get along? and others. it is one of the finest films i have seen in my life. it is about hope, peace, facts, truth, reality, people, statistics, and other subjects. put simply, it is about life, and how similar life really is for all of us.
it runs about one hour and thirty minutes, and i can't begin to imagine how mr. spurlock was able to edit the nearly 800 hours of film that he shot. i could have watched more.
i would have been happy with a 2 or 3 hour documentary on this subject. i wanted to learn more. i recommend everybody see this film. it is well worth your time, and if you don't agree, i want to hear why.
namaste
i saw this movie last evening, and it is, in my opinion, one of the best documentaries i have ever seen. it is done by morgan spurlock and his group of very talented people. it answers some fundamental questions like: how do we end worldwide terrorism? how do we bring peace to the middle east? how can we all get along? and others. it is one of the finest films i have seen in my life. it is about hope, peace, facts, truth, reality, people, statistics, and other subjects. put simply, it is about life, and how similar life really is for all of us.
it runs about one hour and thirty minutes, and i can't begin to imagine how mr. spurlock was able to edit the nearly 800 hours of film that he shot. i could have watched more.
i would have been happy with a 2 or 3 hour documentary on this subject. i wanted to learn more. i recommend everybody see this film. it is well worth your time, and if you don't agree, i want to hear why.
namaste
Monday, March 23, 2009
my AIG bonus...
has not arrived yet. i am still waiting. i have however received other bonuses from this AIG situation. i think we all have. i think there is much to be learned from this. for example, if you do a little reading and research, you will learn how we got into this mess, and who is really responsible. you will learn who wrote the legislation that allowed the banks and mortgage houses and investment brokers to gamble away our money and soul. it is quite clear who is responsible. there is a clear paper trail. and it is also painfully clear who has benefited from this criminal mess. i do not work for AIG. i have never worked for AIG. i have never been offered a job with AIG. you will also learn that a man told the bush administration about the madoff scam in 2001, 2002, 2003, and 2004, and they did nothing about it. the facts are clear and undeniable. will ferrell is performing in his broadway show called, you're welcome america, a final night with george w. bush, and it is a smash hit. it is on HBO now and you really ought to see it. check your local listings. it is ninety minutes long and it is brilliant. i give it my highest rating. and you can always catch my films on YouTube under, "franklandfields". enjoy. peace.
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Sunday, March 15, 2009
fyi
if you have not seen the current smash hit will ferrell broadway show, "you're welcome america, a final night with george w. bush", you have a chance to see it today, sunday, march 15, 2009, at 11pm, on hbo, channel 702. this is one of the best shows i've ever seen. i predict it will win a tony award. it is brilliant. please let me know your opinion. enjoy. peace out.
Friday, March 13, 2009
great article
Is Obamanomics Conservative or Revolutionary?
Wednesday 11 March 2009
by: Robert Reich
There are two ways to see Obamanomics.
The first, much preferred by the White House, is as a set of initiatives so modest as to hardly merit a raised eyebrow. Yes, steps must be taken to deal with the current economic crisis. But assuming the economy recovers next year, Obama's budget projects that government spending by the end of the decade will drop to around 22.5 percent of GDP, which is about where it was under Reagan.
What about those tax hikes on the wealthy? Obama merely restores the top two marginal income tax rates to what they were in the 1990's, the capital gains rate to its lowest level during that same prosperous decade, and the rate on dividends to a level even lower than it was in the 1990s. And even these modest reversions to the 1990's will affect only the wealthiest 3 percent of Americans, and not until 2011. Ninety-seven percent of small businesses won't pay a dime more. True, the very rich won't be able to deduct quite as much as they can now for their mortgage interest and charitable donations, but this is hardly revolutionary, either. In fact, it's another throwback - to the limits in place under Ronald Reagan. All told, taxes are projected to total 19 percent of GDP by the end of the decade. That's even lower than it was in the late 1990's.
Modest as they are, these taxes will generate enough revenue to pay for half of what's needed for universal health care, and still reduce the deficit by about $750 billion over ten years - to 3.1 percent of GDP by the end of the decade.
But isn't universal health care itself a pretty radical step? Not according to this view. The other half of what's needed to pay for universal health care will come from health-care savings that are also necessary to keep the current big health-care entitlement programs - Medicare and Medicaid - affordable. It's just common sense: Allow government to use its bargaining leverage under Medicare and Medicaid to lower drug prices, strengthen Medicare pay-for-performance incentives, and institute better disease management, prevention, and health information technologies.
What about the environment? Isn't cap and trade a huge deal? Not at all. Instead of heavy-handed regulation, it's a market solution to the problem of global warming. Government merely sets an overall cap on the amount of carbon dioxide to be allowed into the atmosphere, which drops annually, and then requires firms to bid for permits to pollute within that overall cap. Firms can buy and sell permits to each other; they can innovate to reduce pollution even further. Such a system will generate enough revenues to give 95 percent of Americans a yearly refundable tax credit of $400, and also finance research and development of renewable energy and a modernized electricity grid.
But isn't Obamanomics' approach to educational reform expensive and intrusive? No. By this view, it's very mainstream and incremental - and doesn't impose on the prerogatives of states and locales. It expands the tax credit for college tuition to $2,500 a year and increases Pell Grants to $5,500 yearly - almost negligible increases, given how fast tuitions are rising. It cuts subsidies to banks participating in the student-loan program, which is exactly what Bill Clinton did, and it provides some funds for early childhood education.
So there we have it: Obamanomics as pragmatic, incremental, centrist, even conservative.
But there's another way to view Obamanomics - as an economic philosophy exactly the opposite of the one that's dominated America for more than a quarter century.
The basic idea of Reaganomics was that the economy grows from the top down. Lower taxes on the wealthy make them work harder and invest more, and the benefits trickle down to everyone else. Rarely in economic history has a theory been more tested in the real world and proven so wrong. In point of fact, nothing trickled down. After the Reagan tax cuts, increases in the median wage slowed, adjusted for inflation. After George W. Bush's tax cuts for the wealthy, the median wage actually dropped. Meanwhile, most of the income went to the top. In 1980, just before the Reagan revolution, the richest 1 percent took home 9 percent of total national income. But by 2007, the richest 1 percent was taking home 22 percent.
Obamanomics, by contrast, holds that an economy grows best from the bottom up. Obama's program increases taxes on the top, and uses the proceeds to raise the living standards of average Americans by giving them lower taxes, better schools, and more affordable health insurance. That may not seem very radical, but compared to the last quarter-century it's revolutionary.
Reaganomics didn't believe in public investment, except perhaps when it came to the military. Everything else was considered government spending, which was assumed to be wasteful. Hence, the cuts (adjusted for inflation) during Reagan, Bush I and Bush II in education, job training, infrastructure, and basic research and development. And the reluctance to expand health insurance except when it came to corporate welfare for the pharmaceutical industry.
But Obamanomics is committed to these forms of public investment. And there's good reason: In a global economy, capital moves to wherever it can get the best deal around the globe. That means capital and jobs go to nations that can promise high returns either because labor is cheap and taxes and regulations low, or because labor is highly productive - well-educated, healthy, and supported by modern infrastructure.
Which do we want? For the better part of the last quarter-century our implicit economic strategy has tended toward the first. But that's a recipe for lower wages and lower living standards for most Americans, along with widening inequality. The only resource that's uniquely rooted in a national economy is its people - their skills, insights, capacities to collaborate, and the transportation and communication systems that link them together. Everything else - including capital, technology, designs, even plant and equipment - can move around the globe with increasing ease.
Bill Clinton talked a lot about the importance of public investment, but he failed to do much about it because he came to office during an economic expansion, and the major worry was excessive government spending leading to inflation. Obama comes to office during the biggest downturn since the Great Depression, and although he doesn't talk much about public investment his plan represents the largest commitment to it in forty years.
Reaganomics' third principle was that deregulated markets function better. They do, in many respects, but not always. And when they don't, all hell can break loose. Energy markets were deregulated and we wound up with Enron. Carbon emissions weren't controlled, and now we face global warming. Financial markets were deregulated and we have a global meltdown. Obamanomics, by contrast, accepts that government has an important role in setting the rules of the capitalist game: Setting an overall cap on carbon emissions, ensuring that products and foods are safe, maintaining the solvency and security of financial companies.
Under Reaganomics, government was the problem. It can still be a problem. But Obamanomics recognizes there are even bigger problems out there that can't be solved without government. By building the economy from the bottom up, recognizing the central importance of public investment, and understanding that markets cannot function without regulation, Obamanomics finally reverses and repudiates the economic philosophy that has dominated America since 1981.
If you look only at the small print, Obamanomics looks conservative. If you look at the big picture, it's revolutionary.
Wednesday 11 March 2009
by: Robert Reich
There are two ways to see Obamanomics.
The first, much preferred by the White House, is as a set of initiatives so modest as to hardly merit a raised eyebrow. Yes, steps must be taken to deal with the current economic crisis. But assuming the economy recovers next year, Obama's budget projects that government spending by the end of the decade will drop to around 22.5 percent of GDP, which is about where it was under Reagan.
What about those tax hikes on the wealthy? Obama merely restores the top two marginal income tax rates to what they were in the 1990's, the capital gains rate to its lowest level during that same prosperous decade, and the rate on dividends to a level even lower than it was in the 1990s. And even these modest reversions to the 1990's will affect only the wealthiest 3 percent of Americans, and not until 2011. Ninety-seven percent of small businesses won't pay a dime more. True, the very rich won't be able to deduct quite as much as they can now for their mortgage interest and charitable donations, but this is hardly revolutionary, either. In fact, it's another throwback - to the limits in place under Ronald Reagan. All told, taxes are projected to total 19 percent of GDP by the end of the decade. That's even lower than it was in the late 1990's.
Modest as they are, these taxes will generate enough revenue to pay for half of what's needed for universal health care, and still reduce the deficit by about $750 billion over ten years - to 3.1 percent of GDP by the end of the decade.
But isn't universal health care itself a pretty radical step? Not according to this view. The other half of what's needed to pay for universal health care will come from health-care savings that are also necessary to keep the current big health-care entitlement programs - Medicare and Medicaid - affordable. It's just common sense: Allow government to use its bargaining leverage under Medicare and Medicaid to lower drug prices, strengthen Medicare pay-for-performance incentives, and institute better disease management, prevention, and health information technologies.
What about the environment? Isn't cap and trade a huge deal? Not at all. Instead of heavy-handed regulation, it's a market solution to the problem of global warming. Government merely sets an overall cap on the amount of carbon dioxide to be allowed into the atmosphere, which drops annually, and then requires firms to bid for permits to pollute within that overall cap. Firms can buy and sell permits to each other; they can innovate to reduce pollution even further. Such a system will generate enough revenues to give 95 percent of Americans a yearly refundable tax credit of $400, and also finance research and development of renewable energy and a modernized electricity grid.
But isn't Obamanomics' approach to educational reform expensive and intrusive? No. By this view, it's very mainstream and incremental - and doesn't impose on the prerogatives of states and locales. It expands the tax credit for college tuition to $2,500 a year and increases Pell Grants to $5,500 yearly - almost negligible increases, given how fast tuitions are rising. It cuts subsidies to banks participating in the student-loan program, which is exactly what Bill Clinton did, and it provides some funds for early childhood education.
So there we have it: Obamanomics as pragmatic, incremental, centrist, even conservative.
But there's another way to view Obamanomics - as an economic philosophy exactly the opposite of the one that's dominated America for more than a quarter century.
The basic idea of Reaganomics was that the economy grows from the top down. Lower taxes on the wealthy make them work harder and invest more, and the benefits trickle down to everyone else. Rarely in economic history has a theory been more tested in the real world and proven so wrong. In point of fact, nothing trickled down. After the Reagan tax cuts, increases in the median wage slowed, adjusted for inflation. After George W. Bush's tax cuts for the wealthy, the median wage actually dropped. Meanwhile, most of the income went to the top. In 1980, just before the Reagan revolution, the richest 1 percent took home 9 percent of total national income. But by 2007, the richest 1 percent was taking home 22 percent.
Obamanomics, by contrast, holds that an economy grows best from the bottom up. Obama's program increases taxes on the top, and uses the proceeds to raise the living standards of average Americans by giving them lower taxes, better schools, and more affordable health insurance. That may not seem very radical, but compared to the last quarter-century it's revolutionary.
Reaganomics didn't believe in public investment, except perhaps when it came to the military. Everything else was considered government spending, which was assumed to be wasteful. Hence, the cuts (adjusted for inflation) during Reagan, Bush I and Bush II in education, job training, infrastructure, and basic research and development. And the reluctance to expand health insurance except when it came to corporate welfare for the pharmaceutical industry.
But Obamanomics is committed to these forms of public investment. And there's good reason: In a global economy, capital moves to wherever it can get the best deal around the globe. That means capital and jobs go to nations that can promise high returns either because labor is cheap and taxes and regulations low, or because labor is highly productive - well-educated, healthy, and supported by modern infrastructure.
Which do we want? For the better part of the last quarter-century our implicit economic strategy has tended toward the first. But that's a recipe for lower wages and lower living standards for most Americans, along with widening inequality. The only resource that's uniquely rooted in a national economy is its people - their skills, insights, capacities to collaborate, and the transportation and communication systems that link them together. Everything else - including capital, technology, designs, even plant and equipment - can move around the globe with increasing ease.
Bill Clinton talked a lot about the importance of public investment, but he failed to do much about it because he came to office during an economic expansion, and the major worry was excessive government spending leading to inflation. Obama comes to office during the biggest downturn since the Great Depression, and although he doesn't talk much about public investment his plan represents the largest commitment to it in forty years.
Reaganomics' third principle was that deregulated markets function better. They do, in many respects, but not always. And when they don't, all hell can break loose. Energy markets were deregulated and we wound up with Enron. Carbon emissions weren't controlled, and now we face global warming. Financial markets were deregulated and we have a global meltdown. Obamanomics, by contrast, accepts that government has an important role in setting the rules of the capitalist game: Setting an overall cap on carbon emissions, ensuring that products and foods are safe, maintaining the solvency and security of financial companies.
Under Reaganomics, government was the problem. It can still be a problem. But Obamanomics recognizes there are even bigger problems out there that can't be solved without government. By building the economy from the bottom up, recognizing the central importance of public investment, and understanding that markets cannot function without regulation, Obamanomics finally reverses and repudiates the economic philosophy that has dominated America since 1981.
If you look only at the small print, Obamanomics looks conservative. If you look at the big picture, it's revolutionary.
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
chocolate news
http://www.comedycentral.com/help/questionsCC.jhtml
the hilariously brilliant program Chocolate News, on comedy central, is gone, at least for the moment. comedy central has chosen not to renew the shows contract. maybe we can change their mind. if you like the show, and if enough of us write to comedy central at the link above, perhaps they will bring the show back. other canceled tv shows have been saved this way. i hope we can bring back Chocolate News. thank you. peace out.
my videos are on YouTube under, "franklandfields". enjoy.
the hilariously brilliant program Chocolate News, on comedy central, is gone, at least for the moment. comedy central has chosen not to renew the shows contract. maybe we can change their mind. if you like the show, and if enough of us write to comedy central at the link above, perhaps they will bring the show back. other canceled tv shows have been saved this way. i hope we can bring back Chocolate News. thank you. peace out.
my videos are on YouTube under, "franklandfields". enjoy.
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
1 - i wonder what barbie's doin' this mornin'? it is the morning after. 50! anybody see the artist rendering of what barbie should look like in the current aarp newspaper? pretty interesting. but seriously, here's the list of what barbie really did last night to celebrate her 50th.
10 - wanted to call ken, but couldn't find his new unlisted number, or his private facebook page.
9 - got a manicure and pedicure.
8 - picked out an outfit to wear.
7 - popped a couple of alleve for those midlife aches and pains.
6 - brushed teeth, flossed, and gargled for 20 seconds with listerine.
5 - called a couple of girlfriends to arrange a rendezvous and left voicemail.
4 - fed the turtle.
3 - put on a sweater to avoid the chill.
2 - sat down to wait for her girlfriends to call back.
1 - fell asleep at 8pm in her easy chair.
welcome to fifty barbie. enjoy. i have ken's number, but he's asked that i not give it out. sorry. you might wanna try myspace.com. love you!
======================================
2 - theory and idea.
theory - there must be at least two people (and probably more) who don't litter, for every one person who does. at any rate, we've got them vastly outnumbered.
so........
idea - how about those of us who don't litter, take it one step further, and simply pick up one piece (or more) of litter whenever we see it. that way, i'm theorizing, we can eliminate litter in no time at all. what do you think? is it worth a try? today i picked up two pieces of litter. please let me know how it goes for you.
=================================
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
enjoy.
peace.
10 - wanted to call ken, but couldn't find his new unlisted number, or his private facebook page.
9 - got a manicure and pedicure.
8 - picked out an outfit to wear.
7 - popped a couple of alleve for those midlife aches and pains.
6 - brushed teeth, flossed, and gargled for 20 seconds with listerine.
5 - called a couple of girlfriends to arrange a rendezvous and left voicemail.
4 - fed the turtle.
3 - put on a sweater to avoid the chill.
2 - sat down to wait for her girlfriends to call back.
1 - fell asleep at 8pm in her easy chair.
welcome to fifty barbie. enjoy. i have ken's number, but he's asked that i not give it out. sorry. you might wanna try myspace.com. love you!
======================================
2 - theory and idea.
theory - there must be at least two people (and probably more) who don't litter, for every one person who does. at any rate, we've got them vastly outnumbered.
so........
idea - how about those of us who don't litter, take it one step further, and simply pick up one piece (or more) of litter whenever we see it. that way, i'm theorizing, we can eliminate litter in no time at all. what do you think? is it worth a try? today i picked up two pieces of litter. please let me know how it goes for you.
=================================
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
enjoy.
peace.
Friday, March 06, 2009
WATCHMEN
i give this movie an extra large bag of popcorn, with extra real butter, with an endless refill large drink, with a large box of milk duds. thumbs up and grade A+. i really enjoyed this movie. it has good everything...acting, special effects, visuals, directing, morals, lessons, dialogue, etc...
i recommend everybody see this film. the violence is not too over the top for me. the story is very timely, and the scenes quite realistic and telling. of course the opinions expressed here are my own. you may have different ones, and i'd like to hear them.
take care.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com.
my films are on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
i'd love to hear your feedback on them.
have a glorious day.
peace.
i recommend everybody see this film. the violence is not too over the top for me. the story is very timely, and the scenes quite realistic and telling. of course the opinions expressed here are my own. you may have different ones, and i'd like to hear them.
take care.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com.
my films are on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
i'd love to hear your feedback on them.
have a glorious day.
peace.
Thursday, March 05, 2009
b-bye rush, rip
"March 4, 2009, 10:00 pm
Fears of a Clown
Once upon a time, you could drive to the most remote reaches of the United States and escape Rush Limbaugh. But from the Mogollon Mountains of New Mexico to the Badlands of South Dakota, where only the delicious twang of a country tune or the high-pitched pleadings of a lone lunatic came over the AM dial, there is now the Mighty El Rushbo.
As someone who spends a lot of time on the road, I used to find Limbaugh to be an obnoxious but entertaining companion, his eruptions more reliable than Old Faithful. But now that Limbaugh has become something else — the face of the Republican Party, by a White House that has played him brilliantly — he has been transformed into car-wreck-quality spectacle, at once scary and sad.
Behold:
The sweaty, swollen man in the black, half-buttoned shirt who ranted for nearly 90 minutes Saturday at the Conservative Political Action Conference. He reiterated his desire to see the president of his country fail. He misstated the Constitution’s intent while accusing President Obama of “bastardizing” the document. He made fun of one man’s service in Vietnam, to laughter.
(J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press) Rush Limbaugh.
David Letterman compared him to an Eastern European gangster. But he looked more like a bouncer at a strip club who spent all his tips on one bad outfit. And for the Republican Party, Limbaugh has become very much a vice.
Smarter Republicans know he is not good for them. As the conservative writer David Frum said recently, “If you’re a talk radio host and you have five million who listen and there are 50 million who hate you, you make a nice living. If you’re a Republican party, you’re marginalized.”
Polling has found Limbaugh, a self-described prescription-drug addict who sees America from a private jet, to be nearly as unpopular as Rev. Jeremiah Wright, who damned America in the way that Limbaugh has now damned the nation’s newly elected leader. But Republicans just can’t quit him. So even poor Michael Steele, the nominal head of the Republican Party who dared to criticize him, had to grovel and crawl back to the feet of Limbaugh.
Some expected more mettle from Steele. After all, this rare African-American Republican won his post after defeating a candidate who submitted the parody song from Limbaugh’s show: “Barack the Magic Negro.”
Race is an obsession with Limbaugh, one of the threads I noticed on those long drives on country roads.
When Colin Powell endorsed Obama during the campaign, Limbaugh said it was entirely because of race. After the election, Powell said the way for the party, which has been his home, to regain its footing was to say the Republican Party must stop “shouting at the world.”
In 2003, Limbaugh said quarterback Donovan McNabb was overrated because the media wanted a black to succeed. Over the next six years, McNabb threw for nearly 150 touchdowns and went to a Super Bowl.
And Limbaugh launched the current battle when he said of Obama: “We are being told that … we have to bend over, grab the ankles, bend over forward, backward, whichever, because his father was black, because this is the first black president.”
Translation: submit sexually to a black man because “someone” is telling us all to. Who? Which leaders of the Democratic Party have made such a claim? Which opinion-makers? But therein lies the main tactic of Limbaugh, an old demagogue technique: create a straw man, then tear it down. The latest example was Saturday, when Limbaugh presented himself as the defender of capitalism, liberty and unfettered free markets. Obama, he has said since, is waging a “war on capitalism.”
There is a war, all right. We are witnessing the worst debacle of unfettered capitalism in our lifetime brought on by — you got it, capitalism at its worst. It cannibalized itself. Government, sad to say, had nothing to do with it — except for criminal neglect of oversight.
Now that government has been forced to the rescue, just who is insisting on taxpayer bailouts? Who is in line for handouts? Who is saying that only government can save capitalism? The very leaders of unregulated markets who injected this poison into the economy, the very plutocrats that Limbaugh celebrates.
And, of course, let us never forget that the bailouts of banks and insurance companies were initiated by the Republican president Limbaugh defended for eight years.
Of late, Limbaugh has wondered why he has trouble with women. His base is white, male, Republican — people the party has to stop pandering to if it hopes to govern soon.
It’s little wonder that the thrice-married Limbaugh, who uses “femi-Nazi,” “info-babe” and “PMSNBC” (Get it? The network is full of women suffering pre-menstrual cramps, ha-ha), among his monikers for women, can’t get a date with that demographic.
For Democrats, this is all going to plan. It was James Carville and associates who first cooked up associating Limbaugh with the opposition, as Politico reported. Then on Sunday, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said Limbaugh was the “voice and the intellectual force and energy behind the Republican Party.”
Limbaugh played his role, ever the fool. A brave Republican could have challenged him, could have had a “have you no shame” moment with him, giving the party some other identity, some spine. Instead, they caved — from Steele, to the leaders in the House, Eric Cantor and Mike Pence, to Gov. Bobby Jindal, who would be ridiculed by Limbaugh for his real first name, Piyush, were he a Democrat.
You could almost hear their teeth clattering in fear of the all-powerful talk radio wacko, the denier of global warming, the man who said Bill Clinton’s economic policies would fail just before an unprecedented run of prosperity.
But Limbaugh has a fear of his own. If people see him purely as an “entertainer,” as Steele suggested, he will be exposed for what he is: a clown with a very large audience."
Fears of a Clown
Once upon a time, you could drive to the most remote reaches of the United States and escape Rush Limbaugh. But from the Mogollon Mountains of New Mexico to the Badlands of South Dakota, where only the delicious twang of a country tune or the high-pitched pleadings of a lone lunatic came over the AM dial, there is now the Mighty El Rushbo.
As someone who spends a lot of time on the road, I used to find Limbaugh to be an obnoxious but entertaining companion, his eruptions more reliable than Old Faithful. But now that Limbaugh has become something else — the face of the Republican Party, by a White House that has played him brilliantly — he has been transformed into car-wreck-quality spectacle, at once scary and sad.
Behold:
The sweaty, swollen man in the black, half-buttoned shirt who ranted for nearly 90 minutes Saturday at the Conservative Political Action Conference. He reiterated his desire to see the president of his country fail. He misstated the Constitution’s intent while accusing President Obama of “bastardizing” the document. He made fun of one man’s service in Vietnam, to laughter.
(J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press) Rush Limbaugh.
David Letterman compared him to an Eastern European gangster. But he looked more like a bouncer at a strip club who spent all his tips on one bad outfit. And for the Republican Party, Limbaugh has become very much a vice.
Smarter Republicans know he is not good for them. As the conservative writer David Frum said recently, “If you’re a talk radio host and you have five million who listen and there are 50 million who hate you, you make a nice living. If you’re a Republican party, you’re marginalized.”
Polling has found Limbaugh, a self-described prescription-drug addict who sees America from a private jet, to be nearly as unpopular as Rev. Jeremiah Wright, who damned America in the way that Limbaugh has now damned the nation’s newly elected leader. But Republicans just can’t quit him. So even poor Michael Steele, the nominal head of the Republican Party who dared to criticize him, had to grovel and crawl back to the feet of Limbaugh.
Some expected more mettle from Steele. After all, this rare African-American Republican won his post after defeating a candidate who submitted the parody song from Limbaugh’s show: “Barack the Magic Negro.”
Race is an obsession with Limbaugh, one of the threads I noticed on those long drives on country roads.
When Colin Powell endorsed Obama during the campaign, Limbaugh said it was entirely because of race. After the election, Powell said the way for the party, which has been his home, to regain its footing was to say the Republican Party must stop “shouting at the world.”
In 2003, Limbaugh said quarterback Donovan McNabb was overrated because the media wanted a black to succeed. Over the next six years, McNabb threw for nearly 150 touchdowns and went to a Super Bowl.
And Limbaugh launched the current battle when he said of Obama: “We are being told that … we have to bend over, grab the ankles, bend over forward, backward, whichever, because his father was black, because this is the first black president.”
Translation: submit sexually to a black man because “someone” is telling us all to. Who? Which leaders of the Democratic Party have made such a claim? Which opinion-makers? But therein lies the main tactic of Limbaugh, an old demagogue technique: create a straw man, then tear it down. The latest example was Saturday, when Limbaugh presented himself as the defender of capitalism, liberty and unfettered free markets. Obama, he has said since, is waging a “war on capitalism.”
There is a war, all right. We are witnessing the worst debacle of unfettered capitalism in our lifetime brought on by — you got it, capitalism at its worst. It cannibalized itself. Government, sad to say, had nothing to do with it — except for criminal neglect of oversight.
Now that government has been forced to the rescue, just who is insisting on taxpayer bailouts? Who is in line for handouts? Who is saying that only government can save capitalism? The very leaders of unregulated markets who injected this poison into the economy, the very plutocrats that Limbaugh celebrates.
And, of course, let us never forget that the bailouts of banks and insurance companies were initiated by the Republican president Limbaugh defended for eight years.
Of late, Limbaugh has wondered why he has trouble with women. His base is white, male, Republican — people the party has to stop pandering to if it hopes to govern soon.
It’s little wonder that the thrice-married Limbaugh, who uses “femi-Nazi,” “info-babe” and “PMSNBC” (Get it? The network is full of women suffering pre-menstrual cramps, ha-ha), among his monikers for women, can’t get a date with that demographic.
For Democrats, this is all going to plan. It was James Carville and associates who first cooked up associating Limbaugh with the opposition, as Politico reported. Then on Sunday, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said Limbaugh was the “voice and the intellectual force and energy behind the Republican Party.”
Limbaugh played his role, ever the fool. A brave Republican could have challenged him, could have had a “have you no shame” moment with him, giving the party some other identity, some spine. Instead, they caved — from Steele, to the leaders in the House, Eric Cantor and Mike Pence, to Gov. Bobby Jindal, who would be ridiculed by Limbaugh for his real first name, Piyush, were he a Democrat.
You could almost hear their teeth clattering in fear of the all-powerful talk radio wacko, the denier of global warming, the man who said Bill Clinton’s economic policies would fail just before an unprecedented run of prosperity.
But Limbaugh has a fear of his own. If people see him purely as an “entertainer,” as Steele suggested, he will be exposed for what he is: a clown with a very large audience."
Monday, March 02, 2009
a little movie trivia
All Time Box Office (U.S.)
Rank Title Dist. Cumulative
Gross Release
Date
1 Titanic Paramount Pictures $600,788,188 12/19/1997
2 The Dark Knight Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution $533,213,994 07/18/2008
3 Star Wars 20th Century Fox $460,998,007 05/25/1977
4 Shrek 2 DreamWorks $441,226,247 05/19/2004
5 E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial Universal Pictures $435,110,554 06/11/1982
6 Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace N/A $431,088,301 05/19/1999
7 Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest Buena Vista Pictures Distribution, Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures International $423,315,812 07/07/2006
8 Spider-Man Sony Pictures International, Sony Pictures Releasing $403,706,375 05/03/2002
9 Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith 20th Century Fox $380,270,577 05/19/2005
10 The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King New Line Cinema $377,027,325 12/17/2003
11 Spider-Man 2 Sony Pictures Releasing $373,585,825 06/30/2004
Rank Title Dist. Cumulative
Gross Release
Date
1 Titanic Paramount Pictures $600,788,188 12/19/1997
2 The Dark Knight Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution $533,213,994 07/18/2008
3 Star Wars 20th Century Fox $460,998,007 05/25/1977
4 Shrek 2 DreamWorks $441,226,247 05/19/2004
5 E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial Universal Pictures $435,110,554 06/11/1982
6 Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace N/A $431,088,301 05/19/1999
7 Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest Buena Vista Pictures Distribution, Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures International $423,315,812 07/07/2006
8 Spider-Man Sony Pictures International, Sony Pictures Releasing $403,706,375 05/03/2002
9 Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith 20th Century Fox $380,270,577 05/19/2005
10 The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King New Line Cinema $377,027,325 12/17/2003
11 Spider-Man 2 Sony Pictures Releasing $373,585,825 06/30/2004
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
the up side
a new deadline has been set for TV conversion from analog to digital. i haven't a clue what any of it means, but read all about it here, http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_11721487, and i'm writing about it anyway. here's what i understand. if you don't have a converter box, you ain't gonna be able to watch much TV. this is going to hurt. for some, the pain will be unbearable, while for others it will only be one more inconvenience in a numb life where they've gotten all too used to inconvenience.
and now the upside.
if people can't watch TV, because they can't afford a $40 TV converter box, maybe, just maybe, they'll read more? think of it. this is good, right? it's free to check out books from your local library, if they haven't closed down due to budget cuts. i'm thinking (hoping) this TV CONverter box nonsense will cause more people to read more. if people read more, perhaps they'll learn more, and understand more, and get smarter, and live more fulfilled lives. or am i just nuts?
what do you think?
i'm on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
enjoy. peace out.
and now the upside.
if people can't watch TV, because they can't afford a $40 TV converter box, maybe, just maybe, they'll read more? think of it. this is good, right? it's free to check out books from your local library, if they haven't closed down due to budget cuts. i'm thinking (hoping) this TV CONverter box nonsense will cause more people to read more. if people read more, perhaps they'll learn more, and understand more, and get smarter, and live more fulfilled lives. or am i just nuts?
what do you think?
i'm on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
enjoy. peace out.
Friday, February 20, 2009
The Pink Panther 2
for those who grew up seeing peter sellers play the pink panther, nobody will ever do it like that. that said, i give this latest pink panther a medium bag of popcorn, no butter, no drink, no milk duds. sorry. it's mildly funny. they try hard. i think what's needed is a better script. at any rate, it's fun entertainment, and laughter was heard in the theatre. it's not the funniest comedy i've seen, but it will do.
to view my films, see them on YouTube under, "franklandfields". enjoy. peace out.
to view my films, see them on YouTube under, "franklandfields". enjoy. peace out.
Monday, February 16, 2009
Friday, February 06, 2009
Slumdog Millionaire
this is one of the best films i have seen this year. i give it a full bag of popcorn, with extra real butter, and a large refillable all-you-can-drink drink, and a bag of chips. this is a movie you must not miss. i really enjoyed it, and you should stop reading NOW if you don't want to know any more about the movie. one of the reasons i liked this film so much is because it has what i want from every movie and out of life: a happy ending.
hope i haven't spoiled it for you. enjoy. peace. on YouTube under, "franklandfields". be.
hope i haven't spoiled it for you. enjoy. peace. on YouTube under, "franklandfields". be.
Friday, January 30, 2009
defiance, the 2008 movie
all races and cultures have their stories of defiance. none is more horrific than any other, or less important. human suffering is human suffering. as these stories are told over and over in books and films, we come to understand what shakespeare said many years ago. 'we all bleed, we all cry, we all hurt, we all die', etc.
defiance the movie, with 007, is a good story and adaptation from the book. it is universally appealing, because we all have such stories in our own culture and race. i give this film a solid B. the best movie i have seen this season is, the curious case of benjamin button. any way you look at it, "an eye for an eye makes the whole world blind". www.franklandfield.blogspot.com. on YouTube under, "franklandfields". enjoy. peace.
defiance the movie, with 007, is a good story and adaptation from the book. it is universally appealing, because we all have such stories in our own culture and race. i give this film a solid B. the best movie i have seen this season is, the curious case of benjamin button. any way you look at it, "an eye for an eye makes the whole world blind". www.franklandfield.blogspot.com. on YouTube under, "franklandfields". enjoy. peace.
Friday, January 23, 2009
Frost/Nixon
this is a film worth seeing. i give it a full bag of popcorn, with extra butter, and a medium drink. the movie is a good history lesson. the performances are great. the cat and mouse game between frost and nixon is entertaining. i would hope ron howard will do a similar movie about gerald ford, who of course pardoned nixon. i have seen two films this year about presidents, and they have both been magnificent. they are, W, and Frost/Nixon. i recommend both movies. frost/nixon definitely gets a thumbs up from me.
please let me know your opinion.
enjoy.
peace.
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
please let me know your opinion.
enjoy.
peace.
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
President Barack Obama
it's been 3 and 1/2 days. how are you feeling? i'm still euphoric. our new president is off and running. i'm thinking these are the first days of the next eight years. what do you think? enjoy. peace.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
i am now uploading a new film on YouTube. you will soon be able to watch it. please let me know what you think. i deeply appreciate your opinions and feedback. history is being made at this very moment. enjoy. please make a difference each and every day. peace. find the film on YouTube under, "franklandfields".
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
Yes We Did!
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
Yes We Did!
Friday, January 16, 2009
Last Chance Harvey
i gladly give this film a full bag of popcorn, with extra butter, and a medium drink. this is not my highest rating for a movie, but it is close. i enjoyed the story, acting, scenery, etc...
the movie is very sweet, charming, believable, sincere, and it has a happy ending. i might even think a sequel could happen. it is certainly, in my opinion, worth the price of admission. you may even cry. i nearly did.
i could not live in london. too gray, cold, and rainy for this desert rat. i hope you'll find my opinion of this movie helpful. i'm not a critic, nor do i write reviews. enjoy. peace.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
the movie is very sweet, charming, believable, sincere, and it has a happy ending. i might even think a sequel could happen. it is certainly, in my opinion, worth the price of admission. you may even cry. i nearly did.
i could not live in london. too gray, cold, and rainy for this desert rat. i hope you'll find my opinion of this movie helpful. i'm not a critic, nor do i write reviews. enjoy. peace.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
Thursday, January 15, 2009
new film rating system
i'm giving this a try.
tell me what you think.
"a full bag of popcorn, extra butter, and a large drink" = my highest rating for a movie you must see. let's say it's the same as five stars, or an A+.
"a full bag of popcorn" = four stars, or a B.
"a medium bag of popcorn" = three stars, or a C.
"a small bag of burnt popcorn" = two stars, or a D.
"a box of sour gummy worms" = one star, or an F.
"couldn't afford munchies" = don't bother seeing this film at all, because it a sucka sucka sucka!
rating system subject to change at any time, without prior notice, like life.
"you never know what's comin'."
enjoy.
peace.
tell me what you think.
"a full bag of popcorn, extra butter, and a large drink" = my highest rating for a movie you must see. let's say it's the same as five stars, or an A+.
"a full bag of popcorn" = four stars, or a B.
"a medium bag of popcorn" = three stars, or a C.
"a small bag of burnt popcorn" = two stars, or a D.
"a box of sour gummy worms" = one star, or an F.
"couldn't afford munchies" = don't bother seeing this film at all, because it a sucka sucka sucka!
rating system subject to change at any time, without prior notice, like life.
"you never know what's comin'."
enjoy.
peace.
witness
HISTORY IN THE MAKING...
i hope everybody will witness history this tuesday, january 20th, 2009, beginning about 8am our time. (california time)
some compare this event to the moon landing, and if that works for them, so be it.
i say, nothing compares to the coming historical events.
if you can, stay home and watch history being made right before your eyes.
take a sick day, if you are one of the lucky ones who still has a job.
don't let this opportunity pass you by.
i plan on watching all day.
i would compare this historical event to the signing of the declaration of independence.
and that, for what it's worth, is my opinion.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
enjoy.
peace.
i hope everybody will witness history this tuesday, january 20th, 2009, beginning about 8am our time. (california time)
some compare this event to the moon landing, and if that works for them, so be it.
i say, nothing compares to the coming historical events.
if you can, stay home and watch history being made right before your eyes.
take a sick day, if you are one of the lucky ones who still has a job.
don't let this opportunity pass you by.
i plan on watching all day.
i would compare this historical event to the signing of the declaration of independence.
and that, for what it's worth, is my opinion.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
enjoy.
peace.
Monday, January 12, 2009
gran torino
good film.
please don't miss this movie.
thumbs up.
enjoy.
peace.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
please don't miss this movie.
thumbs up.
enjoy.
peace.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
Sunday, January 11, 2009
polls, polls, polls
polls, polls, polls
Posted 1/11/2009 11:19 AM PST on MyDesert.com, and here. enjoy.
http://hnn.us/articles/47918.html
"And that's not a minority opinion. In a 2006 Siena College survey of 744 history professors, 82% rated President Bush below average, or a failure.
Last April, in an informal poll by George Mason University of 109 historians, Mr. Bush fared even worse - 98% considered him a failed president. Sixty-one percent judged him, as Ellis does, one of the worst in American history."
interesting stuff, huh?
full article here:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/01/11/sunday/main4712837.shtml
Posted 1/11/2009 11:19 AM PST on MyDesert.com, and here. enjoy.
http://hnn.us/articles/47918.html
"And that's not a minority opinion. In a 2006 Siena College survey of 744 history professors, 82% rated President Bush below average, or a failure.
Last April, in an informal poll by George Mason University of 109 historians, Mr. Bush fared even worse - 98% considered him a failed president. Sixty-one percent judged him, as Ellis does, one of the worst in American history."
interesting stuff, huh?
full article here:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/01/11/sunday/main4712837.shtml
Thursday, January 08, 2009
485k for china?!
laura bush recently spent $485,000 for white house china. her money? or taxpayer money? any way you look at it, that's a lot of money, so maybe we can help out? how about everybody who can afford to, send a recycled new paper plate to the white house.
if you want, include a personal note, i'm sure laura and george would appreciate it.
http://cosmos.bcst.yahoo.com/up/player/popup/?rn=3906861&cl=11432032&ch=4226714&src=news
if you want, include a personal note, i'm sure laura and george would appreciate it.
http://cosmos.bcst.yahoo.com/up/player/popup/?rn=3906861&cl=11432032&ch=4226714&src=news
Monday, January 05, 2009
an eye for an eye
you may have heard this one:
"an eye for an eye makes the whole world blind."
in terms of violence and conflict, this is certainly true.
it's probably true in most other ways too.
today i write about violence and conflict.
any violence and conflict.
not just war.
"war is never the answer."
no doubt, you've heard that one too.
in order to eliminate conflict and violence, somebody simply has to stop.
conflict and violence require two, like the tango.
what if somebody is shooting rockets at you every hour?
what is your answer? not violence.
you may die, but you won't answer violence with violence.
the world will see you in the most positive light, as the victim.
the world will demand that the violence against you be stopped.
if you have the right to defend yourself, and you defend yourself, then so does everybody else, and the cycle/circle of violence continues perpetually.
if only we could harness the energy from violence for good.
if somebody is violent to me, i will not respond with violence.
in order for there to be peace, we must eliminate violence.
we must figure out how to live together in peace and harmony.
whether this will happen before humankind is extinct, is anybody's guess.
i remain optimistic, and will continue to eliminate violence whenever and wherever i can.
i hope you'll join me.
in the meantime, peace.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
"an eye for an eye makes the whole world blind."
in terms of violence and conflict, this is certainly true.
it's probably true in most other ways too.
today i write about violence and conflict.
any violence and conflict.
not just war.
"war is never the answer."
no doubt, you've heard that one too.
in order to eliminate conflict and violence, somebody simply has to stop.
conflict and violence require two, like the tango.
what if somebody is shooting rockets at you every hour?
what is your answer? not violence.
you may die, but you won't answer violence with violence.
the world will see you in the most positive light, as the victim.
the world will demand that the violence against you be stopped.
if you have the right to defend yourself, and you defend yourself, then so does everybody else, and the cycle/circle of violence continues perpetually.
if only we could harness the energy from violence for good.
if somebody is violent to me, i will not respond with violence.
in order for there to be peace, we must eliminate violence.
we must figure out how to live together in peace and harmony.
whether this will happen before humankind is extinct, is anybody's guess.
i remain optimistic, and will continue to eliminate violence whenever and wherever i can.
i hope you'll join me.
in the meantime, peace.
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
Friday, January 02, 2009
marley and me
thumbs up for this film.
bring tissue.
you'll cry.
good movie.
enjoy.
peace.
what do you think?
bring tissue.
you'll cry.
good movie.
enjoy.
peace.
what do you think?
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
happy new year
2009 will be just fine,
so sit back and relax,
and enjoy the facts,
Obama is president, hooray,
everything's gonna be OK!
bush is soon gone and forgotten,
we can now clean up all that is rotten,
the last eight years have been, well,
some would say HELL,
it will take a lot to fix what's wrong,
and we must all pitch in and be strong,
only together can we work this out,
this is what america is all about,
so stop the whining, complaining, and finger-pointing,
americans have spoken,
on january 20th, 2009,
there will be an historic anointing."
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
happy new year.
enjoy.
peace.
so sit back and relax,
and enjoy the facts,
Obama is president, hooray,
everything's gonna be OK!
bush is soon gone and forgotten,
we can now clean up all that is rotten,
the last eight years have been, well,
some would say HELL,
it will take a lot to fix what's wrong,
and we must all pitch in and be strong,
only together can we work this out,
this is what america is all about,
so stop the whining, complaining, and finger-pointing,
americans have spoken,
on january 20th, 2009,
there will be an historic anointing."
www.franklandfield.blogspot.com
on YouTube under, "franklandfields"
happy new year.
enjoy.
peace.
Monday, December 29, 2008
good talk
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/steven_pinker_chalks_it_up_to_the_blank_slate.html
well worth viewing.
enjoy.
peace.
well worth viewing.
enjoy.
peace.
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Monday, December 22, 2008
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Thursday, December 18, 2008
chocolate news
chocolate news is one of the best shows currently on TV.
check it out.
let me know what you think.
peace.
check it out.
let me know what you think.
peace.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
from iPhone
raining today.
mother earth is enjoying it.
as is said:
"no rain, no rainbows".
and then some.
peace
mother earth is enjoying it.
as is said:
"no rain, no rainbows".
and then some.
peace
Sunday, December 14, 2008
Friday, December 12, 2008
the day the earth stood still
good movie.
i recommend it.
thumbs up.
good film and great message.
i hope everybody will see it.
peace.
i recommend it.
thumbs up.
good film and great message.
i hope everybody will see it.
peace.
Monday, December 08, 2008
did you know?
at least two people in this world love you so much they would die for you.
at least fifteen people in this world love you in some way.
a smile from you can bring happiness to anyone, even if they don't like you.
every night, somebody somewhere thinks about you before they go to sleep.
you mean the world to someone.
if not for you, someone may not be living.
you are special and unique.
when you make the biggest mistake ever, something good can still come from it.
when you think the world has turned its back on you, take a look: you most likely turned your back on the world.
someone that you don't even know exists loves you.
always remember the compliments you received. forget about the rude remarks.
always tell someone how you feel about them; you will feel much better when they know, and you'll both be happy.
if you have a great friend, take the time to let that person know.
and always spread peace.
at least fifteen people in this world love you in some way.
a smile from you can bring happiness to anyone, even if they don't like you.
every night, somebody somewhere thinks about you before they go to sleep.
you mean the world to someone.
if not for you, someone may not be living.
you are special and unique.
when you make the biggest mistake ever, something good can still come from it.
when you think the world has turned its back on you, take a look: you most likely turned your back on the world.
someone that you don't even know exists loves you.
always remember the compliments you received. forget about the rude remarks.
always tell someone how you feel about them; you will feel much better when they know, and you'll both be happy.
if you have a great friend, take the time to let that person know.
and always spread peace.
Sunday, December 07, 2008
Thursday, December 04, 2008
sleep
a friend of mine says:
"i'll get the best sleep of my life when i'm dead."
i've got something better. i am now getting the best sleep of my life AND i'm waking up afterward!
i've recently purchased a tempur-pedic bed.
the old bed was old. i cannot tell you how old, because i'm ashamed.
the new tempur-pedic bed is HEAVEN! it's difficult to describe to people who have never experienced sleeping on one, but i'll try.
think about sleeping on a cloud, filled with warm water, as if you're floating, with no pressure on any part of your body. think about waking up with NO aches and pains. think about sleeping so deeply, practically nothing bothers you or wakes you, and you rarely recall your dreams. think about your bed being the perfect temperature, no matter what temperature you or your room are. think this is too good to be true? i'm here to tell you it is not.
tempur-pedic will let you try their mattress and return it if you don't like it. they do this, because very few people return their mattress. and i know why.
it is the best sleep i've ever had. from now on, i will stay in hotels with tempur-pedic beds. i don't think i'd sleep very well on anything else.
this isn't an ad for tempur-pedic. this is me telling you how well i'm sleeping now that i have a tempur-pedic bed. this is me overjoyed with the increased energy i have from less sleep. when you sleep better, you need less sleep. it is amazing and wonderful and a bag of chips.
and now on with the rest of the day.
peace.
"i'll get the best sleep of my life when i'm dead."
i've got something better. i am now getting the best sleep of my life AND i'm waking up afterward!
i've recently purchased a tempur-pedic bed.
the old bed was old. i cannot tell you how old, because i'm ashamed.
the new tempur-pedic bed is HEAVEN! it's difficult to describe to people who have never experienced sleeping on one, but i'll try.
think about sleeping on a cloud, filled with warm water, as if you're floating, with no pressure on any part of your body. think about waking up with NO aches and pains. think about sleeping so deeply, practically nothing bothers you or wakes you, and you rarely recall your dreams. think about your bed being the perfect temperature, no matter what temperature you or your room are. think this is too good to be true? i'm here to tell you it is not.
tempur-pedic will let you try their mattress and return it if you don't like it. they do this, because very few people return their mattress. and i know why.
it is the best sleep i've ever had. from now on, i will stay in hotels with tempur-pedic beds. i don't think i'd sleep very well on anything else.
this isn't an ad for tempur-pedic. this is me telling you how well i'm sleeping now that i have a tempur-pedic bed. this is me overjoyed with the increased energy i have from less sleep. when you sleep better, you need less sleep. it is amazing and wonderful and a bag of chips.
and now on with the rest of the day.
peace.
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Monday, November 24, 2008
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Monday, November 17, 2008
Sunday, November 16, 2008
yes we can, yes we did, and yes we will
http://change.gov/newsroom/entry/your_weekly_address_from_the_president_elect/
Friday, November 14, 2008
Friday, November 07, 2008
Thursday, November 06, 2008
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
perspective
http://www.aish.com/heroesOfIsrael/heroesOfIsraelDefault/From_Ethiopia_to_Israels_Knesset.asp
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Monday, October 27, 2008
Friday, October 24, 2008
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
quote of the day
"One of the major reasons so many of us remain hurried, frightened, and competitive, and continue to live life as if it were one giant emergency, is our fear that if we were to become more peaceful and loving, we would suddenly stop achieving our goals. We would become lazy and apathetic."
by Richard Carlson, PH.D.
from his book, Don't Sweat The Small Stuff...and it's all small stuff.
by Richard Carlson, PH.D.
from his book, Don't Sweat The Small Stuff...and it's all small stuff.
Friday, October 17, 2008
W.
i just saw W., and i endorse it, and give it a thumbs up.
i'm talking oscar worthy.
what do you think?
peace.
i'm talking oscar worthy.
what do you think?
peace.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Friday, October 10, 2008
Friday, October 03, 2008
Wednesday, October 01, 2008
President John McCain
PLEASE VOTE ON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH, 2008!
if i were president john mcCain, here are the first ten things i'd do in my first ten days as president of our united states.
day 1 - install a state of the art emergency room in the white house. i am after all 72 years old.
day 2 - remove all the grass at the white house and replace it with environmentally friendly and water conserving plants.
day 3 - i'd have a really close look in all the white house closets. there has to be some skeletons someplace. and time permitting, go on a moose hunt with my vice president.
day 4 - i'd have my staff calculate the exact number of vacation days that george w. bush took while in office (a record) to make certain i didn't take more.
day 5 - since i've been in office now for a week, i'd take a break at one of my nine (or is it ten?) houses, and perhaps buy another pair of $300 italian shoes. they are so comfy!
day 6 - i'd telephone putin, the saudi's, and others, and make it crystal clear to them that if they misbehave, i'll start another war.
day 7 - i'd ask my military advisers and generals if it was actually possible to start another war, because i think all our troops are currently over-committed around the world.
day 8 - i'd reinstate the draft, raising the age to 50.
day 9 - i'd take a nap. it's exhausting being president, especially when you're 72 years old.
day 10 - i'd come to my senses, apologize to the american people, and the rest of the world, resign my presidency, and have my vice president resign too, and then i'd declare our new president to be President Barack Obama.
of course all this hinges on me actually being elected on november 4th, 2008.
and surviving the revolution between then and january 20, 2009.
but we all have a dream.
PLEASE VOTE ON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH, 2008!
if i were president john mcCain, here are the first ten things i'd do in my first ten days as president of our united states.
day 1 - install a state of the art emergency room in the white house. i am after all 72 years old.
day 2 - remove all the grass at the white house and replace it with environmentally friendly and water conserving plants.
day 3 - i'd have a really close look in all the white house closets. there has to be some skeletons someplace. and time permitting, go on a moose hunt with my vice president.
day 4 - i'd have my staff calculate the exact number of vacation days that george w. bush took while in office (a record) to make certain i didn't take more.
day 5 - since i've been in office now for a week, i'd take a break at one of my nine (or is it ten?) houses, and perhaps buy another pair of $300 italian shoes. they are so comfy!
day 6 - i'd telephone putin, the saudi's, and others, and make it crystal clear to them that if they misbehave, i'll start another war.
day 7 - i'd ask my military advisers and generals if it was actually possible to start another war, because i think all our troops are currently over-committed around the world.
day 8 - i'd reinstate the draft, raising the age to 50.
day 9 - i'd take a nap. it's exhausting being president, especially when you're 72 years old.
day 10 - i'd come to my senses, apologize to the american people, and the rest of the world, resign my presidency, and have my vice president resign too, and then i'd declare our new president to be President Barack Obama.
of course all this hinges on me actually being elected on november 4th, 2008.
and surviving the revolution between then and january 20, 2009.
but we all have a dream.
PLEASE VOTE ON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH, 2008!
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
opinion
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/30/opinion/30herbert.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
one cannot debate the facts of history.
one cannot debate the facts of history.
Friday, September 26, 2008
Thursday, September 25, 2008
White Tea and The CrackaHeds
announcing a brand new improv performance group available for your "special" function(s).
for bookings, contact franklandfield@yahoo.com
thanks and peace.
for bookings, contact franklandfield@yahoo.com
thanks and peace.
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Monday, September 22, 2008
OK
http://finance.yahoo.com/loans/article/105735/The-65-mpg-Ford-the-U.S.-Can%27t-Have
well, OK then.
or are there "other" reasons?!
well, OK then.
or are there "other" reasons?!
Friday, September 19, 2008
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Sunday, September 14, 2008
Friday, September 12, 2008
who said this?
"God made dinosaurs 4,000 years ago as ultimately
flawed creatures, lizards of Satan really, so when they died and became
petroleum products we, made in his perfect image, could use them
in our pickup trucks, snow machines and fishing boats."
"who said this" is a brand new feature beginning today.
enjoy.
peace.
flawed creatures, lizards of Satan really, so when they died and became
petroleum products we, made in his perfect image, could use them
in our pickup trucks, snow machines and fishing boats."
"who said this" is a brand new feature beginning today.
enjoy.
peace.
RIP my friend
"Bob Beck
August 26, 2008
Grizzled, handsome, locally esteemed and internationally recognizable Camel and Marlboro man Bob Beck died at home Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2008, after a difficult battle with cancer. Soft-spoken, gentle-souled Beck, so different in persona from the rough-hewn Indiana-Jones type character that would and often did “walk a mile for a Camel” through the most harrowing elemental obstacles, seldom showed impatience and temper in his post-camera life except over two subjects — protecting the habitat that we share with fellow species, and what he perceived as the hubris and disregard of the current Bush administration for the care and wellbeing of its citizenry.
Said Beck, regarding our shared-planet responsibility, “You have to protect your resources, especially here [in Idyllwild] where we rely upon what comes from the sky. People who don’t care about their environment and the animals are greedy and self-serving. It would be a happier Idyllwild and world if people cared about such things. I really strongly believe if a person loves, respects and takes care of animals — which I put myself on equal footing with, I’m no better or worse than they are — they will respect those around them more. Those who mistreat and don’t respect animals will do the same thing with everything else around them.”
About the second Bush family presidency, Beck fumed, “I’m definitely for any government that takes care of its people and the environment, and cares. But politicians usually like to keep the power and control so that philosophy is usually fiction. But it’s what I’d like. People will disagree, which is part of being in a free society, but I’m definitely opposed to the [George W.] Bush administration. What they’ve tried to do is criminal and self-serving; they don’t have the environment or people at heart. Bush seems to only care about serving corporations’ needs, not serving humankind domestically or internationally.”
Beck was a trusted good friend and neighbor of this writer. In 2003, at the height of the bark beetle crisis when this writer had to remove scores of beetle-ravaged grandfather pines removed from his property, Beck called to offer condolences, gently understanding the sadness that came with the loss of strong, silent and seemingly indestructible friends that had weathered so many years — understanding that life, important and valuable, had passed.
Those who knew and loved big Bob Beck — his soft words, good heart, merry twinkle in his eyes, and love for family and causes that moved him — know that someone important and valuable has passed. He cut a strong, graceful and impressive swath through any crowd through which he passed. He was bigger-than-life and humbly and affably human.
“It is with great sadness that I share the news that Bob Beck died early yesterday morning from cancer,” wrote Associates of Idyllwild Arts Foundation President Jan Goldberg. “He died peacefully, in his sleep, with his dear wife Erin at his side. We will all miss Bob — that deep voice, that smile, the charm and good will that he showed us all. He will always be an inspiration to us of how to live a gentle, sweet life with family, friends and dogs. Bob, we will miss you.”
Beck was born in Oceanside in 1936, bought a cabin in Idyllwild with wife Erin O’Neill in 1981, and moved here full-time in 1997. Of his years as the Camel man, Beck said, “When I did it, I wasn’t that aware of the effects of smoking. This is one of the problems with doing such a campaign. My problem with the cigarette industry was they covered up the problems and didn’t pass them on to the public. For that reason, I wouldn’t do it today.”
Beck leaves behind his wife, Erin; son Matthew; daughters Liza, Kristen and Benedicte; and grandchildren."
from The Town Crier Newspaper, Idyllwild, California, author unknown
August 26, 2008
Grizzled, handsome, locally esteemed and internationally recognizable Camel and Marlboro man Bob Beck died at home Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2008, after a difficult battle with cancer. Soft-spoken, gentle-souled Beck, so different in persona from the rough-hewn Indiana-Jones type character that would and often did “walk a mile for a Camel” through the most harrowing elemental obstacles, seldom showed impatience and temper in his post-camera life except over two subjects — protecting the habitat that we share with fellow species, and what he perceived as the hubris and disregard of the current Bush administration for the care and wellbeing of its citizenry.
Said Beck, regarding our shared-planet responsibility, “You have to protect your resources, especially here [in Idyllwild] where we rely upon what comes from the sky. People who don’t care about their environment and the animals are greedy and self-serving. It would be a happier Idyllwild and world if people cared about such things. I really strongly believe if a person loves, respects and takes care of animals — which I put myself on equal footing with, I’m no better or worse than they are — they will respect those around them more. Those who mistreat and don’t respect animals will do the same thing with everything else around them.”
About the second Bush family presidency, Beck fumed, “I’m definitely for any government that takes care of its people and the environment, and cares. But politicians usually like to keep the power and control so that philosophy is usually fiction. But it’s what I’d like. People will disagree, which is part of being in a free society, but I’m definitely opposed to the [George W.] Bush administration. What they’ve tried to do is criminal and self-serving; they don’t have the environment or people at heart. Bush seems to only care about serving corporations’ needs, not serving humankind domestically or internationally.”
Beck was a trusted good friend and neighbor of this writer. In 2003, at the height of the bark beetle crisis when this writer had to remove scores of beetle-ravaged grandfather pines removed from his property, Beck called to offer condolences, gently understanding the sadness that came with the loss of strong, silent and seemingly indestructible friends that had weathered so many years — understanding that life, important and valuable, had passed.
Those who knew and loved big Bob Beck — his soft words, good heart, merry twinkle in his eyes, and love for family and causes that moved him — know that someone important and valuable has passed. He cut a strong, graceful and impressive swath through any crowd through which he passed. He was bigger-than-life and humbly and affably human.
“It is with great sadness that I share the news that Bob Beck died early yesterday morning from cancer,” wrote Associates of Idyllwild Arts Foundation President Jan Goldberg. “He died peacefully, in his sleep, with his dear wife Erin at his side. We will all miss Bob — that deep voice, that smile, the charm and good will that he showed us all. He will always be an inspiration to us of how to live a gentle, sweet life with family, friends and dogs. Bob, we will miss you.”
Beck was born in Oceanside in 1936, bought a cabin in Idyllwild with wife Erin O’Neill in 1981, and moved here full-time in 1997. Of his years as the Camel man, Beck said, “When I did it, I wasn’t that aware of the effects of smoking. This is one of the problems with doing such a campaign. My problem with the cigarette industry was they covered up the problems and didn’t pass them on to the public. For that reason, I wouldn’t do it today.”
Beck leaves behind his wife, Erin; son Matthew; daughters Liza, Kristen and Benedicte; and grandchildren."
from The Town Crier Newspaper, Idyllwild, California, author unknown
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Sunday, September 07, 2008
Thursday, September 04, 2008
Wednesday, September 03, 2008
Tuesday, September 02, 2008
Monday, September 01, 2008
why complain?!
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7535229.stm
most of us have nothing to complain about.
and have a beautiful day.
peace.
most of us have nothing to complain about.
and have a beautiful day.
peace.
Thursday, August 28, 2008
speech
you may have heard there's a speech tonight. and there will be another one next week too. both deserve to be heard i think. neither is more important than the other. you may have a different opinion.
one fact remains, tonight's speech will make history. the speech next week might make history too. we'll just have to wait and see about that. one thing is for sure, if we don't hear both speeches, i believe we're cheating ourselves. we can only decide what we think about a speech after we've listened to it.
november 4th, 2008 will be the day on which we will all be "the decider". the decision made that day will affect us all for a long time to come.
please make the best possible decision you can.
and have a beautiful day.
peace.
one fact remains, tonight's speech will make history. the speech next week might make history too. we'll just have to wait and see about that. one thing is for sure, if we don't hear both speeches, i believe we're cheating ourselves. we can only decide what we think about a speech after we've listened to it.
november 4th, 2008 will be the day on which we will all be "the decider". the decision made that day will affect us all for a long time to come.
please make the best possible decision you can.
and have a beautiful day.
peace.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
link of the day
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7584179.stm
if only john and george were here to see this.
i'm sure they're watching.
"let it be".
"imagine".
peace.
if only john and george were here to see this.
i'm sure they're watching.
"let it be".
"imagine".
peace.
Monday, August 25, 2008
link of the day
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/25/us/politics/25race.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&ref=politics&adxnnlx=1219676463-yixEhFFT/R4AkFpCWzpXig
we may have come a long way, but we still have a long way to go.
in order for there to be true equality, i believe we'll have to practice it each and every day, forever.
what do you think?
and have a beautiful day.
peace.
we may have come a long way, but we still have a long way to go.
in order for there to be true equality, i believe we'll have to practice it each and every day, forever.
what do you think?
and have a beautiful day.
peace.
Friday, August 22, 2008
I.O.U.S.A.
i saw this film last night, and it is excellent. i recommend everybody see it. it presents the facts in a way most people can understand them.
if you care about america, planet earth, your children, grand children, great grand children, and all future children, then you really must see this movie.
and have a beautiful day.
and please save more money.
peace.
if you care about america, planet earth, your children, grand children, great grand children, and all future children, then you really must see this movie.
and have a beautiful day.
and please save more money.
peace.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
link of the day
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/17/automobiles/collectibles/17BUGATTI.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
WOW!
WOW!
Friday, August 15, 2008
great green news
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/15/business/15solar.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
and have a beautiful day.
peace.
and have a beautiful day.
peace.
Sunday, August 10, 2008
PR goldmine
i'm giving this one away for free.
hey gas stations, are you listening?!
99¢ gas for 24-hours.
could it possibly hurt you?!
think about it, PLEASE.
and have a beautiful day.
peace.
hey gas stations, are you listening?!
99¢ gas for 24-hours.
could it possibly hurt you?!
think about it, PLEASE.
and have a beautiful day.
peace.
Sunday, August 03, 2008
simplify
august 1 through 7 is national simplify your life week. so what does that mean exactly? well, depends who you are and your current mental condition. for some, simple is easy. their lives are defined by simple. everything they do, say, and think, is simple. for others, different story. it's important, i believe, for each and every one of us to simplify our lives in some way(s). the 21st century is very complicated and full of drama. even selecting a pope is very complicated and full of drama. there's plenty of room for simplification just about everyplace. i pledge to simplify my life not just this week, but every week. in the end, and we'll all arrive there far too soon, what do we really need? it's quite simple actually. i shall let you make that determination for yourself. we're all snowflakes. no two alike. and thank goodness for that! and have a beautiful and simple day. peace. frank landfield
Saturday, August 02, 2008
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