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Sunday, August 29, 2010

When a picnic isn't...but still is a good day!

Today’s wanderlust took us from home to the tiny village of Freeport, across the River, to Clarksburg, a small town on the Sacramento River in the Delta. From there we cut over thru the winery fields of grapevines, the others planted in late corn or recently cut alfalfa, to the road that runs along the ship canal. From there we headed to the farmers market in Southport, where I got some bananas pretty cheap, and some locally grown tomato’s cauliflower, green beans and zucchini. We then strolled across the way to a coffee shop, and while I got a distinctively strong coffee, Honey (aka Cookie monster) bought some raisin walnut (yuck) oatmeal cookies.

We then continued thru West Sacramento along the river to the highway to Woodland. Let me say that last year we bought a Garmin navigation thingy to keep from getting lost, and not having so many maps in the car. Well we used the damn thing in Woodland to find a deli, and it worked, except the first deli was closed, looked abandon, as out of business; the second was closed, the third was a (newly?) vacant lot with a sign saying it was available for commercial construction…arrrghh…so we decided to cruise back down the road to a commercial sandwich place like Subway, when Honey spotted a market that said “Deli” in the window…SAVED at last!

The clerks were very nice and made us sandwiches on rolls, and we headed out to picnic somewhere. Finally finding a place to park and eat looking at a farm field, I took a few bites and realized I didn’t really like the thing…the bread was just too dry. Honey enjoyed his, but I have rarely heard him complain about food…ever.

We drove along, saw a mall we used to visit once in a while that has gone out of business for the most part, all the anchor stores leaving. We stopped to look at some new Jeeps, which Honey likes looking at and then mumbling about payments, cheap plastic parts, and other stuff. Then he spend the rest of the trip home usually telling me how his current vehicle isn’t so bad.

 

Today he decided not to, and took me to the local brewery where we bought a case of beer, which he doesn’t drink but I do. It’s a hefeweizen, which I really enjoy in summer…from there we got on the interstate and came home.

All in all, a nice day out..

Now to get ready for the work week…ughhhh

Saturday, August 28, 2010

The Picnic that wasn't, or try , try again...

We enjoy summer, especially since global warming has meant our summers over the past 5 years have been on average cooler than those of my childhood…seriously, today was a partly cloudy day in the upper 70’s, until like last week's high of  111…

So on our days off, Honey gets me and the dog, and we travel a short distance from our home to “cow country” seeking a likely place to have a spontaneous picnic. That was again the plan today; however the family adherence to avoiding local news programs should be rethought.

We ended up at Rancho Seco Park, discovering that a triathlon was in place for today and tomorrow. Sooooooooooo, all the picnic places were taken, all the campsites taken, and the normally free park had an admission fee…OOPS.

Continuing our journey, we traveled the back roads and ended up in Folsom, and resigned ourselves to a hamburger at a local favorite. The dog appreciated this, since she absolutely loves hamburgers, the meat anyway.

So now armed with the knowledge our destination of today was out, Honey is suggesting we try again Sunday afternoon, only this time he is checking online the destination for any events…Have a nice Sunday!

Friday, August 27, 2010

Friday Night

Soooo, I'm home on a Friday night.  I am officially a loser.

Honey and I would like to go out, but Friday(in fact Friday thru Sunday) every place is so friggin crowded, its pointless.

We hate crowds.

Not like a few people, I'm talking about places like friggin AppleBees having a three hour wait. Applebees??? We haven't gone out to a movie in years, because during the week we are working and then its hurry home, eat, maybe watch TV, go to bed, blah blah blah. So it is with everyone around us, who then flock like lemmings to the bars, restaurants, nightclubs, drive-ins, and every other place where people go.

 

 So its another night of maybe finding a movie to watch, either on TV, pay per view, our library of dvd's (yeah, like there's nothing there we havent seen a zillion times) and maybe making some popcorn... maybe its not so bad. beats watching news shows all night about how screwed we all are...or going crazy switching from place to place on the web..

Have a GREAT Saturday...we're going to have a picnic, unless it rains...

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

I could Never be your woman..

Now I know your heart, I know your mind,
You don't even know you're being unkind,
So much for all your high brow Marxist ways,
Just use me up and then you walk away.
...you can't play me that way.

Well I guess what you say is true,
I could never be the right kind of girl for you,
I could never be your woman.

 

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Monday, August 16, 2010

Muslims Know the Symbolism of the Ground Zero Mosque

"Obama is in effect saying that you can build a triumphal mosque marking Islam’s superiority and victory — which is how the Ground Zero mosque will be viewed in the Islamic world — and you can lie about your funding, and lie about your commitment to inter religious dialogue and harmony, and refuse to denounce jihad terrorists, and all that is just fine with him."

Not long ago a friend wrote me " If the Muslim mosque is built at WTC, it wont' be a religious site, it'll be a victory monument"

 

Here Marine veteran and national security writer James Zumwalt lays out the facts..

 

Muslims Know the Symbolism of the Ground Zero Mosque

 by James Zumwalt

Symbolism is at play in the debate over a grand mosque being built near the site of Islamic extremism’s greatest terrorist victory against a democracy.

While many embrace its construction as symbolic of a democratic society’s tolerance, there is danger in not understanding the symbolically sinister side of its construction as well.

As much as we hear about Islamic extremists only representing a small percentage of the Muslim community, it is difficult to forget the images of euphoria in many Muslim countries as news of the 9/11 attacks spread. Thousands of Muslims were seen rejoicing over the violent deaths of more than 3,000 innocent victims. While Islamic extremists had dealt the devastating blow, more than just Islam’s extremists joined in the euphoria over the pain and suffering it inflicted upon non-believers.

At some point after 9/11, cropped photographs of the New York City landscape near the World Trade Center began circulating on the Internet in Muslim circles. Cropped into the photographs were the minarets and domes of numerous mosques dotting the area surrounding the 9/11 site.

Many Muslim believers understood the symbolism—the assault against a key bastion of the non-believer’s world had started; the push to place that bastion under Islam’s world caliphate umbrella by establishing a foothold on territory that 9/11 had made hallowed was now in progress.

If we choose not to blame Islam for the violent acts of Islamists—instead accusing extremists of having hijacked this religion of peace—we should at least listen to the insights Islam’s moderates share with us about their religion.

Modern day Turkey is among the most moderate of Muslim states. As such, it was welcomed into the NATO alliance as sharing some of the values of its Western members. But comments by Turkey Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on his beliefs about Islam and the symbolism its mosques represent, should give us pause for concern. “The mosques,” Erdogan has said, “are our barracks, the domes our helmets, the minarets our bayonets and the believers our army.” Nothing in “moderate” Muslim Erdogan’s description of Islam suggests it is a religion of peace.

Furthermore, Erdogan takes offense at even using the term “moderate” to describe Islam. Such a description, the prime minister has asserted, is “very ugly, it is offensive and an insult to our religion. There is no moderate or immoderate Islam. Islam is Islam and that’s it.” By Erdogan’s definition, Islamists and moderates are of the same ilk. If so, a dangerous mindset now permeates NATO’s den.

Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, assisted by his wife Daisy Khan, heads the American Society of Muslim Advancement (ASMA). ASMA leads the effort to build a $100 million, 13-story mosque, less than 200 feet from the World Trade Center. Both Rauf and Khan describe themselves as moderate Muslims. While such a label suggests a tolerance for Western culture and beliefs, their actions/inactions reveal something far different.

An organization known as Former Muslims United (FMU) has launched a campaign to appeal to Muslim leaders to repudiate sharia law’s more extremist views—i.e., such as executing former Muslims who leave Islam for another religion. FMU asked Rauf and Khan to sign a “Muslim pledge for religious freedom and safety from harm for former Muslims.” Ten months later, ASMA has failed to do so.

More recently, during a live radio interview, Rauf refused to condemn violent jihadist groups as terrorists. While refusing to admit Muslims carried out the 9/11 attacks, Rauf has not hesitated to condemn U.S. policies as the root cause.

In 2004, Rauf wrote a book entitled, according to the English translation, “What’s Right with America is What’s Right with Islam.” Such a title suggests a moderate perspective is taken. However, the book’s Arabic translation—“The Call From the WTC Rubble: Islamic Da’wah From the Heart of America Post-9/11”—suggests otherwise. Rauf, denigrating the loss of American life in calling it “rubble,” seeks to use 9/11 as a springboard for selling Islam to America.

Also closely linked to Rauf’s AMSA and topping its list of supporters is a charitable organization known as Carnegie Corp. It is headed by Iranian-born scholar Vartan Gregorian who, in his own book, espouses the Islamist goal of world domination. Thus, both Rauf and Gregorian promote replacement in America of the U.S. Constitution with sharia law. This is quite evident by Rauf’s assertion, “Throughout my discussions with contemporary Muslim theologians, it is clear an Islamic state can be established in more than just a single form or mold. It can be established through a kingdom or a democracy. The important issue is to establish the general fundamentals of sharia that are required to govern.”

Still unclear about the mosque initiative is the source of its $100 million funding. AMSA has yet to fully disclose how an organization whose financial well has been relatively dry is suddenly flush with funding. It is critical that the source of this funding be disclosed and verified it has no link to the same groups to which Rauf refuses to attach a terrorist label—such as the violent Muslim Brotherhood to which Rauf is said to have ties.

As non-Islamic religious houses of worship flounder in Muslim nations prohibiting freedom of religion, mosques flourish in non-Islamic states promoting such freedom. Muslim moderate leaders, such as Erdogan, seek to achieve the goal of their extremist brethren of subjugating the West to sharia law—the only difference being they have cloaked their ultimate objective under a “moderate” label.

Muslims understand symbols. The name initially selected for this mosque building effort is “Cordoba House.” Cordoba is a Spanish city where a victorious Muslim army destroyed a church, building a mosque in its place.

In 2001, President Bush initially referred to the war on terrorism as a crusade—later apologizing for the negative connotation it had for Muslims and never using it again. Yet in naming this mosque building effort after Cordoba and claiming it is a cultural center to promote religious tolerance, its initiators purposefully continue to reference a name having a very negative connotation for non-Muslims.

The construction of this mosque, so close to the World Trade Center site, will symbolize yet another victory for Islam over Western values

[James Zumwalt, Marine veteran Vietnam and Gulf wars who writes on national security and defense issues, is the author of "Bare Feet, Iron Will: Stories from the Other Side of Vietnam's Battlefields"]

Published 08/03/2010 - 10:33 p.m. CST

Politics..

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Memories of the past

I am in a reflecting kind of mood today...attended my nephew's memorial service, visited with family afterwards, shared memories...and on my way home I reminisced a little about my own life.

I arrived in Germany a rainy day in March 1977, flying into Frankfurt. I was met by people eager to meet with the "newbie", the instructional aid replacing a military dependent that had gone back to the USA with her family. I  quickly learned Americans call the USA "the world". While Germany and the US are different, American culture (and business) show up here and there...Heidelberg is a beautiful city on the Neckar River, as I soon discovered. It was also home to many US Forces during those days, hence the need for a school for American children. With not so much to do I explored the area.

I settled in and over the next several months, met a lot of people, and my nights were often taken with being social, quite unlike the days at college when I was pretty selective and generally didn't like dating too much in favor of going steady with someone...but I had decided this was a chance to meet a lot of people, and experience the differences from across the USA. So it was that I met and started dating on a regular basis a young man about my age, who was a junior officer in the Army. He took me all sort of places, we visited the Alps, Munich, the local areas wine country, and parts of France. Where ever he went, I w ent and we had a good time

One night, shortly after my 24th birthday, I asked him to come over and share dinner with me, and afterwards we would sit in the living area and talk a bit, drink some wine, and listen to music. I remember this evening because I bought a new album from the base exchange store, and played this song for him...specifically this song.

 


MusicPlaylistRingtones
Create a playlist at MixPod.com

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

August 10, 2010

Today is August 10, 2010.

According to the calendar, tomorrow is the start of Ramadan, when "Muslims all over the world abstain from food, drink, and other physical needs during the daylight hours. As a time to purify the soul, refocus attention on God, and practice self-sacrifice, Ramadan is much more than just not eating and drinking.

Muslims are called upon to use this month to re-evaluate their lives in light of Islamic guidance. We are to make peace with those who have wronged us, strengthen ties with family and friends, do away with bad habits -- essentially to clean up our lives, our thoughts, and our feelings. "

Maybe this month of reflection will help our world. Undoubtedly,   it will also be a time to reflect on the many insults and humiliations on the people. Maybe to only be a pause in jihad against the west.

 Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, the leading figure behind the Cordoba House (the “Ground Zero mosque”), explains away terrorism. “They feel the feed to conflagrate,” he says of Muslims who feel they’ve been “humiliated” and “ignored.”

 “In terms of specific conflict, specific issues that have resulted in specific actions within recent history, those have to be tied in to the perceptions which were created around what people were actually reacting to at that given point in time.”

When asked whether the U.S. bears “ultimate responsibility” for “any reactions,” Rauf responds, “I wouldn’t say ultimate. It’s the one who leads in the dance.”
 

So in essence he says its our fault, akin to "our chickens have come home to roost..."

Perhaps that explains the 16,000 acts of Islamofacist terrorism since 9/11....we caused it.

Enjoy your fasts, and hopefully peace there after, but remember this...

Deo juvante invidiam superabo!

Canice

Sunday, August 8, 2010

IS THE GROUND ZERO MOSQUE OPENING ON 9/11/2011?

New York Post Story

THE TENTH ANNIVERSARY OF 9/11!  The mosque will open. That has been approved, much to the dismay of many New Yorkers and probably to the dismay of most Americans.

The building where the mosque will welcome the faithful to prayer was damaged by the fuselage of one of the jets which was flown into the Twin Towers on 9/11. That's how close it is to Ground Zero. A short two blocks.

Cordoba House is bankrolling the 13-story mosque and Islamic Cultural Center. ... Cordoba House took its name from Cordoba, Spain. In the Middle Ages, Cordoba was the capital of an Islamic Caliphate....

A spokesperson for Cordoba House explained they want to combat misunderstandings about Islam.

Many New Yorkers believe they understand quite well. They see this mosque just 2 blocks from Ground Zero as an aggressive, in-your-face determination by Muslims to downplay the role of the Muslin terrorists on 9/11.

People on the street are saying, "They know they're offending us. They want to offend us".  ...

Complete article http://hubpages.com/hub/IS-THE-GROUND-ZERO-MOSQUE-OPENING-ON-91111

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Really, have we forgotten?

This video is of a song by Darrly Worley, "Have You Forgotten?'

The theme is about 9/11. I know I have not forgotten, I know my cousin in the Army has not forgotten- crying out loud, he was in the tower when the plane hit several floors above him. He can recite what he saw once outside the building, says the most horrific part in all that horror was watching people hold hands and jump to their death rather than burn...and that visual is in my mind from the news coverage...a  national nightmare that now many apologist would have us believe was our fault...a nightmare many in THIS country believe OUR government did...

I am angry at our current government for their stupidity in our economic policy, but I still love my country.

 I still believe in the American Dream, the one our founders enabled us to work towards in 1776. I will not apologize for loving this country, for honoring our flag above all others, for believing that this country is without equal. 

There, i said it...yes, America hasn't always done the right thing, but damn it, we do a hellava lot right...

Pariotism is not a vice

A friend reminded me I am the daughter of a Marine...I guess I got a double dose of patriotism, cause I married a former Marine... 

I am proud I am an American.

My fellow citizens, I have NOT forgotten what that means, have you?

 

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

NBA OR NFL

GUESS WHICH ONE.......


Even if you aren't a sports fan this is very interesting!




36 have been accused of spousal abuse

7 have been arrested for fraud

19 have been accused of writing bad checks

117 have directly or indirectly bankrupted at least 2 businesses

3 have done time for assault

71
repeat 71
cannot get a credit card due to bad credit
14 have been arrested on drug-related charges
8 have been arrested for shoplifting


21
currently are defendants in lawsuits,
and

84
have been arrested for drunk driving
in the last year



Can
you guess which organization this is?

NBA Or NFL
?


 

Give up yet?
Scroll down,




Neither,
it's the 535 members of the
United States Congress!!!!


The same group of Idiots that crank out
hundreds of new laws each year
designed to keep the rest of us in line.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

We the People of the United States....

We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”

America is a diverse country, in almost any manner your choose to use the word diverse. Ethnically, religious beliefs, physical geography, you name, we got it.

For while we are all different from each other in many ways, we are also the same; we used to be anyway.

A republic started at great peril by courageous men over 200 years ago, who rebelled against  a King, for they would not be servants nor subject, but desired to be free, and citizens. This nation grew from that beginning, and along the way corrected things as they needed to be. And grew as a culture, a nation united.

People immigrated here, seeking prosperity and freedom.

My own ancestors came and learned the dominant language. They sought out other people of the same faith, and joined those churches or synagogues. They worked hard, and joined their neighbors when the country was in peril .

They sought to simply have a better life, and each generation since has sought the same.

There was a belief in our country, in the people.

 I remember the last time I saw that unity was September 11, 2001. Didn’t matter what your politics, what your background, what you looked like, young or old, because in that singular eventful day we saw that it’s us that we care about.

We got distracted since then, from working together, to yelling and screaming at each other about Iraq, Afghanistan, Bush-Cheney, etcetera, and in our search for something better we forgot who we are, what we stand for as a culture, as a society, as an experiment in republican government.  Not GOP Republican, but as a republic, where the people elect a representative, who then is supposed to meet with other representatives in meeting in Congress.

Congress is a word that means “A formal assembly of representatives,  to discuss problems”, yet ours don’t seem to do that anymore

 In my view, today we are faced with many difficulties, and as a nation we have failed to do what must be done.

 

The slimmest of majorities elected a total ass clown President, a man many doubt meets the citizenship standard to be President, let alone to have any qualification that warranted his election, save one. He is a capable speaker. The willing buy into the dishonesty's that are uttered by this master of deceitfulness – in plain speak, this BS artist conned his way into being a Senator, and now President. 

 

And now here we are, sidetracked from dealing with our national issues because this man is creating more issues than solving.

So let’s reclaim our focus, and deal with the issues that confront us. Starting with electing representatives dedicated to stopping the dishonest and deceitful lies that become laws, and begin to return this country to what it should be...the United States of America, One nation, indivisible…

More wrath of Canice.... 

We have become so tolerant that today states are required to provide benefits to anyone, even those that cannot read or speak the language of American culture. We have polluted the meaning of words that terms like racist, socialist, radical, leftist, conservative, et al  have ceased being nouns to become pejoratives.

Thanks for listening, I know many will disagree, but I worried…

   Comments are subject to being deleted if you post something I deem offensive, stupid, or liberal

   (or all three at the same time)