Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Michelle Malkin produced this.. .kind'a cool... says a lot about 'we the people'

A by-the-numbers look at Obama's first year


A by-the-numbers look at Obama's first year
Jan 18 11:13 AM US/Eastern
By The Associated Press
Highlights of Obama's first year, by the numbers:___
7,949.09—Dow Jones Industrial Average close on Jan. 20, 2009.
10,609.65—Dow Jones Industrial Average close on Jan. 15, 2010.
13 million—Number of people 16 and older unemployed as of January 2009.
14.7 million—Number of people 16 and older unemployed as of December 2009.
7.7 percent—Unemployment rate January 2009
10.0 percent—Unemployment rate December 2009
$787 billion—Cost of economic stimulus approved by Congress.
$10.6 trillion—Outstanding public debt Jan. 20, 2009.
$12.3 trillion—Outstanding public debt Jan. 14, 2009.
$296.4 billion—Federal spending from the financial crisis bailout fund before Jan. 20, 2009.
$173 billion—Federal spending from the financial crisis bailout fund after Jan. 20, 2009.
$165 billion—Amount of bailout funds repaid by banks and automakers.
139—Bank failures between Jan. 20, 2009, and Jan. 14, 2010.
274,399—Number of properties that received forclosure-related notices in January 2009.
349,519—Number of properties that received forclosure-related notices in December 2009.
34,400—U.S. troops in Afghanistan in January 2009.
70,000—U.S. troops in Afghanistan as of Jan. 12, 2010.
319—U.S. military deaths in Afghanistan from January 2009 through Jan. 15, 2010.
139,500—U.S. troops in Iraq in January 2009.
111,000—U.S. troops in Iraq as of Jan. 12, 2010.
152—U.S. military deaths in Iraq from January 2009 through Jan. 15, 2010.
539—Appointments to top federal policy positions submitted to the Senate
352—Appointments confirmed by the Senate.
180—Appointments in top policy positions carried over from the Bush administration.
12—Formal news conferences.
21—Foreign countries visited.
29—States visited.
10—Visits to Camp David.
2—Vacations.
___

Friday, January 15, 2010

Someone's Birthday today... hehe... Happy Birthday Tammy Moffat

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TAMMY

Happy birthday to you!!

and many many more!

We are proud of you.

Mom and Dad Moffat

From Connie LaGrow...

  The cowboy Boot

(Anyone  who has ever dressed a child will love this  one!)
 

Did you hear  about the Texas teacher who was helping one of  her kindergarten students put on his cowboy  boots?

He asked for help and she could  see why...
 

Even with  her pulling and him pushing, the little boots  still didn't want to go on. By the time they got  the second boot on, she had worked up a  sweat.
 

She almost  cried when the little boy said, 'Teacher,  they're on the wrong feet.' She looked, and sure  enough, they were. It wasn't any easier pulling  the boots off than it was putting them on. She  managed to keep her cool as together they worked  to get the boots back on, this time on the right  feet..
 

He then  announced, 'These aren't my  boots.'
 

She bit her  tongue rather than get right in his face and  scream, 'Why didn't you say so?' like she wanted  to. Once again, she struggled to help him pull  the ill-fitting boots off his little feet. No  sooner had they gotten the boots off when he  said, 'They're my brother's boots. My mom made  me wear 'em.'
 

Now she  didn't know if she should laugh or cry. But, she  mustered up what grace and courage she had left  to wrestle the boots on his feet  again.
 

Helping him  into his coat, she asked, 'Now, where are your  mittens?'
 

He said, 'I  stuffed 'em in the toes of my  boots.'
 

She will be  eligible for parole in three  years.
 

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Marilyn sent along this ditty too.. .humm, how true...


From Marilyn....


Good morning all,
This e-mail is in reference to disaster relief for Haiti earthquake victims.  As many of you know Dr. Keith Flanagan (OSU Alumni Class of 1978 and Native of Texhoma OK) has been a Veterinary Missionary in Haiti for the past 23 years.  Below is a series of e-mails from him, his wife and another field missionary Dr. Kelly Crowdis to Dr. Kit Flowers Director of Christian Veterinary Mission.  I received this e-mail yesterday from Dr. Flowers and thought some of you all would like to hear that Keith and Jan are safe and might like to make a contribution to the CVM relief fund that is set up.  At the end of this e-mail collection there is a web site where you can donate to help the relief efforts Drs Flanagan and Crowdis are involved in at this time in Haiti.  Appreciate your consideration of this request for help. God Bless,
Carolynn MacAllister     

Dear friends,
We first heard of the earthquake in Haiti on Tuesday afternoon as Dr. Keith Flanagan wrote:
“We just had a strong earth quake here in Haiti. All the phone service is out.  I don’t know about Kelly, but are praying that all is okay.  Will keep you posted.  The house is still shaking every now and then. All the back wall and some of one of the side walls went down. Better run and get wire up for tonight.”
With you, our hearts have been broken once again for Haiti and the people we have served since the early 1980’s.   Currently we have Dr. Keith and Jan Flanagan and Dr. Kelly Crowdis serving as long-term workers and have had hundreds of short-term volunteers serve in Haiti over the years. We have trained over 1000 village level animal health workers and have been blessed to serve the people of Haiti in many other development and ministry inputs.
Communication has been a challenge, but I did want to share with you this string of communication we have had over the last 24 hours.
Keith and Jan’s son Brian also serves in southern Haiti Les Cayes and wrote:  “We are fine in Les Cayes, small quake.”
We were relieved yesterday to hear this report from Jan: “Kelly is fine.  She just came by the house.  She had been doing a training and was on her way back in.  She is headed to her house to see how everyone is doing.  She saw lots of destruction coming in."
We praise the Lord for the safety of these CVM fieldworkers and yet keep them in prayer as they begin to work with the Haitian people to assess the damage, respond to the immediate needs and understand how to help once again. Today Keith, Jan and Kelly are out looking for their Haitian friends and co-workers. Keith wrote early this morning, “We are still without any telephone communication so I am not sure how many of our friends are. I went to check on Berlinda and her family who live in a ravine and they were all fine.  We went to another area to check on a friend of theirs and we are sure that he didn’t make it. The house totally collapsed.  There is lots of damage, but I am surprised at some of the big buildings that are still standing. Will keep you posted.”
We also heard from Jan today: “It is still hard to get thoughts going, but wanted to let you know that we did make it through the night.  Keith has left this morning to see what all he can find out.  John Claude came this morning (co-worker with Keith).  They lost everything, but praise the Lord all his family are okay.  Just where to start now?  He said everyone in his area are just out in the streets.  No one wanted to come in last night and I must say there were two or three times I was ready to go back out side. Keith went by Kelly’s house last night, but didn’t go in but looked like everything was okay.  We were thankful that she made it in okay.”
We were able to connect by phone with Kelly and found that her house has some damage with everything a mess as things fell off of shelves.   She found out that one of her staff members has lost a family member and so was off early this morning to go and help in the response.
Pray for strength and wisdom as they grieve the loss with their friends and co-workers and begin to discern how to best respond. We have established a Special Projects fund to help generate funds for them to use in this response. If the Lord is leading you to give, please click here to donate to this fund.
We will keep you posted with regular updates on this time and how God is at work to empower His people in serving the people of Haiti.
Keep Praying,
Kit
Dr. Kit Flowers
Executive Director
Christian Veterinary Mission

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Mama Sweet

Hey Friends, First of all, I want to thank you all for an awesome weekend last week. Despite a lot of other things going on, we had an incredible crowd @ The Wormy Dog! We are really appreciative of Wingo, OK Gazette, and OklahomaRock.com for supporting us & giving us press. We also had a great crowd at Momo's in Austin & we made some new fans too. The staff there is amazing & they really helped us have a great night! This weekend, we only have one show & it is on Friday night @ The Golden Light Cantina in Amarillo on Friday night. Golden Light is a beer bar, but you can bring in your own liquor. The staff there is great, the food next door is awesome & we have some really great fans that come to see us. So, if you are in the area or if you are looking to get away for the weekend, come see us. Thanks for everything, Aron
Richard Hawkins

Richard Hawkins  Payne County's Junior Miss Scholarship Program: Payne
County's Junior Miss Scholarship Fundraiser. Eat at the Hideaway any
time on Tuesday, January 19, 2010 to support our March 13, 2010 Payne
County's Junior Miss Program. A portion of sales fund contestant cash
college scholarships. 405-612-2831.

Nasa photographs 'trees' on Mars



The "trees" are really trails of debris caused by landslides as ice melts in Mars's spring. You can even see a cloud of dust, just to the left of centre of the picture, where an avalanche is caught happening.
The photograph was taken from orbit around Mars by HiRISE, the most powerful camera sent to another planet.
NASA's Candy Hansen told The Sun: "The streaks are sand, dislodged as ice evaporates, which slide down the dune. At this time of the Martian year the whole scene is covered by CO2 frost."
Last month Nasa announced a new telescope had detected five planets outside the solar system. The observatory, which was launched last year to find other Earths, made the discoveries in its first few weeks of science operations.
Although the new worlds, called exoplanets, are all bigger than Neptune, Nasa said their discovery showed that the planet hunting telescope was working well

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

"Avatar" = anti-military and anti-American ???

It's a titanic battle, and it's in the 3-D of reality: A Chicago alderman versus "Avatar." 

Eleventh Ward Ald. James Balcer believes the new blockbuster movie is anti-military and anti-American. 

CBS 2's Mike Parker reports. 

Balcer is a decorated Marine veteran of the Vietnam war, and now he's going into battle against the film that may turn out to be the biggest moneymaker of all time. He hates the film's message, and he's not alone. 

In the movie, an army of mercenaries, led by a villainous Marine, invades the idyllic planet of Pandora and goes after the peaceful blue creatures who live there over deposits of a precious mineral. 

Balcer says the film makes Marines "look like lunatics." In reality, he said, "We are a good, generous country that helps people." 

Balcer's not the only critic blasting "Avatar" for its point of view. There is also conservative activist Tom Roeser. 

"This is the only time I ever sat in a theater where people were cheering the forest and the blue people, attacking ex-Marines," Roeser said. 

Asked if the film is anti-American and anti military, Balcer said, "Well, they never mentioned America but when you have the eagle, globe and anchor -- the Marine Corps emblem -- it has to be America." 

"And that's the Hollywood view of us," Roeser complained. "We are the exploiters, we are pre-emptive attackers." 

Others who have seen the film were less critical. 

"To me it was more talking about people's exploitations on resources," Michelle Tan said. 

"It can be kind of like, liberal and anti-military, but overall, the message was more like humanitarian," Tatiana Favelevic said. 

The film critic for the right-wing Weekly Standard calls the film "blitheringly stupid" and among the "dumbest movies I've ever seen." Others have attacked it for its super-environmentalism and what is perceived as an anti-Christian slant. 

None of this has kept "Avatar" from becoming a huge moneymaker all over the world. 

FEATURED EVENTS




Barking Water (Movie)
Thursday, January 14
6:00 pm

The Holba’ Kana’li (Moving Pictures) continues this month with the award-winning film Barking Water. The movie chronicles a dying man, Frankie, and Irene, his on-again, off-again partner of 40 years. The two set off on a journey across Oklahoma to visit Frankie’s eclectic family.

The film was produced by Chickasaw Chad Burris and directed by Creek/Seminole Sterlin Harjo. Sterlin Harjo will attend the screening and participate in a Q & A forum after the film.

All seats - $5.00 (includes tax)

Tickets on Sale Now! 

Friday, January 08, 2010

Wonder why Obama's team seems to lack business sense or any sense at all?

Wonder why Obama's team seems to lack business sense?
    
In case you missed it, on a recent Glenn Beck Show, he had a graph that illustrated the percentage of each past president's cabinet who had worked in the private business sector prior to their appointment to the cabinet. You know what the private business sector is... a real life businesses, not a government job. Here are the percentages presented by Glen Beck.
   
    T. Roosevelt........ 38%
    Taft.......................40%
    Wilson ................. 52%
    Harding................49%
    Coolidge............. 48%
    Hoover .................42%
    F. Roosevelt....... 50%
    Truman.................50%
    Eisenhower......... 57%
    Kennedy.............. 30%
    Johnson..............47%
    Nixon................... 53%
    Ford...................... 42%
    Carter.................... 32%
    Reagan.................56%
    GH Bush.............. 51%
    Clinton ................ 39%
    GW Bush............. 55%
   
    And the winner of the Chicken Dinner is.............
   
    Obama................. 8% !!!
   
    Yes!  That's right!  Only Eight Percent!!!..the least by far of the last 19
    presidents!!  And these people are trying to tell our big corporations how
    to run their business? They know what's best for GM...Chrysler... Wall
    Street... and you and me?
   
    How can the president of a major nation and society...the one with the most
    successful economic system in world history... stand and talk about business
    when he's never worked for one?.. or about jobs when he has never really had
    one??!
   
    And neither has 92% of his senior staff and closest advisers.! They've spent
    most of their time in academia, government and/or non-profit jobs.....or as
    "community organizers" ..when they should have been in an employment line.






And the idiots in Washington want to run Heathcare... sigh, they could screw up putting in a light bulb.... Just how dumb do we the American people appear to those morons?


Truckloads Of Unused Swine Flu Vaccines

Updated: Friday, 08 Jan 2010, 8:37 AM EST
Published : Friday, 08 Jan 2010, 7:10 AM EST
MYFOXNY.COM - After months of fear, media coverage and government warnings there wasn't as much demand for the swine flu vaccine in New York state as expected.
Truckloads of swine flu vaccines are being returned by counties that say the expected demand for the shots never happened.
When the state's H1N1 vaccination program kicked off in the fall there were fears that there wouldn't be enough of the new vaccine to go around.
The flu strain has not spread as wide as feared and some people were also unsure of pumping a quickly developed vaccine into their bodies.
On January 1, state health officials urged people who haven't been vaccinated to get a shot.
"When it's in a shortage, everyone clamors for it," said Dr. Richard Daines, commissioner of the state Department of Health. "Now that it's abundant, people don't think they need to fight for it."
New York is among 11 states that has widespread flu outbreaks.  Daines says another wave of flu could hit the state.
The swine flu first turned up in New York last April at St. Francis Preparatory School in Queens.
Copyright MYFOXNY.COM

Passage of the health-care bill will be, for the administration, a catastrophic victory. If it is voted through in time for the State of the Union Address, as President Obama hopes, half the chamber will rise to their feet and cheer. They will be cheering their own demise.
If health care does not pass, it will also be a disaster, but only for the administration, not the country. Critics will say, "You didn't even waste our time successfully."
What a blunder this thing has been, win or lose, what a miscalculation on the part of the president. The administration misjudged the mood and the moment. Mr. Obama ran, won, was sworn in and began his work under the spirit of 2008—expansive, part dreamy and part hubristic. But as soon as he was inaugurated ,the president ran into the spirit of 2009—more dug in, more anxious, more bottom-line—and didn't notice. At the exact moment the public was announcing it worried about jobs first and debt and deficits second, the administration decided to devote its first year to health care, which no one was talking about. The great recession changed everything, but not right away.
In a way Mr. Obama made the same mistake President Bush did on immigration, producing a big, mammoth, comprehensive bill when the public mood was for small, discrete steps in what might reasonably seem the right direction.
The public in 2009 would have been happy to see a simple bill that mandated insurance companies offer coverage without respect to previous medical conditions. The administration could have had that—and the victory of it—last winter.
Instead, they were greedy for glory.
It was not worth it—not worth the town-hall uprisings and the bleeding of centrist support, not worth the rebranding of the president from center-left leader to leftist leader, not worth the proof it provided that the public's concerns and the administration's are not the same, not worth a wasted first year that should have been given to two things and two things only: economic matters and national security.
Those were not only the two topics on the public's mind the past 10 months, they were precisely the issues that presented themselves in screaming headlines at the end of the year: unemployment and the national-security breakdowns that led to the Christmas bomb plot and, earlier, the Fort Hood massacre. "That's two strikes," said the president's national security adviser, James Jones, to USA Today's Susan Page. Left unsaid: Three and you're out.
Just as bad, or worse, the president's focus on health care allowed the public to infer that his mind was not focused on our security. He'd frittered his attention on issues that were secondary and tertiary—climate change, health care—while al Qaeda moved, and the system stuttered. A lack of focus breeds bureaucratic complacency, complacency gives rise to slovenliness, slovenliness results in what was said in the report issued Thursday: that, faced with clear evidence of coming danger, the government failed, as they're saying on TV, to "connect the dots." Dots? They were boulders.

***

I am wondering if the Obama administration thinks it vaguely dishonorable to be popular. If you mention to Obama staffers that they really have to be concerned about the polls, they look at you with a certain . . . not disdain but patience, as if you don't understand the purpose of politics. That purpose, they believe, is to move the governed toward greater justice. Just so, but in democracy you do this by garnering and galvanizing public support. But they think it's weaselly to be well thought of.
In politics you must tend to the garden. The garden is the constituency, in Mr. Obama's case the country. No great endeavor is possible without its backing. In a modern presidency especially you have to know this, because there will be times when history throws you a crisis, and to address it you may have to do an unpopular thing. A president in those circumstances must use all the goodwill he's built up over the months and years to get through that moment and survive doing what he thinks is right. Mr. Obama acts as if he doesn't know this. He hasn't built up popularity to use on a rainy day. If he had, he'd be getting through the Christmas plot drama better than he is
The Obama people have taken to pointing out how their guy doesn't govern by the polls. This is all too believable. The Bush people, too, used to bang away about how he didn't govern by the polls. They both added unneeded stress to the past 10 years, and it is understandable if many of us now think, "Oh for a president who'd govern by the polls."
If Mr. Obama is extremely lucky—and we're not sure he's a lucky man anymore—he will get a Republican Congress in 2010, and they will do for him what Newt Gingrich did for Bill Clinton: right his ship, give him a foil, guide him while allowing him to look as if he's resisting, bend him while allowing him to look strong.

***

Which gets us to the Republicans. The question isn't whether they'll win seats in the House and Senate this year, and the question isn't even how many. The question is whether the party will be worthy of victory, whether it learned from its losses in 2006 and '08, whether it deserves leadership. Whether Republicans are a worthy alternative. Whether, in short, they are serious.
I spoke a few weeks ago with a respected Republican congressman who told me with some excitement of a bill he's put forward to address the growth of entitlements and long-term government spending. We only have three or four years to get it right, he said. He made a strong case. I asked if his party was doing anything to get behind the bill, and he got the blanched look people get when they're trying to keep their faces from betraying anything. Not really, he said. Then he shrugged. "They're waiting for the Democrats to destroy themselves."
This isn't news, really, but it was startling to hear a successful Republican political practitioner say it.
Republican political professionals in Washington assume a coming victory. They do not see that 2010 could be a catastrophic victory for them. If they seize back power without clear purpose, if they are not serious, if they do the lazy and cynical thing by just sitting back and letting the Democrats lose, three bad things will happen. They will contribute to the air of cynicism in which our citizens marinate. Their lack of seriousness will be discerned by the Republican base, whose enthusiasm and generosity will be blunted. And the Republicans themselves will be left unable to lead when their time comes, because operating cynically will allow the public to view them cynically, which will lessen the chance they will be able to do anything constructive.
In this sense, the cynical view—we can sit back and wait—is naive. The idealistic view—we must stand for things and move on them now—is shrewder.
Political professionals are pugilistic, and often see politics in terms of fight movies: "Rocky," "Raging Bull." They should be thinking now of a different one, of Tom Hanks at the end of "Saving Private Ryan." "Earn this," he said to the man whose life he'd helped save.
Earn this. Be worthy of it. Be serious.

Thursday, January 07, 2010

Obama's Fiscal Fantasy World

Obama's Fiscal Fantasy World
Spending is up nearly 24% since Bush's last full budget year.
By KARL ROVE

After President Obama devoted much of 2009 to health care and global warming—two issues far down Americans' list of concerns—the White House says he will pivot to jobs and deficit reduction in his State of the Union speech in a few weeks. The White House is considering dramatic gestures, perhaps announcing a spending freeze or even a 2% or 3% reduction in nondefense spending.

But Americans shouldn't be misled by the election year ploy: Mr. Obama rigged the game by giving himself plenty of room to look tough on spending. He did that by increasing discretionary domestic spending for the last half of fiscal year 2009 by 8% and then increasing it another 12% for fiscal year 2010.

So discretionary domestic spending now stands at $536 billion, up nearly 24% from President George W. Bush's last full year budget in fiscal 2008 of $433.6 billion. That's a huge spending surge, even for a profligate liberal like Mr. Obama. The $102 billion spending increase doesn't even count the $787 billion stimulus package, of which $534 billion remains unspent.

Mr. Obama can placate congressional Democrats by arguing that all that extra spending he has already crammed through can cover their spending desires at least through the 2010 congressional elections.

Mr. Obama is thinking of tapping another pocket of cash. Now that the banks are repaying—with interest and dividends—the $240 billion the Bush administration lent them, the Obama administration is considering recycling those dollars into new spending on "green" technology and more stimulus, despite provisions Congress wrote into the law creating the Troubled Asset Relief Program that requires that repaid TARP funds be used exclusively for deficit reduction.

Meanwhile, defense spending is being flattened: Between 2009 and 2010, military outlays will rise 3.6% while nondefense discretionary spending climbs 12%.

All this leaves Mr. Obama in the enviable position of appearing tough on spending while growing the federal government's share of GDP from its historic post-World War II average of roughly 20% to the target Mr. Obama laid out in his budget blueprint last February of 24%.

There are also those pesky entitlements. This mandatory spending has grown to 66% of the budget, up from 29% in 1965. Serious budgeters understand spending cannot be brought under control unless these mandatory outlays are part of the mix.

One idea on Capitol Hill is to create a commission that would propose a package of entitlement reforms that Congress would have to vote on as a package, up or down, take it or leave it—much like the base closing commission.

The Obama White House likes this idea in part because the proposal calls for including some congressional Republicans but would reserve a majority of the seats on the commission for Democrats. That would put Democrats in charge while also making the GOP share in the political pain that would come with whatever the commission proposes. Conservatives worry, with justification, that a commission's purpose would be to provide Republican cover for tax increases and a permanent increase in the size of the federal government.

What's more, the White House may only be interested in an election-year gesture. White House staff are apparently considering creating a presidential commission that would look like it's working on deficit reduction but that would be established by executive order. Of course, without congressional authorization, there's no way to force Congress to vote on a commission's recommendations.

Whatever Mr. Obama says in his State of the Union, Republicans need to be tougher on spending and deficits. Later this month, Senate Republicans are planning to force their colleagues to go on the record on how to spend returned TARP funds by demanding that Democrats vote on the issue. Some House Republicans are also considering calling for a return to the level of discretionary domestic spending that existed when Mr. Obama entered office last January.

Few things focus the attention of politicians as much as approaching elections. Democrats are aware that spending and deficits are big reasons Republicans have a nine-point lead on the Rasmussen Poll's generic ballot.

Independents are particularly sensitive about deficits, spending and taxes, whose growth they see aversely affecting jobs and the economy. They give Mr. Obama only a 21% approval on handling the deficit. Only 10% of independents want to spend unused bank bailout money on other government programs.

At the beginning of his term, Americans believed Mr. Obama would follow through on his campaign promises about "cutting wasteful spending" and going "through the federal budget, line-by-line, ending programs that we don't need" and putting "an end to the run-away spending the record deficits."

After a year of living in his fiscal fantasy world, Americans realize they have a record deficit-setting, budget-busting spender on their hands. Voters are now reading the fine print on all that Mr. Obama proposes and as they do, his credibility, already badly damaged, suffers.

~Mr. Rove, the former senior adviser and deputy chief of staff to President George W. Bush, is the author of the forthcoming book "Courage and Consequence" (Threshold Editions).

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Multimedia message

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ANN ... BIG OLE 63....



















and it seems like yesterday that we were riding our new bicycles through the streets of Stillwater enjoying our youth, thinking of our future together, or standing in the the backroom of the Shoe Department of JC Penney's downtown visiting about this and that, not a clue in our heads of the wonderful things to come our way...

And now, here we are, another milestone for us to share together.

My wish to you is that you enjoy this day with family and friends to it's fullest. I wish to you wonderful and complete good health (since we both know that under this stupid healthcare bill the "morons from foggy bottom" handed us, we will not receive that in our years to come). I wish that every wish you wish for today comes true, except the one regarding my early demise!! HAHA wink wink!!!

Happy Birthday Ann.... with much love, forever and a day... S
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