Wednesday, June 16, 2010

This is one of Heather Ann's photo's from the 'Wooden Bat Tournament 2010' in Stillwater. If you think little league is just boys being boys... study the intensity of the faces, and all he is doing is sliding into home... Heather, GREAT JOB!!


Unknown boys of summer at a baseball tournament in Stillwater that Andrew played in. What is known is this photo was taken by Heather Ann B. and it's a great photo that sums it all up! The call does not matter, it's about playing the game, and how you play... and these young men are in fact playing for keeps!

She has many more in her photo albums on dotphoto.com. check them out! (Click the photo to enlarge!)

Way to go Heather!!

Friday, June 11, 2010

For my fellow firefighter friends and those who support them... oh my goodness...



Years ago, a feed client of ours, walked into our business talking on the phone just a laughing up a storm.... I mean belly laughing... and handed me the phone... and I heard hello, this is Jerry... nough about me, how bout you?... and then started telling me about his good friend Wes Thurman who had just handed me the phone... needless to say - I was speechless... and something I will remember till I die... his laugh, etc... and then Wes had him tell me this story...

I had forgot about this till a friend of mine posted it on line this am....

one never knows who or where... sometimes the world gets real small... haha...

but nough bout me... how bout you?

If you know Wes, this is his saying too... it's seems I now know where he picked it up.. haha..
Wes and Jerry grew up together, and needless to say, there are many stories shared over this call...

From Jonathan this am.... I want to hire this drummer for a client's band I am working with.. haha.. now that would be a show!!



watch the drummer.... he is GOOD!!

Thursday, June 10, 2010

I am sorry if you find this boring or mundane or don't agree... but I feel this President is KILLING America and I want something left for my family and their families... I have never seen such a lack of leadership, nor of concern for the American people as he brings to the table. It's as if he is in another world. Well Mr. Obubba... I care. I love this country, and I don't like your obubbaism!


Obama and the Trouble With Voting 'Present'

Weak and radical, the president looks more like Jimmy Carter all the time.

When Barack Obama announced he was running for president in February 2007, Nathan Gonzales of the Rothenberg Political Report wrote "Obama's history of voting 'present'" in Springfield, Ill.—even on some of the most controversial and politically explosive issues . . . raises questions . . . Voting 'present' is one of the three options in the Illinois Legislature (along with 'yes' and 'no') but it's almost never an option for the occupant of the Oval Office."
Mr. Gonzales's words were prescient. Barack Obama may now be president, but at times he appears to be merely present. That has been the case with his response to the environmental catastrophe unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico. The president was late recognizing the disaster's magnitude, late in visiting the region, late in approving requests by Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, and late in feigning outrage. He has never offered an independent plan to stop the leak.
Mr. Obama also seems disinterested in hearing from experts about the spill. The White House's "Deep Water Horizon Response Timeline" doesn't list a single meeting between Mr. Obama and industry experts, though he did send Energy Secretary Steven Chu and others to Houston May 12 to meet with BP and others.
Yet while the president says his Noble Prize-winning energy secretary has been "examining every contingency," Mr. Chu was clueless about BP's plans to install a cap over the well to funnel oil to a vessel on the surface. As the New York Times reported last Saturday, "After the cap was successfully placed, Mr. Chu wondered aloud why oil was still spewing." BP engineers had to explain that oil was still coming from vents that "would be closed very slowly to ensure that mounting pressure would not force the cap off."
Even now, Mr. Obama looks like a spectator, albeit an angry one, barking at White House aides to "plug the damn hole" (now that's a good idea no one has thought of) and telling NBC's Matt Lauer he's in search of an "ass to kick."
But the main political behind that's being kicked is Mr. Obama's. The latest ABC News/Washington Post poll says Americans give the federal government a 69% negative rating for its handling of the spill, compared to a 62% negative rating for Washington's handling of Katrina in August 2005.
This pattern of being merely present has been apparent almost since the first days of the Obama presidency. He may unveil his mighty teleprompter to help pass what Congress has drafted, but this White House seems strangely disconnected from crafting legislation.
For example, last year's stimulus was largely drafted by House Appropriations Chairman David Obey of Wisconsin, one of Congress's most liberal members. As a result, what passed was a wasteful spending bill rather than an economic growth package.
And faced with a growing mountain of debt, Mr. Obama passed the issue off to an ineffectual commission whose report is due after the election. After growing the size of the federal government by a quarter in just over a year, he now says he'd like agencies to try to find 5% cuts in their budgets.
On other controversies—the attempt of high-ranking aides to entice candidates not to challenge incumbent Democratic senators, the details of cap-and-trade legislation, the resolution of big conflicts between the House and Senate versions of financial regulation, and the drafting of comprehensive immigration reform—Mr. Obama appears to be removed, distant and detached, unwilling or unable to provide the adult supervision Washington requires.
The result is that he receives a 38% approval and 52% disapproval rating on his handling of the economy in the latest Economist/YouGov poll. The GOP enjoys a nine-point lead over Democrats in Rasmussen's latest generic ballot.
This is causing the public to revisit concerns it's had about Mr. Obama since he clinched the Democratic nomination in March 2008. Then the ABC/Washington Post Poll reported that 46% of Americans found him too "inexperienced" to be an effective president, the highest number ever for a major party presidential nominee. In October, just before the election, ABC/Washington Post asked the question again: 44% called Mr. Obama too inexperienced. On issue after issue, Mr. Obama is providing plenty of evidence to validate those concerns.
Americans might hope the president's diffidence when it comes to the hard work of government might mitigate his more extreme liberal tendencies. No such luck. Mr. Obama is an odd mixture of passivity and radicalism. He's happy to be a cheerleader for policies (like nationalizing health care) that many Americans find dangerously liberal.
The country has had another president both weak and radical at the same time: Jimmy Carter.
Mr. Rove, the former senior adviser and deputy chief of staff to President George W. Bush, is the author of "Courage and Consequence" (Threshold Editions, 2010).

Wednesday, June 09, 2010

The Alien in the White House - from Wall Street Journal today.


The Alien in the White House

The distance between the president and the people is beginning to be revealed.

The deepening notes of disenchantment with Barack Obama now issuing from commentators across the political spectrum were predictable. So, too, were the charges from some of the president's earliest enthusiasts about his failure to reflect a powerful sense of urgency about the oil spill.
There should have been nothing puzzling about his response to anyone who has paid even modest critical attention to Mr. Obama's pronouncements. For it was clear from the first that this president—single-minded, ever-visible, confident in his program for a reformed America saved from darkness by his arrival—was wanting in certain qualities citizens have until now taken for granted in their presidents. Namely, a tone and presence that said: This is the Americans' leader, a man of them, for them, the nation's voice and champion. Mr. Obama wasn't lacking in concern about the oil spill. What he lacked was that voice—and for good reason.
Those qualities to be expected in a president were never about rhetoric; Mr. Obama had proved himself a dab hand at that on the campaign trail. They were a matter of identification with the nation and to all that binds its people together in pride and allegiance. These are feelings held deep in American hearts, unvoiced mostly, but unmistakably there and not only on the Fourth of July.
A great part of America now understands that this president's sense of identification lies elsewhere, and is in profound ways unlike theirs. He is hard put to sound convincingly like the leader of the nation, because he is, at heart and by instinct, the voice mainly of his ideological class. He is the alien in the White House, a matter having nothing to do with delusions about his birthplace cherished by the demented fringe.
One of his first reforms was to rid the White House of the bust of Winston Churchill—a gift from Tony Blair—by packing it back off to 10 Downing Street. A cloudlet of mystery has surrounded the subject ever since, but the central fact stands clear. The new administration had apparently found no place in our national house of many rooms for the British leader who lives on so vividly in the American mind. Churchill, face of our shared wartime struggle, dauntless rallier of his nation who continues, so remarkably, to speak to ours. For a president to whom such associations are alien, ridding the White House of Churchill would, of course, have raised no second thoughts.
Far greater strangeness has since flowed steadily from Washington. The president's appointees, transmitters of policy, go forth with singular passion week after week, delivering the latest inversion of reality. Their work is not easy, focused as it is on a current prime preoccupation of this White House—that is, finding ways to avoid any public mention of the indisputable Islamist identity of the enemy at war with us. No small trick that, but their efforts go forward in public spectacles matchless in their absurdity—unnerving in what they confirm about our current guardians of law and national security.
Consider the hapless Eric Holder, America's attorney general, confronting the question put to him by Rep. Lamar Smith (R., Texas) of the House Judicary Committee on May 13.
Did Mr. Holder think that in the last three terrorist attempts on this soil, one of them successful (Maj. Nidal Hasan's murder of 13 soldiers at Fort Hood, preceded by his shout of "Allahu Akbar!"), that radical Islam might have played any role at all? Mr. Holder seemed puzzled by the question. "People have different reasons" he finally answered—a response he repeated three times. He didn't want "to say anything negative about any religion."
And who can forget the exhortations on jihad by John Brennan, Mr. Obama's chief adviser on counterterrorism? Mr. Brennan has in the past charged that Americans lack sensitivity to the Muslim world, and that we have particularly failed to credit its peace-loving disposition. In a May 26 speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Mr. Brennan held forth fervently, if not quite comprehensibly, on who our enemy was not: "Our enemy is not terrorism because terrorism is just a tactic. Our enemy is not terror because terror is a state of mind, and as Americans we refuse to live in fear."
He went on to announce, sternly, that we do not refer to our enemies as Islamists or jihadists because jihad is a holy struggle, a legitimate tenet of Islam. How then might we be permitted to describe our enemies? One hint comes from another of Mr. Brennan's pronouncements in that speech: That "violent extremists are victims of political, economic and social forces."
Yes, that would work. Consider the news bulletins we could have read: "Police have arrested Faisal Shahzad, victim of political, economic and social forces living in Connecticut, for efforts to set off a car bomb explosion in Times Square." Plotters in Afghanistan and Yemen, preparing for their next attempt at mass murder in America, could only have listened in wonderment. They must have marvelled in particular on learning that this was the chief counterterrorism adviser to the president of the United States.
Long after Mr. Obama leaves office, it will be this parade of explicators, laboring mightily to sell each new piece of official reality revisionism—Janet Napolitano and her immortal "man-caused disasters'' among them—that will stand most memorably as the face of this administration.
It is a White House that has focused consistently on the sensitivities of the world community—as it is euphemistically known—a body of which the president of the United States frequently appears to view himself as a representative at large.
It is what has caused this president and his counterterrorist brain trust to deem it acceptable to insult Americans with nonsensical evasions concerning the enemy we face. It is this focus that caused Mr. Holder to insist on holding the trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in lower Manhattan, despite the rage this decision induced in New Yorkers, and later to insist if not there, then elsewhere in New York. This was all to be a dazzling exhibition for that world community—proof of Mr. Obama's moral reclamation program and that America had been delivered from the darkness of the Bush years.
It was why this administration tapped officials like Michael Posner, assistant secretary of state for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. Among his better known contributions to political discourse was a 2005 address in which he compared the treatment of Muslim-Americans in the United States after 9/11 with the plight of the Japanese-Americans interned in camps after Pearl Harbor. During a human-rights conference held in China this May, Mr. Posner cited the new Arizona immigration law by way of assuring the Chinese, those exemplary guardians of freedom, that the United States too had its problems with discrimination.
So there we were: America and China, in the same boat on human rights, two buddies struggling for reform. For this view of reality, which brought withering criticism in Congress and calls for his resignation, Mr. Posner has been roundly embraced in the State Department as a superbly effective representative.
It is no surprise that Mr. Posner—like numerous of his kind—has found a natural home in this administration. His is a sensibility and political disposition with which Mr. Obama is at home. The beliefs and attitudes that this president has internalized are to be found everywhere—in the salons of the left the world over—and, above all, in the academic establishment, stuffed with tenured radicals and their political progeny. The places where it is held as revealed truth that the United States is now, and has been throughout its history, the chief engine of injustice and oppression in the world.
They are attitudes to be found everywhere, but never before in a president of the United States. Mr. Obama may not hold all, or the more extreme, of these views. But there can be no doubt by now of the influences that have shaped him. They account for his grand apology tour through the capitals of Europe and to the Muslim world, during which he decried America's moral failures—her arrogance, insensitivity. They were the words of a man to whom reasons for American guilt came naturally. Americans were shocked by this behavior in their newly elected president. But he was telling them something from those lecterns in foreign lands—something about his distant relation to the country he was about to lead.
The truth about that distance is now sinking in, which is all to the good. A country governed by leaders too principled to speak the name of its mortal enemy needs every infusion of reality it can get.
Ms. Rabinowitz is a member of the Journal's editorial board.

Tuesday, June 08, 2010

My friend and fellow Jaycee and Officer put a photo of these glasses from my year as President of the Oklahoma Jaycees... sure brought back a lot of memories... Steve Elwart lived in Nash and worked for Champlin in those days... a very honorable and distinguished man, good times.

If you look around.. seems....

you might want to click here to see the latest on how obamacare is messing up the system...
Simply put, when broke, stop spending! This stupid bill needs to be repealed for one reason. We can not afford it. It was poorly crafted, poorly written and will not help anyone. It makes things worse. Even the uninsured will find this out. They are supposed to be the ones this bill helps, but right now as in the days gone by, no one is turned down.

In my close family I know of two who have been insured fully for last 30 years and have not been to doctor for physical!  I know of some without insurance who have had!  I saw my own father spend time in 2 hospitals, and one nursing home and one rehab center. They could have paid for every bit of it, but he was treated equally with those who had NO insurance, or perhaps a bit worse as they left a rectal tube inside him for two weeks and nearly killed him with that!

All this will do is cost money, create government jobs putting IRS into our lives even deeper, and provide us less coverage with less providers than we now have. If you think I am kidding, think it through. This is to provide insurance for millions more... and there are less and less doctors, and hospitals struggling now to keep doors open due to poor slow payments from government with what is now provided.

I am sure this payment process is much like I encountered in the feed business. We provided feed to many government operations, state and a few federal, and the payment was always 120 to 160 days behind... and in some cases over a half year late. Yes, we carried the government on our backs as a small business owner!

ObamaCare Watch  check this link out to keep watch on. might not mean much today, but just wait!

Did you catch this past week when China, our major lender, stiffed Gates on a major meeting with them, telling them the timing was not quite right... haha... or did you hear how Australia, when asking China for more money, was told to fix some things in their nation first before they loaned them more money? They did, they devalued their money some and China stepped up and loaned them more! Who rules Australia?  Is America next?

Doesn't matter how we got here... it was both party's who screwed us up and got us into this mess. What we need now is to 'set the reins'... put the stop on - spending! It has to come to a halt.  We need leadership, solid leadership. I honestly didn't like McCain and felt o'bubba was a flash in the pan... spent a lot of my life with folks JUST like him... lots of BS and no original thoughts or leadership. He has to be a one termer!

Both party's need to fix this by finding very smart women or men with leadership abilities and the word NO in their vocabulary, and we as Americans need to be able to accept NO. The next set of presidential candidates needs to have some practical experience in the business world, need to be a leader, not say they are but actually be a leader! and be honorable. and be someone who's word is his/her bond!

You may have hated Bush - but you always knew where he stood and that he would not change. Today that is not a bad character flaw, haha... this obubba can't tell the truth on any issue, and has flip flopped more on all issues than anyone I have ever seen in my life in any position. Most kids are better at this than he is! And man can obubba pick losers to surround himself with! How about a tax cheat for Sec of Treasury, or Head of Ways and Means or second in command being a tax cheat, and ... oh well just check them out.. great cast of misfits...

I have six wonderful, heck, even outstanding and amazing grandchildren, and I pray every night they will be able to enjoy this great country without being taxed to death.. but probably won't happen.

I promise you there is 20 to 25% interest coming. Inflation like we have not seem before... and unemployment will not decrease for some time. It would be just awesome if we could find out the truth from our government! We need to have term limits and throw out the old dogs who do nothing but suck off the public teat!

What a sad set of employment numbers. No private sector jobs being created, but hundreds of thousands of government jobs being created! And you and I pay for them! Right now if you add up IRS and State Taxes and are self employed you pay 58 cents on the dollar. Then you pay about 10% sales tax when you buy something and property taxes when you own something and tag and tax and ........     it blows me away. And I was thinking this is why American came to be, to get away from all the taxes???  Did I miss something here?

As a nation, we do nothing for ourselves. We produce nothing. Almost all we buy is imported. How can jobs be created in this environment? We need the age of entrepreneurship to come back - folks to start new businesses, tax incentives to help them start up, hire workers... and get to producing things HERE in USA.

One does not have to look far to see that this lack of leadership at the top mimicks our own top leader here at home. Look at the leadership from Gov on cleaning up Med. Ex. Office, or other boards or agencys... lots of problems and NO leadership. Lots of BS and no 'get'er done'....

ok.. off soap box.  I write these to stir comment... and those are welcome too..  loved to know your thoughts, or if I am way off base here and all by myself... or swimming with most of you....

My My My... rock star baseball player... gett'em Dylan....


OPHS!.... that boy has some power behind that bat!


Another awesome photo from Phillip Moffat.

June Family Birthdays and Anniversaries sure there are many I missed...

June 1 - Ivan and Freda Moffat - 65 years this date
June 3 - Roxann and Lary Weeks - 33 years this date
June 3 - Clinton and Joanna Wilson - 55 years this date
June 9 - Emily and Molly Siegrist - 18
June 18 - Jake Moffat - 28
June 23 - Elinore Moffat - 91
June 25 - Fannie Moffat - 97
June 26 - Paul and Heather Blankinship - 17 years this date
June 28 - Uncle Mike - 66

send email to stanmoffat@gmail.com to add dates missed to this month, please. thanks...

Uncle Mike

As of last evening, Mike had been moved to a normal hospital room, had a new addition in his side, a tube to eliminate some internal bleeding pushing against his lungs, only 10% deflation of his damaged lung, and they were going to get him up to walk last night. Last we talked with Uncle David, he and Aunt Terry were on their way to grab a bite to eat and pick up a shake for Uncle Mike.. and he was very happy to hear that!

David picked up the bike from the lot in Enid where it went after the accident and quickly decide the nice folks running it were crooks... NEVER call Direct Towing in Enid for any reason!
He reported the bike is in three pieces and is completely messed up on the side we could not see, including a broke frame. I believe he reported the bike to be in three pieces and nothing moved, with most damage on side we could not see or that was not shown in the photos from Saturday.

As of last evening we believe he will be in St. Mary's for at least another week, and then to rehab but this is very fluid and subject to change hourly or more often.

His attitude is great. His memory is a bit improved, amazingly on some things and lacking in places, like mine on a normal day, haha....

Not sure his room number... Ann knows it...

but to send cards... use:


St. Mary's Regional Medical Center
Attn: Patient Mr. Mike Shaklee
305 South 5th
Enid, OK 73701




and phone to call and talk... main number is (580) 233-6100  and I be they will transfer you to his room.


All I know for now....