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The place where the world comes together in honesty and mirth.
Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.


Thursday, September 4, 2008

Condemned man's hearing moved to before execution

Well, duh!

A judge on Thursday moved a hearing date for a condemned inmate so that it's no longer scheduled for after his execution, giving his lawyers the chance to argue while he's still alive that the conviction was unfair because the judge was allegedly having an affair with a prosecutor.

State District Judge Greg Brewer moved the hearing date for Charles Dean Hood to Monday, two days before Hood is set to die for the 1989 slaying of a couple in Plano, near Dallas.

The decision reverses a that of another judge, Robert Dry, who had set a similar hearing for Sept. 12, two days after Hood's execution date.

The hearing will address arguments that Brewer's murder trial was unfair because of an alleged romantic relationship between the judge presiding over the trial, Verla Sue Holland, and former Collin County District Attorney Tom O'Connell.

*****

I do not know a thing about this case. However, I think setting a hearing two days after the man was to executed was bit off. What good the hearing will do for the man is up to the court there in Texas. Please tell me the first judge just can't read a calendar and was not petty, spiteful or any such as that.

McPain: I will 'fight for your future'

And the lies continue ...

"I will fight for your future" said McPain.

And just who's future will he fight for? Thus far he has 'fought' for naught save his own and the very few of the wealthiest of the wealthiest - and done a crappy job of it in the bargain.

Before you n'er-do-wells spout off you should know I am one of those wealthiest and I loath the buffoon and he has never done a damned thing for me. I also happen to be a Marine of the same era and I was never stupid enough to get myself captured despite being 'north of the DMZ' more than south of it - so his POW 'status' means zilch to me (and to all other self respecting soldiers who served without being idiots and allowing themselves to be captured.)

The speech was nothing but a empty space, a vacuum that even the hot air he was blowing could not fill.
The same tired old dog and pony show with smoke and mirrors is what we saw tonight.
I was less impressed than I was last night and I wasn't impressed last night.

It will come as a shock to some troglodytes perverting an old forum I used to be on that I even watched the speeches, but as they are troglodytes so someone with an open mind and the Cajones to stand up to them always shocks them ... and what they never learned was that mine are platinum coated hardened steel and I have a working brain to go along with them.

As Peggy Noonan said, "It's over!"

Searching the Net

The top twenty searched items on the internet for
September 4th, 2008

Sarah Palin
Hayden Panettiere
Leighton Meester
HI-5
National Hurricane Center
NFL
Kellie Pickler
US Open
Anne Hathaway
Barak Obama
Drudge Report
NOAA
Google Chrome
Jessica Alba
Hurricane Hanna
Christine Aguilera
Jerry Reed
90210
Bristol Palin
Limewire

An Error of Comedic Proportions

Comedians just LOVE Palin ...

Vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin has many views. She says she's opposed to same-sex marriage. Did you know that? Yeah, Palin says everyone knows marriage isn't for gay people; it's for pregnant teenagers." --Conan O'brien

"Let me ask you a question: is it just me, or does Sarah Palin look like a model for Lenscrafters?" --David Letterman

"Earlier tonight, I don't know if you saw it, Sarah Palin gave a tremendous speech to the republicans, though some are claiming it was actually her daughter's speech." --David Letterman

"Hey, the republican convention is still going wild in scenic St. Paul, Minnesota right now. Alaska governor and vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin was the star speaker tonight. A lot of excitement. She promised a walrus in every igloo and a whale tooth in every papoose." --Jimmy Kimmel

"Governor Sarah Palin gave her speech tonight at the gop convention, and it gave people who didn't know anything about her the chance to finally meet her, you know, like John McCain." --Jay Leno

"We're learning more and more about governor Palin. Apparently her daughter's name is Juno." --Jay Leno

"The republican convention is under way. the theme for tonight's republican convention is, 'who is John McCain?' Tomorrow night's theme is, 'who forgot to check if the vice president's daughter is pregnant?'" --Conan O'brien

"And you've got to love this: Sarah Palin is an avid hunter. An avid hunter. A vice president who likes guns? Well, what could go wrong there?" --David Letterman

"Some people are saying that McCain picked Sarah Palin to appeal to women who supported Hillary Clinton. This is crazy. You can't just replace Hillary Clinton with another woman. Bill tried that, it didn't work out." --Craig Ferguson

"John McCain's vp pick is the governor of Alaska, a unknown hockey mom named Sarah Palin that no one ever heard of. The only other job she had in politics was the mayor of a small town known as Wasilla, Alaska, and now she has the opportunity to be on a ticket opposite of Barack Obama, the first black man she's ever seen." –Bill Maher

"Are you kidding me, the mayor of Wasilla, Alaska? Yeah, that's who you want in the White House during a time of crisis. When she got a phone call at 3 in the morning, it was because a moose had gotten in the garbage can." –Bill Maher

"When they were vetting her for this job, like three seconds ago, she said, quote, I'm not making this up, 'what is it exactly that the vp does every day?' Let me field that for you, Sarah. they start wars, they enrich their friends, they subvert the constitution, and they shoot people in the face. that's what the vice president does." –Bill Maher

"And McCain felt what this nation really needs now is a vice president who looks like Tina Fey." --David Letterman

Accused toll-evader rigged license plate?

The Transit Authority of New York and New Jersey accuse Orlando Payano of rigging his tractor-trailer's license plate so that it flipped up when he sped through camera-equipped toll plazas without paying. Payano, charged with toll evasion and "license plate destruction," denies the allegations.
The Port Authority said driver Orlando Payano ran a cable from the license plate to the dashboard cigarette lighter inside the cab of the vehicle.

Pulling on the lighter flipped the plate under the truck.

A Town divided: Seagrove, North Carolina

Among the endless allegations of thievery, financial subterfuge and conspiracy, there is only this certainty: North Carolinians take their pottery seriously.

And that's about all outspoken potter Don Hudson can say without throwing himself further into a deepening dispute among the noted artisans living in an area of central North Carolina rich in natural clay, where pottery has flourished for more than 250 years.

The dispute has resulted in two pottery festivals in Seagrove scheduled for the same November weekend.
One is new this year, the other has been held for the last 26.

The divide, and all the confusing reasons for a fight over pottery, can appear ridiculous to outsiders.
But it's venomous for those involved, resulting in ugly propaganda, reports of a gunshot fired at one shop and allegations of assault.
Attempts to settle it have gotten nowhere.

"It's crazy. It's doing huge damage, and they should get over it," said Charlotte Brown, author of the 2006 book, "The Remarkable Potters of Seagrove" and director of the Gregg Museum of Art & Design at North Carolina State University in Raleigh.
"It's not over anything that matters. It's personal. Everybody stands to lose."

Even some customers are starting to take sides, said Michelle Kovack, an artist who paints pots thrown by her husband, Craig, and is neutral in the feud.
"They've got to realize, we're stuck in the middle of this," she said. "We're just trying to make a living."

Potters have carved out a living in the Seagrove area, about halfway between Charlotte and Raleigh, since the mid-18th century.
It was founded by seven families who embraced the abundant clay underfoot.
Seagrove artists' fans include actors Elizabeth Taylor and Paul Newman, and the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Tokyo.
North Carolina governors have commissioned the community's pottery as gifts for world leaders.
All of which helps explain the passion that feeds a feud that has simmered for years and went public this summer.

The schism generally involves differences between potters who support the Museum of North Carolina Traditional Pottery - which is more of a welcome center with samples of local work - and artisans who have broken from it.

Some in the breakaway group also support the financially struggling North Carolina Pottery Center, which displays and promotes work from artists statewide, not just those based in Seagrove.
It also sells pottery, which critics say hurts local artists and takes business away from their shops.

The center, which doesn't support either festival, has been the target of attacks by Hudson, a museum board member and a potter in nearby Sanford.
Hudson has published two articles that have infuriated some potters and written numerous e-mails, one of which resulted in legislative fiscal researchers examining the center's finances in August.
The state auditor has since given the center a clean financial report.

Museum supporters operate the Seagrove Pottery Festival.
It attracts 5,000 to 6,000 people to Seagrove - population 250 - each year and is considered one of the best festivals in the Southeast.
Scheduled for the weekend before Thanksgiving, it gives potters a chance to make money before tourism slows in the winter and raises $50,000 to $60,000 for the museum.
"I know that people know that the economy is bad now, but really, for us, it's been dwindling for several years," Kovack said.
"And it makes that show all the more important because the slow season is like January through March, maybe even April. And we need to make a lot of money at Christmastime to get us through that slow season."

Some museum supporters say the center has tried to steal the festival for years, though the former center director denies that.
Hudson tries to frame the feud around the center.
He brought the simmering ill feelings to the public with a May article he published in the guide of a separate pottery gathering.
The article, "Frankenstein's Monster," referenced the museum's efforts to start the center years ago.
Hudson accuses the center of playing favorites and planting "seeds of discord and strife in a community already under the stress of intense competition."

In doing so, Hudson didn't win any friends.
The former attorney said in an e-mail that no one "has ever confused me with Mother Teresa."
The tone of the article upset many, including some of his museum board colleagues, who failed in an attempt to boot him.
Two other board members and an office staffer resigned.
"I think Don in his heart thinks he's doing absolutely the best he can for us," said Judy Merritt, board secretary until she resigned in early June after the failed ouster attempt.

Word of a new event soon followed: the Celebration of Seagrove Potters, scheduled for the same weekend as the other festival.
It began as a group of irked potters, but is now under the auspices of the Seagrove Area Potters Association, a nonprofit marketing group.
Phil Morgan, a potter renowned for his crystalline glazes, said the new event is part of "a vindictive attack to try to kill the museum because Don Hudson is associated with the museum."
Nonsense, said dissident group leader Ben Owen III, another titan of Seagrove and descendant of one of the community's founding families.
He insists the new festival is about highlighting only Seagrove artists, and doesn't have anything to do with Hudson.
That despite the festival, with an emphasis on pottery made in a specific Seagrove area, not including Hudson, who is based in nearby Sanford.

In the past few weeks, things have only gotten worse.
Morgan said someone fired a gunshot into his shop on N.C. 705 - known as "Pottery Highway."
Two other potters accused each other of assault.

Museum supporters are threatening to go to court, claiming the second festival doesn't meet town ordinances.

In August, Hudson wrote a flier titled, "SewerFest," referring to the event's location: a vacant building beside a sewer lagoon.
It includes a tribute to Richard Gillson, the longtime museum president who died in January after falling from a ladder at the museum.
Hudson and his supporters defended the flier as political satire.
But Gillson's daughter, Deborah Gardner of Dunkirk, N.Y., said her father would be horrified.
"My father was a very outspoken man, but he never would have stooped to the level that Don Hudson has brought himself down to," she said.

*****

Oh, and you guessed it Hudson is a ... re...
It seems they cannot exist without causing trouble for everyone else.
Well, I hadn't planned on attending the Seagrove festival this year anyway.

Independents react to Palin's 'speech'

Here are some reactions by four Independent voters to the speech given by the repugican VEEP nominee:

I was completely underwhelmed. She was a republican novelty act with a sophomoric script. It was not even a speech I would expect for a someone running for the local PTA, much less for vice president.”

-- George Lentz, 66, Southfield - Independent


Who is Sarah Palin? I'm sorry but I still don't know anymore about this young lady tonight than I did last night ... the way it looks to me, she's the republican vice presidential nominee for one reason: because Hillary wasn't selected.”

-- Mike Kosh, 38, West Bloomfield - Independent


"Sarah Palin is a self-described ‘pitbull with lipstick.’ She spent little time helping Americans learn who she is. Her speech contained few statements about policy or the party platform. … I am not convinced that Palin's experience as a mayor or governor in Alaska meet the qualifications to be vice president much less one stroke or heart attack away from being commander in chief.”

-- Ilene Beninson, 52, Berkley - Independent


Nothing worked for me. I found her barrage of snide remarks and distortions to be a major turn off. She is not a class act. The most important point she made is that she will be an effective attack dog.”

-- Jan Wheelock, 58, Royal Oak - Independent

Palin energizes the base

Palin energizes the base all right -

- the Democratic base

Ben Smith @ poltico reports that Maggie O'Connell's speech last night raised $10 million...for Obama!

Obama's coffers have been filling since Sarah Palin attacked him repeatedly in St. Paul last night.

An Obama aide confirms Drudge's report that Obama has raised about $8 million from more than 130,000 donors and is on pace to raise $10 million by the time McCain reaches the stage tonight.

Bet you they didn't see that coming

Get the latest real facts and figure from 538, who has always maintained for weeks now that obama is ahead w/electoral, popular and percentage votes.

Why would your daughter need sex education?

Why would your daughter need sex education?

Because she's 16 and chugging
rum shots with the gang?

Where was Mom????

As of this moment ...

Lest the repugicans think their diversion is working ...

As of this moment:

4,150 brave men and women are gone.


In Iraq due to the greed and callousness of the cabal!

Support our troops, bring them home now!

Send a card

See more at someecards.com

Palin, the CNP and Diebold are linked

Get ready for another stolen election!

by Faun Otter

Fact 1. Palin was not vetted by McCain but by the leaders of CNP

Fact 2. Diebold are major financial backers of CNP candidates

Fact 3. CNP are Christian Reconstructionists and Christian Dominionists

CNP have a rule that, the media should not know when or where they meet or who takes part in their programs, before or after a meeting.

(Reported in the NYT August 2004)

The following Source Watch listing will convince you of the bad people that make up this unpleasant group:

http://tinyurl.com/gs89

Another good article and links on CNP is at:

How stupid are Repugicans?

They'll buy an "Abstinence Only" program
from a woman who's daughter looks like this.

Relax you morons it isn't her!

Cap'n Morgan to the rescue

Penis-boy and Bristol (left) get down
with some Captain Morgan Rum.

He gets the governor's daughter drunk,
screws her,
impregnates her,
then says,
"I don't want kids."

And these are the 'Family Values' people!?

Bristol Palin at the family bar
...and she's either 16 or 17 in this picture.

Don't know about you but my children did not drink at 16 or 17.

In fact they still don't drink - and the "baby" is 35 years old now.

The media's love affair with McPain is over.

Bloomberg media: The media's love affair with McPain is over.

About time, don't you think!?

Three Facts

Here are three facts about Wasilla:


Wasilla is considered a backwoods hillbilly area by other Alaskans.

People from the area proudly call themselves "Valley Trash."

How much more obvious do you need?


Sarah Palin wows the faithful with her "Seig Heil" tribute to Hitler

Be afraid, be very afraid ...

Video footage of Sarah Palin's church
Wasilla Assembly of God Clip
This is video footage from the Pentecostal church Sarah Palin belongs to, clearly showing dozens of members of the congregation speaking in tongues and wandering zombie-like through the aisles, also thrashing around on the floor in front of the pulpit.
I am not sure, but I believe several people are drooling or frothing at the mouth - it is not clear enough to make it out for sure
I have haven't seen anyone online mention this video, or even Palin's connection in general to this church (including a pastor who preaches that God put the shrub in office), so thought I would bring it to your attention.
Smashing Telly's post with the video.

The Wasilla Assembly of God church had lots more up on their website, but they've since removed it with this statement.

In one of those videos Palin describes the Iraq War as "a task from god."
Here's that video.

Here's another in which it is revealed that the Alaska oil pipeline is God's Will.
If you're so inclined, a quick search reveals a lot more on.

Douglas Rushkoff on the RNC

rudy-can-fail.jpg

Douglas Rushkoff posted an insightful essay about the RNC speeches.

"I felt a bit nauseous watching the Republican convention last night. I’m very much a give-the-benefit-of-the-doubt kind of guy, so I try to listen to the arguments people make even when they’re made in over-the-top or patronizing ways.
Sometimes it’s good to distinguish between the rhetorical devices and the underlying substance. Even people who use manipulative language sometimes have an important point beneath their persuasion techniques (ads against smoking, for example). I usually don’t feel uneasy when I put those filters on, but last night - during the
Guiliani speech - I realized I was no longer filtering a speechwriter’s intentional manipulation; I was trying to look beyond real hate."

Read the rest of Douglas Rushkoff's essay over at Boing Boing: Douglas Rushkoff on the RNC
Douglas Rushkoff's own website is under a 'Denial-of-service cyberattack' - something that the wing-nuts are fond of doing - preventing readers from viewing his website for the time being

Repugican Hypocrisy

Leave it Jon Stewart to prove the repugican's hipocrisy1


The Daily Show has a segment with video clips of Dick Morris, Karl Rove, Bill O'Reilly, and others complaining about the media's unfair treatment of Sarah Palin, along with earlier video clips of these folks dishing out the same garbage about other women, including Hillary Clinton.

Damn it, those ol' cameras and tape recording devices are only supposed to show and record the dogma not the truth!

Soap Opera: episode 9 million and one part 26 - A

Texas drops over half of the cases in polygamist sect raid.

Child by child, Texas authorities are acknowledging that many of the children seized during a raid on a polygamist sect's ranch can safely live with their parents or guardians.

Since the April 3 raid on the Yearning for Zion Ranch in Eldorado, 235 children's custody cases have been dropped, meaning fewer than half of the 440 children seized remain bound by a court order to stay in Texas, attend parenting classes or be available for unannounced visits by Child Protective Services.

CPS spokesman Patrick Crimmins said more cases are likely to be dropped but he was unsure how many.
They're being dropped "as fast as we can because it's a burden on everyone," he said.