• 1,297 replies
    marye
    Joined:

    Nuclear power! Carcinogenic cell phones! The Stanley Cup! and the usual parade of kids dancing and shaking their bones, politicians throwing stones, etc. Discuss.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • fluffanutter
    Joined:
    Chris Kyle: Navy Seal, American Sniper
    Chris Kyle from Texas is a former Seal and the greatest sniper in the history of the American armed forces (his longest confirmed kill was over 6100 yards, more than a mile) with over 150 confirmed kills. He received 5 bronze stars and two silver stars (combat medals) for his service in Iraq from 2003-2008. He co-wrote the book American Sniper. This book evoked a lot of emotion from me every time I opened it up. It provided a lot of information about veterans that I had been seeking. It opened up the war in Iraq to me through the battles for Fallujah, Ramadi and Sadr City inside Baghdad. I will list briefly some of the main points I discerned: * The precursor chemicals of WMD, sold to Iraq by the French and Germans, were found by US Forces. * The war turned into a Christian crusade against "the savages". * The armed forces go wherever they are ordered. Don't blame them, blame the politicians. * The rules of engagement seriously hindered the armed forces ability to do their job. There was paperwork & witnesses involved to justify all killing. * Non-political Iraqis fought against our armed forces out of national pride. * Combat is addictive. Black humor is pervasive. Friendships made in combat often last longer than marriages. * Veterans are not only scarred from physical wounds, they are tortured mentally by the killing and wounding they have done, especially when it is collateral damage. * The training of other country's men into an armed force is impossible. * Seals like to fight in bars. This is an excellent book if you want a first-hand perspective. Highly recommended for a view of things veterans usually only speak of to each other and at VFW halls.
  • TigerLilly
    Joined:
    fluffanutter
    that's what I said, back during the Strauss-Kahn scandal. How interesting the timing was to take him down.
  • fluffanutter
    Joined:
    Hollande Strauss Kahn
    A socialist won the French presidential election yesterday -- Francois Hollande. He is only the 2nd Socialist president since WWII and already the markets are tumbling and it would be easy to bet the DJI short today. Is this speculation justified? I have no idea but things are so screwed up already I don't think it will make much difference. He might get yelled at in Chicago at the NATO summit for pulling the French out of Afghanistan. What IS interesting to note is that Dominique Strauss Kahn would have been the first stringer for the Socialist Party had he not been set up in NYC in a sex sting honey trap. Who wanted Strauss Kahn out of power and for what reason?
  • TigerLilly
    Joined:
    Adieu Sarko
    And good riddance. The jury's still out on Hollande, at least amongst my more left-thinking French buddies; but we'll see. Bad news in the Greek elections-neo Nazis got 8 % of the seats in Parliament. Squeeze a people too badly, and they squeeze back in possibly unpleasant ways.
  • fluffanutter
    Joined:
    Derby Day
    Many "Hat" (Derby Day, git it?) parties around my parts last Saturday. A lot of hung over people on Sunday. That is what happens when you substitute the passion fruit margaritas for the mint juleps on a super-moon Saturday Night. I stay away from the alcohol related events like the plague. Not that I don't have other vices... If you were in a full moon hat party hope your head wasn't too big the next day. (Noonie -- There is no system for winning at the horse races unless you happened to live or work around the track. Save your money and wait for a good fix, which didn't happen all that frequently. That is what we used to do at Narragansett anyway. A track that has long since closed.)
  • noonie
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    derby
    you know i always wanted to learn how to bet on the ponies. i use to work with a guy who every weekend he would go to the track and sometimes he wouldn't show up for work on monday. Then we would kmow he won big. I asked a couple of times to show me but he always said "no way get your own system" Those double ipa sound good, to bad i am work
  • Anna rRxia
    Joined:
    Derby Day - Another bizarre American Ritual
    Once a year the Kentucky bluegrass gentry and their horse breeders get together in Lou-A-Vull at Churchill Downs and do this thing. It is the showcase of the best horse on dirt and "the fastest two minutes" in the sports year. On another level, it seems to be a bizarre ritual in which 165,000 people get stinking drunk and watch midgets and dwarfs dressed in bright colors perched on animals go fast. It is also a fashion show and photo-op. Hunter Thompson writes most eloquently about this phenomenon. This spectacle was made for him and it is about us as Americans who have "Derby Parties" in our homes and watch on our monster flat screen TVs. My Old Kentucky Home indeed.
  • Gr8fulTed
    Joined:
    I love the Kentucky Derby
    I'll Have Another cashed in at 40-1: any winners out there? I'll continue with the mint juleps and some double IPA's (Wood-aged from Great Divide). Bodemeister placed.
  • fluffanutter
    Joined:
    THIS from a Wall St. Investment Co.
    And people call me an "Alarmist" (among other things)! 1. War Could 2012 be the year World War Three begins in earnest? We've discussed this at some length in a number of letters, and though our timing has been wrong (we imagined hostilities would already be upon us by this time), we stand solidly behind our conviction that a Middle Eastern conflict that begins in this calendar year will spread and encompass nearly the entire planet, and that hostilities will not cease for some years to come. Part of our belief is predicated on the massive stockpiling of crude oil we see here at home, a development that only makes sense if someone, somewhere is expecting a sharp spike in the price of oil. 2. Liquidity Call 2012 the year that economic Rohypnol, the so-called 'date rape' drug, finally took effect. After several years of the Fed (and other central banks) slipping the stuff into the money supply, we're all beginning to 'go under'. With the world now awash in paper that people call money, inflation can never be far behind. In 2012 the dreaded 'I' word starts to bite. 3. Civil Unrest and Terrorism One look at Greece, Spain and to a lesser extent our own Occupy Wall Street movement, and its clear there's something afoot globally that looks like a riot. Recent disturbances in (of all places) Canada, where thousands of striking university students and union workers took to the streets of Montreal to voice their displeasure with the 'status quo' show that even sleepy backwaters like Canuckia aren't immune to the trend. Call 2012 the year that anarchy reached unprecedented proportions globally. In Europe, particularly, it appears the violence will take on nationalistic hues, bringing with it everything that normally attends such outbreaks (beatings/lootings/lynchings/pyrotechnics/etc). The terrorist underworld will likely view the whole show as an excellent opportunity to piggyback on popular frustration and begin marking their favorite targets. 4. Wilder Weather We're just the messengers here, so don't shoot, but it's looking like we're in for some strange and persistent natural calamities over the course of the year. After a steady pickup in tectonic activity over the last year and a half, scientists are now calling for even more seismic action in the twelve months, particularly around the so-called ring of fire that circumscribes the Pacific ocean. But that's not all. West coast earthquakes will also apparently be augmented by a hectic hurricane season (on the east coast and Gulf states), and tornadoes are expected to multiply across the Midwest during the storm season as well. Most of all, we have generational – and possibly historical – sunspot activity expected in the next year that most experts agree could cause irredeemable damage to our power grid, satellite technology and even domestic electrical appliances. 5. Summary In short, no one will be secure or immune from what's about to hit. The stock market will rise, we believe (liquidity), but the value of our holdings will diminish (inflation). And how long can such a condition persist? That depends on how safe our cities become in the face of a general civil breakdown, how successful terrorists are at undermining our habitual way of life, and how much increasingly violent weather and extended blackouts conspire to deprive us of confidence in corporate growth. That sounds strangely like the end of the world How do you plan for that? Well, I'm not going to give you their investment advice, you have to pay for that. But if this is what Wall St. is talking about then maybe the Mayan calender people aren't so nuts after all. Time to load the bullion supplies into the survival bunker. (!)
  • fluffanutter
    Joined:
    May Day 2012: Obama Surrenders in Kabul
    Although the history books, and media outlets, will never say it, President Barak Obama surrendered in the middle of the night after cowardly slinking in on Air Force One after a 13 hour flight from DC. The protocol was signed with President Hamat Karzai amidst a total news blackout with 6 big chinook helicopters packed with elite troops guarding them in a tight cordon on the tarmac. One year to the day after the navy Seals disposed of Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan Obama addressed the troops in an airplane hanger and told them how proud he was of them for always upholding America's most cherished values. This is a president that always says and does the right thing, no matter what. Now America is signed to a contract to keep the troops in play in advisory roles till some time in 2024. I can't imagine who would want to remain on that blasted heath for another day. We're not fooling anybody. Least of all the Taliban who wouldn't even negotiate with us. Meanwhile, "Occupy" rioters took to the streets this May Day from Miami to Seattle. While not exactly a show of strength it was something to be considered. (I am currently reading "American Sniper" by ex Navy Seal Chris Kyle and had another comment for this day but will save it for another. This BUD/S for you & your tribe Mr. Kyle. I don't support war but I support the warriors who would stand for us.)
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Forums

Nuclear power! Carcinogenic cell phones! The Stanley Cup! and the usual parade of kids dancing and shaking their bones, politicians throwing stones, etc. Discuss.

user picture

Member for

14 years 1 month
Permalink

So, I know LA has never been a super big Deadhead town, but they simply dont exist on LA classic rock radio. Old school (KMET, KLOS, KLSX) or new (The Sound). Its as if The Dead has been erased by the playlists. Not even Truckin or Touch of Grey! Is this the same in your town?
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

But the good news is when we go to the supermarket we occasionally here Touch Of Grey. Want to hear something really strange? When I got stopped by an NC State Trooper for speeding in Charlotte he put me in the back seat of his cruiser while he wrote the ticket. I'm sitting there listening to his classic rock and it's playing: Truckin'! My state Public Radio plays segues of Grateful Dead and they signed off on Jerry's birthday this year by saying "Happy birthday Jerry. We miss you." My advice if you want to hear a classic rock format that has The Grateful Dead in it's playlist? Move to Santa Cruz or Arcata in Humboldt. I lived in La-La land for a year (Beverly Hills, Sherman Oaks) & never goin' back except to visit. ~ Set up, like bowlin' pin, Knocked down, it gets to wherin' thin. ~.
user picture

Member for

14 years 1 month
Permalink

Thats funny, Lamagonzo. You know I bring it up because I discussed my Dead tribute act with a non-head buddy from St. Louis He said "oh man, they are sooo played out on rock radio" and I was like, what?!? Not in LaLa Land, but apparently in St. Louis. Yeah, and definitely NoCal has the Dead coming out of the walls.
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

whereas here in Oakland I was leaving Whole Paycheck last night after picking up a couple of items and realized that the music coming over the speakers was...Estimated Prophet. The real version.
user picture

Member for

14 years 1 month
Permalink

Thats an oddball grocery store song! I guess youd expect that from a Whole Foods in Dead Country
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

...a smallish chain in the Northeast. No doubt they bought a playlist for the baby-boomers and most of us are all walking around a little more or less greyer these daze! ~ Oh well, a touch of grey. Kind of suits you anyway ~
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Anna Hazare entered the tenth day of his fast against corruption in the Indian capitol today and upped the ante. His fast is against the widespread bribery and corruption that is engrained in that part of India. He is 74 years old and was arrested for his demonstrations in India. A bad, stupid mistake for the Indian government, which was, after all, founded by a faster named Mahatma Gandhi. Very savvy organizers have gathered around him and when he was released from jail, where he started the first four days of the fast, there were thousands waiting for him. He went to the Memorial place of the Mahatma to pay obeisance and then went to a prepared dais where he is carrying on his fast in front of 20,000 people, the number of which is expected to grow. While he was only supposed to fast for 14 days he is now demanding that India pass new laws against bribery and corruption before he stops. He may have gone to far. Anybody who has been to that part of the world knows how entrenched corruption is (almost as much as our Congress) in that part of the world. He is a hero to the one billion people of India and many other countries, which could start a new wave of dumping corrupt governments like the Arab spring. In fact, Angsang Sukyi was just released from seven years of house arrest in Myanmar (Burma) the other day. Anna Hazzare is my Alpha Dog of the Year for 2011.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Gaddafi's forces are making a last stand, fighting off rebels from his compound. Nobody knows what the "eccentric" Colonel may do. I guess he is finding out what Hitler felt like in his bunker as the Allies were invading Berlin in 1945. Libya liberated again on 8/22/11 ~ Stand up for you rights ~
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Rent this movie if you want to know why we are still in an economic crisis. It tells the tail better than I could. Mortgage backed derivatives sold by unregulated investment banks. ~ Ship of fools, sail away from me! ~
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I think it's wonderful that the insane bastard is going, but am cynical about what comes next. Dictators tend to leave very large governmental holes behind them. Egypt is still struggling, look what happened in Yugoslavia after Tito fell and so on. Libya has so many tribal overlords, how will the reconcile them to a new govt? Am very curious. ********************************** I am not young enough to know everything. Oscar Wilde
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

On the East Coast, At least the nuke in Virginia shut down. We should be Grateful we're not Dead!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

i agree TigerLilly; the situation in Libya is a farce. Berlusconi signed a friendship pledge and co-operation treaty just two months before the uprising. now Italy is busy in the carve-up of Libya's vast oil riches.and we wonder why they hate the West. the rebels doing the dirty work as we wade in via the slipstream. it will end in disaster. meanwhile McCain spouts nonsense about Russia and China next in line for upheaval. and wouldn't the US just love that. Leary's "whiskey drinking generals" springs to mind. i feel embarrassed while watching these brave people die; do they know what they've inadvertently let themselves in for? the word of the year is Shame.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

please support this everyone - for japanese speakers - http://www.pj-fukushima.jp/index.html for English speakers - http://www.pj-fukushima.jp/en/project.html a wonderful, inspiring project to support this troubled area. the government isn't doing much but you can. instigated by Otomo Yoshihide, it calls for musicians, scientists and artists to help. as he says "The situation is really sad but we need a smile otherwise we cannot survive. So we need music, we need a noise, we need improvised music."
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

China is a cobbled together country of many regions. Migrant laborers are not allowed in on the party but provide the backbone of cheap labor. As long as China is booming (through everybody buying crap at Wally World) there will be no revolution. However, as time progresses and labor becomes cheaper in other parts of the world China will have less employment and then the probability is high that the naitives will become restless. The power in China rests on a very thin thread. The money has to go out to the outlying provinces and the communist bosses and army who protect this far-flung empire. When it doesn't watch out. A true break-up of China, like the Soviet Union in '89, is inevitable. The question is when. The sad part is that it won't come in time for HH the XIVth Dalai Lama to visit Tibet before he dies (Tibet is part of the Chinese empire since 1959).
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

we must transcend nostalgia; the inner-reality is home. constant cycle (the fire wheel burning?); nothing is ever resolved. perpetual turning in nothingness. we do what we can. blip on radar; fireworks once a year. fuse light and turn to smoke. single rung of the ladder. blink and miss it. destined paths or affect and combust. burnt amber glow amongst flesh and bone. just a vessel that's all. piercing insight behind the veil. too much vaseline on the lens. current evolution a geographical fossil. genetic recombination dust in the wind. gene drift and flow. taller higher inwards higher taller. don't come to me for answers but i'll trade you for another question. we do what we can.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche said (something like) in Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism: "Nostalgia for the past is bullshit." Very true. And I bite all the time on that one. Anybody got any screen wipes to get the vaseline off my lense??
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

don't come to me for answers lamagonzo, i said i only have questions!!i've used all my wipes on my own lens. can never seem to have enough.... that's a great book by the way; have read many times. last time was drenched in humidity in Yokohama, Japan. droplets of salt water leaving their trace on paper pages; Coltrane through the speakers. dripping insight while my fractured ribs pulsed. a long story. 2.00am lessons as the city tried to sleep. neon outside the window, air desertion in an upright chair. i treasure that book; it's simple but it teaches plenty.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

If anybody thinks that the recent earthquake that shook our nation's capitol to it's foundation stone coupled with the first hurricane to hug the East Coast in about thirty to forty years isn't a bad omen, think again. I got a bad feeling that this is a warning in our face. Eternal vigilance is the price we pay for our freedom. I could say that another way but I won't. This shit is too serious. ~ Things went down we don't understand but I guess in time we will ~
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

a great piece written by musician, historian, journalist Bob Ostertag; one of my favourite artists. about the web's influence on our understanding of music. similar parallels can be drawn, i feel, regarding the need to reassess live performance and it's future presentation; ticketmasturbator should become unnecessary.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

...against corruption in Delhi, India. He is 74 years old and vows to continue the fast until an Ombudsman is appointed with special powers (Lok-phal in Indian) to expose and fight bribery and corruption. He has told his supporters, 10s of thousands at any given time, to block the gate if police come to arrest him. It seems he will fast onto death. This is potentially the biggest political fast since Bobby Sands and several other IRA members died in jail in 1981. The Grateful Dead dedicated a show on that day at the Nassau Coliseum (He's Gone). Still my Alpha Dog of the year 2011.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Hurrican Irene will leap frog along the mid-atlantic coast tonight and tomorrow. Floridians are relieved, although beach erosion may be happening. On a more somber note, green sea turtle Andre, released 3 weeks ago by the wonderful folks in Juno Beach at the Loggerhead Marinelife Center, washed up dead on Hutchinson Island 2 days ago. Andre was critically injured by a propeller awhile back, then was nursed back to better health, for a year, at the Loggerhead facility. There is a video of his 8/3 return to the ocean on You Tube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PC0bI6Wpqko
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

i'd be when careful mentioning Bobby Sands and the IRA; Bob Weir should've done a wee bit more homework before tossing out dedications. not clever.this is an organisation that killed many innocent people indiscriminately, people that may well have actually supported what they had to say. a simple hunger strike against bribery, corruption and greed is not the same as fighting for a cause with guns, bombs and murder. as a buddhist lamagonzo, i'm surprised that you drew such a parallel. it was not impressive for the Grateful Dead to open their mouths in that fashion. worse still to release a CD containing it. my family on my mother's side is Irish and while i totally support people's right in wanting independence, once you introduce violence and murder you have lost all respect. not clever.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

The tactic of nonviolent fasting is the only thing Huzzare and Sands have in common. Huzzare is my Alpha Dog, not Sands and the IRA who, in the end, were really nothing but a bunch of mobsters who had co-opted a political cause. I have used the nonviolent tactic of fasting several times in my life to good effect. The longest was 32 days. I also did 17 days with the Tibetan youth Congress in Geneva at the annual UN Conference on Human rights. I stepped aside to let the Tibetans have the limelight. In the end they fasted 22 days. Nonviolence is an incredible tool for social change. I wish people would use it more than it's polar opposite.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

well that's totally fine, but in which case there was really no reason to mention bobby sands then. non-violent fasting he may have done (is there any other kind?!); he did his violence before that remember.
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

I have posted before here about Weir’s thoughtless Bobby Sands dedication. If you consider that at that time the US Authorities were turning a blind eye to massive IRA fund raising in the USA, enabling the terrorists to buy arms and explosives (mostly in the USA) to kill and maim people in Britain and Ireland. The US based fundraising and gunrunning was only really stopped in 2005, as part of the sudden enthusiasm for a ‘war on terror’! The other main supplier of arms and explosives to the IRA was of course Libya.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

absolutely right cosmicbadger. maybe because the US financed them (and others) so much that certain parts of the american public stayed ill-informed and thought that their actions were just (not aimed at you lamagonzo, i know you're one of the good guys!! and salutes to you for the Tibetan solidarity. check out the "Metamorphosis" DVD by the incredible band Ghost; includes footage of leader Masaki Batoh protesting outside the Chinese embassy in Tokyo. a long time supporter of the Tibetan cause, the cover of their album "Tune In Turn On Free Tibet" is on the wall of the Dalai Lama's residence!!).interesting at the furore by US citizens over the freeing of the (falsely?) convicted man by the Scottish government regarding the Lockerbie disaster. they probably paid for the bombs that killed members of their families. absolutely shocking. that Bob Weir remark still irritates me when i hear it. we all make mistakes i know, but my shoulders automatically hunch and contract when that comes out. silly boy. by the way, i heard Angelos Epithemiou recently did his comedy for the troops in Afghanistan; something to cheer up the lads. apparently didn't go over that well. i guess his material was never going to be suitable for the Taliban.........................
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

“We've just learned about the Federal Reserve's extraordinary secret bailout of the country's big banks. We now know that the TARP bailout program was only the tip of the iceberg, and that financial institutions received a total of $1.2 trillion in loans and other funds while the rest of the country was left to struggle for economic survival. We also know that, despite all that "we got our money back" rhetoric, these loans represent a cash giveaway to the banks that totals up to tens of billions of dollars - while homeowners and student loan borrowers continue to struggle. Here's what we now know about this secret bailout, thanks to a Bloomberg report, along with what we already knew - and what we still don't know.” Read the rest of the story @ nationofchange.com
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Even though presidential contender Rick Perry still believes the jury is out on whether climate change/global warming is real or not, the rest of the country's public officials well understand that it is better to over hype the weather events and get people out than to wait to the last minute for things to develop (except in Indianapolis at the State Fair). All the weather events from drought in Texas to tornadoes to lightning have all been more extreme. Meanwhile, China & India & the USA, at the Federal level, remain deadlocked in a death grip. Nobody is going to blink until everybody agrees. The Antarctic is melting.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

gonzo! How can we not notice? I really do think that we have helped ALOT with climate change, BUT, if we look back through the milenniums-dramatic climate changes have always happened every few thousand years. ********************************** I am not young enough to know everything. Oscar Wilde
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I caught a demonstration there, in Republique. It was consisting of African immigrants, protesting about document and residency in France issues. There were about 400 Africans out there, with a drum circle, and native dress (could really see that different countries have very different people) and I stood there for over an hour-talking to the guys and watching them. Was fascinating to learn about what they have to go through in order to be "safe" in France. I also got some great shots of the dancing!!********************************** I am not young enough to know everything. Oscar Wilde
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

This corporation is getting three month visas for foreign students and enslaving them in factories. And not just the Hershey corporation! Yeah, corporations good, people bad -- right! What do you think these students will say about America when they go home? I think they will be easily recruited by terrorists because they have seen for themselves the worst greedhead conduct ever. Where are the police and social workers and courts when this stuff happens? The CEO & CFO of Hershey need to be horse-whipped in the public square in Hershey, PA while the victim students look on, along with Fortune 500 CEOs and CFOs. A message needs to be sent to the corporate world that this is NOT ACCEPTABLE!!! ~ Barbed wire whipping post ~
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

cuz think they are pretty cool! :D********************************** I am not young enough to know everything. Oscar Wilde
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Must have been a nice trip to Paris except for the hail storm coming back.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

This Colorado race almost feels like le Tour de France! Terrific scenery, crazy spectators and great competiton. Merciless for the early leaders, as the peloton catches up and Elia Viviani wins again, yesterday in Steamboat and today in Breckenridge. Levi Leipheimer retains the yellow.Tomorrow's last leg is from Golden to Denver. Party time in Breckenridge tonight!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Anna Huzzare ended his fast today in the 16th day (4 days were done in jail) after the Indian government passed a non-binding resolution to consider laws against corruption. Huzzare admitted it was only half a victory but vowed to continue to pressure the government. He had lost more than 16 lbs at the age of 74. I am glad that the man continues to live. Had he fasted onto death there was widespread consensus that it would have been a momentous, pivotal turn in the campaign to wipe out corruption and bribery which is widely entrenched in all of Asia. Way to go Anna Huzzare! ~ Long May You Run ~
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

From the safe and dry environment of eastern Kansas, I'm wondering how folks are doing from Nags Head to Maine today? CNN is showing flooding in Norfolk & Virginia Beach.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Our state took a direct hit in terms of rain. A uniform average of about 7" fell on all parts of the state from South to North yesterday causing towns to flood from Bennington to St. Johnsbury. The state's new emergency management agency in Waterford was evacuated yesterday when Winooski River overflowed it's banks. Many roads and bridges have been washed out. There have been numerous power outages and 1 death reported. There is widespread flooding in all parts of the state. The eye of the storm passed directly overhead of me at 6:10pm yesterday. This was caused when the storm tracked further westward than was forecast, taking a route up the Hudson Valley and then up the Westwards spine of the Green Mountains. There was no wind but torrential downpours the entire day. This was absolutely a result of climate change and global warming. Hurricanes and tropical storm do not usually cause such severe rainfall. The last time was 1938 for this kind of damage in the State of Vermont. This flooding is being called a once every 500 year occurence, though that may be an exaggeration.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

...16 trillion dollars in bailout loans to banks from the New York Fed., starting in October of 2008. This is really unbelievable. Socialism for the rich while the rest of us rugged individuals earning less than $250,000 a year have to scratch for a living. This audit would never have happened if not for the efforts of Special Investigator General Barofsky at the Treasury Department. Geitner tried to stop him but Obama green-lighted his mission. Alan Greenspan, Larry Summers and Tim Geitner screwed the entire planet in deregulating the investment banks so they could create the mortgage-backed sub-prime derivative ponzy scheme and then bet against it. Every generation there is a massive swindle of the American public where the rich & connected get their fortunes handed to them. This one was the first to go global and spare no poor person on Earth. ~ Taught me so well I grabbed that gold... ~
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

new Japanese prime minister? a-ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha........the Korean invasion continues. probably a soka gakkai loser as well. i bet his throat muscles must be huge. bow down Noda to your Korean and your cult masters; strip away every last shred of self-respect and fill your greedy gullet. soka gakkei = everything that makes the world shit.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

All Japanese are of Korean descent, despite their incredible arrogance that they are the greatest culture in the world. They totally screwed the aboriginal people living on those islands. They have become so corrupt. It really shows in their traditions of Buddhism -- monks who drink and marry and eat meat. What a terrible example for the rest of developing Buddhist nations. I'm not saying their isn't anything good about their culture. There is, but you have to go there to see it.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

"despite their incredible arrogance that they are the greatest culture in the world." where on earth do you get your information from lamagonzo?!!! i seem to recall some posts by your good self in true knee-jerk fashion suggesting all kinds of things; not a good example to Buddhists either. you're even more contradictory than me sometimes which takes some beating, i'll tell ya! nothing the matter with drinking, marrying or eating meat by the way, monk or not; it's called "normal behaviour". if anything is a perversion of humankind it's bizarre abstinence. the Dalai Lama also enjoyed meat; Buddhists can eat meat, although usually they do not want to get involved in the butchering or handling of animal flesh. you on that crack pipe again?.........
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

please send love, support and anything else you can offer to Johnman; the shit has hit the fan for him and his son and needs whatever you can give. please read the "positive vibes" topic for further info.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Are you denying that the Japanese people are descended from Koreans? That they are not very arrogant in their behavior toward other cultures? That they didn't crush the aboriginal people on the islands they took over? Tell it to the Koreans whose women were enslaved in brothels in WWII. This is not a knee-jerk reaction, these are facts. There is a prescribed code of conduct for monks and nuns in Buddhism (none of which is not eating meat, I'll admit) and the Japanese don't follow it. The Dalai Lama does eat meat. He is Tibetan. Tibetans live in a very cold climate. He tried not to eat meat and got sick, so he eats meat. It's a genetic thing. In all of the great monasteries of Tibet re-established in exile in South India, none of them eat meat, at the Dalai Lama's request.. I've seen both Korean & Japanese culture and while I'll admit that both have more than a healthy dose of pride it is certainly the Japanese who show a superior arrogance and flaunt it in the face of those other cultures. Here I am not defending American culture at all. We certainly followed the Japanese model of invading and slaughtering the natives. You mentioned Japan and Korea in the same breath and I made a comment on the Japanese culture. You can like it or not but don't try to distort facts.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Vermonters are not taking a wait-and-see approach. With their neighbors from New Hampshire and Massachusetts, they are organizing a movement. They promise to close down the plant by direct action if it continues to operate past March 21, 2012. Activists are discovering that support for direct citizen action is growing throughout the region. From senior citizens to harried single moms, people are volunteering and vowing to get arrested or whatever else it will take to close down the reactor. Non-violent civil disobedience training sessions are being conducted throughout the region and organizers are working in a variety of ways to build a region-wide movement. Read the rest of the story at nationofchange.org
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

I was gonna say, they seem pretty upset about a shoe factory in Vermont. But it seems to be about something else. What can I say, I've been clearing out way too much sneaker spam lately.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Yeah, we do here in VT. But you're right, first things first. Get the mud out of your basement, then go fight the nuke. It still ain't pretty, but we're recovering.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

'm afraid you leapt before you looked lamagonzo.i didn't distort any facts; i never denied any descent from Koreans. i never mentioned anything about what they did in the past. maybe a re-read is in order? if you look again, my first sentence is questioning your quote about their supposed "incredible arrogance". which is nonsense. from some quarters of government maybe but since when did anyone pay attention to politicians to inform us of a nation's personality traits? sweeping statements such as those just seem to glorify your own thoughts on matters not the actual truth. and yes, i do that too sometimes, guilty as charged sir!, but don't expect me to overlook a comment that is horseshit. every country has done horrific things in the past. but we live in 2011. i know you're full of facts about injustices on every damn culture but let it go. my initial post was highlighting the worrying influence of South Korea in all areas of Japanese political life. nothing to do with dredging up shock quotes about women in brothels and suppressing the ainu. that is government, not the overwhelming majority of the country's peaceful, humble citizens. does this mean if i post a positive topic about Germany i'm going to be hit with facts and figures about the Nazis and what they did to the jews? move on. my wife is Japanese, we visit there regularly, we are moving there permanently next year. we know about Japan, believe me. superior arrogance and flaunting in the face of others? learn the language, visit there more often, live there for a time and speak to the population. also, i'm curious; what prompted you to mention buddhist monks in the first place? i am really hoping it had nothing to do with me writing about soka gakkei. If you want to talk corruption look into those scumbags; they are a manipulative, murderous cult that has zero to do with buddhism and are spreading their ugly tentacles into politics, business, finance and intimidation. if you want to campaign about something and highlight abuse and real injustice, investigate these guys. just be careful as your phone will be bugged, you will be followed and possibly dumped in a river wearing concrete shoes. right, now let's dig up something about those Vermont citizens; misdemeanors in the past i'll bet. must be a couple of pedophiles in there somewhere. maybe the nuclear company there have an employee with a disabled child with aids that needs caring for, hence the reason for keeping the plant open. none of which would have anything to do with the fact that nuclear energy is dangerous and that the local people should be supported. how many zen buddhists does it take to change a light bulb? none. they ARE the light bulb........
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

The word "Gaijin" means foreigner and has a negative connotation. Even though you are married to a Japanese woman you will always be "Gaijin" in that society. People will look at you differently and think you have body odor until they get to know you. Using these kind of terms and having these assumptions, I believe them to be arrogant. Plus, I base my opinion on my dealings with Japanese monks and nuns in this country. Not the SG crazies, but Nipponzan Mjohoji (same mantra, different sect). Then there is the oriental culture of politeness to your face while they tear you a new one behind your back. All oriental cultures have it but it is really quite unbearable with the Chinese and the Japanese. This is my opinion. You know what they say about opinions,,, Everybody has one.
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

I think your analysis is rather simplistic, Gonzo. I spent many years living and working in SE Asia and have some experience of this, dealing with everyone from ordinary folks to government ministers. The ‘Asian way’ is not wrong or bad, it is just different and it is up to us to learn to understand it. Formal meetings and many social interactions are conducted in a polite, respectful way because it is very rude to draw undue attention to yourself and others in such situations. Nothing wrong with that. Careful attention to what is being said often provides clues to how the other party is really feeling….and if you are relying on translation you easily miss these. That can be a problem; I have known several people who have overlooked what were considered to be clear warning signs and suddenly found themselves persona non grata. Similarly you have to learn ways to get your messages across. Often the real ‘getting to know you’ and deal making is done in less formal circumstances and it is easy for outsiders to relax too much when out drinking or socialising and miss the opportunity to find out what the real agendas are. Yes it is hard, but for outsiders in the US (including me) the combination of in your face macho posturing and pretend buddy-dom in many social interactions can be just as confusing and offensive.