Monday, November 30, 2009

Women face tough choices without bill making it worse

The Nov. 12 article, “Women face tough choices on abortion coverage” discusses some of the implications and uncertainties surrounding the Stupak amendment to the House version of the health care reform bill.
This amendment prohibits millions of women from buying (with their own money) private health insurance which provides full reproductive health care benefits.
It is not an extension of the current law, which forbids the use of federal funds to pay for abortions. It in fact restricts private insurance companies participating in the insurance exchange from offering abortion coverage if even one of their policy holders receives a federal subsidy.
The suggestion that women can buy a separate rider is a red herring. Such policies do not exist at present; furthermore, no one expects an unplanned pregnancy or one with severe medical complications.
The Senate is considering their version of the health care bill now. We must let our senators know that the Stupack amendment is not acceptable to the majority of the American people.

Priscilla Newberger
Corvallis
Telegraph UK Sunday, Nov, 29th 2009

"A British university has placed an advertisement looking for a lap-dance researcher with experience studying the erotic dance industry, The Telegraph reported.
The University of Leeds advertised the position for its school of sociology and social policy, according to the paper.

The advertisement reads: "Research Officer -- The rise and regulation of lap dancing and the place of sexual labor and consumption in the night time economy," MyFoxChicago.com reported.
The university requires "prior experience of conducting research in the female sex industry," MyFoxChicago.com reported.

The researcher will study the "rise, tolerance and integration of sexual consumption and sexual labor displayed through the erotic dance industry."
Sociologists at the school intend to interview 300 exotic dancers in the U.K., as well as managers and regulators, as part of their research."

Uhhh, where do I sign up? :)

It's Islams' turn

AP Sunday, November 29, 2009

"GENEVA — Swiss voters overwhelmingly approved a constitutional ban on minarets on Sunday, barring construction of the iconic mosque towers in a surprise vote that put Switzerland at the forefront of a European backlash against a growing Muslim population.
Muslim groups in Switzerland and abroad condemned the vote as biased and anti-Islamic. Business groups said the decision hurt Switzerland's international standing and could damage relations with Muslim nations and wealthy investors who bank, travel and shop there.
"The Swiss have failed to give a clear signal for diversity, freedom of religion and human rights," said Omar Al-Rawi, integration representative of the Islamic Denomination in Austria, which said its reaction was "grief and deep disappointment."

The referendum by the nationalist Swiss People's Party labeled minarets as symbols of rising Muslim political power that could one day transform Switzerland into an Islamic nation. The initiative was approved 57.5 to 42.5 percent by some 2.67 million voters. Only four of the 26 cantons or states opposed the initiative, granting the double approval that makes it part of the Swiss constitution.

Muslims comprise about 6 percent of Switzerland's 7.5 million people. Many are refugees from the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s and about one in 10 actively practices their religion, the government says.

The country's four standing minarets, which won't be affected by the ban, do not traditionally broadcast the call to prayer outside their own buildings.
The sponsors of the initiative provoked complaints of bias from local officials and human-rights group with campaign posters that showed minarets rising like missiles from the Swiss flag next to a fully veiled woman. Backers said the growing Muslim population was straining the country "because Muslims don't just practice religion."
"The minaret is a sign of political power and demand, comparable with whole-body covering by the burqa, tolerance of forced marriage and genital mutilation of girls," the sponsors said. They noted that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has compared mosques to Islam's military barracks and called "the minarets our bayonets."

Anxieties about growing Muslim minorities have rippled across Europe in recent years, leading to legal changes in some countries. There have been French moves to ban the full-length body covering known as the burqa. Some German states have introduced bans on head scarves for Muslim women teaching in public schools. Mosques and minaret construction projects in Sweden, France, Italy, Austria, Greece, Germany and Slovenia have been met by protests.
But the Swiss ban in minarets, sponsored by the country's largest political party, was one of the most extreme reactions.

"It's a sad day for freedom of religion," said Mohammed Shafiq, the chief executive of the Ramadhan Foundation, a British youth organization. "A constitutional amendment that's targeted towards one religious community is discriminatory and abhorrent."
He said he was concerned the decision could have reverberations in other European countries.
Amnesty International said the vote violated freedom of religion and would probably be overturned by the Swiss supreme court or the European Court of Human Rights.
The seven-member Cabinet that heads the Swiss government had spoken out strongly against the initiative but the government said it accepted the vote and would impose an immediate ban on minaret construction.

It said that "Muslims in Switzerland are able to practice their religion alone or in community with others, and live according to their beliefs just as before." It took the unusual step of issuing its press release in Arabic as well as German, French, Italian and English.
Sunday's results stood in stark contrast to opinion polls, last taken 10 days ago, that showed 37 percent supporting the proposal. Experts said before the vote that they feared Swiss had pretended during the polling that they opposed the ban because they didn't want to appear intolerant.

"The sponsors of the ban have achieved something everyone wanted to prevent, and that is to influence and change the relations to Muslims and their social integration in a negative way," said Taner Hatipoglu, president of the Federation of Islamic Organizations in Zurich. "Muslims indeed will not feel safe anymore."

The People's Party has campaigned mainly unsuccessfully in previous years against immigrants with campaign posters showing white sheep kicking a black sheep off the Swiss flag and another with brown hands grabbing eagerly for Swiss passports.
Geneva's main mosque was vandalized Thursday when someone threw a pot of pink paint at the entrance. Earlier this month, a vehicle with a loudspeaker drove through the area imitating a muezzin's call to prayer, and vandals damaged a mosaic when they threw cobblestones at the building."

Upcoming Nazi Guard Trial

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,577766,00.html

John Demjanjuk goes on trial on Monday for his part in WWII atrocities.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Mike Penner

LOS ANGELES — A Los Angeles Times sportswriter, who announced two years ago he was a transsexual and was changing his gender to female, was found dead in a suspected suicide, the paper reported Saturday.
Mike Penner, 52, who shocked colleagues and readers after he announced he was becoming a woman in April 2007, then returned to work as a man, was found dead at his Los Angeles home, according to the paper.
Penner had worked for 25 years on the sports staff of the Times.
"He was one of the most talented writers I've ever worked with," wrote Times Sports Editor Mike James on a blog on the Times Web site. "He was a gentle man, a kind man. It's just a tragedy," James wrote.
Penner revealed his transsexuality in a column in the paper, telling readers that he would continue to cover sports news under the name of Christine Daniels.
"How do you go about sharing your most important truth, one you spent a lifetime trying to keep deeply buried, to a world that has grown familiar and comfortable with your facade?" Penner wrote in his column.
"I am a transsexual sportswriter," he wrote. "It has taken more than 40 years, a million tears and hundreds of hours of soul-wrenching therapy for me to work up the courage to type those words. I realize many readers and colleagues and friends will be shocked to read them."
Penner covered the NFL, tennis, the Olympics and the Los Angeles Angels in his tenure at the paper.

Somebody stop the reality star, and more satire from Springfield

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/harry-shearer/reality-stars-sign-us-up_b_372357.html

  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/29/the-29-best-chalkboard-ga_n_371207.html






Mailbag: A question of exploitation

In your Sunday editorial you found “byzantine” a bill passed by the legislature that would provide if “private contractors save the government money by paying people less, they are not allowed to get a contract to do the work” where public workers are already doing the work. Judging from your comments, you would probably find “living wage” provisions equally so.
Furthermore you connect this bill to the upcoming vote in January on the action by the legislature taxing corporations and households making over $250,000 — “you might want to remember the following as an example of how the Legislature that gave you the tax proposals also made it hard to reduce the cost of government.”
What should never be forgotten is the long-standing effort to exploit workers. Often, of late, done in a devious and surreptitious manner. Sometimes even with the aid of some workers, those who fall for the deceit and secrecy — unable to connect the dots of their repression.
It’s a simple clash of values, those in favor of exploiting workers versus those who are opposed.
Often such a clash cannot be resolved any other way than by a vote — like the one coming up in January. I hope those who are opposed to exploiting workers will join me in voting “Yes.”

Robert G. Gourley, Corvallis

Letter: Why was no citation issued to officer who rear-ended a pickup?

I noticed in the Nov. 25 Crime Watch section that on Nov. 21, Philomath police cruiser rear-ended a pickup truck in the middle of an intersection and within a signed construction zone.
To my surprise, no citations were issued apparently because "The truck's brake lights were already on" on so when the slow moving truck braked additionally hard to stop for a pedestrian in a crosswalk, the brake lights "did not flash" to indicate it was stopping (again, because the brake lights were "already on").
Four years ago, my teenage son was cited for the exact same infraction (Although not in a signed construction zone). He was cited for failure to maintain a safe driving distance. His fine was somewhere around $200 and his insurance rates shot up.
I'd like to know why the police officer was not cited for the same thing. And in a construction zone no less. The way I understand it, even on a rural road, if you come around a corner and there is a disabled or parked vehicle in the road (brake lights or not) and you can't stop in time, you may be cited for your inability to stop.

Steve Dockins, Philomath

Basketball and Obama

AP

"It was a family affair for President Obama at the Oregon State-George Washington University basketball game Saturday.

It was a family affair for President Obama at the Oregon State-George Washington University basketball game Saturday.

Brother-in-law Craig Robinson is the Oregon State coach. And the president brought along first lady Michelle Obama, daughters Malia and Sasha, and mother-in-law Marian Robinson.
The family sat courtside in the half-full Smith Center, munching on popcorn as Oregon State (1-3) tried to hand George Washington its first loss after four victories.
OSU led 34-24 at halftime.

Naturally, the Obamas were intensely interested in the outcome. Obama and Mrs. Robinson clapped when OSU scored. Mrs. Obama smiled and clapped, too.

Obama, an avid basketball fan who likes to play the game himself as often as he can, spent the past two days out of public view, enjoying Thanksgiving at the White House with family and friends."

By the way the Beavers beat George Washington 64-57... GO BEAVS!

Garbs' of garb...

http://gazettetimes.com/news/opinion/editorial/article_8c5e8d2e-dcab-11de-88ca-001cc4c03286.html

Monday, November 23, 2009

The Big One

http://www.foxnews.com/projects/pdf/111909_ReidBill.pdf

The link to the full bill set for debate... I have a headache now from starting to read it. Below is Rep. Greg Walden's comments on 11/09/09:

“Tonight, the U.S. House of Representatives had a choice of two healthcare reform plans. I voted for healthcare reform that would reduce the cost of health insurance premiums by 10 percent, cut the federal deficit by $68 billion, and make insurance more accessible to millions of Americans. Unfortunately, that’s not the plan that passed.
“As a small business owner for more than 21 years, I know what it’s like to pay the bills and sign the front side of a paycheck. Independent analysts estimate that the $730 billion in new taxes on Americans families and small businesses in the bill that passed today will result in the loss of 5.5 million American jobs. There’s even an unthinkable new tax on items like pacemakers, artificial hips, and stints.
“The country cannot afford a new $1.3 trillion government program that creates 111 new bureaucracies, especially when nationwide unemployment is at its highest level in 26 years. Just this year, Washington, D.C. has launched unprecedented national takeovers of the auto industry, the energy industry, and now the healthcare of every American.
“The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that the cost of a family premium under the government takeover that passed today will be $15,000 in 2016. The Republican alternative that I voted for tonight would reduce that cost to $10,000 in 2016.
“I served on a hospital board for many years and strongly believe that this country is in need of healthcare reform. But that reform should not be borne on the backs of seniors in the form of over $500 million in cuts to Medicare Advantage in Oregon’s Second District, which would impact the healthcare of 38,000 seniors in central, southern, and eastern Oregon. Americans deserve a patient-centered approach to healthcare, not a government plan that threatens to force you off the care you enjoy right now with a more expensive plan.
“We can do better with a targeted approach that tackles the biggest problems, and that’s what I voted for. We can lower the cost of premiums and expand access by giving employers the ability to group together for stronger bargaining with health insurance companies, just like corporations and unions do right now. We can allow insurance to be purchased across state lines, giving families and businesses much more choice and competition to bring down the cost of health insurance. And we can protect Medicare and the seniors who rely on it and ensure that no one is denied access to healthcare because pre-existing conditions. The Republican plan I voted for would have done all of that.
“Finally, I am strongly disappointed that rural America was left behind in this bill. Two amendments I proposed in the Energy and Commerce Committee to ensure a voice for rural America on government healthcare committees were stripped behind closed doors, with no explanation. That’s just plain wrong, and it speaks to why the American people are so frustrated with the broken system of government in Washington, D.C.”

Private vs Public good...

http://antipatrioticvenezuelan.blogspot.com/2009/10/end-of-private-property-as-i-know-it.html

Glimse into the (maybe) distant future...

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Monday, November 16, 2009

Friday, November 13, 2009

Roses ‘n’ Raspberries (Nov. 13)

ROSE (roz) n. One of the most beautiful of all flowers, a symbol of fragrance and loveliness. Often given as a sign of appreciation.

RASPBERRY (raz’ber’e) n. A sharp, scornful comment, criticism or rebuke; a derisive, splatting noise, often called the Bronx cheer.

We hereby deliver:

• • •

• RASPBERRIES to the idea now making the rounds among certain sportswriters that the Pacific-10 Conference should abandon its round-robin schedule for football.

Here’s the background: Under the current schedule, each Pac-10 team plays every other team in the conference during the season. Before the college football season expanded to 12 games in 2006, Pac-10 teams like Oregon State didn’t play every conference foe every year — one conference team rotated out of the schedule each year.

Like so much else in college sports these days, the argument to stop playing the round-robin schedule boils down to cash: If the Pac-10 schools were able to eliminate one conference game every year, the reasoning goes, they would schedule in its stead a nonconference “cupcake” game — a game that the Pac-10 school would be a virtual lock to win. With more wins on their records, more Pac-10 teams would be eligible for bowls and an additional Pac-10 team might even sneak into another one of the Bowl Championship Series games (and, yes, our annual BCS editorial is on the schedule for December).

To which we say, balderdash! Horsefeathers! At the end of each season’s conference play, the Pac-10 has a true champion, a team that has battled every other team in the conference. In addition, playing the round-robin schedule adds familiarity to the schedule and helps fuel the rivalries that provide so much of the pleasure of college sports — what Beavers fan, for example, is not awaiting the 2010 game against USC in Corvallis? The Pac-10 does it right as it is. Let’s not mess with something that’s working just to pursue a few more dollars.

• • •

• ROSES to Robert Blackledge, the former business owner, city councilor and downtown Corvallis advocate who died last week at the age of 93. Blackledge’s legacy of civic service included 10 years on the City Council and two years on the city Planning Commission. He also served many years on the Downtown Parking Commission and also was a volunteer firefighter for nearly half a century.

• ROSES as well to Dale Schrock, who served for 16 years as a Benton County commissioner, from 1975 to 1991 and before that, toiled on the Benton County Planning Commission, where he backed Hewlett-Packard’s controversial plans to build a high-tech campus in Corvallis. Schrock died Oct. 31 in a vehicle crash on Highway 99W. He was 80. Schrock also helped draw up the county’s first comprehensive land plan and never let anyone forget that the county didn’t end at the city limits of Corvallis.

• ROSES, finally, to Lillian “Lil” Brown, who worked at the Department of Human Services and volunteered her time with a number of local organizations, including Community Outreach Inc., Altrusa and the Majestic Theater. She died recently at the age of 56. Allen was well-known for her big voice, her flamboyant personality and for her tireless (and often thankless) work on behalf of the poor, the needy, the abused and the suffering.

These are people who invested much of their lives doing the kind of work that helps to build a community and for that, we are in their debt.

• • •

• ROSES to the Benton County Foundation for more than 50 years of service to the county. This is Community Foundation Week across the United States, and it’s worth celebrating the good work that organizations such as the Benton County Foundation do. In the last five years alone, the Benton County Foundation quietly has contributed nearly $2 million in grants to nonprofit agencies and scholarships to students. Across the nation, these foundations are assets to their communities, and the Benton County Foundation deserves to have a higher profile here.

• • •

• ROSES to the organizers of this week’s Veterans Day activities across the mid-valley. Albany, of course, is justifiably proud of its mammoth parade, but we were pleased to see a number of Benton County schools planning assemblies and other events to honor veterans as well. We look forward to today’s activities at Oregon State University, where students, faculty and staff will have a timely reminder that the Memorial Union, the center of the campus, is meant to honor those fallen military men and women who have been association in some way with OSU. With American military men and women still in harm’s way in Iraq and Afghanistan, the ceremonies this week couldn’t have been timelier.

Continuing the discussion surrounding health care


http://media.barometer.orst.edu/media/storage/paper854/news/2009/11/10/Forum/Continuing.The.Discussion.Surrounding.Health.Care-3827336.shtml

Editorial: Game vs. reality

It is true, as the demonstrators at Heritage Mall on Monday night said, that war is not a game. But neither is “Call of Duty,” the game they were protesting, anything like war. It’s a video game, that’s all.

Yes, judging from the snippets advertising the game you can find online, it features highly disturbing images and actions. And one wonders about the mental makeup of people who enjoy engaging in that sort of game, especially as a matter of habit instead of momentary curiosity. But after all the arguments against that sort of entertainment are made, it’s still just a game. No actual person is physically harmed.

The art and technical virtuosity of the producers of computerized video games such as this one are truly astonishing. They can create ... well, creatures that seem to be alive and scenes that look like what we imagine apocalypse to look like.

As advanced as it already is, the technology will progress with every passing year. So it is reasonable to assume that the virtual reality in these games will become ever more impressive, ever more seemingly real, as time goes on.

This assumption allows us to anticipate a time when people will be able to lead a virtual life that is as real to them as reality out here in the physical world.

But even then, what happens in those game consoles will still be just that, make-believe. Our communities might actually be safer and more peaceful if we can relegate most violence and crime to what people do on their screens. (hh)

Letter: Nondiscrimination act would guard against prejudice (Nov. 12)

I believe that, howsoever it may be, we are all equal, and we are endowed by that equality with certain inalienable rights, and numbered among these are the rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. As with most Americans, my belief in this is supported and informed by some religious belief and background. As a believer in this and the Constitution, I am not inclined to expect anyone to share or understand those religious beliefs. I do expect my fellow Americans to understand and share a belief in my opening statement, however, central as it is to our collective happiness, peace and prosperity, to fulfilling our founders' vision of an ever more perfect union.

I am disappointed when I discover there is resistance to such things as the Employment Non-Discrimination Act. If someone were fired because they are white or Christian, we would be justly outraged. What if you were fired because you are straight or male? The community would rally around you and the law would come down on your side.

If one of your fellow Americans were fired because they are homosexual, bisexual or transgendered, this would not be the case. The law abandons these, our fellow Americans, to the prejudice of their employers. EDNA does nothing more than protect people from prejudice, to ensure to all of us the same equal opportunity which we all so treasure and to which we enjoy Constitutional guarantee.

Please, urge our congressional delegation to pass EDNA (H.R 3017).

Jeffrey Hinman II, Corvallis

Monday, November 9, 2009

Reflections of Alvaro Barreto

“You must understand that jiu-jitsu is really four things:

One: it is a philosophy that can be summed up by the statement ‘give to win’. For example if you make strength with your arms then you give a point of leverage for your opponent to use against you. If you stay loose then you deprive your opponent of that so by appearing to be weak you gain strength.

Secondly it is a system of teaching. It gives access to proper rules of human behavior, self respect, honor, discipline, courage and so on.

Third it is a therapy. If man is too aggressive, it will calm him. Is he too weak or passive? It will make him stronger.

And finally it is a fighting system. Today in MMA people only concentrate on the last and ignore the first three.What is the essence of jiu-jitsu? Jiu-Jitsu is not an end. It is a tool for creating a better life.

On Cirriculum: In my vision, jiu-jitsu is made up of four courses: self defense, traumatic moves (locks and chokes), judo and ground fighting. To be a complete martial artist you need to know all four, because each helps the other.”On Jiu-Jitsu Professors:"Some teachers don't live correctly. A good teacher should be a good citizen with a good educational background, such as from a university. That makes him better at passing on information. Students need a leader they can look up to because the majority of the time, they look for instructors to give them confidence and keep them strong."

The Gentle Art

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pImvS0OuQdU&feature=player_embedded

Beautiful...

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Healthy Kiddos

http://www.usaweekend.com/09_issues/091108/091108health-kids.html

In an attempt to "Give it a rest" there is no Right Wing nut job spin here...

Mailbag: Offended by this plate

I am outraged as a legal U.S. citizen with a son who has gone to battle twice in Iraq to protect our country. I want answers to how an idiotically run state government office can allow what I saw.

On Friday, Oct. 30, 2009, while I was driving down Highway 20 towards Lebanon, I saw a newer black Ford Explorer. He was in front of me. The vehicle had a tinted back window of a Mexico flag and a license plate that read "Ilegal."

Is this not a slap in the face? How did DMV allow this? Does the INS know about this?

I am so sick and tired of the illegals doing what they want and where they want to whomever they want. I know that "Mexifornia" has taken over California, but here in Oregon too?

Are we now known as "Or Gone South Olé"? It is pathetic and I think DMV should be fined for allowing this. And the driver of this vehicle, be aware because when I see you again on the road, I will have INS on speed dial on my cell phone and alert them. You like advertising like this? Go back to where you came from.

Kim Lawrence, Sweet Home

The Democrat-Herald contacted the vehicle's owner, Mary Ann Patricio of Sweet Home. She said that her husband, Jesus, is from Mexico and at one time entered the U.S. illegally but obtained his citizenship about eight years ago. "I support good, decent people who are trying to come here to build a better life and to do good," Patricio said. "I don't support those who come here and do bad." The license plate is her way of showing that support.

Letter: The effect keeps us warm (Nov. 8)

ohn Jones ("Letter: Sunday's carbon dioxide article was utter bunk", Letters, Nov. 1) claims that the greenhouse effect is a myth, and provides scientific-like statements to support his position.

Fortunately, he is wrong. The earth's mean surface temperature can only be explained through the greenhouse effect, primarily associated with low-concentration gases including water vapor, carbon dioxide and methane.

Without the heat-trapping effects of these gases, the planet would be about 60 degrees Fahrenheit cooler. This was already explained to Mr. Jones in a letter by Andreas Schmittner in the weekday Gazette-Times on Oct. 12. There are numerous web sites, text books and general science books that explain the effect.

Mr. Jones then explains what he really doesn't like; a group whose goals include social justice and a fair distribution of wealth and power. How do you argue against social justice? How can you even argue against "fair distribution"? Nothing in that statement says "equal distributio," just "fair."

Judging by polls, the climate-change denialist movement in the U.S. has had a good year. Mr. Jones, in his fight against the promotion of social justice and fairness, can claim some credit. The U.S. runs a significant risk, however, of being left behind in the global race for engineering solutions to a real problem, precisely because the public is so easily swayed by pseudo-science.

This doesn't augur well for the free market, or the American way of life, or whatever it is that Mr. Jones thinks he is protecting.

Laurence Padman, Corvallis

Editorial: Marriage vote never ends

No one is surprised that supporters of gay rights want Oregon to vote again, in 2012, to try to repeal the 2004 constitutional amendment defining state-approved marriage as between a man and a woman. They won't give up until their goal is reached, so the issue will never go away.

If voters affirm their 2004 decision in 2012 - the way Maine just did on the same subject - activists will shoot for bringing it back maybe in 2020 or 2022. And if it goes the other way in any of those elections, you can bet that those who won the case in 2004 will have enough energy and conviction to get something on the ballot to try to repeal the repeal.

Let's just remember that in our system, nothing is ever settled for all time.

Nobody who already has an opinion is likely to change his views on something as fundamental as the definition of marriage.

But as long as activists with a different view can get petitions signed in sufficient numbers, we'll be voting on that issue again and again. (hh)

Editorial: Guns and pot

The sheriffs of Jackson and Washington counties have argued before the Oregon Court of Appeals that they should not have to give concealed handgun licenses to otherwise qualified citizens who hold medical marijuana cards. Their case is not convincing.

They claim they are in a bind because of the federal law against marijuana, medical or otherwise. The sheriffs ought to remember who votes for them and who pays them - and it's NOT the federal government.

Further, only recently the same sheriffs made the valid point - in regard to a proposed change in public records law, a change that failed to get through the 2009 legislature - that people often get those licenses because they have security concerns. Seems like of all the people in Oregon, medical pot permit holders may have more need of personal security and protection than most.

Let's hope the court quickly confirms that the sheriffs have no grounds to withhold handgun licenses from the users of medical pot. (hh)

"The Expendables"



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1320253/fullcredits

Uhhh, where do I wait in line?

Saturday, November 7, 2009

"Christmas Carol"

http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/1810049009/info

This Friday morning my wife and I took our kids to see Disney's "Christmas Carol". Word of caution there are scary scenes. As you may know having talked or conversed with me on various topics that this "story" is one that I like very much. I always have.

I want to first talk about the sheer beauty of this film.

Some 3D movies are only in it for the cheap 3D gimmick. You know, the random excuse for something to jump out or fall into the audience. Of course having nothing to do with the plot. This film uses the 3D format to make the audience say to themselves, with mouths opened and eyes wide, "Wow", "Ohh", "Ahh".

There are the dirty London street scenes, snowy countryside scenes, and the three ghosts each with their own unique image and personality. Without giving too much away I was impressed on how there could be something done within the bounds of these very well know, and beloved characters which are somehow different yet not off putting. At no point during this film did I think to myself, yeah, yeah on to the next ghost. I was looking forward to the next, while not wanting the current ghost to go off screen.

Jim Carrey lends his voice to: Scrooge/ Voice of Ghost of Christmas Past/ Voice of Ghost of Christmas Present/ Voice of Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come.

Gary Oldman lends his voice to Bob Cratchit / Marley / Tiny Tim

While Bob Haskins of ("Who Framed Roger Rabbit") lends his voice to Mr. Fezziwig / Old Joe

Without getting into the social, political, or religious implications of this story (too much) I turn my attention to the story. I like how this version sticks pretty close to the book. I found myself thinking about the less fortunate, orphans, and people I work with and for. At the films end I left feeling uplifted, spirit renewed, and ready for Christmas! I know, I know it's only November 7th. I do have to say 99.1 FM will soon start playing Christmas music 24-7...

Bottom line for me was; if you like the story go see this movie. If for no other reason for the 3D beauty, and unique story telling methods used. If you don't care for the story; go anyway simply for the 3D experience. Trust me you'll love it.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Mailbag: A reference to Kenya

Since you had the honesty to print the article in yesterday's paper (the Oct. 18 Sunday Gazette-Times), I was hoping you had the integrity to check out and print the enclosed article.

I have seen a number of articles and tapes attesting to the fact that Obama was born in Kenya, and to the fact that his mother has not resided in the United States for five years after the age of 14 (she was 18 when he was born in Kenya), thus making him not a citizen in any way at birth. This makes him ineligible for the presidency.

The deceit must be brought to light. It is an insult to our founders, and to all those who have followed the constitutional requirements.

Susan C. Woods, Albany

Ms. Woods included a printout of a web page from a 2004 edition of a paper in Kenya that refers to "Kenyan-born U.S. Senate hopeful Barack Obama."

Deja Vu

http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/1809962998/video/16379548

Is it just me, or is this a remake of an "Outer Limits", or "Tales From The Darkside" of the same title? I swear I saw this episode... I don't think it was a "Twilight Zone"...