WHEREAS, It is the duty of all nations to acknowledge the providence of Almighty God, to obey His will, to be grateful for His benefits, and humbly to implore His protection and favor;
WHEREAS, Both the houses of Congress have, by their joint committee, requested me “to recommend to the people of the United States a day of public thanksgiving and prayer, to be observed by acknowledging with grateful hearts the many and signal favors of Almighty God, especially by affording them an opportunity peaceably to establish a form of government for their safety and happiness.”
Now, therefore, I do recommend and assign Thursday, the 26th day of November next, to be devoted by the people of these States to the service of that great and glorious Being who is the beneficent author of all the good that was, that is, or that will be; that we may then all unite in rendering unto Him our sincere and humble thanks for His kind care and protection of the people of this country previous to their becoming a nation; for the signal and manifold mercies and the favorable interpositions of His providence in the course and conclusion of the late war; for the great degree of tranquility, union, and plenty which we have since enjoyed; for the peaceable and rational manner in which we have been enabled to establish constitutions of government for our safety and happiness, and particularly the national one now lately instituted; for the civil and religious liberty with which we are blessed, and the means we have of acquiring and diffusing useful knowledge; and, in general, for all the great and various favors which He has been pleased to confer upon us.
And also that we may then unite in most humbly offering our prayers and supplications to the great Lord and Ruler of Nations and beseech Him to pardon our national and other transgressions; to enable us all, whether in public or private stations, to perform our several and relative duties properly and punctually; to render our National Government a blessing to all the people by constantly being a Government of wise, just, and constitutional laws, discreetly and faithfully executed and obeyed; to protect and guide all sovereigns and nations (especially such as have show kindness to us), and to bless them with good governments, peace, and concord; to promote the knowledge and practice of true religion and virtue, and the increase of science among them and us; and, generally to grant unto all mankind such a degree of temporal prosperity as He alone knows to be best.
— George Washington – October 3, 1789
Bumpersuckers
Thanks to Gary at The Llama Butchers for pointing me toward Atomic Trousers’ fisking of the top 10 worst liberal bumper stickers.
If you’re wondering how you can fisk something one to five words long it simply means you haven’t been paying attention. Here’s one of the 10:
“Remember Katrina. Fight Global Warming” – Fight it with what? Nunchucks? Me attacking global warming like a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle, you driving a Prius or the U.S. signing the Kyoto Protocol all have the same effect on changing the earth’s temperature: zippo. I started mocking all the angles on this bumper sticker and it started getting too long.
Perspective
This morning I had to get up and out of the house early in order to have a root canal done. I was delighted!
You see, the last couple of weeks have been almost surreal. While we were out of town for my father’s funeral a friend of ours (a man just a year older than myself) also passed away from cancer. We got back in in time to go to his funeral; meanwhile Paul Keuttel of Wog’s Blog died, as did my grandmother’s brother. Then last weekend the brother of one of my wife’s best friends died in a hunting accident. My wife went to his funeral yesterday.
So, anyway, do you know how it is sometimes when you know you have to get up early for something; how you have trouble getting to sleep, or staying asleep, and you get those weird dreams? Well, around 4:00 a.m. this morning I half-awoke, thinking I’d overslept. When I saw the clock I went back to sleep, but kept waking up every 20 minutes or so to look at the clock. The worst part of it was even though I’d wake up, I’d keep going back into the same dream where another close member of my family had died — and that the 7:30 a.m. appointment I had to get up for wasn’t to see the dentist but to give the eulogy, which I had yet to write. To say my sleep was fitful is an understatement.
When I finally woke up (at the time I’d originally planned to) I regained enough clarity to suddenly realize, “Wait a minute, I don’t have to give a eulogy at a funeral — I’m only supposed to get a root canal!”
Wow, talk about a day-brightener!
Jesse Ventura finishes fourth book
…And boy, are his lips tired!
Whoops, it appears he’s written his fourth book.
From the Pioneer Press:
Former Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura largely disappeared from public view when he left office five years ago, but he isn’t keeping his opinions to himself.
He co-wrote a book, filled with his feelings on politics, international affairs and the media, due out next April.
“It really reflects Gov. Ventura,” said Bill Wolfsthal, associate publisher at the New York-based Skyhorse Publishing. “It’s energetic and opinionated and absolutely fascinating.”
The book, “Don’t Start the Revolution Without Me,” was co-written with author Dick Russell.
“It really is great reading,” Wolfsthal said.
I heard the original title was “Don’t Start the Promotion Without Me.”
What happened to my fur coat?
Man, talk about your punctuated equilibrium (if you go for that sort of thing). This blog had been cruising along for awhile as a Slithering Reptile in the TTLB blog-ranking ecoystem for I don’t know how long when all of a sudden last week I noticed I had morphed or “evolved” into a Marauding Marsupial, completely bypassing the intermediate phylum of Flappy Bird and Adorable Rodent. I couldn’t figure out how this happened because TTLB essentially measures links and I hadn’t had a sudden burst of linkage — at least none that showed up in my TTLB report. I just assumed that global warming had killed off a bunch of blogs ahead of me and I’d been promoted simply for outlasting them.
Now, just as spasmodically, I’m back to reptile status. I don’t think I would have noticed except that I felt a draft.
Honestly, even after two-plus years of doing this blog, I don’t understand how a lot of the protocols and accessories work on this great big inner-web thingy. For example, sometime last spring I started getting 300-400 visitors a day, day after day. I didn’t see any reason for the sudden surge of fans, but I noticed that my Site Meter report was showing most of these to be from Google images; in other words people searching for photos. Some of the images I’d posted were getting a lot of attention (in particular a close-up photo of the Mall Diva’s bruised and naked knee that was getting all kinds of traffic from Asia). After this kept up for awhile it just wasn’t that interesting for me check the Site Meter at the end of the day because the numbers didn’t have that much to do with anything I’d written – and given my irregular posting schedule the past several (intense) months – that was probably just as well.
Now the image links have gone away, too, just about as quickly as they appeared. While my “daily visits” average has crashed big time, I actually like this better; I didn’t feel as if I’d “earned” the traffic. It was actually kind of de-motivating. While traffic isn’t the reason I blog, it does offer a measure of feedback to indicate if what I’m writing is resonating with anyone. I don’t know if I’d keep blogging if I got 5 or 10 or 20 visitors a day, but I do know that 400 visitors a day didn’t make me feel more like blogging.
Oh well, that’s enough navel-gazing (actually, I don’t think reptiles have navels). I think the real reason I blog is so I can go to Keegan’s — and I’m heading there tonight!
Happy birthday, P.J.
Today’s the birthday of one of my favorite writers, P.J. O’Rourke (1947). I’ve been reading him ever since I graduated from Mad Magazine to The National Lampoon, and followed his work in books with hard covers such as Republican Party Reptile, All the Trouble in the World: The Lighter Side of Famine, Pestilence, Destruction and Death, and Eat the Rich. He’s the kind of writer I’d like to be when I grow up, even though there’s little evidence that he’s done so.
Whenever I’ve found a particularly funny or trenchant sentence or two I’ve thrown it into a file for future reference. In honor of P.J.’s birthday, here are a few of them:
- When a thing defies physical law, there’s usually politics involved.
- Everybody wants to save the earth; nobody wants to help Mom do the dishes.
- The forces of safety are afoot in the land. I, for one, believe it is a conspiracy – a conspiracy of Safety Nazis shouting “Sieg Health” and seeking to trammel freedom, liberty, and large noisy parties. The Safety Nazis advocate gun control, vigorous exercise, and health foods. The result can only be a disarmed, exhausted, and half-starved population ready to acquiesce to dictatorship of some kind.
- Sloths move at the speed of congressional debate but with greater deliberation and less noise.
- If you think healthcare is expensive now, just wait until it’s free.
- Bureaucrats want bigger bureaus. Special interests are interested in whatever’s special to them. These two groups bring great pressure to bear upon politicians who have another agenda yet: to cater to the temporary whims and fads of the public and the press.
- Neither conservatives nor humorists believe man is good. But left-wingers do.
- A little Government and a little luck are necessary in life; but only a fool trusts either of them.
- Something is happening to America, not something dangerous but something all too safe. I see it in my lifelong friends. I am a child of the “baby boom”, a generation not known for its sane or cautious approach to things. Yet suddenly my peers are giving up drinking, giving up smoking, cutting down on coffee, sugar, and salt. They will not eat red meat and go now to restaurants whose menus have caused me to stand on a chair yelling, “Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail, dinner is served!” This from the generation of LSD, Weather Underground, and Altamont Rock Festival! And all in the name of safety! Our nation has withstood many divisions – North and South, black and white, labor and management – but I do not know if the country can survive division into smoking and non-smoking sections.
- Earnestness is just stupidity sent to college.
- To grasp the true meaning of socialism, imagine a world where everything is designed by the post office, even the sleaze.
- The Republicans are the party that says government doesn’t work and then gets elected and proves it.
- Politics is the business of getting power and privilege without possessing merit. A politician is anyone who asks individuals to surrender part of their liberty – their power and privilege – to State, Masses, Mankind, Planet Earth, or whatever. This state, those masses, that mankind, and the planet will then be run by … politicians.
- People with a mission to save the earth want the earth to seem worse than it is so their mission will look more important.
- When a private entity does not produce the desired results, it is (certain body parts excepted) done away with. But a public entity gets bigger.
Tell us how you really feel, Leo
My friend Leo at Psycmeistr’s Ice Palace is often as pointed as an icicle in defending his religious and political convictions on his blog, especially when those convictions come together on a particular issue. He doesn’t mince his words but will make mince of stories or arguments in favor of limiting our freedoms.
Leo recently used an advisory from American Family Associations — about a HUD-owned senior citizens building in Florida banning an 85-year-old tenant from displaying religious Christmas decorations on her door (a policy that has now been rescinded) — as the starting point for a post raking evermore ambitious nanny state restrictions on our freedoms and our society’s general willingness to put up with this.
Ladies and gentlemen, the State, when held up as god, is a jealous god, and it shall have no other gods before it.
Not even the Real One.
I find it all the more oxymoronic that people on the left who call themselves Christians are so willing to sell their religious freedom to embrace the false promises and sour milk that flow from the golden calf that is the government teat.
In the absence of the acceptance of God, man himself attempts to fill the void to become that which he rejects.
With predictably disastrous consequences, I might add.
And unfortunately, those who choose to ignore history are bound and determined to drag the rest of us along on their path toward its insidious repetition.
Read the whole thing, including the links. But be careful you don’t poke your eye out!
In My Father’s House, Conclusion
The house looked all too familiar. My sister and my uncles had removed all the appliances and equipment brought in over the past few months that had never seemed to fit. His chair, his bed, are now as they’ve always been. I know better than his dog, who wanders the house looking up quizzically and runs to the patio door when he thinks he hears someone, but standing in the family room I still half-expected to see him when I turned around, or when I heard a footstep in the kitchen.
What I wasn’t expecting at all was to go into the grocery store or the gas station in the small town and see a black-bordered card by the cash register, announcing his passing. I’d forgotten how things were done in a small town where just about everybody knows everyone else. I’d seen, maybe, hundreds of these cards when I lived here but never pictured his name on them, let alone my own in the body copy. Later, driving some things over to the funeral home I was still taken aback to read his name and the times for the visitation and the funeral on the marquee facing the street.
My father passed away Monday night, October 29, due to … what, exactly? It’s kind of complicated, so I suppose you could say he died of “complications.” Was it the lymphoma he’d been battling? The chemotherapy itself? The realization that living with the pain only meant yet another day of living with the pain?
I saw him wasting away, of course. In June. In September. Was it only last December that we had all been together and so happy? Thursday morning, October 25th, my mom called me at work (I’d taken to keeping my cell phone on and with me even in the office) from the hospital where he’d been for a week, fighting a kidney infection; where he’d had another torso scan to check on the progress of the cancer. There was to be a consultation with his oncologist the next day, could I be there? How could I not. Plain, but unspoken, was the thought that they would say the cancer was still spreading and there was nothing more they could do. I took an early morning flight Friday, and arrived at the hospital just moments after they’d moved him from his room into the ICU. When I caught up with him he had an oxygen mask covering the lower half of his face, the straps making his ears stick out even further, his head bald as a newborn’s. Despite the oxygen his whole body fought for each breath, filling and releasing in a series of rapid convulsions. I took his hand and could feel his pulse through his palm.
My mother, my brother, my mother’s brother and I met with the oncologist. Good news: the cancer was stable, it had not spread further. Bad news: he had developed blood clots in his lungs from the chemo. This was dire. He might not live through the weekend. By the afternoon, however, he was better, breathing easier, able to talk, still able to understand. He thirsted, and I put the tiny sponge to his lips so he could drink. I, his first child, shared some news of his first grandchild, and the monitor showed his heart-rate spiking. “That … was … your … heart … then,” he said. Yes. Yes it was.
Saturday morning I held my phone to his ear so he could talk to my youngest daughter, Tiger Lilly; as always, he teased her a little. Saturday afternoon my brother and I picked up our sister at the airport, just 15 minutes from the hospital. Saturday evening my father and I said our good-byes. They were brief because there wasn’t much left unsaid between us. Sunday morning I had an early flight back to St. Paul because there were things I had to do, first. Then calling my mother when I got home, hearing he had asked to be disconnected from everything except what was dripping into him for the pain. Monday evening my mother was at his bedside, talking on the phone to my sister back at the house, saying that he had been breathing much easier for the past five minutes and was resting peacefully, and then, as she said it, he stopped. “Say good-bye to your father,” she cried, thrusting the cellphone toward his ear as the nurse rushed in. Then the phone was ringing at my house, and once again I was on the road, toward a familiar place that was never going to be the same again.
When I was younger I couldn’t quite understand why people went to visitations or funerals. You only had a few moments with the family before moving on, and wasn’t it hard for them to stand there having to greet all those people when they’d rather be off grieving somewhere in private? I’ve had a different understanding and appreciation, though, for the last ten years or so. “Paying your respects,” always sounded like such a cliche until I experienced how important and comforting it was to see and hear from people what my father had meant to or done for them; there were a lot of friends and family of course, and many, many people I did not recognize.
The funeral was a “celebration of life,” and several of my father’s friends from the Masonic Lodge and/or the golf course shared moving and often hilarious stories. Men of a generation not known for crying wept openly nonetheless. With tight lips and throat I somehow kept it (mostly) together through the eulogy I offered, perhaps because in a way I had been preparing for it all my life. After we rode out to the cemetery my wife, an ordained minister and police chaplain, spoke the scripture and the prayer and then my oldest daughter stood in the bright sunlight beside the casket and on that hillside in the great, open air absolutely filled every ear (and I hope every heart) as she sang a cappella, an old hymn:
There is a fountain filled with blood drawn from Emmanuel’s veins;
And sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains.
Lose all their guilty stains, lose all their guilty stains;
And sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains.
E’er since, by faith, I saw the stream Thy flowing wounds supply,
Redeeming love has been my theme, and shall be till I die.
And shall be till I die, and shall be till I die;
Redeeming love has been my theme, and shall be till I die.
Related posts:
In My Father’s House, Part 1
In My Father’s House, Part 2
In My Father’s House, Part 3
Turning Toward the Mourning
Shifting the Sun
Oi! A Friday quiz…
It’s been awhile since I’ve done a Friday quiz! This one is “Who’s Your Inner European?”
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Your Inner European is Irish! |
![]() Sprited and boisterous! You drink everyone under the table. |
Hmmm. Irish. Must be the Gaelic roots. I don’t know about the “drinking people under the table” part, though, especially when it can be so much more interesting above the table.
Take the quiz and find out if deep down you’re really a cheese-eating surrender monkey.
HT: Away With Words.
Biofuel me once, shame on you…
Don’t like the opportunistic, economically-flawed, even counter-productive rush to biofuels? You’re not alone, though you might be surprised who shares your concerns.
Oxfam International, a social justice, anti-poverty organization has released a report condemning the EU’s biofuel mandates as not only being unproductive, but downright nasty:
EU proposals will make it mandatory by 2020 for ten per cent of all member states’ transport fuels to come from biofuels. In order to meet the substantial increase in demand, the EU will have to import biofuels made from crops like sugar cane and palm oil from developing countries. But the rush by big companies and governments in countries such as Indonesia, Colombia, Brazil, Tanzania and Malaysia to win a slice of the ‘EU biofuel pie’ threatens to force poor people from their land, destroy their livelihoods, lead to the exploitation of workers and hurt the availability and affordability of food.
“In the scramble to supply the EU and the rest of the world with biofuels, poor people are getting trampled. The EU proposals as they stand will exacerbate the problem. It is unacceptable that poor people in developing countries should bear the cost of questionable attempts to cut emissions in Europe,” said Robert Bailey from Oxfam.
Biofuels may offer the potential to reduce poverty by increasing jobs and markets for small farmers, and by providing cheap renewable energy for local use, but the huge plantations emerging to supply the EU pose more threats than opportunities for poor people. The problem will only get worse as the scramble to supply intensifies unless the EU introduces safeguards to protect land rights, livelihoods, workers rights and food security.
EU member states agreed that the ten per cent target must be reached sustainably, but Oxfam warns that the current proposals contain no standards on the social or human impact.
“The EU set its biofuel target without checking the impact on people and the environment. The EU must include safeguards to ensure that the rights and livelihoods of people in producing countries are protected. Without these, the ten per cent target should be scrapped and the EU should go back to the drawing board,” said Bailey.
“Let’s be clear, biofuels are not a panacea – even if the EU is able to reach the ten per cent target sustainably, and Oxfam doubts that it can, it will only shave a few per cent of emissions off a continually growing total.”
Published reports show that as much as 5.6 million square kilometres of land – an area more than ten times the size of France – could be in production of biofuels within 20 years in India, Brazil, Southern Africa and Indonesia alone. The UN estimates that 60 million people worldwide face clearance from their land to make way for biofuel plantations. Many end up in slums in search of work, others on the very plantations that have displaced them with poor pay, squalid conditions and no worker rights. Women workers are routinely discriminated against and often paid less then men.
You can read the entire report on Oxfam’s site. While there’s a certain amount of “World to end; women and minorities hardest hit” perspective, it’s an interesting take on an issue that many people, despite differing political views, still sense is profoundly wrong-headed.











