Obama's View on teen pregnancy: abortion as the way out, the road to absolution and redemption for pregnant teens.
In this article, Pat Buchanan hits the nail on the head.
I agree with this man's opinion.
This blog contains my views and opinions on topics that I feel a need to speak out about...doing the right thing is not always easy, otherwise more people would be doing it.
Saturday, September 13, 2008
Friday, September 12, 2008
Father Hits Daughter's Boyfriend With Pipe
This guy should have been given a pat on the back, instead he was arrested.
I would have done the same thing.
This is One Man's Opinion
I would have done the same thing.
This is One Man's Opinion
Thursday, September 11, 2008
September 11, 2001
Where were you on this fateful day? Do you remember what happened on that day? Well, I do, and I will never forget it.
We had been in our mobile home that we bought a little over a month, and my daughter just started kindergarten. I was getting her up for school and her TV was on. We didn't have cable at the time and there was no antenna on it so the signal was very snowy, but she did get the Fox network channel. On the tv, I could just make out the World Trade Center and someone was giving the play by play as it was happening live I saw the first plane hit. At the time, it was not know to be a terrorist act.
Then I went into the living room where the reception was much better and turned on the tv. I sat there with my daughter and watched the second plane hit. I believe that at that time it was known that the planes had been hijacked. I felt really horrible.
I drove my daughter to her school and people were just starting to talk about it. I turned on the radio and rushed to work where everyone was huddled around the television in the conference room. We sat there and watched as people jumped and fell from the upper floors. Then we watched in horror as first one tower, then the other collapsed. No one spoke for the longest time. There wasn't a dry eye in the place.
Eventually, the owner told us to get back to work and that we could listen to the radio or get on the internet at our desks to keep us updated.
I don't think that we really got any work done that day, and not much that whole week.
Even though we really couldn't afford it, the next day, we signed up for cable tv so we could see what was going on.
I was so glad when we went into Afghanistan and then later Iraq. I know there are those who criticize the President, and for most of those people, I have nothing but contempt. And those that say we brought what happened on that day seven years ago, I have one thing to say to you, "head or gut."
Going over there and killing these worthless scumbags was the right thing to do no matter how the media and the liberal jackasses try to demonize the President's actions. And all the men and women who have sacrificed everything to do their duty are the true heroes.
So, to those men and women who died on that day and to the families and those who had loved ones killed in that act of overwhelming cowardice, my thoughts and prayers will always be with you.
Freedom is never free.
We had been in our mobile home that we bought a little over a month, and my daughter just started kindergarten. I was getting her up for school and her TV was on. We didn't have cable at the time and there was no antenna on it so the signal was very snowy, but she did get the Fox network channel. On the tv, I could just make out the World Trade Center and someone was giving the play by play as it was happening live I saw the first plane hit. At the time, it was not know to be a terrorist act.
Then I went into the living room where the reception was much better and turned on the tv. I sat there with my daughter and watched the second plane hit. I believe that at that time it was known that the planes had been hijacked. I felt really horrible.
I drove my daughter to her school and people were just starting to talk about it. I turned on the radio and rushed to work where everyone was huddled around the television in the conference room. We sat there and watched as people jumped and fell from the upper floors. Then we watched in horror as first one tower, then the other collapsed. No one spoke for the longest time. There wasn't a dry eye in the place.
Eventually, the owner told us to get back to work and that we could listen to the radio or get on the internet at our desks to keep us updated.
I don't think that we really got any work done that day, and not much that whole week.
Even though we really couldn't afford it, the next day, we signed up for cable tv so we could see what was going on.
I was so glad when we went into Afghanistan and then later Iraq. I know there are those who criticize the President, and for most of those people, I have nothing but contempt. And those that say we brought what happened on that day seven years ago, I have one thing to say to you, "head or gut."
Going over there and killing these worthless scumbags was the right thing to do no matter how the media and the liberal jackasses try to demonize the President's actions. And all the men and women who have sacrificed everything to do their duty are the true heroes.
So, to those men and women who died on that day and to the families and those who had loved ones killed in that act of overwhelming cowardice, my thoughts and prayers will always be with you.
Freedom is never free.
Sunday, September 07, 2008
Junk Drawers
What is a junk drawer? You know what they are. Every home has one. A junk drawer is a drawer somewhere in the house that you put things that you don't know where else to put them. These things don't fit into any of the other drawers in the house and they are items that you don't want to throw away because you might need them in the future.
Growing up, my parents had a junk drawer. As a matter of fact, they had two. We loved to look in them to see what kind of "treasure" we could find. Thumb tacks, string, a spool of thread, rubber bands, glue, an assortment of pencils and pens, scraps of paper, some change (which we liked to sneak out of the drawer), missing parts from toys, a pair of pliers, a screwdriver or two, scissors, and a lot of other things I fail to remember. But the drawer was always there, and if we lost something or needed something, we could usually find it there.
When got married for the first time, my wife and I unconsciously started our own junk drawer filled with the same type of things that were in the junk drawer from my child hood, except for the toy parts. Throughout the time we were married, it never let us down. I think when she left, she took it with her along with most everything else. While single, I really didn't have a junk drawer. I don't know why. Then, I remarried and we started a new junk drawer. After a year, we moved into a different house and as before, started another junk drawer that lasted for five years.
We then moved to Missouri and took our junk drawer with us...we actually had two and just dumped them into a box and when we got to our new house, we dumped them into a drawer and added and subtracted from that drawer till we moved again. But this time, we were bound and determined not to have a junk drawer. Well, things haven't worked out that way. While unpacking our things, we came across odd items and things that didn't fit into any of our other drawers. So I put them in a drawer in the back laundry room and a new junk drawer was begun.
I am a firm believer that humans have a basic instinct to create a junk drawer. I am sure that when we lived in caves, we reserved a part of that cave for "junk". At our jobs, there are junk drawers. I am sure that there is even a junk drawer on the International Space Station. My dad even carried one with him. He always carried odds and ends in his pockets...pocket knife, pencil, change, screwdriver, rubber band, and some other items that had unknown functions to us.
Junk drawers. What are they? They are a place to put bits and pieces of our lives that are important to us at any given time, but have no home of their own.
What is in your junk drawer?
Junk Drawer Ingenuity
The Junk Drawer Blog
Growing up, my parents had a junk drawer. As a matter of fact, they had two. We loved to look in them to see what kind of "treasure" we could find. Thumb tacks, string, a spool of thread, rubber bands, glue, an assortment of pencils and pens, scraps of paper, some change (which we liked to sneak out of the drawer), missing parts from toys, a pair of pliers, a screwdriver or two, scissors, and a lot of other things I fail to remember. But the drawer was always there, and if we lost something or needed something, we could usually find it there.
When got married for the first time, my wife and I unconsciously started our own junk drawer filled with the same type of things that were in the junk drawer from my child hood, except for the toy parts. Throughout the time we were married, it never let us down. I think when she left, she took it with her along with most everything else. While single, I really didn't have a junk drawer. I don't know why. Then, I remarried and we started a new junk drawer. After a year, we moved into a different house and as before, started another junk drawer that lasted for five years.
We then moved to Missouri and took our junk drawer with us...we actually had two and just dumped them into a box and when we got to our new house, we dumped them into a drawer and added and subtracted from that drawer till we moved again. But this time, we were bound and determined not to have a junk drawer. Well, things haven't worked out that way. While unpacking our things, we came across odd items and things that didn't fit into any of our other drawers. So I put them in a drawer in the back laundry room and a new junk drawer was begun.
I am a firm believer that humans have a basic instinct to create a junk drawer. I am sure that when we lived in caves, we reserved a part of that cave for "junk". At our jobs, there are junk drawers. I am sure that there is even a junk drawer on the International Space Station. My dad even carried one with him. He always carried odds and ends in his pockets...pocket knife, pencil, change, screwdriver, rubber band, and some other items that had unknown functions to us.
Junk drawers. What are they? They are a place to put bits and pieces of our lives that are important to us at any given time, but have no home of their own.
What is in your junk drawer?
Junk Drawer Ingenuity
The Junk Drawer Blog
Friday, September 05, 2008
Sarah Palin
Here is a good article about Sarah Palin, John McCain's VP choice.
I think he made a very good choice in her and she will change the direction of American Conservatism for a long time to come. Not to mention that she is much more qualified to be president than Obama with his pittance of experience and knowledge.
This is One Man's Opinion.
I think he made a very good choice in her and she will change the direction of American Conservatism for a long time to come. Not to mention that she is much more qualified to be president than Obama with his pittance of experience and knowledge.
This is One Man's Opinion.
Thursday, September 04, 2008
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