Jun 19 2010

administrator

Free to a Good Home

Filed under Website News

One slightly used website with great potential.

I can’t do it.  I had good intentions when I started this site, but I just can’t keep it going, I can’t put the time into it that it deserves.  I’ve never taken the time to publicize it, or fix it up, or find all the authors that it needs.

I would be happy to give this site away to a person or persons who think they can do right by it.   I even have books if you are a neophyte in online blogging or Wordpress sites.  Depending upon the situation, I’d probably be available by cell phone on nights and weekends, for technical help.

Contact me at

 idaho speaks @ cableone.net

(don’t use spaces in the email address)

The domain name and the hosting are paid up until January.  It costs us very little (probably less than $10 per month)  to do this site. 

Won’t you please consider taking this fun little site into YOUR life?

One response so far

Jun 12 2010

kymberly

Keep the 4th of July on the 4th in Idaho Falls

Filed under Community Issues

Our friend and hero, Kristen Gazaway, made the news for this one.  Rock on, Kristen!
 
Everybody - please donote twenty bucks to this effort (by next Wednesday - you can do it through PayPal at this site ). 
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Let’s make Frank Vandersloot put his money where his mouth is! 
 
But to raise your blood pressure, check out some of the comments.  I swear, people in Idaho Falls are suffering from Stockholm Syndrome at the hand of Vandersloot.  LOL.  They totally miss the point.  And really, how on earth do you explain the obvious to people who are THIS kind of obtuse?  Answer - you don’t, you just move on after wasting your breath for a few minutes of trying.    
 
Here’s the news story on Local News 8 -

No responses yet

Jun 10 2010

kymberly

Does the Navy Lie?

Filed under National News

I’m thinking, probably.
 
Does it lie with as much alacrity as BP?
 
I’m pretty sure, probably not.
 
Why haven’t we gotten the Navy in there to babysit those colossal infants at Beyond Puke?  I’m sick and tired of BP’s BS and at this point if they said “kym, the sky is blue, grass is green, and the moon most certainly is not made from green cheese”, I’d never believe them. 
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oil-rig
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I’ve had it up to my eyeballs with this crap.  So maybe “up to my eyeballs” on a 5 ft. 3 in. tall person isn’t exactly monumental, but when you get enough people up to their eyeballs sick of this, then we become a force for change. 
 
BP is about as right-for-the-job as a murderer is right for the job of prosecuting his own case.  I know our government doesn’t have the resources to clean this oil mess up (surprise - that’s what happens when we elect in idiots who cut taxes and call it a “free market” economy) but we DO have the resources to watch the BP sociopaths like the greedy little turd blossoms they are.
 
Get involved - help the rest of us work to pull the cork out of our own government’s ass.

2 responses so far

Jun 05 2010

Dawn

Miranda anyone?

Filed under Miscellaneous

“You have the right to remain silent.  Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law.  You have the right to have an attorney present now and at any further questioning.  If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed to you free of charge.”  Does this sound relatively familiar?  Turns out that there is not just one Miranda.  Police agencies can change the wording as long as the rights are clearly stated. You do not have to be read your rights at the time of arrest.  They only have to Mirandize you before they can question you.

So, how many of us actually understand the Miranda Warning?  How many people think that once you are Mirandized the police nicely go call your lawyer and wait for them to arrive before they question you?  I think a large portion of us have seen Law & Order, Criminal Minds, NCIS, CSI, etc.  We see the officers get pissed because some one “lawyers up”.  We also see people who flat out refuse to say anything.  So, what happens in reality? You have to say “I want a lawyer” in order to get one.  No one just offers to get one for you and past reading you Miranda they will usually never again mention you have the right to an attorney.

Well, now the Supreme Court ruled a person has to actually say they want to remain silent just like they have to ask for a lawyer.  Just “being” silent is not good enough anymore.  It certainly seems contradictory to “the right to remain silent”  doesn’t it?

So who will this really help/hurt?  Criminals generally know the court/police system just as well, and in some cases better, than the attorneys.  They know their Miranda and they know the interrogation process.  If they are career criminals and smart, they usually know exactly how to keep quiet and lawyer up.  But how much does the rest of society, especially immigrants, know about Miranda and the legal police procedures for interviewing, interrogation, and arrest?  I believe that the majority of us do not know enough.

Anyone can be hauled in, Mirandized, and questioned.  You don’t actually have to arrest a person to interview/interrogate them.  You merely have to read them Miranda.  So, if anyone goes to the police and accuses you of a crime, you could be taken in for questioning.  People think you should be helpful to the police and honest, because after all , you have done nothing wrong.  However, the truth does not always set you free.  The police are there to make arrests.  The DA is there to make convictions.  Truth does not always mean justice.

People who are living here without documentation are going to be the biggest group affected by this I believe.  They may not speak any or enough English to understand what is happening and probably don’t know anything about Miranda.  If they do speak enough English they may be scared enough of any uniformed official to say anything the police ask them to without having done anything.  Many people have fled here from countries where uniformed officials are the gangs, rapists and murderers.  They know to just do whatever they are told or they will die! These poor people will confess to any crime you want them too because they believe you will torture and kill them if they don’t!

I fear that this ruling is directly related to the horrible immigration law that Arizona has passed.  They are going to be able to arrest, prosecute, and jail more and more people that have done nothing wrong but try to live free of poverty, terror, and tyranny.  The DAs and police are going to benefit with higher arrest and conviction rates.  And the For-Profit Prison system is going to be bursting with people that are not really criminals and we are going to be paying the bill and it is a much higher bill than if the government was still running the prison system.  This is going to make the owners of the prisons even richer and that is the only “benefit” I see to this new ruling.  This may make the “interview” process go faster than if the person never says a word even to ask for a lawyer, however.

Moral of the story: if the police ever ask you to “come down to the station for a little chat” or “take you down to the station for and interview”.  Immediately ask for a lawyer and tell them you want to remain silent.  Very little good can come from you being “cooperative” in their investigation if you are the “person of interest” or “suspect”.

4 responses so far

Jun 04 2010

Dawn

ON KEEPING THE 4TH OF JULY ON THE 4TH

Filed under Community Issues

The point here I believe is that if they are city fire works for all to enjoy then the city should be responsible for them. The problem is that they are allowing one man/private organization do the ONLY city PUBLIC FREE firework show! Telling people that they should just go set off their own fireworks at their home on the 4th is quite frankly ridiculous. How many people do you think would have to choose between food for the week and the fireworks? ALOT! Fireworks are really expensive and many live in apartments that you could not set them off at home because the parking lot is private property not owned by the renter. For many many children the only fireworks they get to see are those that Vandersloot pays for!

Those are just some issues with you telling them to do it on their own. Now, Separation of Church & State, well folks I’m sorry but Eastern Idaho isn’t the only place in the good ol’ USA that has a problem with that Constitutional mandate! The City of Idaho Falls and Chamber of Commerce should take the responsibility of getting the money for the fireworks and the rest of the 4th celebration. Their isn’t a problem with Vandersloot donating to the money pool for that. However, letting him be the only one in charge and the only one to foot the bill is certainly against the Democratic way if you ask me.

And yes I do agree that this state as well as Utah rely far to much on the LDS church to make their laws and run the state. The whole reason we celebrate the 4th of July is to celebrate freedom. And in case anyone of any particular religion has forgotten, that was originally FREEDOM FROM RELIGIOUS PROSECUTION!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It wasn’t all about freedom from government and taxes! It was about the freedom to practice whatever religion you wanted. The problem has been that in 200+ years the people of the US have not adhered to that!!!!!!

There is also no reason why citizens/residents of Idaho Falls should not/could not donate money to the fireworks cause throughout the year in order to free it from the stranglehold that it currently it is under. For the Mayor’s office to say there is no interest in making sure that our holidays stay on the actual day of the holiday is preposterous! Do you honestly think the framers of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights would agree with switching the celebration of what they fought for to a different day every 7 years when the holiday falls on a Sunday just for the convenience of those of a particular religion? NO!!!!!!!!

It is up to the people who have a problem with the holiday being on a Sunday to change their celebration not the ENTIRE STATE OR CITY OR COUNTY!

4 responses so far

Jun 02 2010

kymberly

First Fords - Cool

Filed under This Gem's 4 U

The following is not a rant, it’s just a bitchin bit of industrial revolution history about one of my favorite car breeds, the Ford.  Check out how the wheels were made and also note the last minute where it shows the places these tough guys could go.  I cannot even fathom taking my Outback into some of those conditions, and it’s designed to attempt rougher roads.
 
Wouldn’t it have been fun to pull on your goggles and gloves then careen wildly through the wilderness in one of these?  Remember - no seat belts back then, so you’d have been living on the edge.  Speed (my favorite thing to do in a car) wasn’t this baby’s big draw, but you gotta figure, people back then were used to one horsepower, so 40 mph. would have felt like 100.
 

No responses yet

Jun 01 2010

kymberly

Hitler Recruited Gay “Enforcers”

Filed under WTF?

But not just ANY gay enforcers….the Fuhrer preferred his homos hot and bothersome and like, totally macho.  So for instance, at a Village People concert, Hitler would have tossed his panties at the construction worker or the cop -  guys who could pump their junk AND their power tools.  He wouldn’t have paid much mind to the Indian or sailor, because everybody knows that effeminate gays weren’t what the third reich liked.  But hey, had the sailor possessed an Orgazmo gun, who knows…
 
This story would be one big, fat bwahaha were it not for the fact that millions of Fox Spews viewers will go like this - “Well yeah, ya know, Hitler was a socialist and Obama is a socialist so now I bet Obama is going to recruit socialist gays just like Hitler.  The homos will be everywhere - forcing us into their agenda.  Then we’ll all be forced into gay, socialist, negroism.”  Seriously, if you don’t know somebody who thinks like this, then you don’t live in a red state. 
 
On another note, this is totally unrelated but freaking hysterical (at least to me, a current Census employee and former census taker).  Some experiences out there in the field were exactly like this next clip.  I called them “WTF moments”.  They were confusing as all hell but sure did beat the snot out of that “scary-guy-with-a-rifle” moment.  
 
Dawn sent me the link.  Thanks, Dawn.  Even though you got me so addicted to demons that I crave them like candy.  LOL.
 
Betty White rocks. 
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No responses yet

May 26 2010

boomer

1972 vs. 2008 and the fight for the middle

Filed under Miscellaneous

Increasingly, I’ve been observing increasing parallels between the election of 1972 and 2008. The crises in those eras, while different at home have a strong similarity- a foreign war with no conclusive end in sight- Viet Nam in ‘72, and the Iraq-Afghanistan war in 2008.

In both elections, the wars created rifts in our population that bled into our domestic problems and differences. In both, those rifts split long before the elections themselves, were evidenced in earlier elections, but the ‘72-’08 elections became the culmination of enormous shifts in the country’s essential political thoughts and political outlook.

And, importantly, the same generation of voters was heavily involved in both.

When I enlisted in the Navy in 1965 at age 21, I wasn’t very political. If anything, I was a typical Idaho kid, conservative in nature, but uninvolved and disconnected with politics in general. I was too young to vote in 1964, and in 1968, I was in the service and didn’t know what I believed politically, though by then, I had come to oppose the war. I received my abstentee ballot while cruising off the shores of Africa, and after studying it and realizing I didn’t know a damn thing about any of the candidates, made the ballot into a paper airplane and sailed it over the side of my ship.

During my service, I gradually saw the Viet Nam war as a loser. By the time I was discharged, my view was the same as a lot of the kids I served with. And like most of them, I simply went home. I wasn’t spat on, or disparaged in any way for my military service, as most vets weren’t. I just came home. That was in May, 1969. By the end of June, I realized that the country no longer supported the war while waiting for some parts at a farm machine store. A couple of old Mormon farmers were in the store, waiting as I was, and discussing the war. Neither of them wanted any more of it, and I realized then, that if two old conservative farmers wanted out, Viet Nam was a lost cause.

The kids had been against the war widely for years before then. The draft, which had been in place since the Korean War, with all it’s exemptions, was ruinously corrupt, and very draconian- if a kid didn’t have an exemption when he got his induction notice, he had very limited ways of avoiding being drafted- the only ways to avoid service were to fail the pre-induction physical, get an exemption before the physical, go on the run and stay one jump ahead of the local draft board, or enlist.

As the years went on, this system met ever greater resistance and protest. The March on Washington, in 1967, was the first of the huge marches that showed just how big the resistance was. The kids weren’t quiet about it, either… ‘Hell No! We Won’t Go!’ became the chant for a generation who looked to the Democratic president, Lyndon Johnson, to put an end to the war and the unfair draft. The fury over the war grew in size, scope, and generational opposition after 1967, and the older people, the ones Nixon called the Silent Majority, found the anti-war movement unseemly.

These folks didn’t like any of the huge social changes that were going on at the same time worse than they didn’t like the war. Some of them clung to patriotism, some didn’t, but in general, they didn’t like the dope smoking long-haired hippy kids and their hedonistic ways. As children of the Great Depression, they couldn’t understand what the kids were so mad about, especially when it was their kids who were growing their hair long.

The Silent Majority wanted things to go back to where they were just a few years earlier. Some of them wanted the country to go back to being apartide again, especially in the South, where The Democratic party watched some of it’s Southern states desert after splitting off from the main party. The Democrats lost their conservative base with the Civil Rights laws Johnson got passed.

By 1968, the Democrats began losing the center as well. Johnson, a populist and strong liberal, had passed all of Kennedy’s most liberal agenda into law and had seen all his civil rights laws reach passage. He accomplished almost everything his supporters wanted to the full, even though he lost the South doing it. That he became so despised by both parties, and by the voters, confused and saddened him, and he had enough. He realized he wouldn’t win and called it quits.

1968 was the flaming year when everything blew up. ‘Nam went bad, got bigger and dirtier, politicians and civic leaders were assassinated, the Democratic convention turned into a riot squelched by a Democratic mayor, and it looked like no one was on the job, tending the store in Washington. New Nixon, out of the scene for 8 years, came back with an easy task- all he had to do was promise to stop the war and the civil disorder. Law and Order was what the people wanted, and what Nixon guaranteed. The Republicans presented a united front against the fractured Democrats, who nominated Johnson’s equally liberal V.P. Hubert Humphrey as a compromise candidate. Humphrey was as old guard as Johnson, and as connected in the halls of Congress, but the kids didn’t like him.

The kids were colorful, noisy as hell, insulting, and often radical. There weren’t very many activists in their total numbers, and most of the young in general either liked them or not, in degrees. As the activists become more radical, the support for them grew steadily less among their peers. But they pulled off a mesmerizing side show with the convention riots, which led to another year’s worth of attention with the trials that followed.

By early 1971, the anti-war movement was at it’s strongest and largest. Nixon had widened the war, and the lottery draft system had done away with the deferments. For the first time, college kids were getting drafted alongside blue-collar kids with deferments, and none liked it. The Kent State massacre, in May of 1970, created an even deeper divide, even as it shocked everyone as much as the deaths in 1968.

Sipro Agnew, Nixon’s V.P., was the mouthpiece of the administration, and preached the politics of division to the confused political center. The Democrats began losing their ideals, their footing, and their financial support. And all was lost quickly, as Congress still had large Democratic majorities in both houses.

By 1972, The party implosion was complete. George McGovern, the candidate who should have been nominated in 1968, was weakened by his choice of Tom Eagleton, who had gotten electroshock treatments for depression 10 years earlier.  He withdrew, was replaced by Sargeant Shriver, a Kennedy brother-in-law, but the damge was done. McGovern was never able to find and promote a single powerful reason to vote Democrat, and Nixon won re-election.

The Viet Nam war eventually ended, badly. The protestors gave up politics and went on with their lives. The first economic tremors of what was to come showed up in 1974, with the oil embargo. The draft was stopped, the military was cut back deeply. But the divisions remained in both the young and older voters. The division was to calcify into the young as they aged, and faced one recession after another into and throughout the ’80s and ’90s. The country swung rightward.

Since the 2008 election is still fresh on most folk’s minds, I don’t think I have to go into such great detail, but the comparisons are obvious. The party that was in a long minority, the Republicans, had taken over Congress. With George W.Bush, they had their perfect leader, a man who strongly believed the most conservative principles of the party and advanced them, Like Johnson, he widened a war, but he also started another on a different front, and got stuck in the tar pit on both of them. Although politically less skilled than Johnson, Bush had a V.P. and a Chief of Staff who more than made up with their skills, and Bush had the same big business support that Johnson enjoyed.

Until the perfect storm of 2008, when the economy collapsed under his watch. Bush was just as surprised as Hoover, but Hoover had the misfortune to have the Great Depression hit on the first year of his single term, and Bush had the luck to have the second Great Depression hit at the end of his second.

His party was left in the same great disarray as the Democrats were after the Johnson presidency. The mid-terms of 2006 were the equivalent of the 1968 election except that in ‘68, a new President was elected along with a large Republican congressional minority. The tide began to turn in ‘06, but it came in in 2008.

Now, the generation who was split and scarred by Viet Nam were the Silent Majority, only much less silent and much less centered. The Tea Party movement took it’s rule book from the protesters of the 60’s, and like them, they have only one thing they are protesting- the unexpected, sudden election of a man they didn’t see coming, and a majority of congressional members who were swept in with him. As with Nixon, the political fight became a struggle for the Big Middle, the Silent Majority, who are the moderate center that is slow to move very far one way or the other.

Like the Democrats of the early 70’s, the Republicans have lost their ability to persuade the Big Middle. The Democrats of the 70’s tried, and failed, to bring back the progressive populism that had sustained them for so long all through the 80’s and 90’s. It took a war and an economic collapse for the progressives to regain popularity with the Big Middle. It took a big swing to the far left for them to lose the Big Middle in 1972.

The Tea Party message is much more muddled than the war protester’s was. All their talk of Constitution and Liberty are abstracts that are more palatable to the Big Middle than their racist impulses, and their desire to turn back the clock to when things were swell for them. Since the consequences of not bailing out the banks never happened, they believe that TARP and the other bail-outs were never needed in the first place.

Like the protesters, the Tea Party is low in active numbers, higher in sympathetic followers, but not large enough to tip the scales away from the centrist Big Middle.

The Republicans are in similar disarray to the Democrats of 1972. They are trying to find where their base is by going more conservative, just as the Democrats tried to go more liberal, and it isn’t working any better for them than it did for the Democrats.

As the Democrats once longed for another Kennedy, who brought a new brightness to the party, the Republicans now yearn for another Reagan, who was a similar dominant personality. Like the Democrats, none has emerged for the Republicans. And just saying ‘Hell, No!’ to the opposing agenda didn’t work any better for the Democrats of 1972.

Like the war protesters, I expect the Tea Party will eventually yell itself out and fade away after getting enormous attention from the news of the day. Their attempts to sway the Big Middle lack the numbers to really become powerful, and their agenda is too vague to attract the essential centrist and patient body of the Big Middle.

Back in 1969, I heard the Big Middle’s voice in those farmers waiting for their parts. I can’t hear those voices this time. The Democratic progressivism is bound to be tempered and weakened by the Big Middle, but I haven’t heard the voices that are quietly discussing the desire to return to the 2000 decade. The tide has come in as slowly as it went out.

3 responses so far

May 22 2010

darlene

You Say You Want a Revolution…

Filed under WTF?

Well, you know…we all want to change the world.

 

 But truth be told, I don’t want your revolution.  Because who are you revolting against?  My country, and my government, and my President.  Basically, you are asking for a revolution against ME.

 

And I don’t understand how you possibly can fool yourself into thinking you’re going to make it happen, make it work, make your fantasy dream world come true.

 

militiaYou don’t like the way we do Federal government business now?  So you’re going to do what…storm the halls of Congress and the White House and the Supreme Court?  All three branches of the Federal Government?

 

And you’ll have to kill all of those who resist.  And there will be many who resist.  I will be one of them.  I don’t want people overthrowing my government.  I don’t care who you are, whether you’re from Russia or Iran or North Korea or Rexburg, Idaho…you aren’t forcibly taking over MY government without a fight from me!

 

So let’s say you kill all of us who resist you.  You’re going to do what, after you’ve run all the current elected people out of town?  Have lawful elections to put new people in there?  Well guess what?  All those current fools were elected by the citizens, and when they vote again, they will end up voting for the same kinds of losers who were in there before, don’t you realize that?

 

So how do you prevent that from recurring?  Threaten to overthrow the new set, too?  Only allow your own cherry-picked candidates to run?  Or just select amongst yourselves who will be the next set of rulers?

 

What you’d be doing is bringing totalitarianism into play!!!  Everything must be done your way, or out the next government goes.  Forcibly.   

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What kind of democracy is that?

 

The Constitution frames for us our lawful ways to achieve our hopes, our dreams, our country’s future.  Do you believe we have we drifted away from what the Founding Fathers intended?  Then educate, inform, and win over the hearts and minds of your fellow citizens.  Achieve your goals through the ballot box, as the law provides for.

 

But I want you to consider something.  The Constitution IS A BLUEPRINT.  That means, I might have a different viewpoint than you.  I might want my government to do some basic things that you don’t feel are found there, but I can see those functions in that document as clear as day.  I have rights, too.  And I intend to vote for people who sometimes see things my way. 

 

And you might just have to compromise some times, because that’s how we do things in this great wonderful country.  I’m happy to meet you part of the way, but I’m not willing to let you have all the power in OUR country.  And since each of my neighbors thinks just a little bit different than I do, it seems that none of us will get all of the things that we want. 

 

So why do you feel you have the right to force a revolution against our government, if it doesn’t do exactly what you want it to do?  It’s not doing exactly what I want either, it’s basically doing a little bit of what each of its citizens want.   

 

And that should be alright…it’s the American Way

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8 responses so far

May 21 2010

kymberly

Short, Sweet Fun

Filed under This Gem's 4 U

Take a minute to take this test (really, it takes just about a minute).
 
 
I’m not the brightest crayon in the box, and I don’t pride myself on much (except my gift of gab, which can only be silenced by duct tape) but I do my best to take in as much as I can about a subject before making up my mind on it.  I passed this test with flying colors so this little experiment gives me confidence to say, “yeah, I do pretty good at that”.
 
This might explain why I’d make a terrible Tea Partier.
  
Thanks for the link, Dan Henry.

3 responses so far

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