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September 27, 2004

Cycling Diary: 9/27/04

Rode through development, down the old tracks by the high school, through the HS woods trail a few times, and back through the development.

5.5 miles, 12.7 mph average, top speed 21.7 (that's on level, not downhill), about 22 minutes or so.

Going to get major rain & wind tomorrow so likely no riding - and then have visits Wednesday night so will be Thursday (Debate night!) before I can ride again.

Bumper Sticker

Everyone needs one of these on their car:


bushcheney

Just so you know where I stand....


September 26, 2004

Cycling Diary: 9/26/04 - Concord & the Battle Road

Today's ride took us up to Minuteman National Historic Park where the colonists first took on the british on April 19th, 1775.

We started at the visitor's center - road the battle trail west towards Concord - and ended up at the Old North Bridge. After some time there, motored down to Concord Center, had some ice cream, and then headed back.

12.7 Miles, Average Speed just under 9 mph. Top speed 15.7 mph.

Some pictures from today:

Bikes on the new Rack: hondarack

Yours Truly Posing with some Sheep:
bryanconcord

The Sheep along the Battle Road:
concordsheep

You see some interesting people along the Battle Road - here's a tour guide speaking about the British that are buried just off of the Battle Road:
northbridgespeaker

Even the bikes need a break:
bikesbreak






September 25, 2004

Cycling Diary: 9/25/04 - Part Deux

Returned to Silver City Bicycles with my sidekick. She picked up a 2005 Trek 2900 in the blue & yellow scheme, a helmet, gloves, shorts, cage, water bottles, and other goodies. Then it was back to Massasoit again:

7.0 Miles, Average Speed 8.5 mph, 48 minutes, Top Speed 22.6 mph. 4 miles trails, 3 miles road.

Exhausted now!

Concord and the Battle Road tomorrow if things hold...

Cycling Diary: 9/25/04

Short ride this morning - longer ride this afternoon with a partner (once she picks up her bike today). Again, at Massasoit State Park.

5.4 Miles (1 mile road, 4.4 miles trails) - average speed 9.8 mp/h, Top Speed 18 mph. 22 minutes.

Bought a Thule Speedway 962 on Thursday night and installed it last night. Today was its first use - we'll try it out for two bikes this afternoon.

September 24, 2004

Butler University Officer Killed

Indianapolis has suffered its second line in the duty death of a police officer with the murder this morning of Butler University Police Officer James Davis, reports the Indianapolis Star:

A Butler University Police Department officer was shot and killed this morning in the parking lot at Hinkle Fieldhouse, and his suspected assailant was shot less than three hours later a short distance away.

The officer, who university officials identified as James Davis, 31, was pronounced dead at 11:08 a.m. from a single gunshot wound to the head. He had been with the Butler police since January, 2003.

Police set up a perimeter from 46th Street to 49th Street between Sunset Lane and Boulevard Place as they searched for the suspect, who fled the scene of the 10:30 a.m. shooting on foot.

At 12:45 p.m., police engaged the suspect in the 4400 block of North Illinois Street. The suspect was shot and has been transported to Wishard Memorial Hospital.

Police late this afternoon identified the suspect as Kahdir Al Khattab, 26. He was in critical condition.

Al Khattab had been wanted on an arrest warrant for battery.

I'll point out that Officer Davis was a year ahead of me at Indiana University. While I do not recall his name - his face is familiar to me. Perhaps I knew him - perhaps we took a class together - perhaps not. But I feel his loss nonetheless.

RIP Officer James Davis....

September 23, 2004

Cycling Diary: 9/23/04

Went and visited nearby Massasoit State Park about nine miles down the road in East Taunton, Massachusetts.

Today's Ride: 15.3 miles, 9.6 mph, Top Speed 33.5 mph. About 75% of the ride was trails (thus the significantly lower average speed), the rest was road work / recovery.

Some pics from the camera phone of the ride:

38359252101_0

38359206917_0

38344957957_330

I came home covered in mud and sweat - but it was well worth it. Going back there on Saturday and likely Sunday too....



Sonicwall Restrictions

I'm sitting in the Panera Bread in Saugus, MA doing some work before heading across the parking lot to the store. I tried to access my weblog here at bryanstrawser.com and got this message:

This site is blocked by the SonicWALL Content Filter Service.

URL: http://www.bryanstrawser.com/

Reason for restriction: Forbidden Category "Pornography"

What the hell?!

I checked Sonicwall's Category Descriptions and found this:

Pornographic sites containing sexually explicit material for the purpose of arousing a sexual or prurient interest.
Yup, you got it. My weblog is pornographic.

I guess I say FUCK too often.

Well, Fuck Sonicwall!

Life Change

Lest you think this is becoming a cycling log - despair not!

I am in the midst of the most significant change in my personal life in many many years.

When I was in high school, I was a 140 pound speed machine. I ran somewhere around 6-8 miles daily. From June through October I played 2-3 hours of Tennis at least once a day - and often more. I swam laps like there was no tomorrow while lifeguarding at the city pool. Most nights I umpired two softball games. Starting the Monday after tennis season ended, I hit the weights and started running - and that didn't let up until track ended in June. I did that for four years.

Then came college, the discovery of beer, and a stressful job and suddenly I weighed 230 pounds.

Last year, I did a modified Atkins diet and lost thirty pounds over two months. And then I gained it all back.

Three weeks ago I finally decided that I had enough. I started a food diary and discovered I was overeating by about 1200 calories each day. That was fairly easy to trim down. I just changed what I was eating - how I was snacking - and cut out all of the crap (like ice cream).

I do miss ice cream!

Then I started running. First outdoors, then on the treadmill - and then I broke out the bike.

Now my bike was 12 years old - I paid $80 for it at Target to have for college. The new bike is a world of difference.

My goal is to get to 170 pounds and do a century ride (100 miles) by October 1st, 2005. I believe this is completely doable.

My reward is that I'll let myself purchase a nice road bike - like this Trek 1000. Until then, I'll buy nothing. No computer gizmos, no new gadgets, no new golf clubs, nada.

September 22, 2004

Cycling Diary - 9/22

Short day due to issue at the house - only 13 minutes, 3.1 miles, average speed around 14.6 mp/h, top speed 24.5 mp/h.

3 Laps around the development.

I pushed hard, got up a good sweat and then ran out of light.

Cycling Diary - 9/20/04

Monday's ride: 5.2 miles in 25.43 minutes. Average speed was 13.96 miles/hour. Top speed 23.9 miles/hour.

Up Williams Street, around King's Place development, circled housing addition twice.

Nice simple ride - saw one other biker on a road bike.

First ride w/ shorts and gloves - much more comfortable...

September 19, 2004

Cycling Diary - 9/19/04

Today's ride: 15.1 Miles in 1:20.45, average speed 11.2 MPH. Top speed 21.2 MPH.

First day with the Trek 4500 - awesome ride.

Afternoon ride - twice around development, down 140 to Taunton Green, around Green / Courthouse, down to High Street to broken bridge, back to High's intersection with 140 - down to 3rd/4th street - past the old Silver plants - past Public Works building to Weir Corner - down Weir to gas pipeline, back home via Elementary School, Williams Street, High School.

The Trek 4500

For the last three weeks, as a part of a major change in my lifestyle, I've begun to seriously exercise for the first time in many years. My goal is to reach 170 pounds in a year or so.

I've found that running on the treadmill is exceptionally boring - and the treadmill here at the house is not a great one. Running outdoors is good and easy to do in this neighborhood, but my shins aren't so sure about that. So a few weeks ago, I started riding my bike.

Now, I've had this bike since 1992 when I was preparing to goto college. I paid $80 for it at Target and it shows. It has not worn well over the years. So after discovering some local trails and talking with some friends that had nicer bikes, I decided that a new mountain bike would make a nice Christmas gift this year. So Christmas came early for me.. it came this morning!

After researching several bikes, I ended up purchasing a 2004 Trek 4500, along with some accessories (below) from Silver City Bicycles, just down the road in Raynham, Massachusetts.

Here's a view of the Trek 4500:

45002

In addition, I wanted to be able to monitor distance, speed, time, and some other factors, so I picked up a Cycle Computer from Vetta - the Vetta RT-88. This little baby is wireless and measures a ton of factors. Take a look:

Product_RT88_09

Of course, you have to have a cool helmet. Unfortuantely, I couldn't find a Trek helmet that fit my head - so I went with the Specialized 2005 Air Force. It was a pain in the ass to adjust, but I suppose it's worth it to keep my brain intact.

05HelmetAirForce_l

Of course, I have a wish list of items. Here it is:

I expect this list to grow in the coming weeks!


September 18, 2004

Dooce on Poop

If you don't read Dooce, well, you're just missing out on the finer things in your life:

Hello, Internet. My name is Heather and my website is the number one search result for “poop in my ass.” Life doesn’t get much better than that.
And then there's this fine entry:
I guess C. was at work the day after traveling for a few days, and he found himself IN THE COMPANY BATHROOM (I can hardly type these words without my whole bowel system clinching up), and The Big Bad Motherfucking Poop hit him. He was going to have to pass The Big Bad Motherfucking Poop at work because it was coming and nothing could stop it. For those of you who have been really constipated you know which poop I’m talking about. It’s the one that you can’t physically pass because it’s so hard and large and GRANITE-LIKE IN TEXTURE that the law of physics says, “This is too big to fit out your butt.” But The Big Bad Motherfucking Poop disregards the laws of nature. It defies nature, and it must be passed because it says so.

So C. is sitting on the toilet, his pants around his ankles, and The Big Bad Motherfucking Poop is making it’s way out his butt even though Object A is too big to fit through Object B. And he is in pain, a lot of pain, the pain of a woman feeling the head of her baby crowning through the birth canal. The pain is almost indescribable, and as he is telling me this story I want to hold his hand and assure him that everything is going to be okay because I HAVE FELT THAT PAIN. Pain, oh pain. The world is going to end PAIN.

Go read Dooce now - you won't regret it.

September 15, 2004

Edwards / Kerry on the Draft

This is a monumentally stupid thing to say, as reported today in the Boston Globe:

Vice presidential candidate John Edwards promised a West Virginia mother on Wednesday that if the Democratic ticket is elected in November the military draft would not be revived.

During a question-and-answer session, the mother of a 23-year-old who recently graduated from West Virginia University asked Edwards whether the draft would be reinstated.

''There will be no draft when John Kerry is president,'' Edwards said, a statement that drew a standing ovation.

It's a stupid thing to say because no one can predict the future.

What if we're attacked and have to goto war against another country - say Iran, or North Korea, or Jordan, or Syria, or the Sudan - who knows? What if our current military structure and force levels isn't enough?

What if?

What if?

No one thought something like 9/11 would ever happen to us either - but it did - and it's changed our worldview.

What's he thinking? Everything will be hunky-dory if Kerry and he are elected?

This ranks right up there with "Read my Lips"....

September 13, 2004

Zell's Response

In today's Wall Street Journal, Senator Zell Miller has a few words for his critics:

But for David Gergen and this newspaper's Al Hunt, among others, to call me a racist was especially hurtful. For they know better. They know I worked for three governors in a row, not just one: Carl Sanders, Lester Maddox and Jimmy Carter. They knew I was the first governor to try to remove the Confederate emblem from the Georgia flag. And by the way, when I called each of Georgia's former governors to tell them what I was about to attempt, Jimmy Carter's first question to me was, "What are you doing that for?" Mr. Gergen and Mr. Hunt also know I appointed the only African-American attorney general in the country in the 1990s and more African Americans to the state judiciary than all the other governors of Georgia combined, including that one from Plains.

So, they can call me names and ridicule my angry demeanor all day long. But facts are facts. And the fact is, John Kerry has a long record of proposals to weaken our national security in a time of war. And I would never put my family's safety in those hands.

Single Issue Voter

Until 9/11, I voted based primarily on one issue: gun control.

So, based on that statement alone, in most years, I would not support Kerry simply because of comments like this:

Kerry said renewing the assault weapons ban would not interfere with the Second Amendment rights of gun owners.

Idiot.

Please have him go back and read the Second Amendment again.

The Assault Weapons Ban is History

The fabled "assault weapons" ban expired this morning, reports CNN:

Ten years after it was born out of the carnage of three California mass shootings, the federal assault weapons ban is fading out of existence Monday.
This is a horrible law - born out of emotion and reactionary thought rather than any criminological theory.

I am glad to see that it's gone.

Now, on to more important things...

September 12, 2004

A Morning of Rememberance

From the dawn memorial service for Flight 93 in Shanksville, PA:


gal.p1.flag.ap

September 11, 2004

Remember

September 11th has impacted me significantly personally, politically, and professionally. Certainly its impacted me more than I expected it to when I sat that morning in front of a television and watched the world suddenly shift about me ---

Personally, 9/11 was a gut-wrenching emotional experience for me. I was driving in Connecticut on my way to visit a store that morning when a peer called to tell me about what had happened. The second plane had just hit, you see. I spent that morning in South Windsor, Connecticut with my team watching as the day unfolded. I remember, that morning, being almost completely in shock.

The emotions came to me on the ride home - alone - listening to the radio. And then more that night on the couch, watching the news until 2 or 3 in the morning.

There are a few memories and images from that time that have always stayed with me --

When I recovered from my shock that morning - it was the realization that hundreds of police, fire, and EMS personnel had gone into those buildings - risked their lives - and as we discovered later that day - many had given their lives to save others.

The second is what happened to me the next morning at work. I was in the my office around 6:30am to meet someone for a long drive and spend the day visiting stores together.

Shortly after I arrived at the office, I heard a loud roar overhead.

"Oh, just an airplane flying by...", I thought.

Then it hit me - nothing was supposed to be flying. I ran outside and looked up.

It was a flight of Air Force fighters in a formation of five - flying out towards Cape Cod to take up a Combat Air Patrol. Something I'd never seen before outside of an airshow...

Emotionally, 9/11 affected me - like others - greatly. I was fortunate in that I did not lose any friends or family members that day. But I cried many times during the following days - sometimes out of a sense of loss - sometimes in awe of the heroism displayed that morning - sometimes just because I love my country.

I would tear up just driving down the road in the weeks following 9/11 when I would see an American Flag hanging over an overpass - or when I'd hear a sound bite on the radio of Mayor Giuliani, President Bush, or others speaking about 9/11. And, to this day, the video of the Star Spangled Banner being played at Buckingham Palace in London reduces me to a blathering idiot.

Professionally, 9/11 has had a huge impact on how my job is viewed - and what I worry about each day. I'll always focus on the traditional aspects of retail loss prevention - theft and fraud - but now I'm highly concerned with how we prepare and posture ourselves to better respond to a crisis - how we prevent major incidents - how we coordinate with public safety officials - and on and on --

What I worry about today at work is night and day from what I worried about when I started in this field eleven years ago...

Two photos from that time have always stuck with me..

The first is the widely publicized photograph of President Bush comforting Mayor Giuliani and Governor Pataki during his visit to New York City a few days after 9/11.

bushpatakigiuliani

The second is a photo (and story) that I first saw months after 9/11 in Dennis Smith's book Report from Ground Zero.

It's a photo of Lt. Ray Murphy of the New York City Fire Department (FDNY). He was walking away from the cameraman following the collapse of the first WTC Tower. He had just recovered from that tower collapse and was headed into the still standing WTC tower in order to help others.

curatolo_murphy_at_wtc
He was killed in the collapse of that tower.

This picture has always reminded me of both heroism and sacrifice given freely by the men and women of the FDNY, NYPD, PAPD, and others that day ---

In the end, I think we all have the responsibility to remember what happened that day - to us - to our fellow man - here in our own country.

A few weeks ago, while having coffee with a peer in Minneapolis, our conversation steered towards the impact of September 11th on our lives - both personally and professionally.

She pulled out her PDA - tapped on it a few times - and spun it around so that I could read it.

It was her calendar - turned to September 11th, 2004 - and it showed just one word:

Remember

The Eulogy of Captain Francis J. Callahan, FDNY

Winds of Change this morning is pointing to the Eulogy of Captain Francis J. Callahan of the FDNY, over at Philip Toshio Sudo:

Eulogy of Capt. Francis J. Callahan, delivered by Capt. James Gormley, Dec. 10, 2001:

Captains and lieutenants of the New York City Fire Department share a special relationship with other officers of similar rank. When we meet for the first time we introduce ourselves to each other, we shake hands, we measure each other's resolve and fortitude. At Operations our aggressiveness is based on the trust we share in each other.

Firefighters and their officers share a different, but also special relationship. Officers very literally lead firefighters into harm's way. We go first. If things go badly we are required by our oath and tradition to be the last of our command to leave. Accountability for our men is carved into our heart. Responsibility for our men, their wives and children are in the depth of our soul.

This is why we are here today. Capt. Frank Callahan is the ranking officer killed at the World Trade Center from our firehouse. He leaves last. I cannot say he will be the last to ever leave. We live in a dangerous world, and we put our boots and helmets on every day.

Captains, especially commanding officers of companies in the same quarters, have a unique relationship. We know each other as no else ever will. We are commanding officers of complementary companies. We cannot work successfully without each other. There are not many of us, you could fit us in one fair-sized room. We are not always friends. There is too much at stake, but our respect, and trust in each other, is unquestioned.

Frank Callahan was more than my friend, to simply call him brother would not do our relationship justice. Frank was my comrade. It's harder to be a comrade than a friend. It's different than being a brother.

Friends and brothers forgive your mistakes. They are happy to be with you. You can relax and joke with them. You can take your ease with them--tell them tall tales.

Comrades are different. Comrades forgive nothing. They can't. They need you to be better. They keep you sharp. They take your words literally.

When a friend dies we miss them, we regret words unspoken, we remember the love. When a brother dies we grieve for the future without him. His endless possibilities. If your brother doesn't die of old age you might never accept the parting. When a comrade dies we miss them, we regret words unspoken, we remember the love, we grieve the future without them. We are also proud. Proud to have known a good man, a better man than ourselves. We respect the need for him to leave, to rest.

Some people equate camaraderie with being jovial. It is anything but. Camaraderie is sharing hardship. It is shouts and commands, bruises and cuts. It's a sore back and lungs that burn from exertion. It's heat on your neck and a pit in your stomach. It's a grimy handshake and a hug on wet shoulders when we're safe. It's not being asleep when it's your turn on watch. It is trust, it is respect, it is acting honorably.

You hold your comrade up when he can't stand on his own. You breathe for him when his body's forgotten how. It's lifting a man up who loves his wife and children as much as you love your own. Looking them in the eye for the rest of your life and trying to explain, and not being able to. You kiss them for him. It's laying him down gently when his name appears on God's roll call. It's remembering his name. I'll never forget his name. He was just what he was called: Frank. You never had to chase your answer. He said it to your face.

It's at the same time being both amazed and proud that you've known men like him. Looking for your reflection in their image. Seeing it. Knowing you're one of them.

There's a song out of Ireland. A line of it says, "Comrade tread lightly, you're near to a hero's grave." If you ever said that to Frank he would have given you the "look" and pushed past you in the hallway.

Frank was light on his feet but he never tread anywhere lightly. When Frank did something it was like a sharp axe biting into soft fresh pine, with a strong sure stroke. It was done. It was right. It meant something. It was refreshing. It smelled good.

Quite often we discussed history. The successes and failures of political, military and social leadership. The depth and broadness of Frank's historical knowledge was astounding.

I've been told Frank enjoyed a practical joke. We never joked together. Rarely laughed. We never sought out each other's company on days off. We never went golfing or fishing. We never went for a hike in the Shawangunk Mountains together. We were often happier apart than we ever were together because we shared the nightmares of command.

We shared problems. We shared stress. We shared dark thoughts that are now front-page news. Incredulous at the failures of leadership that have borne fruit. We shared the proposition of a time and place where few would dare to go. He went there because it was his turn. He called his wife, Angie, before he received his orders to respond. He told her what was going on. He told her things didn't look good; he told her he loved her.

Historically it is said, "They rode to the sound of the guns":

Capt. Frank Callahan

Lt. John Ginley

Firefighter 1 Gr. Bruce Gary

Firefighter 1 Gr. James Giberson

Firefighter 1 Gr. Michael Otten

Firefighter 1 Gr. Kevin Bracken

Firefighter 1 Gr. Steve Mercado

Firefighter 1 Gr. Michael Roberts

Firefighter 1 Gr. John Marshall

Firefighter 3 Gr. Vincent Morello

Firefighter 3 Gr. Michael Lynch

Firefighter 6 Gr. Michael D'Auria

and Firefighter 2 Gr. Kevin Shea

Kevin, we are joyful that we got you back. Have no guilt. The same goes for the rest of us. I know what you all did, you got your gear on, found a tool, wrote your name or Social Security number in felt tip pen on your arm or a leg, a crisis tattoo in case you got found.

We went down there knowing things could go badly. We stayed until we were exhausted, got three hours sleep and went back again, and again. That's what comrades do. Only luck and circumstance separate us from them.

It is significant that we are in Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. The first performance here was "West Side Story," the story of this neighborhood. This Act is part of that story. It is more than we can absorb in one lifetime, so the story must be told until it makes sense.

It is poignant because the arts have helped mankind deal with reality since stories were told round the fire and we drew on cave walls. The arts help us exercise our emotions. We are surrounded by art and overwhelmed by our emotions. From the pictures children have drawn for us, the poetry, songs, and banners, to the concerts, plays and operas that we have been invited to attend--use the arts to heal your heart. Exercise your emotions. Feel anger, feel hate, feel love and pride. Run the gamut of your emotions until you settle where you belong, as good honorable men, every inch the equal of our comrades, friends and brothers. That's what they want. That's what your families need. That's what you deserve.

Frank was a trusted leader, a captain. The best commander I've encountered here, or in the military. It was important to him. We both believed captain to be the most important rank in the department. He was forged by his family, his comrades, every officer and firefighter that he ever worked with. He was tempered by his experience.

History, the record of successes and failures of leadership, has caused us to be here. Capt. Frank Callahan did not fail in his leadership. He led his command where they were needed, and he's the last of them to leave. If more of the world's leaders were forged as he was, our world would not be in its current state.

Frank Callahan is a star, a reference point. A defined spot on the map of humanity. Guide on him to navigate the darkness. You will not wander, you will not become lost

Two Years In, the Rest of our Lives to go....

Glenn Reynolds, over at Instapundit pointed to this Bleat, by Minneapolis's James Lileks from September 11, 2003.

I've never read a more fitting blog post about 9/11:

Two years ago today I was convinced that every presumption I had about the future was wrong. This war, I feared, would be horrible, total, and long.

Two years later I take a certain grim comfort in some people’s disinterest in the war; if you’d told me two years ago that people would be piling on the President and bitching about slow progress in Iraq, I would have known in a second that the nation hadn’t suffered another attack. When the precise location of Madonna’s tongue is big news, you can bet the hospitals aren’t full of smallpox victims. Of course some people are impatient with those who still recall the shock of 9/11; the same people were crowding the message boards of internet sites on the afternoon of the attacks, eager to blame everyone but the hijackers. They hate this nation. In their hearts, they hate humanity. They would rather cheer the perfect devils than come to the aid of a compromised angel. They can talk for hours about how wrong it was to kill babies, busboys, businessmen, receptionists, janitors, fathers, mothers, sisters, brothers - and then they lean towards you, eyes wide, and they say the fatal word:

But.

And then you realize that the eulogy is just a preface. All that concern for the dead is nothing more than the knuckle-cracking of an organist who’s going to play an E minor chord until we all agree we had it coming.

I’ve no doubt that if Seattle or Boston or Manhattan goes up in a bright white flash there will be those who blame it all on Bush. We squandered the world’s good will. We threw away the opportunity to atone, and lashed out. Really? You want to see lashing out? Imagine Kabul and Mecca and Baghdad and Tehran on 9/14 crowned with mushroom clouds: that’s lashing out. Imagine the President in the National Cathedral castigating Islam instead of sitting next to an Imam who's giving a homily. Mosques burned, oil fields occupied, smart bombs slamming into Syrian palaces. We could have gone full Roman on anyone we wanted, but we didn’t. And we won’t.

Which is why this war will be long.

The world will not end. It will roll around in its orbit until Sol expires of famine or indigestion. In the end we’re all ash anyway - but even as ash, we matter. The picture at the top of this page is a sliver taken from a 9/11 camera feed. It’s the cloud that rolled through lower Manhatttan when the towers fell. Paper, steel, furniture, plastic, people. The man who took the picture inhaled the dust of the dead. Somewhere lodged in the lung of a New Yorker is an atom that once belonged to a man who went to work two years ago and never came back. His widow dreads today, because people will be coming and calling, and she’ll have to insist that she’s okay. It's hard but last year was harder. The kids will be sad and distant, but they take their cues from her, and they sense that it's hard - but that last year was harder. But what really kills her, really really kills her, is knowing that the youngest one doesn’t remember daddy at all anymore. And she's the one who has his eyes.

Two years in; the rest of our lives to go.

September 05, 2004

Zell's Speech

Much is being said in the press and in the blogosphere about Zell Miller's Speech to the Republican National Convention on Wednesday night last week. I missed the speech and caught only the highlights - I was able to watch the rest last night.

Overall, I thought it was a good speech. Yes, Zell was a bit angry and frustrated and that came out in his speech. But I'd be angry and frustrated too if I thought that my party had abandoned me - and Zell is right about the Democrats having changed over the last twenty years.

A couple of the better portions of his speech:

Never in the history of the world has any soldier sacrificed more for the freedom and liberty of total strangers than the American soldier.

And, our soldiers don't just give freedom abroad, they preserve it for us here at home.

For it has been said so truthfully that it is the soldier, not the reporter, who has given us the freedom of the press.

It is the soldier, not the poet, who has given us freedom of speech.

It is the soldier, not the agitator, who has given us the freedom to protest.

It is the soldier who salutes the flag, serves beneath the flag, whose coffin is draped by the flag, who gives that protester the freedom he abuses to burn that flag.

No one should dare to even think about being the commander in chief of this country if he doesn't believe with all his heart that our soldiers are liberators abroad and defenders of freedom at home.

But don't waste your breath telling that to the leaders of my party today. In their warped way of thinking, America is the problem, not the solution. They don't believe there is any real danger in the world except that which America brings upon itself through our clumsy and misguided foreign policy.

It is not their patriotism, it is their judgment that has been so sorely lacking.

They claimed Carter's pacifism would lead to peace. They were wrong.

They claimed Reagan's defense buildup would lead to war. They were wrong.

And no pair has been more wrong, more loudly, more often than the two Senators from Massachusetts, Ted Kennedy and John Kerry.

Of course, many on the left didn't like Zell Miller's comments about the role that the American Soldier has played defending our freedoms. Scott Rosenberg over at Salon.com writes this:
I'm sorry, senator, but you couldn't be more wrong. (And every Republican who applauded you needs a remedial civics class). It is the U.S. constitution that bestows these freedoms. Executives and legislators sometimes try to abridge them. Soldiers, for the most part, protect them. But from the time of the nation's Founding Fathers on, American leaders, thinkers and citizens have been conscious of the tension between our cherished civil freedoms and the logic of warfare. Waging war demands sacrifice and obedience -- and compromises freedom. And so democracies rightly and appropriately go to war reluctantly, and voters demand that their leaders show that there is no alternative to fighting.
Yes, he's right. These freedoms are guaranteed by the Constitution - but they're protected by the American Soldier - and others - who have ensured that our Constitution was protected. Senator Miller has a law degree - taught history and poltical science - and served in the military. I'm quite sure that he doesn't need a remedial civics lesson.

Miller continues:

Twenty years of votes can tell you much more about a man than 20 weeks of campaign rhetoric.

Campaign talk tells people who you want them to think you are. How you vote tells people who you really are deep inside.

Senator Kerry has made it clear that he would use military force only if approved by the United Nations.

Kerry would let Paris decide when America needs defending. I want Bush to decide.

And...
For more than 20 years, on every one of the great issues of freedom and security, John Kerry has been more wrong, more weak and more wobbly than any other national figure.

As a war protester, Kerry blamed our military.

As a senator, he voted to weaken our military. And nothing shows that more sadly and more clearly than his vote this year to deny protective armor for our troops in harm's way, far away.

George W. Bush understands that we need new strategies to meet new threats.

John Kerry wants to refight yesterday's war. President Bush believes we have to fight today's war and be ready for tomorrow's challenges. President Bush is committed to providing the kind of forces it takes to root out terrorists, no matter what spider hole they may hide in or what rock they crawl under.

George W. Bush wants to grab terrorists by the throat and not let them go to get a better grip.

From John Kerry, they get a "yes/no/maybe" bowl of mush that can only encourage our enemies and confuse our friends.

As expected, the left went nuts. Dave Winer wrote the following:
The Zell Miller speech was a wakeup call. That wasn't an election speech, that was incitement to a lynch mob. Guess who's the guest of honor? Think about it. Why was the Miller speech so scary? Answer -- you're next. That's what Miller was saying. After this election we put on the brown shirts.
I guess he's expecting the SA and the SS to start marching in the streets next - under the banner of the Republican Party.

I've always admired Senator Miller - he's a frequent guest on Imus in the Morning - my morning talk radio show. I've found his interviews engaging and humorous - just like his speech.

September 04, 2004

The Cradle of Baseball

A little more than a week ago, I visited that cradle of baseball - Boston's Fenway Park to catch a game between Boston and Toronto.

Baseball at Fenway is just, well, different, than other ballparks. There's the history and traditions - such as the last World Series won by Boston (1918):


worldseries

Then there's Coach Johnny Pesky, who played for Boston in the 40s and 50s - and continues to suit up for every game:

pesk

And the Green Monster out in Left Field:

greenmonster

And the famous Red Seat in the outfield where Ted Williams hit his monster home run:

redseat

Some scenes from the game:

thepitch

fists

There's no place like Fenway Park...

John Galt: We are on Strike!

Some deep thoughts from Ayn Rand:

For twelve years, you have been asking: Who is John Galt? This is John Galt speaking. I am the man who loves his life. I am the man who does not sacrifice his love or his values, I am the man who has deprived you of victims and thus has destroyed your world, and if you wish to know why you are perishing - you who dread knowledge - I am the man who will now tell you.

You have heard it said that thi sis an age of moral crisis. You ahev said it yourself, half in fear, half in hope that the words had no meaning. You have cried that man's sins are destroying the world and you have cursed human nature for its unwillingness to practice the virtues you demanded. Since virtue, to you, consists of sacrifice, you have demanded more sacrifices at every successive disaster. In the name of a return to morality, you have sacrificed all those evils which you held as the cause of your plight. You have sacrificed justice to mercy. You have sacrificed indepndence to unity. You have sacrificed reason to faith. You have sacrificed wealth to need. You have sacrificed self-esteem to self-denial. You have sacrificed happiness to duty.

You have destroyed all that which you held to be evil and achieved all that which you held to be good. Why, then, do you shrink in horror from the sight of the world around you? That world is not the product of your sins, it is the product and the image of your virtues. It is your moral ideal brought into reality in its full and final perfection. You have fought for it, you have dreamed of it, and you have wished it, and I - I am the man who has granted you your wish.

Your ideal had an implacable enemy, which your code of morality was designed to destroy. I have withdrawn that enemy. I have taken it out of your way and out of your reach. I have removed the source of all those evils you were sacrificing one by one. I have ended your battle. I have stopped your motor. I have deprived the world of man's mind.

Men do not live by the mind, you say? I have withdrawn those who do. The mind is impotent, you say? I have withdrawn those whos mind isn't. There are values higher than the mind, you say? I have withdrawn those for whom there aren't.

While you were dragging to your sacrificial altars the men of justice, of independence, of reason, of wealth, of self-esteem - I beat you to it. I reached them first. I told them the nature of the game you were playing and the nature of that moral code of yours, which they had been too innocently generous to grasp. I showed them the way to live by another morality - mine. It is mine that they chose to follow.

All the men who have vanished, the men you hated, yet draded to lost, it is I who have taken them away from you. Do not attempt to find us. Who do not choose to be found. Do not cry that it is our duty to serve you. We do not recognize such duty. Do not cry that you need us. We do not consider need a claim. Do not cry that you own us. You don't. Do not beg us to return. We are on strike, we, the men of the mind.

- Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged

Busy

Been busier than a one legged man in an ass-kicking contest.

I have much queued up to blog about - but first I need to relax ;)

More to come...

September 01, 2004

ATTACKED: The Protest Warriors in San Diego

Been pretty busy at some meetings and such on this end, but appears that SMASH and his fellow band of Protest Warriors have had some excitement in sunny San Diego lately.

Wish I could join them...