I'm Still Gone
I'm still over at The New Just Another Pretty Farce, but I don't want this blog to become a porndomain, so I'm throwing up the occasional post to remind youto visit me at
Just Another Pretty Farce.
Datta Dayadhvam Damyata Shantih Shantih Shantih
I'm still over at The New Just Another Pretty Farce, but I don't want this blog to become a porndomain, so I'm throwing up the occasional post to remind youto visit me at
I have made the leap, followed the herd, whathaveyou.
Well, a few weeks ago I decided to write about Gwen Shamblin and my experience with Weigh Down Workshop. Every word of that blog entry was truthful. It was purely my experience. Nothing more than a recap of events.
I'll be honest. I'm scratching my head over something I don't quite understand here.
Matters are compounded with the belief of reserved eschatology. With the belief that you have already reserved your place in heaven (by taking the Lord Jesus Christ into your heart), you no longer are to be held accountable for your own actions. Not even by yourself. I mean, isn't that what 'grace' is for? You can beat your wife or get blow jobs from a male prostitute in a hotel in Colorado, but you are still going to heaven. Afterall, you love Jesus.
It is when you are certain that the world is ordered and in control, "even if it doesn't seem to make sense right now", that you become incapable of seeing the importance of doing what's right.
The thing is, we need you. God needs you, to help turn this thing around. You don't have to do it for me or for my kids. Do it for Jesus. The time is now. We can do this together.
this is going to sound harsh, and i apologise if it offends, but sometimes i honestly and without malice wish that these people would just go ahead and die. that way they’d get to be with God and they wouldn’t be here screwing everything up, discrediting His church, and getting in the way of His work.
This post by The Kleinheider was my tipping point.
So I got an email from dolphin, which clued me in to this wonderfulness.
Join us in rejecting the ti(red) notion that shopping is a reasonable response to human suffering.
I had a wierd moment of cognitive dissonance when we started to watch Lost last night. Watching Charlie make a breakfast fruit plate for Claire it struck me that this no longer feels like the show I started watching three seasons ago. That show was about a group of people thrown together in a harsh circumstance and trying to make the best of it.
Today's conversation at NiT about disposable shopping bags is hitting home with me in a big way.
I, too, could usefive thousand dollars. I already have a home, though. So I don't know exactly what hook I can use to grift it out of people.
I'll even make a deal with you. If I can raise the money I need to get out of homelessness, I'll never bother you again.
I'm tired, and I just want to go home - (if I had a home).
What is it with the number "92%"? I've decided over the last month that whenever anyone quotes me a placement rate of "ninety-two percent" that they're most likely being both untruthful and running a scam.
Yesterday I missed out on the blogosphere, and therefore missed out on the discussion of mandatory sentencing for child molesters. I hate coming late to the party, but I really need to go on record.
The attorney gene is not dying out in my family. I think, rather, that it is becoming intensified through the generations. When my nieces or nephew have children, those kids will probably be Supreme Court Justices.
Well, since B. wants everyone to blog about something interesting and I mostly write about my own life, I guess we're all outta luck.
I figured this could either be a short review or a long review. We'll start with the short version for anyone who's in a "too long; didn't read" mood.
It makes me so relieved to note that the FBI has underreported its use of the Patriot Act.
One government official familiar with the report said shoddy bookkeeping and records management led to the problems. The FBI agents appeared to be overwhelmed by the volume of demands for information over a two-year period, the official said.
"They lost track," said the official who like others interviewed late Thursday spoke on condition of anonymity because the report was not being released until Friday.
>> Stories about Al Gore with the word 'inconvenient' in them; i.e. Al Gore's Inconvenient Gas Bill.
I just ate at Taco Bell for the first time in over a year.
That would be more convenient for everyone. She'd get the smack of reality upside the head--which is what she needs in addition to post-partum depression medication. Walter Reed would get intense scrutiny by all sectors of society, even Timbaland.
A blogger I've not yet heretofore had the pleasure of reading has stumbled across my radar. He calls himself the Mountain 'Publican and he has some harsh words about the Obesity Epidemic.
[He's] an 8th generation Mountain Republican dedicated to rugged individualism and old-fashioned leave-me-alone conservatism, believing in small-government and valuing individual liberty most highly.
I wrote yesterday about initiatives taken by the state to address obesity issues .... Market-based health care costs of the future will reflect whether we recognized and dealt with the obesity epidemic today.
Here's the part where I seek advice from the blogosphere.
Wow, the comments from yesterday's truculent post are hoppingly interesting, even though they seemed to veer off topic at points.
Remember that moment in Braveheart, when the attendant to the princess starts speaking to her in French, 'knowing' that the barbarian Wallace wouldn't understand? And then that sweet moment when Wallace not only responds in French, but several other languages as well?
You'd be amazed what some of us non-political bloggers know about politics. I probably am just as educated and aware of parlimentary procedure as Hobbs himself. I've actually had formal training in it.
There is a difference between blogging about things other than politics because you're uneducated and uninterested, and blogging about other things because you understand that politics, while important, is not the most important thing.
People like Hobbs view politics as sport. I think THEY are the ones who don't understand it, not me.
So all bloggers--even the libertarian ones--are now invited to participate in the viewing of our democratic processes. Woot.
And whatever you do, don't blog about how cool it is to meet other bloggers, and how Rep. Mumpower is different than you thought he'd be. At least not until the next day.
I don't believe in credit. Unless I need it.
Last Friday, Kleinheider said this
I have noticed, though, that much of the chatter on the right bemoan the results of this poll as evidence of the death of personal responsibility in America. Maybe that's true.
However, I can't help the part of me that wants these same bloggers to experience a catastrophic illness, emerge from hospital with $30,000 in debt, and then set them in front of their computers with their blogging platform dialed up and start them atypin'.
You know how in August or September there's always someone writing a blog post that essentially says "Christmas Decorations? Already? I'm still in shorts/eating potato salad/playing lacrosse/swinging out in an old tire over the swimmin' hole"?
::Spoilers::
As of this morning, my JL Kirk Associates blog entry appears on the front page of Google. That's right underneath the JL Kirk webpage itself and the Rip-Off Report entry about them.
Letting a fat kid eat at McDonalds=bad, abusive, poor parenting.
There are holidays out there that are a big deal to some people, even though you don't share in the celebration per se.
I've kept mum on this topic for two reasons. My general point of view isn't a popular one and until now I haven't bothered myself to read the full text of the current bill. Of course, when Sarcastro brings it up, I feel a sort of libertarian pull to join the conversation.