Wednesday, January 26, 2005 

Governor Sanford - State of the State Address 2005

First impressions mean a lot and that is just what this post is, a first impression. Later after digesting Governor Sanford’s 2005 State of State address, I can give you a more detailed analysis.

The speech lacked energy, specifics, forcefulness, and yes, substance. I liked the idea of competitiveness (as a Republican I would), tax reform, government restructuring, and school choice. Even while I was agreeing with some of the subject matter, I was left with a sense of “spell-it-out” or using the more colloquial term, “spit-it-out!.” I was ready for the “go for the jugular” or the “lets get to the meat and potatoes.” My first impression, “Where’s the beef!?..”


Tuesday, January 25, 2005 

Aw, Geez - Here we go again...


Today starts the Senate floor "discussion" on the confirmation of Condi Rice for Secretary of State. A delayed tactic employed by some arrogant and impotent Democrat's - certainly not all Democrats fit that description but the few make it harder on the others.

 

Pro-Life License Plates vs. Choice?..

What’s your opinion? South Carolina lost an opinion before the U.S. Supreme Court over offering pro-life licensing plates and not offering plates for the opposing abortion rights supporters. There are other legal issues involving divided lower courts but the primary decision is, “If you allow plates for one group them you must allow plates for those of the opposite opinion.” South Carolina only issues license plates, upon request and a payment of $70 dollars with the money going to local crisis pregnancy programs. From The Item, Pro-life license plates dealt setback:"
The Supreme Court declined Monday to consider whether states may offer license plates with anti-abortion messages, leaving lower courts divided over whether the programs in a dozen states unconstitutionally restrict dissenting views.

Without comment, justices let stand a lower court ruling that said South Carolina's license plates, which bear the slogan "Choose Life," violate the First Amendment because abortion rights supporters weren't given a similar forum to express their beliefs.

The high court's move means that South Carolina will either have to eliminate the specialty plates or begin offering plates with abortion-rights views. That ruling is at odds, however, with a decision by the New Orleans-based 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, which essentially allowed the plates because it said abortion rights advocates didn't have standing to bring a lawsuit in the case.

Abortion rights advocates cheered the Supreme Court's move Monday.
So again, “What is your opinion should South Carolina do away with the “Choose Life” plates or should South Carolina offer plates to those of the pro-choice advocates?”

Sunday, January 23, 2005 

Goodnight...Early Morning

Sorry, I've not been able to actively keep Barber Shop updated as I would like but when you have a "ticker" like mine, some days are just better than others. My plans, health cooperating, are to include an interview with our new sheriff Anthony Dennis and Ray Reich with the City Development office. I had hoped to do a piece on Education reform but will delay that until another day.

So, goodnight from the Barber Shop and may the good Lord bless us all in our everyday struggle through life...

Friday, January 21, 2005 

What's Your Opinion?..

What’s your opinion? We in America are apathetically accustomed to the safety of our polling places and we all give bellowing speeches on freedom. Although it is my experience, we take our freedom with an abashed grin and a much-ballyhooed Ho-Hummm… Again, “How would you react if we in Sumter had to open one of our community places for the Iraqi election on January 30, 2005?”
Chicken of the Cloth

Iraq isn't the only place where Iraqis will be voting a week from Sunday; polling sites will also be operating in many countries with large Iraqi expatriate populations, including America. Iraqi immigrants will be able to cast ballots in Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, Nashville and Washington.

But while tens of thousands of U.S. troops are risking their lives every day for Iraqi democracy, some cowardly Americans are frustrating it right here at home. "A prominent local Catholic priest is supporting a movement of businesses and churches who are demanding that city leaders move one of the Nashville polling sites in the upcoming Iraq elections," reports the Tennessean:
The Rev. Joseph Breen of St. Edward Catholic Church said he represents a group whose members either live, work, send their kids to school or worship near Coleman Community Center, one of two Nashville-area polling and voter registration sites for the Iraqi Transitional National Assembly election. . . .
Breen worries that a suicide bomber could target either the community center or the other polling station, the Fraternal Order of Police building at 440 Welshwood Drive. . . .

''Five years ago no one would be thinking about this. But there's not a day that goes by when you don't hear of a roadside bomb going off in Iraq. People may think it couldn't happen here, but it could,'' the priest said.The Associated Press reports a similar story in Niles, Ill.:

An organization assisting in voter registration for the upcoming Iraqi elections left their headquarters Thursday in this suburb north of Chicago after village officials expressed security concerns, officials said.

The International Organization for Migration said Niles officials told the group they had concerns that the building could be a target for violence. The organization plans to move its administrative operations to the northwest side of Chicago. . . .

Mary Kay Morrissey, Niles village manager, said officials were worried they could not provide adequate protection for the organization's Niles site. She also said the organization did not get necessary zoning permits.

What kind of people are so pathetic and cowardly? Morrissey seems to be living in the past; her Web page declares: "As we approach the millennium and celebrate our 100 years of pride and progress, the General Government Department will continue to work together with residents, businesses, and community organizations and provide high quality services, efficiently and effectively!" Iraqis need not apply.
As for Father Breen, he should stick to giving fashion advice.


Wednesday, January 19, 2005 

The Competent Ms. Rice - The Clacking Babara Boxer

Condoleezza Rice, the most intellectual member of the Bush Administration who also is a black African-American is now experiencing the Dantesque-nightmare of the liberal attack dogs. An ordeal Ms. Rice literally faced at the fangs of police dogs in May 1963 in Birmingham, Alabama. Although instead of the white segregationist Bull Connor Ms Rise must face the new Bull Connor in the form of a gothic, clacking, fool named Barbara Boxer (D-California.) a Faustian black woman controlled by the good ‘ol liberal white boys. The following is an excerpt from a Blog Post by Lashawn Barber, a conservative African-American writer and columnist – you can read her post here:
I believe white liberals are intimidated by her level of education and achievement, which debunks the claims that blacks can’t get anywhere without their condescending to lower the bar for us poor black folks.

They certainly have no use for a conservative black except to thrust them into the national spotlight on display. Feminists have no interest in a woman unless she’s rich, white, bored and trying to get into a men-only golf club…

Liberals should just be honest and admit their agenda is not about blacks, women, or “the poor.” It’s about the propagation of an ungodly worldview by any means necessary. But there’ll be peace in the Middle East before that happens.
More on the Condoleezza Rice Senate Foreign Relations confirmation hearings as our new Secretary of State later.

 

Bush's "Second Term" - The JibJab Story

Click here if you want to see JibJab's latest parody on the new Bush Administration!.. It's a hoot but beware of French President, Jacques Chirac, in a thong...

 

A Much Belated Congratulations For Charleston

Sorry about the late recognition of Charleston, South Carolina being voted the Best Mannered City in the nation for the 10th year in the row. With continued recognition of South Carolina as a hospitable state for tourism, retirement, and pleasurable liveving conditions comes more and more economic growth and jobs.

So again, congratulations to Charleston, South Carolina!..

Saturday, January 15, 2005 

To Camden, To Camden, To Camden We Shall Go

To Camden we shall go!.. Now, where in Camden, begg's the question, for you see - my daughter and husband are graciously taking her parents out to dinner. You heard correctly, my DAUGHTER is PAYING the check. All those years at our prestigious Clemson University must be paying off some how - let's hope so.

 

Excerpts - Mayor Bubba 1/15/2005

A few excerpts from the Mayor Bubba Newsletter, January 15, 2005, Barber Shop thought would be interesting and worthwhile for us to keep in mind and on our calendars:
Would you please pass along that the next air show (ShawFest) at Shaw Air Force Base will be Saturday, April 23, 2005. We look forward to a great one-day air show with the USAF Thunderbirds as our headliner along with many more exciting events. More details will be out later and as time draws nearer, will be available on our website at [Shaw Air Force Base] http://www.shaw.af.mil. Anyone with questions may contact the public affairs office at Shaw at (803) 895-2019.

Judy Lewis
Deputy Chief
Shaw AFB, SC
Also…
Good morning, Mr. Mayor. I'll be interested in school start dates. In Greenville, we adjusted the calendar so that schools would start a couple of weeks later. I remember when we all used to start the day after Labor Day. The problem with the schedule now is that our children are taking 1st Semester exams after Christmas. I'm not a fan of that. Sims
A check of the District 17 web site showed a link to the 2005 - 2006 School Calendar. District 2 does not yet have a 2005 – 2006 school calendar listed but a call on Tuesday will most likely produce one (Monday is a holiday, "Martin Luther King Holiday")...

Also…
Ray Reich [Director, City of Sumter Department of Growth and Development] has sent us the following 2005 schedule for the Sumter@Six --BillPinkney (biggest draw ever last year)…May 12, The Fantastic Shakers, June 9, General Johnson &The Chairman of the Board---July 14, Second Nature…(Sumter folks in this one)—followed by The Footnotes August 11---also some Sumter people in this one----Billy Scott and the Prophets will be Sept 8 and the program will be over on October 13 with Northtower….Good job Ray…sure will be good to have the talented Sumter people to entertain us….thank you…
Sumter@Six is but one of the many fine activities The City of Sumter offers in its Downtown Sumter program. If you have never been to one of the Downtown Sumter programs, you are missing one of the greatest entertainments in our community. The City of Sumter defines its Downtown Sumter program as,
...the historical heart of our community. Through our aggressive revitalization program much has been achieved during the past few years including a new streetscape, renovations of buildings, development of several plazas that incorporate beautiful fountains and the construction of new buildings. Downtown Sumter has also become the place that Sumterites go for entertainment. Popular events include our Sumter @ Six outdoor concert series, numerous Street Fests and a multitude of shows in the beautiful Sumter Opera House.
Make Sure you visit the City of Sumter’s web site here often for a quick run down on all the available goings and happenings in our community.

 

About Me

Born: March 19, 1946

Married Status: Married with two children, boy age 35 (Information System's Technician, graduate of USC - TSgt in Munitions with the McEntire Air National Guard; Flight School - F-16 pilot deployed with the Base during the Gulf War, War in Afghanistan, & the Iraqi War) and a daughter, age 31 (Teacher for twelve years, National Board Certified, Clemson graduate)

Parents' Occupations: Mother (stay-at-home mother) now deceased, Father (Thirty-year veteran of the US Army Air Force [WWII], Air Force [Korean War], Intelligence officer) now deceased

Education:

1964 - Graduate (sorry about the honors, I was a little on the rough side); Edmunds High School; Sumter, South Carolina - Attended Edmunds only as a senior as we were previously living in Hakata, Japan

1965-1982 University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina (sorry about the time, I was a little on the rough side although I finished on a full EPA Fellowship) with Bachelor of Science degrees in Management and Marketing and Biochemistry/Physics

1996 - University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina; was planning to enter that Fall, with a full Fellowship, in the University of South Carolina's Graduate Physics program but suffered my first of three heart attacks and was unable to proceed - did enter on my own but could not finish because of health

Honors and Awards: Life Scout (finished all Eagle requirements but we transferred back to the United States and by that time, at the age of 18, I was unable to take the Board of Review) - my son made Eagle Scout and loves to let me know!.. Oh, there are many plaques and nicely framed papers over my desk at home but that is all they are now, plaques and papers

Media Experience: none

Government Experience

State Employee:

1974 - 1998 Environmental Manager; South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (medical retirement in 1998 from three heart attacks and a subsequent diagnoses of a rare brain disease at the Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida) - sorry, I like to live life on the rough side

Military; none as the Selective Service qualified me as 4F due to the loss of my left eye at the age of 4 in a childhood accident while in the Philippines (sorry, I was a little rough on the side) - attempts to join the military during the Vietnam War, even with Congressional help, was to no avail

Political Experience:

1965 - 2005 Conservative Activism (began conservative activism during the Vietnam War). Along with a "small" number of other activists, was in the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations audience when the American traitor John F. Kerry gave his "Winter Soldier" testimony on April 22, 1971) - during the testimony, Fulbright allowed Kerry's fellow traitors to applaud and cheer while threatening us with expulsion

Personal Experiences:

I have lived in the following areas: Sumter, SC (place of birth); Melbourne, Florida; Bangor, Maine; Clark Air Force Base, Philippines; Cocoa Beach, Florida; Herndon, Virginia; San Diego, California; Hakata, Japan; and back to Sumter, South Carolina. During our stay in Japan, two friends and I went with my father to Frankfurt, Germany on a three month Temporary Duty Assignment (TDY). While there, my friends and I (we were in the summer between the tenth and eleventh grades of High School) toured Europe arriving back in Germany only twenty-one hours before our scheduled departure back to Japan.

With my father, mother, and three brothers and sisters, I have traveled from the east coast to the west coast and back only once. However, during the summer of 1966, two friends and I hitchhiked from Sumter, South Carolina to Bangor, Maine to Prince Edward Island, Canada (my great-grandparent's home) and then back to Bangor. From Bangor, we then hitchhiked across the United States to San Francisco, California in a little less than three months and then flew home making it back only one day before matriculation. Moreover, maybe to answer a nagging question, no, I have never done drugs!..

Confession time, my run-ends with law enforcement, minor only and as a juvenile, which never amounted to any major offences. For starters, let us go to Herndon, Virginia, sixth grade skipping school, hitchhiking to the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, DC, and spending my entire day at the Museum of Natural History. Occasionally a guard would eventually stop me but more than not my father showed up after a drive from the Pentagon checking on his wayward son. This continued well into seventh grade except for a small hiatus when my parents forced me to go to a Catholic school but the poor nuns saw the light and unceremoniously "kicked" me out after only three months (rough side again).

My other encounters with law enforcement came on four other occasions, three with the Military Police (MP) in Japan and once with the local Sumter County Sheriff's office. The first offence with the Military Police came on a night while on my motorcycle (small 60cc Honda) speeding on base. Trying to outrun them, I tried to do a slide under the rear gate to the Japanese town of Saitozaki but in actuality went through the wooden barricade. The second offence came when I and fifteen other teens took our Boy Scout forty-one foot Boston Whaler for an unauthorized spin out to Izu Island for a night of partying and scuba diving. My offence, not having a fire truck present while we filled the boat tanks with fuel and the small matter of having broke the lock to the fuel pumps.

My last run in with the Military Police happened when several friends and I, along with our girlfriends, took a rather long 150-mile trip, again unauthorized, to the American Naval Base at Sazabo, Japan. On our return trip, we actually ran into a Typhoon, which literally drenched our motorcycles so that they were unable to run. I was the only one that spoke Japanese well enough to hock them for a very, very, tight 100-mile trip back home. Needless to say, the home crowd was within thirty minutes of authorizing an air and rescue for us and was not in the best of moods. For some reason, the Base Commander deemed me the ringleader and I was the only one punished with a 30-day restriction against riding my motorcycle. The motorcycles were picked up several days later by a military truck but my father paid for the truck's use and the price to get the motorcycles out of hock. Of course, taking the mufflers off the bike and sitting on the front porch of the Base Commander's house did not help my case. Yes, to answer any nagging questions, my father was Acting Base Commander at the time.

My brush with the Sumter County Sheriff's office was minor but had they shown up fifteen minutes earlier, it may have had a different outcome. As a senior in High School, we were drag racing our parents cars on a public road. I had just lost one race and was sitting along with my father's car in a driveway of a friend's house when several Sheriff Cars arrived. To make a long story short, the deputies did not charge me with any crime because of my location, parked and sitting in a legal driveway.

Since those few incidents, I have not had one other encounter with law enforcement other than support them in normal citizen activities. It is inevitable, if we survive adolescence and the teen years, most of us grow up as productive and law abiding citizens.

Other Experiences:

  • Hiked the entire length of the Appalachian Trail by segments from 1972 to 1982. Held a private airplane license, cropdusted, flew many cross country flights, co-pilot on a single-engine Beaver aircraft from Bangor, Maine to Seattle, Washington (all with a certified medical waiver because of the loss of my left eye) until the onset of major seizures
  • Accomplished 501 (just had to get in that last one) free-fall skydiving jumps until finally realizing enough was enough. During that entire time had to use my emergency pack only twice
  • I watched with my family from a second story hotel room as thousands of black schoolchildren and young adult blacks took part in peaceful marches in May 1963, protesting Birmingham, Alabama's segregation laws. Police and firefighters used force to scatter the protesters with large jets of water causing children and adults to surge, fall, and hurtle down the street. Many were even bitten by police dogs. Not accustomed to segregation, a major changing point in my life

Monday, January 10, 2005 

The Lord's Prayer


The following is the Lord' Prayer as written by, I believe the very neglected poet, D. H. Lawrence:

LORD’S PRAYER

For thine is the kingdom
The power, and the glory –

Hallowed be thy name, then
Thou who art nameless –

Give me, Oh give me
besides my daily bread
my kingdom, my power, and my glory.

All things that turn to thee
have their kingdom, their power, and their glory.

Like the kingdom of the nightingale at twilight
whose power and glory I have often heard and felt.

Like the kingdom of the fox in the dark
yapping in his power and his glory
which is death to the goose.

Like the power and the glory of the goose in the mist
honking over the lake.

And I, a naked man, calling
calling to thee for my mana,
my kingdom, my power, and my glory.

 

No To "No Child Left Behind"

I agree with Michelle Malkin’s assessment of No Child Left Behind on her post titled, Why No One Paid Me To Sell "No Child Left Behind".” I asked my daughter, a sixth grade science teacher in her twelfth year of teaching, her opinion tonight at supper. My daughter, National Board Certified, went into a long discussion of why she is against the program but this ‘ol man remembers only one word – Unrealistic. Sorry, if I had had a tape recorder I would have written her words but I did find the following review that echoed her thoughts on the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) law:
Edited by Deborah Meier and George Wood (Beacon Press, 132 pages) reviewed by Jill Davidson

I know a principal of a small urban high school who has to defend his school’s mission of meaningful learning as assessed by authentic, high-standard measures against constant demands for “accountability.” It galls me to see how No Child Left Behind’s labels have shaped the expectations of some parents, board members, district officials and funders, how the tendency to look for easy answers has led to the notion that test scores tell all.

I never feel like I can do enough to protect and support this school, to give it the time and space teachers and students need to do the real work of learning and teaching. At least I was able to give my friend Many Children Left Behind.
Produced by members of the Forum for Education and Democracy, its five arguments—seven, counting George Wood’s introduction and Ted Sizer’s preamble—press the case against NCLB emphatically and in great detail, even as they acknowledge, when possible, the light NCLB has shed on the imperative that schools should serve all children well.

Linda Darling-Hammond documents NCLB’s “unmeetable requirements” that guarantee that most public schools inevitably will be labeled as failures. Concluding with suggestions to remake NCLB, Darling-Hammond’s contribution documents other NCLB shortfalls, among them its lack of accountability for financial inequity among schools, its punishment of schools with a wide demographic variety, and its push-out of struggling students. Later on, Stan Karp builds on the notion of the impossibility of Adequate Yearly Progress; Karp also details the dire financial impact of NCLB.

George Wood reports on NCLB-caused trends, such as the Houston’s “miracle,” the sham that underlies much of NCLB. From Ohio, Wood describes how those schools that met NCLB standards were wealthy, white and stable, with well-paid teachers and few special-ed students. Describing how NCLB seems to be “narrowing the school experience,” Wood’s demonstration of the potential for joylessness that schools face is truly depressing.

Spotlighting the fundamental mistrust of schools and their local communities that underlies NCLB, Deborah Meier suggests steps for rebuilding confidence and respect. And Alfie Kohn concludes with a fiery essay on the possibility that a push for school privatization motivates NCLB.

Many Children Left Behind offers arguments packed with data that reveal the legislation’s larger dire consequences. Through its pages, school people dedicated to high-standard, meaningful, personalized teaching and learning, people such as my principal friend, can connect to a wider world that is creating NCLB resistance.

Sunday, January 09, 2005 

Tsunami - Who's Working Who's Not

Please read The Diplomad to find out. Following is an excerpt from their post-titled Unbearable...:
Saturday evening moving into night. We have a slight lull in the pace of activity at the Embassy; all of today's C-130s are loaded and on the way -- even my teen-aged son whom I can't get to pick up his room was unloading trucks at the airport. After a few calls, we managed to snag another hanger at the airfield to store the pile of supplies which keeps growing despite the multiple C-130 flights. It's a pleasure to watch the Australians and our guys work together. They're interchangeable -- except for that, that . . . uh, you know, that cricket thing . . . but for that flaw the Aussies would seem perfectly normal.

You don't want to hear about Aussies and Yanks working. You know all about that. You want to know about the UN. The UN, you ask, what about the UN? Gee, fUNny you should ask. I was just thinking about the UN. Yesterday the UN rep who flew up to Aceh solely for the event, held a press conference at which he criticized the US airlift of supplies. The little S.O.B sniffed that it was "uncoordinated" and that some villages were fed twice while others were missed and that no "assessment teams" were being sent. The Guardian and AP have picked up the story, but my internet is so s-l-o-w, that I haven't been able to find it and link to it. Maybe tonight the internet will speed up and I can find it. I learn from colleagues who were there, no journalist asked the little twit just how many people the UN had fed, and if, indeed, "assessment teams" are what is needed why haven't the gadzillion UN assessment teams hanging out in the capital moved into these remote villages. I'm sorry but I detest these Vultures more and more.

 

Tragedy in Granteville

On January 6, 2005, South Carolina experienced a deadly train accident in Graniteville, S.C. killing 9 people and hospitalizing and injuring hundreds more. The New York Times headline for today Sunday, January 9, 2005, reads, Deadly Leak Underscores Concerns About Rail Safety (registration required).

Ten months ago, government safety officials warned that more than half of the nation's 60,000 pressurized rail tank cars did not meet industry standards and they raised questions about the safety of the rest of the fleet as well.

Their worry, that the steel tanks could rupture too easily in an accident, proved prophetic.

On Thursday, a train crash in South Carolina caused a deadly release of chlorine: 9 people were killed, 58 were hospitalized and hundreds more sought treatment. The ninth body was found yesterday, and thousands of people have been kept from their homes.

Last summer, a derailment in Texas caused a steel tank car to break open, spewing clouds of chlorine gas that killed three people.

The exact causes of the accidents are still under investigation. But the devastation they have wrought shows why tank cars have become an
increasing concern not just to safety investigators but also to domestic security officials worried that terrorists could turn tank cars into lethal weapons.

Governor Sanford must insist from this day forward full disclosure from the National Transportation Safety Board, The Railroad Administration, Norfolk Southern Railroad, and all other federal and state governmental bodies involved in the investigation of this accident full accountability. Let us state our needs fully and boisterously if need be under the banner of “State’s Rights.”

Norfolk Southern Railroad has already shown asinine behavior in handing out assistance checks with fine print on the backside of the check stating, “Endorsement of this check constitutes a full, final release of claims growing out of an accident in Graniteville, South Carolina on 1/6/2005.” Although railroad officials say that by signing this $155 dollar, check in no way limits an individual from acquiring future compensation from the company. If you were an affected individual, “Would you sign a measly check for $155 dollars and sign away your future rights to just and proper compensation?” No, you would not!..

Tuesday, January 04, 2005 

Our Lizard Catchers

We love catching lizards at out Grandmamma and BoBo's house on the side porch. We are now known as the three "Lizard Catchers." Our BoBo says he will let us write about our schools and some of our friends from time to time. Hope to see you soon... My cousin's in trouble right now...



Monday, January 03, 2005 

Tampon Saves Marine's Life

If you don’t believe it, take a hike over to Blackfive’s, Every Care Package is Important. Unbelievable but our Marine’s capacity for ingenuity in the face of adversity is nothing but miraculous. And as for a mistake in the care packages routing, I do not think so…