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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

13th Post: Observations and Prognostications

Greetings Bloggy Wog reader-ship (AKA: Mom). I have returned from my longer-than-expected minor hiatus to make a few observations (prognostications?) gleaned on this joyous voyage into parenthood.

1) For my son, diapers are merely for decoration. The score stands at Diapers: 3 My shirt (and the shirts/blouses of others) 23,412.

2) For my son, sleeping at night is so foreign a concept, I may as well be asking him to solve the US debt crisis...with an abacus.

3) For my son, bath time is not just simply a wonderful chance to pee on daddy, it's a chance to pee on daddy while looking so sweet and cute that Daddy doesn't even mind it. I fear this strategy (in varying forms, I hope) will carry over into his older years.

4) For my son, a running vacuum works as a lullaby. Therefore my son is destined to be a future ROCK STAR!!!!

5) For my son, a mirror offers hours of endless wonder. Therefore my son is destined to be a future MALE MODEL!!!!

6) For my son, a rotating ceiling fan is a wonder to behold. Therefore my son is destined to be a future PILOT!!!!

7) For my son, being thumped on the back for ten minutes straight is enjoyable. Therefore my son is destined to be a future MAJOR SUCCESS!!!

8) For my son, holding onto a finger and shaking it is a must.Therefore my son is destined to be a future POLITICIAN!!!!

9) Oh crap...my son could be a future politician.

10) Well, for your information, my son would make an excellent politician thankyouverymuch and anyone who says otherwise will also get thumped on the back for ten minutes straight...with a dump truck.

BAM!

What I'm reading now:
Our Man in Havana - Graham Greene
The Guns of August - Barbara W. Tuchman

Friday, September 2, 2011

12th Post: The Final Frontier

My wife (heretofore known as Chelsey) said to me the other day as we were seated on our couch watching '70s show' reruns, "You know, in less than a month...there will be three of us living here." I looked at her and nearly channeled Elaine Benes' "SHUT UP?!?". Now I am not an imbecile, I just play one on TV...and not well. I have known for some time now that Chelsey was with child. I have been on multiple (multiple multiple multiple) shopping excursions to Babies R' Us, Buy Buy Baby, Target, and other stores dedicated to expanding the population of the Earth. I have been 'showered'. I have even been harassed (in love, to be sure) by extended family members as to the decision to not name my son Edward Richard Purchase V. I almost even bought a Honda Pilot with which to chauffeur my progeny in comfort and safety. In short (too late), I flippin' knew a baby was on the way! Yet that simple statement, said with a wistful smile and tilted head, stunned me to my core. I am going to be a father?

It was upon that Muhammadian-esque revelation that three monumental realizations came to the forefront of my mind:

From now on I am going to have to watch what I say. One of my favorite movies (and one of Chelsey's too, don't let her tell you different...her cousin even has a cameo in it BTW) is "Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby". If you'll recall (because we all know you've seen it), there is a scene early on where Ricky's dad, Reese Bobby, comes to Career Day and talks - among other things - about what he does for a living: Racing. As a direct result of the 'among other things', Ricky's dad gets tossed out of the school and tells Ricky before he drives off (and out of his life for another ten years or so), "If you ain't first, you're last." Well, Ricky's life from then on is lived by that code and it becomes his trademark. Near the end of that film, Ricky confronts his father with that phrase (because it worked out so well for him). Reese then proceeds to call it nonsensical and blames being high at the time for having said it at all. To him, it was just something cool to say. To his son, who idolized him, it was important. Many times I have traced an opinion or mindset or outlook that I have held for years back to something my father said when I was younger. Those of you who know me, and have known me for a while, know that I have little to no control over what pops out of my oral orifice. My son is doomed.

Solution: Do a LOT less talking. Especially when I am driving and some #$%&$&%& moron cuts me off! Or when Chad 'My Chin Has Its Own Zip Code' Henne !$#$^%$ overthrows a $%#$%&$%wide open receiver!! See what I mean?

From now on I am going to have to watch what I listen to. Some...ok, most of my favorite bands come from the secular side of the spectrum. My wife would add that they also come from the 1990s teenage-wannabe side of the spectrum too...but what does she know? Bands like Radiohead, Weezer, AFI, Smashing Pumpkins, The Offspring, and Jimmy Eat World have dominated my vehicle's CD player for years. Songs like, 'Cherub Rock', 'Evidence', 'Beautiful Thieves', 'Let Down', 'Karma Police', The Greatest Man That Ever Lived', 'My Name is Jonas', and 'Come Out And Play' have been belted (mostly on key) by my person over and over. On my way home from work, I usually listen to sports talk radio on the AM dial (790, 640, 560). I don't know the last time you have heard any of those bands, songs or stations before...but they all aren't rated 'G'. (Especially those AM stations...man, some of the adds they run are pretty sketchy).

Solution: I have already started on this one, listen to more jazz and classical music. As of now I refuse (REFUSE) to allow The Wiggles, Raffi, or Charlie Waffles (eh? eh? Anyone?) into my car. We shall see how long I can hold out.


From now on I am going to have to watch what I watch. Some of our (I am not letting Chelsey off on this one)favorite shows are: The Office, Modern Family, Parks and Recreation, 30 Rock, Seinfeld reruns, 70's show reruns, How I Met Your Mother, Two and a Half Men, and The Soup (<--- we are not particularly proud of those last two...but they are soooooooo funny). Now, even the better shows listed above all have some language and other themes that do not translate well into 'Toddler-ese' and constant exposure to the very young would ultimately lead to one of these moments...and then - in the words of the bard, "It's all downhill from here...". Also, there are movies that I love to watch: "Unforgiven", "Anchorman", "Forrest Gump", "Eastern Promises", "Band of Brothers", and "The Dark Knight" that - even when edited for TV - still would put blush on the ears of my Mother were she around. I'll do you one better, anyone played 'Call of Duty' recently? I'll tell you this much, they capture the vernacular of the military all too well.

Solution: Either watch them really late after he goes to sleep, or find new shows...anyone care to make a recommendation? Also, it's now strictly sports games on the ol' X-Box 360 for me (pre-ordered NHL 12, it's gonna be amazing!!!).

Needless to say, I will need to make some definite life-style changes in order rise up to the standard of Fatherdom my Father set for me. I'll say this much: I cannot wait to hold that little miracle in my arms and tell him over and over how much I love him. I cannot wait for the first time he looks directly at me and says, 'Dada'. I cannot wait for the first time he asks me to play catch with him (or go skating). I cannot wait to take him to his first Panthers game (provided they haven't relocated by then). I do however hope to wait a looooong time before I catch him swearing (my Mom caught me in the 9th grade...and it was not pretty).

FIN

What I am reading now:
1776 - David McCullough
War and Our World - John Keegan

Friday, August 12, 2011

11th Post: Tales From the Ridge

Here follows the third installment in the ever-popular Tales From the Ridge franchise. Some would call this one the best yet, those 'some' being me, and as such I was reluctant to unveil it...but then I realized that nobody would read my Bloggy Wog unless it involved a TFTR...you jerks...so here you go.

On an unrelated related note, I am no longer employed by the Ridge. So I will only ever have the seven or eight really good stories that I have collected over my three years there. Should I fabricate future ones, I will - of course - let you all know up front.

Best,
-Ed(die) IV

As with previous installments, what you are about to read (and therefore see with your minds eye) is 100% truth. Scary, huh?

Chapter 2: They know me around here...

It was a Saturday night like any other, filled with my friends doing tons of fun and exciting things while I was stuck at the Ridge...jerks. The time was inching close to 10:30PM and I was trying desperately to kill the last hour-and-a-half, before boredom did me in first.

I was hunkered down in the Security office scrolling through Myspace (I know I am dating myself here, it was before Facebook became so very important...circa Fall 2006) a movement caught my eye. It was a ratty and faded baseball hat and it was floating at the bottom of the camera just outside the front of the building I was sitting in. Having been on the job for an entire three months, I knew what that meant, a 'guest' had arrived. "Oh goody." I said to myself as I slowly got up and collected the tools of my chosen trade: a radio, the keys, and a pseudo-tough exterior that belied an understanding of the overall uselessness of my job.

As I locked the security office door behind me, I said a little prayer that went a little something like this, “Lord, I am freshly married and the Dolphins have not yet won anything significant in my lifetime. So please don’t let me die now at the hands of a psycho drifter with a hankering for livers and spleens. Amen.” Thus armed, I opened the magnet-locked door and stepped outside to find the bearer of the ratty hat.

I looked to my right down the breeze way towards US-1, then looked left and very nearly crapped myself. There, standing not 15 feet away, was the largest non-professional football playing man I had ever seen. He was about 6'7", a solid (if not rotund) 330lb white male with a beard to make Charles Manson cringe and a stare made to bore through granite. To top it all off - literally - he was a Boston Red Sox fan. "Oh, boy..." I exhaled, "...they don't get much bigger and bandwagon-ier than that."

I quickly collected my thoughts (all two of them...more than usual, I know) and turned to squarely face the Yeti-In-Man’s-Clothing. “How are you tonight, brother? May I help you with something?” I secretly hoped I had put enough ‘gruff’ in the question; that coupled with my squared posture and solid eye-contact should alert the behemoth that I took him seriously.

“I’m here,” Gigantor began in a deep baritone, “looking for my people. Perhaps you’ve seen them?”

I took stock of the situation: One large man, one large hiking backpack on the ground, matching sneakers in relatively good condition, dirty clothes, open fly (that’s no good), and (Whew!) that smell means he’s been on the streets awhile. This one was going to be a doozy. “No, I haven’t seen your people, brother. What do they look like?"

I did not want to step back, although the smell was nailing me full-force, because giving ground - as any soldier will tell you - is the first sign of weakness and supplication. Besides, I stood only 6'1" and weighed (at that time) around 190 pounds...I needed to appear as big as possible in case Tiny decided to get hostile.

“Sure you have. You’ve seen my people.” Big Boy waved his ham-hock hands upwards and in a circular motion, “All God’s people are my people.” And he fixed me with that laser-gaze again.

"Oh great...he’s a hippie. Lord, why do you do this to me?" I thought with a subconscious look skyward. So I replied, “Why of course they are. The Bible says to love your neighbor.” I didn’t think that verse really applied there, but I was nervous...and when I get nervous, I ramble.

“They misquoted me.” Tons-O-Fun said with more than a little disgust in his voice.

“Who did?”

“The Bible writers.” Tubby said with a shrug and shake of his head.

“You lost me, pal.” I confessed with a wince of ‘here-it-comes’ fatalism.

Jumbo looked me dead in the eye and with a sincerity to rival most Elvis impersonators said, “I’m Jesus Christ, Son of God.”

I remembered then having read somewhere that it was usually best to let the looney tunes talk their mania out and NOT to interject or correct. So I proffered, “Well, if you’re who you say you are, you’re a pretty popular guy.”

Not missing a beat, JCSOG put his hand out against the wall of the church, crossed his right leg over his left one, nodded a bit and said, “Yeah, they know me around here.”

I stifled some serious laughter, "Best. Story. Ever." Was all I was thinking. "Nobody will believe this. Nobody." I looked around to avoid the earnestness of the Fat Man’s eyes, knowing that if I made eye contact now, I would be thrown into a fit of uncontrolled laughter.

I managed to muster a “Congratulations” or “Must be nice” or something to that effect. I tried to compose myself. When I looked back at that strange stranger again, I was surprised to see that I was being studied intently by those big creepy eyes.

“Are you security here?” Double-Stuff asked. 

“I am.”

"What?"

"I am."

"What it is my son?"

"I said, I am."

“NO! I Am."

"I'm lost." <---- my best Captain Obvious impression.

"I am that I am!" When he added the emphasis, (and You Bible scholars out there know what he was referring to). I knew that this Chunky Monkey needed a platoon of shrinks...and fast.

"Sorry. I meant: Yes, I am the security here."

Pudgy nodded thoughtfully and asked, "Does it pay good?”

A little annoyed at the blatant grammatical error by one who held claim to being perfect and without sin, I replied in an even tone, “It pays well...but the Army paid better.” I added that last part in the hopes of letting XXXL know that I was no pushover. I also said it with my eyes as drew myself up to my full height...still woefully inadequate for the potential task at hand.

“Army, huh?” Bacon Bits raised one eyebrow and cocked his head to the side a bit, “Would you like me to commit your body to the deep, my son?”

Chubby spoke the request in such an innocent, earnest way, that I didn't immediately put two and two together. You see, in the Navy, 'committing a body to the deep' is a phrase said during a burial at sea. A. Burial. At. Sea. "A BURIAL AT SEA!!!!! WAKE UP YOU MORON AND GET THE MACE READY!!!" It was about that time that I realized I had left the can of pepper spray back inside the office.

With that cacophony ringing in my head coupled with me mentally kicking my own rear end, I managed to mumble something to the effect of, “How for you mean to that do?”

Obviously used to such a fluid response, The Two-Legged Manatee said matter-of-factly, “Well first off, I’d have to suck out your soul...to purify it, of course.”

My threat level instantly went to DEFCON 5. "This isn’t happening...This. Is. Not. Hap. Pen. Ing." I began to embrace the fact that Piggly-Wiggly meant to kill me in ways that would make Stephen King blanch. I responded, “And just how do you plan on doing that?”

“A little mouth on mouth action."

"Oh." In the absence of all other options I realized there was but one hope left to me, “I think it’s time for you to move along.”

“Ok...later dude.” And just like that, Chumba-Wumba turned, picked up his rucksack, and walked away into the night.

I watched him go - at a safe distance - then headed back to the office thinking about what had just transpired. Needless to say, I continuously threw up prayers to the actual Jesus Christ, Son of God as I finished up my shift.

EPILOGUE:

An hour later, I kicked out a couple of high school kids making out in the back seat of their car. From what I could see, he was trying really hard to purify her soul.

FIN

What I am reading now:
The Call - Os Guinness
The Natural - Bernard Malamud

Saturday, July 16, 2011

10th Post: Conventional Wisdom for my Son

My apologies for not blogging for the entire month of June. Let me fill you in on all that has happened since post #9. I got food poisoning...and that's pretty much it.

Below you will find some tidbits of conventional wisdom that I want to pass on to my son, and I am sure you will also find them to be useful in your various pursuits. Bon appetit.

1) A stitch in time saves nine...unless you aren't an 80-year-old lady, then you'll have no idea what the heck that even means.

2) Dress for the job you want, not the job you have...unless you are a Secret Service Agent and you really want to be a clown.

3) Don't drink and drive...unless you are playing golf, then drinking may be the only way to avoid noticing how bad your slice is.

4) There are only two sure things in life: death and taxes...unless you smart off to your mother, then you'll surely get a whuppin'.

5) Don't throw the baby out with the bath water...Oh, wait a second, that one's for me. Next!

6) If at first you don't succeed, write a book about it...I'm looking at you, Sarah Palin.

7) Do not spit into the wind...'nuf said.

8) If you can open a People magazine and not know 50% of the 'people' featured therein, you are doing many things right. Keep it up son.

9) Picking a team to root for is a fine art. You don't want to jump on a bandwagon (or - even worse - jump from bandwagon to bandwagon), unless its your home-town team, then you get a pass (Example: Miami Heat). If you want to root for a winner, I recommend these three litmus tests: 1) Look for a team that always seems to be in the fight. In any given season they could get hot and take the title. Example: San Jose Sharks (NHL), Atlanta Braves (MLB), Florida State Seminoles (NCAAFB/BB), and Baltimore Ravens (NFL). OR 2) Look for a team with a winning tradition that has fallen on hard times in recent seasons. Their fan bases (while understanding the cyclical nature of seasonal team-sport dominance) will not tolerate mediocrity for long, and the ownership will do whatever is necessary to get back on track. Example: Miami Dolphins (NFL), LA Dodgers (MLB), Colorado Avalanche (NHL), and Nebraska Cornhuskers (NCAAFB). OR 3) Pick a team that has stunk so bad, for so long, and so hard that they have accumulated numerous top-5 draft picks. Now all of those kids are reaching their prime all at once, and they will reign high upon the mountain for at LEAST the next 7-10 years. Examples: Kansas City Royals (MLB), Florida Panthers (NHL), Detroit Lions (NFL), and New York Islanders (NHL).

Now you'll notice that I have one of my favorite teams listed in each of those three examples...I like to keep my bases covered. Which reminds me:

10) Always keep your bases covered.

I love you, son. Cannot wait to see you in two months...or so.

Monday, May 30, 2011

9th Post: Memorial Day 2011

I personally know of three men who have paid the ultimate price for the freedoms we enjoy (appreciate?) every day. Today I will honor them with three 'pour outs' and a prayer. Also, I will tell you a little about them (anecdotes, if you will) and the nature of their passing. Please keep their loved ones in your thoughts and prayers today.


SGT Jack Hennessy ( http://www.iraqwarheroes.org/hennessy.htm )

I knew Jack from Basic Training at Fort Benning, GA. He was a good friend of my good friend Billy Ratcliff and we all hung out together on pass and on our (scant) free time. They were both in 1st platoon and I was in 4th. Our two platoons had a pretty nasty feud going on all through basic and when it was statistically (overall platoon marksmanship, PT, individual awards, testing, etc.) determined which platoon was best (4th, of course), he led a prank raid on our FTX (Field Training Exercise) site that resulted in not only their resounding defeat, but his personal shame (he face-planted into a patch of poison oak). Despite all that, he had a tremendous sense of humor and helped me to - finally - pass the sit-ups on my PT test.

Our mutual friend Billy informed me that Jack was killed when his checkpoint was attacked in Baghdad in October 2004. His neighborhood chose to honor him in a wonderful way (see: http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20100916/news/309169776/ ).



SGT Brett Swank ( http://www.iraqwarheroes.org/swank.htm and http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/uticaod/obituary.aspx?n=brett-d-swank&pid=3098408 )

I met Brett when we were shuffled into our Training Platoons at 2/19 in Fort Benning, GA. I have to admit I didn't care for him much; it was mutual. In fact we almost came to blows once (such is often the case when you lump 56 men into an enclosed space) over something...I cannot recall what exactly now. He was an exceptional shot and very good at PT. In short, everything an Infantry soldier should be (and neither of which I was...hmmm). I remember he came to notoriety when a picture of his girlfriend arrived and he was showing it around to everyone, and somebody remarked that she looked an awful lot like another guy in our platoon. It was true, she was a dead ringer for this guy (who shall remain nameless...No, it was not me) and it got so bad that the soldier in question went to the Drill Sergeants to have them ask us to stop calling him 'Swank's chick'. It was too funny...

I stumbled upon news of Brett's death when I was looking up another friend who I hadn't heard from in a while (Larry Sixberry was his name, and he is fine). He was killed in Iraq in January of 2005 by an IED; just two months before his 22nd birthday. The news struck me in an altogether different way than Jack's and Kip's (see below). While I didn't particularly care for Brett, I absolutely respected him as a fellow soldier and the world is - truly - a lesser place without him and other men of his caliber and their 'other's first' mentality. His community chose to honor him as well. ( http://dailyitem.com/0100_news/x1850234543/40-attend-renaming-of-road-for-soldier )


SGT Kip Jacoby ( http://www.fallenheroesproject.org/united-states/kip-allen-jacoby/  )

Kip was an amazing young man. I had the opportunity to know him for a few years in the civilian world of Good ol' Pompano Beach. He came to FBC Pompano with some mutual friends and we had many opportunities to hang out and talk together. I remember when he first came up to me saying how he wanted to enlist - at that time it was the Air Force - and I have said before ( http://edpurchaseiv.blogspot.com/2011/05/7th-post-my-thoughts-on-osama.html ) I feel somewhat responsible for his final decision.

What I remember most about Kip was his love for living! He was the best local skateboarder many people knew. He loved his music. He loved to drive very fast. In fact, he knew of a gas station waaaaaay out in the Everglades that sold higher octane gasoline than anywhere else and would repeatedly drive out there to fill his tank. He was a great listener and I knew he would make a great soldier. His loyalty to his friends, his love of country and his eagerness to serve was proof enough of that.

Kip was killed during Operation Red Wings (See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Red_Wings ) in June 2005. As you will read, it is truly one of the more harrowing tales of the war. No word on whether or not Pompano Beach will honor him officially. Hmmm...that may be something to look into...

On this day, I think of these men. I remember our interactions (both good and bad) and I speak a silent prayer for them and their loved ones. I am sure some of you know others who have served and fallen both in OIF/OEF and in the other wars/conflicts that mark (mar?) our nation's storied past. On this day, I would ask you to please do the same for them.

"The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and bear the deepest wounds and scars of war."
-Gen. Douglas MacArthur

Saturday, May 14, 2011

8th Post: Another "Tale From the Ridge"

What follows is another installment of my future magnum opus 'Tales From the Ridge'.

Chapter 3: He wants what?!?

It was a Thursday morning like any other, busy and full of promise and I was having none of it. I was feeling sick as a dog due to a mixture of eating garbage and staying up until all hours of the night (translation: my wife was out of town). All I wanted was the time to fly by as quickly as possible so I could go home and - finally!!! - beat that stupid level in Halo 3 that was kicking my tookus all over the place (the one where you have to infiltrate the crashed flood-controlled ship...I HATED that level). Anyway, the sleep-deprived haze I was under lifted suddenly when I was alerted on the radio by one of our Facilities workers, 'Vince'.

"Hey, Ed!"
"Go ahead, Vince."
"Hey, Ed we have a guy here in the Fellowship Hall looking for you!"
"I'm on my way."

Now Vince was a nervous guy, and he would get very nervous when it came to homeless people...not just the 'go-all-quiet' kind of nervous, but the awkward 'overly-worked-up-because-this-could-be-a-terrorist-or-a-Mormon-or-both-and-I-need-to-get-an-adult-to-deal-with-this' kind of nervous. Vince is 47 years old.

I walked into the fellowship hall and was immediately assailed by an over-whelming odor; a mixture of sweat, smoke, and general nastiness. My eyes instantly teared up, and it was through that glassy haze that I first beheld, 'Petey'.

Petey stood about 5 feet tall and weighed - easily - 85lbs (about 20 of that was beard). He had on a black t-shirt that said 'F.B.I. Female Body Inspector', very tight blue jeans (quite possibly sized for a toddler), and a pair of mismatched black boots. I noticed he had something in his front pocket shaped like a lighter...but I didn't want to know for sure...if you catch my meaning.

I walked up to Petey and Vince ran up to me and practically squealed, "I caught him smoking in the men's room!"
"Aw yur full'a ****. I wern't no smoking." Was Petey's articulate reply.
"You were so! Ed, the whole place reeks of it."
I made a gesture for Vince to calm down and looked at Petey, "What's your name, brother?"
"Petey, Sir. Are you the Lord Marshall?"
I really wanted to say 'yes' to that, because that is a sick title if ere there were one. Alas, I said, "No, Petey. I'm just the Security guy here. Were you smoking in the bathroom?"
"Nope, Sir...not smoking...not meeee. I always r'spect duh law'r."
"Petey," I said, "I'm smelling a lot of smoke coming from your (I waived my hand in a big circle in front of him) general area right now...and I think you're fibbing to me." I took a step closer, "Tell me the truth, please."
Petey had been staring intently at me the whole conversation up until this point and at my last statement, he looked at Vince, pointed and said, "He wants my body."
"He wants what?!?"
Vince visibly jumped and screamed, "THAT'S NOT WHAT I SAID!!!" He turned to me and grabbed my arm, "Ed, I promise you...that is NOT what I said."
"Wait, you mean he might be almost correct in that statement?"
"All I said was, 'I will need to frisk you'."
"You're an idiot."
"He wouldn't give me the cigarettes."
"Are you a cop, Vince? Don't answer that, OF COURSE you're not! Therefore, you do not frisk anyone. Ever!"

I turned to look back at Petey and he was halfway down the Fellowship Hall at a full sprint. I ran after him and yelled, "Petey, stop!" In what was to be the third in a series of surprises that morning, he did.
"Whut d'yer want, Lord Marshall? I have to go."
"I want to know the truth."
"I may have been smok'n."
"Ok, do you know why you cannot smoke indoors and in bathrooms specifically?"
God love him, he really thought about it for a few seconds, "Cuz you might drop'em in der toy-lit?"
"Well, there is that...but I was going to say you could set off the fire sprinklers and that would make it a bad day for everybody."
"Do you even know whut a bad day looks like?!?" Petey asked me in a startling shift in personality. "I'll give you a lil' clue, you ig'nrant *******. It'zz a bus full'o kids and a bomb! A BOMB!!!!!!"

It's never easy dealing with the obviously insane and I have never taken a course or read a book, but I have learned more about looney-toons in 3 years at The Ridge than in any 40 books or lectures. Of course at that time I had barely been on the job a few weeks and was not quite sure where to take the convo from there. So I simply said, "I can dig it."
"Yeah." Was all Vince could think to add.

Petey had taken a very aggressive posture and was fidgeting with his left hand at his back pocket. So I asked him, "What you got back there, Petey?"
"Mud-butt. I got the mud-butt purty bad. D'ya mind eff'n I smoke?" And he proceeded to produce a pathetic excuse for a cigarette from his back pocket, as well as a lighter...my eyes immediately went to the aforementioned front pocket and instantly regretted it...because a dark stain was spreading.
"Petey! It's time to go, brother...NOW!"
"I am a'goin."
"NO! I mean leave!"
"You can't kick me out, you ************. This is a ************* church!"
"Oh yes I can, and you will leave right now or I'm calling the police."
"YOU SIT ON A BLACK THRONE OF LIES!!!! YOU HAVE NO IDEA WHO I AM!!!!! I'M THE KING OF FRANCE!!! I'M THE KING OF ************* FRANCE YOU *******!!!!"

I didn't really care what all he said after that, because he said it as he was running out the door towards US-1. I turned to look at Vince, and he was white as a ghost. Then Vince turned to me and said - I am not making this up, "I told you he was smoking."

Really?

EPILOGUE:

Later that afternoon, Petey was seen hiding behind the bushes in the back parking lot and I got called again. I ignored it.

FIN

What I am reading now:
You Can Change - Tim Chester
Think - John Piper
The Name of the Rose - Umberto Eco (Sean Connery did the movie based on this book, so you know its boss!)

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

7th Post: My Thoughts on Osama

"Where were you when the world stopped turning on that September day?"
- Alan Jackson

I was in Fort Benning, Georgia preparing to transfer from 30th AG (think of it as a prep-school for Basic) to 2-19th INF TRN REG (Infantry Training Regiment). I was going to be assigned to Alpha Company 4th Platoon 'Dogs of War' (We have such interesting nicknames for our units. As an aside I have been a 'Dog of War', a 'Gator', a 'Bushmaster', a 'Copperhead', a 'Scorpion', a 'Dragon', a 'Demon', and for a very short time a 'Delta Dog'...but I digress). It was 9-ish in the morning (I did not consult my watch) and I was seated on the floor (which is where you sit when you are a Private...chairs are for big-boy soldiers) at the end of a row of about 60 other Privates. There was a very angry Captain standing behind me muttering under his breath, "I cannot believe I have to ------- babysit these ------- Privates again." Or something to that effect, when a Sergeant walked in and whispered to him, "A plane just crashed into the World Trade Center. A big one. They think the pilot had a stroke or something." "Really? That sucks." I was the only person to hear that conversation and I shared the Captain's sentiment. I didn't get to hear any more on that subject as just at that moment we (all 250of us) were ordered outside to do the changeover ceremony.

Once the ceremony was complete we were marched around Sand Hill (the training area) and shown all that awaited us for the next 14 weeks. It took all of about two hours (and a lot of marching) to get everywhere, and finally we were marched into the formation grounds of Alpha Company. This is typically where the fun begins. If you've gone through Basic, or at least seen the first 10 minutes of Full Metal Jacket or An Officer and A Gentleman, you know what I am talking about...but this was very different...and far more unsettling.

There are three Drill Sergeants assigned to each training platoon (four platoons to a company), 12 total. But we only saw four at a time. They cycled in and out of this room with a TV on inside. Each time they came out they were more and more irritated; irritated at us it seemed.

Now, I expected the usual jibes:
- 'How tall are you, son?'
- '6ft tall.'
- 'SIX FEET TALL WHAT? SIX FEET TALL, MORON? SIX FEET TALL, JACK%$#? SIX FEET TALL WHAT?!!???!!!'
- 'Six feet tall, Drill Sergeant.'
- 'Really?!? I didn't know they stacked !#$% that high.'

It was that, but there was something else there...in the eyes. Something that betrayed an altogether different motivation than 'breaking down' a Private. I didn't realize it until later, after they had divided us up into platoons, taken us up to our platoon barracks, and THEN informed us what had happened, that the emotion they had was anger. Anger at not being with their units, not being able to retaliate. You see Infantry Drill Sergeants are culled from the ranks of the best combat units. They are usually the best soldiers and some of the smartest (think super-teachers). They have the skill and the aptitude to teach that skill to others. Imagine knowing you are a great soldier, but not being able to BE that soldier. It was a bitter pill, and we bore the brunt of it for the duration. Many of the Drill Sergeants put in for transfers back to their combat units once our training cycle ended. Hopefully they got their chance.

I didn't think in a million years that I would see the sands of Afghanistan. I was in the National Guard for crying out loud. I mean, I was in the Infantry, but I enlisted in February of 2001 to pay for college and hopefully get some self-discipline. Shoot, I spent the 6 months between enlistment and leaving for Fort Benning, not in training with my soon-to-be unit, not in getting prepared physically for the strain of training; I spent it laying about doing nothing in particular. I hung out with my friends, spent a lot of time with my girlfriend, saw movies, went to concerts, etc. I thought that joining the Infantry would be a cool way to spend a weekend (blowing stuff up, which I did...and IT WAS AWESOME!!! Example: Have YOU ever fired a rocket launcher?) AND it was the quickest Basic Training/AIT (Advanced Individual Training), so I could get back home in time to start the spring semester...and on the Army's dime. Such was my detachment, such was my naivete. Of course I instantly regretted all of that on Tuesday morning.

I won't go into how they told us, needless to say there were a lot of 'F-bombs'. I won't go into the reactions from my platoon, needless to say fear and anxiety ran rampant. I do want to say this: We were lined up in front of our assigned bunks in a sort of giant rectangle (beds lined up along both long walls with a big open space in the middle of the bay) and each man could turn his head and see the rest. The Senior Drill Sergeant said, "Look around, Privates. Some men in this room will die, on foreign soil, avenging this act." He was right.

We did lose a man from 4th, Sgt. Brett Swank and another from 1st platoon: SSG Jack Hennessy (that I know of, perhaps there were more. There were at least a dozen wounded.). Swank wasn't my friend per say...in fact we almost got into a fistfight once. Hennessy was a really good friend of a friend, and helped me on my PT test prep runs from time to time. When I heard of their deaths, it saddened me, obviously...but it made me think that on that September morning when they heard about the attack (the same way I did), and they looked around their specific platoons did they think it would be them?

On an even sadder note, I lost another friend in Afghanistan. He was shot down in a rescue chopper in the mountains during Operation Red Wing in May 2005. He was a member of the famed Night Stalkers (again, we love those cool names in the Army), 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment. They are making a movie about that mission, I do not know when it will come out. I heard about his death from my brother while I was in Mississippi preparing for my own excursion into the sandbox. It was sobering, not simply because it reinforced the dangers of what I was preparing to do, but that I had actually talked this man out of joining the Air Force and into joining the Army. His name was Sgt. Kip Jacoby of good ol' Pompano Beach. I know if he were here right now, he wouldn't hold it against me, but I'm here and I will hold it against me.

I said all of that to show that I am not insulated from the tragedies and wars stemming from 9/11, not so obtuse as to think that death is something to be celebrated and not so vain as to think that American lives are more special than Afghan lives, or Iraqi lives, or Libyan lives, or Vietnamese lives, or North Korean lives, or Japanese lives, or German lives, or Italian lives, or American Indian lives, or British lives. But isn't the point of 'life' to live it well? To contribute to the betterment of mankind? Shouldn't a life be spent not in striving against accepted societal norms, but in a way that hones them further; focuses them sharper. Shouldn't it be that all humankind exists/lives for the perpetuation of humanity? To that end Osama failed as a human. Just as Hitler did. Just as Stalin did. Just as Saddam did. Just as Robespierre did. Just as Nero did.

I suppose it is reasonable to assume that all of those listed above showed love and genuine compassion at some point in time. I am sure they loved their children, spouse (sometimes more than one), pets, friends etc. However, each saw the world, not as something to better or enhance, but as something to force-meld into their image. Sure, they had followers, some numbering in the millions...but they clearly went against the grain of common decency. Clearly.

Now I know we're getting into 'debatable' territory, 'one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter' and all that, but when you look at it, really look at it, What they wanted was so aberrant, so wantonly devoid of morality and benevolence that it caused the rest of the civilized world to unite and fight against them. Those types of individuals have spurned the value of life and pursued - in the words of Coldplay - Death and all his friends. So...is it really such a shame that they found him?

On a lighter note:

Did you hear about the latest trendy drink, the 'Osama Bin Laden'? It has two shots and a splash of water.

FIN

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

6th Post: Things I Hope to Teach my Son

1) Nobody pays a pitcher to hit. The DH is good for the game.

2) Always hold open a door for ladies, people with their hands full and me...of course.

3) Prayer is THE necessity.

4) Read for pleasure. Read for pain. Read for escapism. Just READ!

5) The Godfather trilogy must be watched annually and the life-lessons contained therein are to be valued. Chief of which is to never go alone in a fishing boat into the middle of huge lake with a hitman, especially after you've tried to kill your brother...who - coincidentally - is the boss of said hitman. #youbrokemyheartFredo.

6) When driving always look for the seam. If you have to hit your breaks for anything other than an accident or a red light, you have failed.

7) There is more to Nascar than 'Speed up, turn left. Speed up, turn left'...I just don't know what it is.

8) Duke = Puke (this one is from Mommy)

9) A firm handshake, solid eye-contact, and repeating the name of the person you just met will do more for a first impression that whatever you are wearing at the time.

10) Should you ever enter an enclosed space with FAU Prof Simon Glynn PhD, say that you do not know me and that your last name is just a horrible coincidence and perhaps he will let you live...perhaps.

11) Should you ever enter an enclosed space with Mike Keenan and Mike Yormark, kick them both in the kneecaps and say it is from me (and the rest of the Panther nation).

12) The best food/drink combo to watch any game with is your Mom's chicken nachos and coke with lime.

13) Your Mom is always right...even when she's wrong (which is never).

14) College basketball is the game at its finest. The NBA is a joke.

15) There is nothing wrong with walking away from a fight, as long as you've left the other person unconscious.

16) Do not take yourself so seriously that no one else will.

17) 'Politics' is not a dirty word, but 'Politician' is.

18) Proper grammar, spelling and punctuation are priceless. Nothing screams 'I'm a moron' louder than: 'your welcom', 'I lik it two', 'there boat iz sweet!', 'UR awsum', or my personal favorite, 'U need 2 C there nu hows its sik'. #likenailsonachalkboard

19) Authors to appreciate: Cormac McCarthy, Ursula K. Le Guin, J.K. Rowling, David McCullough, Kurt Vonnegut, Dave Barry and Ray Bradbury.

20) Literature/Novels to love: 'Starship Troopers' - Robert Heinlein, 'The Lottery' - Shirley Jackson, 'Ender's Game' - Orson Scott Card, 'Slaughterhouse 5' - Kurt Vonnegut, 'The Goblet of Fire' - J.K. Rowling, 'Young Goodman Brown' - Nathaniel Hawthorne, 'The Things They Carried' - Tim O'Brien, 'The Raven' - Edgar Allan Poe, 'A Canticle for Leibowitz' - Walter M. Miller Jr., 'The Count of Monte Cristo' - Alexandre Dumas, 'Blood Meridian' and 'The Road' - Cormac McCarthy, 'Blackhawk Down' - Mark Bowden, 'Heart of Darkness' - Joseph Conrad, and basically anything by Ray Bradbury.

21) Movies to enjoy: Amadeus, The Prestige, Band of Brothers, Patton, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Fantasia, Master and Commander, Casablanca, Eastern Promises, Open Range, Gladiator, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Napoleon Dynamite, Unforgiven, The Untouchables, Forrest Gump, and the first 20 minutes of Full Metal Jacket.

22) Bands to follow: Weezer, Jimmy Eat World, Denison Marrs, AFI, Coldplay, Plankeye, and The Smashing Pumpkins.

23) Albums to own: 'Kind of Blue' - Miles Davis, 'Pinkerton' and 'The Blue Album' - Weezer, 'Siamese Dream' - Smashing Pumpkins, 'Holding Hands @ 35,000 ft' - Denison Marrs, 'Time Out' - Dave Brubeck, 'X&Y' - Coldplay, 'Invented' - Jimmy Eat World, 'Commonwealth' and 'The Spark' - Plankeye, 'Beneath Medicine Tree' - Copeland, 'Sing the Sorrow' - AFI, and '3eB' - Third Eye Blind.

23) Sports teams to CHEER!: Miami Dolphins, Florida Panthers, Florida Marlins, Fulham FC (soccer), FSU football, UNC basketball, USA Men's National Soccer Team, Rory McIlroy, and whoever drives the National Guard car.

24) Sports teams to BOO!: New England Patriots, New York Jets, every NBA team (except maybe Miami), Florida Gators, Miami Hurricanes, New Jersey Devils (YOU ALMOST KILLED THE GAME!!), and Tiger Woods (I hated on him before anyone else did).

25) Do not - under any circumstances - spit into the wind.

What I'm reading now:
You Can Change - Tim Chester (devotional)
Think - John Piper
How to Read and Why - Harold Bloom

Friday, April 15, 2011

5th Post: Yet More Random Thoughts...

- Move over Walter "Sweetness" Peyton, there is a new best nickname in all of sports: Cliff "The Adverb" Lee. Anyone NOT an English major get that?

- Is it just me or has Google become that annoying guy/gal you work/hang with who finishes your thoughts before you even finish your first word? Example:
Me: "You know Google, I really like P..."
Google: "Pandora Radio. I know, me too."
Me: "Uh...no. I was saying I really like Pa..."
Google: "Pandora Jewelry. So very fetch."
Me: "NO! I really like Panda Bears!!! OH MY GOSH!!!!!"
Google: "Oh...well that was going to be my 2,346,029,762,396,923rd guess. Pandorajewelry17%offbuynow."

- Donald Trump needs to figure it out already. Is President Obama a qualified President of the USA or not? Trump goes from this:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RfoCrZJ8dQY   to this:  http://www.ny1.com/content/top_stories/88778/-i-ny1-exclusive---i--donald-trump-slams--evil--bush--praises-obama/  in a weeks time. Pick one already, John Ker...I mean, Donald Trump.

- "Interview With The Vampire" > "Twilight". Period. The End.

- I am more than a little concerned with this: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/BRICS-demand-global-monetary-rb-217782600.html?x=0&.v=3. Or...I would be if South Africa weren't involved. They created the vuvuzela, no one can ever take them seriously after that...except maybe deaf people.

- Try as I may...I still cannot see the purpose of putting braille on the DIGITAL SCREEN IMAGES of a DRIVE-THRU ATM. I'm looking at you Bank of America. #doublefail

- Hash tags are the epitaph of modern thought. #toodeepforyou

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

4th Post: Random Thoughts...and a Marxist or two

Some assorted musings from the danky depths of my mind...be careful, madness is catchy.

- I have seen Paradise, and it is in deep blue eyes of Rowan Elisabeth Purchase. Simply gorgeous!

- Hockey season is almost over...at least as far as my beloved - and beleaguered - Florida Panthers are concerned. Now comes my favorite game, "Pick out another - actually decent - team to root for in the Playoffs." I'm feeling the Washington Capitals.

- You can call it whatever you want (my wife says it's a lack of taste), but I really like the following bands and will buy their albums (not just the singles on I-tunes) whenever they release them: Jimmy Eat World, Coldplay, and Weezer (they tease me always with their 2-or-3-amazing-songs-surrounded-by-crummy-filler, but I cannot stop myself...the laughably terrible 'Raditude' notwithstanding).

- I just finished reading the play 'Death of a Salesman' by Arthur Miller and I must say, I found it heartbreaking. It was written - and most assuredly succeeds - as a critique of the American Dream. If you have not read it, please do. To the christian reader, it is a stark portrayal of a life lived apart from God. In fact, I don't believe 'God' is mentioned at all unless attached to a certain 4-letter word. In it, you see a wife who feels her only hope against the inevitable is to put on a brave face. You see two sons, each embodying a separate fatal flaw bestowed (even nurtured) by their fatally flawed father. You see a man so lost in his own failings, that he must constantly re-live the past because he cannot bear to witness his future. A man who gauges his life's worth solely in how it is reflected in the eyes of other men. As I was reading it, I wanted to grab Willy Loman (the main protagonist) and embrace him and hand him a Bible and say, 'Read this! Your life's worth is to be found here!' Alas, I could not...

- LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: There is a United States Pirate Party. FOR REAL!!! Who wants to join it with me? Maybe they give out free eye-patches and parrots.
Here is their logo:American pirate party.svg

How cute: The flag makes a 'P'. Now I really want to join.

Oh...wait a minute...nevermind. It's just a political party to promote the abolition of copyright laws and Digital Rights Management (DRM). Nerds, they ruin everything.

SPEAKING OF POLITICAL PARTIES:

- I met two 'Marxists' today in the Non-fiction section of a newly discovered used bookstore called 'The Book Rack' (on Commercial east of US-1 but before the bridge on the North side). I was looking through a book titled 'Soviet Polity in the Modern Era' (I mean, who wouldn't?) and this guy and his friend come up to me (me, mind you) and asked if I was a member of the CPUSA ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communist_Party_USA ).

I didn't answer right away (big mistake) and they started asking me my opinions on 'Lenin' this and 'China' that. I looked right at them and asked if they were - in fact - serious. They said they were, and I asked them if they were - in fact - aware that Communism was a global failure. They didn't take too kindly to that and pointed out that China owned the USA up to its ears. I pointed out that sure, China is pretty nifty, if you like to ignore little things like gross disregard for human rights, massive levels of starvation/poverty, blatant seizures of land to build the world's largest this and the world's biggest that, the utter and total abolition of a free press, and all that jazz (which - in point of fact - was also banned in China until the late 1980s). The two of them had clearly heard these arguments before and were prepared, "Well, at least they don't own slaves!" "Buddy," I replied, "Their entire population are slaves." This started a huge rant (which I promptly forgot) on American Capitalist Slave culture and how the US was based on a land/slave owner philosophy. My reply, "Funny how we still manage to function, now that slavery has been abolished for over 100 years."

They were not to be deterred. "Look at Cuba," They said, "Best health care system and scientific research stations in the Western Hemisphere!" My reply, "Yeah, you can tell they really appreciate it there...that's why tens of thousands have risked life and limb to cross 90 miles of ocean in the dead of night on inner-tubes and hallowed out tree trunks to join our Capitalist-slave-holding country." They didn't like that either. Then I dropped the bomb, "How old are you two anyways?" One said he was old enough to see through the lies of the establishment (translation: 17-19) and the other mumbled something about being old enough to burn his selective service card (translation: 18-19). I then asked them, "Have either of you ever been outside of the US?" One said not yet and the other said he had been outside the US. I said then that being on a cruise didn't really count. He muttered something I can't repeat here and I said that I had seen up-close and personal the effects of Soviet Communism and that it isn't pretty. "Where were you?" The 'Burner' asked. "Afghanistan and Kyrgyzstan." I said. He squinted at me and frowned, "Whatever."

I then told them that Communism removes the 'humanity' out of governance. I told them that in a Communistic society, the 'essence of the individual' is sacrificed upon the alter of the state. The 'Cruiser' interrupted me right there and said (this is an actual quote, I will never forget it), "Yeah, America really cares about the individual. NOT! So what if America doesn't allow for slavery ON THESE SHORES! They just get their slaves in other countries like Mexico and Thailand and El Salvador and China." I cut him off right there (rude, I know) and said, "I thought you said China 'owned the US'?" He ignored me and said, "They send the slave-type jobs overseas and make a mint!" I conceded that point. Truth be told, I do think American corporations send out for a lot of cheap labor that is only sparsely regulated; jobs that could keep America from the double-digit unemployment it currently has.

Once they saw that they had - in fact - made an actual point, they decided to retire as champions and bade me farewell. Which was a pity, because I so wanted to ask them how they liked being hypocrites for wearing Nike sneakers (made in China) and Quicksilver T-shirts (made in Mexico). However, poetic justice was to be had after all. They went to the clerk to buy the books they had picked out, and proceeded to balk that the store did not take credit/debit cards (the total was a measly 17 dollars...apparently communists don't carry cash), they settled for one book and left...IN A MERCEDES BENZ. Go figure...

What I am reading now:
You Can Change - Tim Chester (devotional)
The Call - Os Guiness
No Country for Old Men - Cormac McCarthy
Marxism for Dummies and Un-Washed Benz-Driving Hipsters: - No, not really

Friday, April 1, 2011

3rd Post: Dare I hope?

"You could have a situation where you achieve the military goal and not achieve the political goal [of Libyan regime change]." - US Defense Secretary Robert Gates

In the article posted here ( http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/04/01/defense-secretary-robert-gates-opposed-arming-rebels_n_843428.html ) it is made clear that Secretary Gates is a man of - in DC at least - un-common sense. He does not believe it will be prudent to arm the Libyan rebels. In this I concur. Now, those of you who know me, know that I am very much pro-military and - being a combat veteran - fully support the US military's endeavors abroad. However, peace-keeping and rebel-arming are two seemingly intrinsic, but in reality, two diametrically opposed actions; actions that have historically created nightmares for the USA. Examples:

-Iran 1953: The Popularly elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddeq nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and the British reached out to the fledgling CIA to assist in the overthrow. They did so and put the Shah in power. (Ironically, in 1978 the US did nothing as the Ayatollah took over the country and turned it into its current incarnation).

-Iraq 1959: The CIA paid Saddam Hussein to assassinate Prime Minister Abd al-Karim Qasim (who initiated the Coup 'detat to overthrow the Iraqi Monarchy in '58)...as you will see in the article below...it all went swimmingly.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article2849.htm

-Chile 1970: The CIA supported a Coup that led to the assassination of the popularly elected President Salvador Allende. Who was put into power as a result? General Augusto Pinochet

-Afghanistan 1980: House Rep Charlie Wilson (D) almost single-handedly drug the US/CIA into the middle of the Soviet/Afghan conflict. Getting hundreds of millions of dollars and weapons (missiles, etc.) into the hands of Afghan rebels (and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar now a noted Taliban leader). The logic behind it was to create a 'Vietnam' for the Soviets, the way the Soviets turned Vietnam into 'Vietnam' for us. Needless to say...the long-term ramifications of those kinds of weapons/training in the hands of Radical Imam controlled fighters were not considered.

Those are just four examples, but I have long said that the greatest enemy of the United States today is the United States of 40 years ago. A policy of forced capitulation (in the case of Chile, to stop the nationalization of American-owned copper mines and the ATT Corp; In the case of Iran, to stop the nationalization of the oil), and/or one of 'Stop Communism at all costs' has caused today's USA nothing but problems.

This particular article gives me hope that a page has been turned.

"Gates and [Admiral Mike] Mullen said that if the rebels are to get arms and training, countries other than the U.S. should provide that assistance. And they stressed that the U.S. still does not have enough good information about who the disparate opposition forces are."

Brilliant. As in the aforementioned examples, there appeared to be no long-term understanding of what these Coups would perpetrate. It was all contingent upon what would benefit the US at that particular time. Now, at least there seems to be some malice of forethought.

"I know that I am preoccupied with avoiding mission creep [definition: slow down the process and cause things to creep along] and avoiding having an open-ended, very large scale American commitment in this," said Gates. "We are in serious budget trouble."

Again, this is music to my ears! The Department of Defense is counting their pennies. Now, I firmly believe that when America is threatened there should be no ledger kept. I mean, who is going to count the dollars when we're all using Yen/Won? In this particular case, a close-kept eye on Defense resources will enable saved funds to continue on to troops/missions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Alas...it would seem there are still bad habits to avoid:

The defense leaders also made it clear to Congress that there will be no U.S. military ground forces in Libya. They would not comment on reports that the CIA has small teams working with the Libyan rebels.

Uh-oh...in my aforementioned examples...how many included the CIA? This could not end well. But wait, it gets better:

Separately, the State Department said the U.S. was not involved in the defection of Gadhafi's top diplomat, Moussa Koussa, although a U.S. diplomat had talked with Koussa. "He's obviously been a part of the Gadhafi regime for many, many years," State Department spokesman Mark Toner said. "I obviously don't want to talk about what conversations we may be having with him and what kind of intelligence we may be able to gather from him, but he certainly has a wealth of information to share, should he decide to."

This brings to mind a certain fellow by the name of Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi and this article will sum him up nicely ( http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/feb/15/curveball-iraqi-fantasist-cia-saddam ).

As well as this bloke, Former Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri and these two articles sum him up nicely - do please read both in order. ( http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/22/AR2006032202103.html ) and ( http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/blumenthal/2007/09/06/bush_wmd/ )

So, we have one man who just wanted to see Iraq free from Saddam and lied to do it, and another who was so tantalizingly close with his assessments, but not close enough to warrant a push for Iraq/US aggression so they had to 'play it up' a bit. Let us hope that whatever Moussa 'My Mother Obviously Hated Me" Koussa tells the CIA, no nose growth shows (eh, eh? Anyone?) and that they give briefings using his statements verbatim (Definition: word for word).

I could insert the old adage about 'those who ignore history...' blah blah blah. I instead shall turn to a (globally speaking) lesser-known proverb, "Like a dog returns to his vomit is a fool who repeats his folly." Proverbs 26:11

I hope I am making my point. Here the US stands on a similar precipice. Rarely does one get to see history re-lived so soon. I do not think that American troops should go to Libya. Sending American air-craft/bombers is acceptable to me because it is obvious to all what they are trying to accomplish (the prevention of potential civilian massacres). However, once you place uniformed troops into another country one of two things tends to happen: 1) The opposition stops fighting - or at least stops fighting hard. They let the Americans take on the tougher elements and subsequently sit back and plan their factional power-grabs (A la Sunnis, Shiites and the Kurds) while American troops absorb all of the casualties. OR 2) They fight along-side the Americans but, obviously, the American forces have greater and greater victories thus highlighting the ineptitude of the freedom fighters/rebels  and muting their accomplishments and - ultimately - decreasing their status in the eyes of the general population (A la the current Iraqi government). Thus, when the American’s pull out, it appears there are weak people in power propped up only by Amercian hands and they become targets themselves either to outside forces (Iran) OR inside factions (Al Queda Iraq).

I am drawing a lot of unfavorable lines back to the Iraq invasion, so let me be clear. I support my brothers and sisters-in-arms there now, there then and there soon. Their mission is good and their goals admirable. I believe we did not go there for oil (as evidenced by the fact we have received no significant deal on Iraqi oil so far...its oil export is still governed by OPEC) and I believe that Saddam would have used WMDs on the US or Israel if he could have.

WITH THAT SAID!!!

If George H.W. Bush had given even token support to the Iraqi people post Gulf War, Saddam would most likely have been ousted and - perhaps - a more stable people-led government would be in place today. Which takes me back to my long-time phrase ('the US of 40 years ago v. US today'). Saddam in power led to the New Iraq War. I hope Libya plays out differently and I will leave you with this quote: 'Freedom won is freedom earned and freedom earned is freedom appreciated and freedom appreciated is freedom well deserved.' - Anonymous

DISCLAIMER: I wrote this intermittently throughout the day (there were many interruptions)...so, if it does not seem to be gelling...well, then it's your fault.

Thoughts?

FIN

Friday, March 25, 2011

2nd Post: Tales From The Ridge excerpt

The following is an excerpt from my future (ever?) novel/memoir/fire-fodder titled 'Tales From The Ridge'. Please know that 9-out of 10 people who come to The Ridge are genuinely in need of assistance and I am more than happy to help, listen, converse, whatever is necessary to show them the light of Christian love and compassion. Many people are positively impacted and genuinely blessed and I am equally blessed to assist them. However, there is always one...that ONE person who comes around every now and then and what results from our interaction is no less than a tale of TOTAL AWESOMENESS. Those tales are the inspiration for this book. I have changed all names, I have changed all likenesses. The stories are all true...and they are all hysterical...to me, at least.

Chapter 7: Geography Lesson

It was a Monday like any other, busy and full of promise. Suddenly, the radio was alive with the digitized dulcet tones of our Receptionist, Debra.
"ED! THIS IS DEBRA!"
"Go ahead, Debra."
"WE HAVE A 'GUEST'!"
"I'll be right there."
"OK!"
'Guest' is code for someone seeking benevolence...and no, Debra does not know how to not yell into the radio.


I strolled into the Welcome Center and found a white male, aged 45-48, with seven teeth and a duffel bag (which, comparatively speaking, is more than many of the people who come to us can claim positive possession of).

I approached and extended my hand in greeting.
"Hello there, My name is Ed Purchase. How can I help you today, brother?"
"I'm not your brother. You can call me Kenny."
"Ok, Kenny. How can I help you today?"
"I was told I could come here...I was robbed yesterday and they took everythi...I'm not drunk and I been clean for 48 months...I need clothes...I have books...my shirt is dirty...I work for ABC fixtures on Commercia...I was promised help if I came here...I want coffee."
That all came out at nearly the same time, and I would swear in court it came out all in one boozy breath. I informed him that the clothing closet and food pantry were only open during the week from 3PM-5PM and since it was 11AM, if he would please come back then (there are school classes held in that room). He took this pretty well, and said he would return.

The End.

No, that's not what happened. Not at all. This is The Ridge, and we hold the lease on Crazy.

"I can't come back...The Japs'll get me...They want revenge...for Hiroshima in '41."
"Uhhh..." (so help me, I really should know better) "I think Hiroshima was in '45, Ken."
"It's Kenny...and you don't know very much about Geography do you, buck-o?"
"Wait...What?"
"Geography. I been studying the Mediterranean...The Suez Canal...Egypt is invaded now and the Suez is closed for the first time in 3,000 years...when the Aztecs did it."

I should have laughed. I should have asked him again politely to leave. I really should have tried harder to control my urge to bathe freely in his mania. I did none of those things, and for that you can thank me later.

"Well, Ken..."
"Kenny."
"Right. Kenny...Egypt isn't actually invaded. That's their people causing all that ruckus. Also, I don't think the Aztecs have ever been to Egypt and if they had, I am quite sure they would have sent me a postcard, because I am 1/14th Aztec and Aztecs know it is rude to not send postcards."
"They were so...and and and...don't you know where Egypt is?"
"I do. It's in North Africa."
"Do you know where Morocco is?"
"North Africa."
"Do you know where Sudan is?"
"North Africa."
"Do you know where Tunisia is?"
"North Africa."
Do you know where Algeria is?"
"North Afr...Ok, you got me. Where is Algeria?"
"Next to Egypt. Do you know what else is next to Egypt? The Tigris River. The Euphrates. The Amazon. AND THE SUEZ CANAL! It's all right there, man...it's all right there. I know this, because I've been studying the Mediterranean."
"You have? Where?"

Now, all this time I have been maneuvering 'Kenny' outside and had succeeded in getting him out onto the patio in front of the Welcome Center. At that question, he stopped suddenly.
"Here! Right here."
He dropped his duffel bag with a thud and opened it. I was surprised to see that he did - in fact - have books in there.
"I've been studying The Mediterranean in this book, right here!"
He then produced and held aloft a copy of 'The Mediterranean Diabetes Cookbook' by Amy Riolo.
"I see..."
"You obviously don't know much about Geography."
"Oh, obviously."
"You should read more books about the Mediterranean."
"I will...I'll call my Aztec cousins and have them mail me some."
"You should. You really REALLY should. That kind of learning is important. Otherwise, you won't know where you are when you get there. I bet you never even seen sand before." He shook his head sadly.
"Probably not. Time to go Ken..."
"Kenny."
"Right, Kenny...time to go, brother...
"Not your brother."
I exhaled slowly...
"Yeeeeaaaaahhhhh...Bye-bye, bud."
"Read books and drink more coffee...I do and look at me; I'm no communist."

FIN

Monday, March 21, 2011

First blog. RANT TIME!!!

Random Rants - Volume 1:

- Parkour is a fad. A High-minded anti-etablishment protest for athletic yuppie hipsters who need to work out all of their angst, granola binges and exclusivist boutique-procured overly-caffeinated beverages. Disclaimer: I wish I could do it.

- The Florida Panthers are owned by an incompetent goober who entrusted his team to a salesman more interested in selling add space on the mascot's tookus than fielding a competitive product.

- Weezer needs to just put out B-side comps (for the uninitiated: compilation albums of un-released songs).

- JK Rowling can never write a successful story about anything else...ever. Not her fault, not her fault.

- Everything Bieber touches turns to Platinum. Everything I touch gives me germs. Fair?

- Fox News AM show 'Fox and Friends' just showed a bit on how Obama is "Seeing the sites in Rio while the world is in turmoil. Is that appropriate?" Then they said, "10 years ago today, Destiny’s Child had a number one video for 'Say My Name'. We'll be right back." Which one was that? Fair or Balanced? I can never tell.

My Wife (whom I love) has made me promise to read the books I have before I obtain any more. I made myself a list...and seeing as there were so many...I decided to read two at a time. Since I would naturally gravitate to more entertaining works vs. books that would actually teach me something, I separated the list into two categories: Must and Want. I will read two books at one time and only when both are finished will I move on to the next two. I have already finished 'How Shall We Then Live' by Francis Schaeffer, 'Killing Pablo' by Mark Bowden and 'The Pearl' by John Steinbeck.

What I am reading now:
You Can Change - Tim Chester
Death of a Salesman - Arthur Miller
My Twitter feed - Because I can