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- Thomas Jefferson

Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Remembrance Day
The Missouri foothills have been both the home and final resting place for my family going back seven generations. Along about the 1850s Thomas Ryerson was the first in the line to settle in the Oak Hill community to try and pull a living out of hardscrabble ground. He married a Souders girl, and others who followed him provided the family names woven into our history. Not that you'd be so inclined, but you'd be hard pressed to find a map with Oak Hill on it as the town has been all but defunct for at least the last couple of these generations.

The old bank and few other buildings still stand, but it takes a discerning eye and even a reliable guide to get you back to what's left of the town, and the few squatters there probably like it that way. A visit there is best assayed in daylight. It's still largely a rural area and the cemeteries typically don't bear fancy, aspirational names suggesting peace and eternity. Many are named after the original farmstead where the cemetery is located and some may be named for a community now as dead as those who are buried in its namesake. Significant numbers of my ancestors rest in the Oak Hill cemetery or at the Mounts farm.

My maternal grandfather used to take me out to Oak Hill when I was a boy to walk among the stones and tell me stories about the people he knew there. Most of these I've forgotten, but I've always remembered the headstone of a girl named Bonnie because she had been about my age (at the time of my first visit) when she died in the early 40s in an automobile accident. Her headstone featured a black and white photo of a blonde girl. Eight years ago my grandfather finally caught up with his friends and family and we brought him back to Oak Hill at the head of a procession that was so long that at one point I looked back and could see the road running across three hilltops and every car in sight was part of the cortege.

Memorial Day weekend and I'm back in the family stomping grounds so I offer to take my grandmother, who will be 89 this June, out to Mounts to visit her mother's grave and to Oak Hill. Like my grandfather before me I also bring along a youngster, my 11-year-old daughter.


Can We Use It Just til We Need Glasses?
U.S. health officials are looking into reports that Viagra may have caused blindness in some men: Viagra Vision Link Raises Red Flag.

Monday, May 30, 2005

Memorial Day: Congressional Medal of Honor Winners Yabes and Gordon

MAXIMO YABES
Born: January 29, 1925
War: Vietnam
Rank: First Sergeant, U.S. Army
Location of Action: Near Phu Hoa Dong
Date of Action: February 26, 1967


Official Medal of Honor Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty. 1st Sgt. Yabes distinguished himself with Company A, which was providing security for a land clearing operation.

Early in the morning the company suddenly came under intense automatic weapons and mortar fire followed by a battalion sized assault from 3 sides. Penetrating the defensive perimeter the enemy advanced on the company command post bunker. The command post received increasingly heavy fire and was in danger of being overwhelmed.

When several enemy grenades landed within the command post, 1st Sgt. Yabes shouted a warning and used his body as a shield to protect others in the bunker. Although painfully wounded by numerous grenade fragments, and despite the vicious enemy fire on the bunker, he remained there to provide covering fire and enable the others in the command group to relocate. When the command group had reached a new position, 1st Sgt. Yabes moved through a withering hail of enemy fire to another bunker 50 meters away. There he secured a grenade launcher from a fallen comrade and fired point blank into the attacking Viet Cong stopping further penetration of the perimeter.

Noting 2 wounded men helpless in the fire swept area, he moved them to a safer position where they could be given medical treatment. He resumed his accurate and effective fire killing several enemy soldiers and forcing others to withdraw from the vicinity of the command post. As the battle continued, he observed an enemy machinegun within the perimeter which threatened the whole position. On his own, he dashed across the exposed area, assaulted the machinegun, killed the crew, destroyed the weapon, and fell mortally wounded.

1st Sgt. Yabes' valiant and selfless actions saved the lives of many of his fellow soldiers and inspired his comrades to effectively repel the enemy assault. His indomitable fighting spirit, extraordinary courage and intrepidity at the cost of his life are in the highest military traditions and reflect great credit upon himself and the Armed Forces of his country.



GARY I. GORDON
Born: August 30, 1960
Military Action: Somalia
Rank: Master Sergeant, U.S. Army
Location of Action: Mogadishu, Somalia
Date of Action: October 3, 1993


Official Medal of Honor Citation: Master Sergeant Gordon, United States Army, distinguished himself by actions above and beyond the call of duty on 3 October 1993, while serving as Sniper Team Leader, United States Army Special Operations Command with Task Force Ranger in Mogadishu, Somalia.

Master Sergeant Gordon's sniper team provided precision fires from the lead helicopter during an assault and at two helicopter crash sites, while subjected to intense automatic weapons and rocket propelled grenade fires. When Master Sergeant Gordon learned that ground forces were not immediately available to secure the second crash site, he and another sniper unhesitatingly volunteered to be inserted to protect the four critically wounded personnel, despite being well aware of the growing number of enemy personnel closing in on the site.

After his third request to be inserted, Master Sergeant Gordon received permission to perform his volunteer mission. When debris and enemy ground fires at the site caused them to abort the first attempt, Master Sergeant Gordon was inserted one hundred meters south of the crash site. Equipped with only his sniper rifle and a pistol, Master Sergeant Gordon and his fellow sniper, while under intense small arms fire from the enemy, fought their way through a dense maze of shanties and shacks to reach the critically injured crew members.

Master Sergeant Gordon immediately pulled the pilot and the other crew members from the aircraft, establishing a perimeter which placed him and his fellow sniper in the most vulnerable position. Master Sergeant Gordon used his long range rifle and side arm to kill an undetermined number of attackers until he depleted his ammunition. Master Sergeant Gordon then went back to the wreckage, recovering some of the crew's weapons and ammunition.

Despite the fact that he was critically low on ammunition, he provided some of it to the dazed pilot and then radioed for help. Master Sergeant Gordon continued to travel the perimeter, protecting the downed crew. After his team member was fatally wounded and his own rifle ammunition exhausted, Master Sergeant Gordon returned to the wreckage, recovering a rifle with the last five rounds of ammunition and gave it to the pilot with the words, "good luck." Then, armed only with his pistol, Master Sergeant Gordon continued to fight until he was fatally wounded.

His actions saved the pilot's life. Master Sergeant Gordon's extraordinary heroism and devotion to duty were in keeping with the highest standards of military service and reflect great credit upon him, his unit and the United States Army.


These and other Congressional Medal of Honor citations may be found at Military Connections.

Sunday, May 29, 2005

Memorial Day: Congressional Medal of Honor Winner Jedh Colby Barker


JEDH COLBY BARKER
Born: June 20, 1945
War: Vietnam
Rank: Lance Corporal, U.S. Marine Corps
Location of Action: Near Con Thein
Date of Action: September 21, 1967



Official Medal of Honor Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as a machine gunner with Company F.

During a reconnaissance operation L/Cpl. Barker's squad was suddenly hit by enemy sniper fire. The squad immediately deployed to a combat formation and advanced to a strongly fortified enemy position, when it was again struck by small arms and automatic weapons fire, sustaining numerous casualties. Although wounded by the initial burst of fire, L/Cpl. Barker boldly remained in the open, delivering a devastating volume of accurate fire on the numerically superior force.

The enemy was intent upon annihilating the small marine force and, realizing that L/Cpl. Barker was a threat to their position, directed the preponderance of their fire on his position. He was again wounded, this time in the right hand, which prevented him from operating his vitally needed machine gun.

Suddenly and without warning, an enemy grenade landed in the midst of the few surviving marines. Unhesitatingly and with complete disregard for his personal safety, L/Cpl. Barker threw himself upon the deadly grenade, absorbing with his body the full and tremendous force of the explosion. In a final act of bravery, he crawled to the side of a wounded comrade and administered first aid before succumbing to his grievous wounds.

His bold initiative, intrepid fighting spirit and unwavering devotion to duty in the face of almost certain death undoubtedly saved his comrades from further injury or possible death and reflected great credit upon himself, the Marine Corps, and the U.S. Naval Service. He gallantly gave his life for his country.

This and other Congressional Medal of Honor citations may be found at Military Connections.

Saturday, May 28, 2005

Memorial Day: Congressional Medal of Honor Winner Cornelius H. Charlton



CORNELIUS H. CHARLTON
Born: 1929
War: Korea
Rank: Sergeant, U.S. Army
Location of Action: Near Chipo-ri
Date of Action: June 2, 1951



Official Medal of Honor Citation: Sergeant Cornelius H. Charlton, Infantry, United States Army, a member of Company C 24th Infantry Regiment, 25th Infantry Division, distinguished himself by conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty in action against the enemy on 2 June 1951, near Chipo-ri, Korea.

His platoon was attacking heavily defended hostile positions on commanding ground when the leader was wounded and evacuated. Sergeant Charlton assumed command, rallied the men, and spearheaded the assault against the hill. Personally eliminating two hostile positions and killing six of the enemy with his rifle fire and grenades, he continued up the slope until the unit suffered heavy casualties and became pinned down. Regrouping the men he led them forward only to be again hurled back by a shower of grenades.

Despite a severe chest wound, Sergeant Charlton refused medical attention and led a third daring charge which carried to the crest of the ridge. Observing that the remaining emplacement which had retarded the advance was situated on the reverse slope, he charged it alone, was again hit by a grenade but raked the position with a devastating fire which eliminated it and routed the defenders. The wounds received during his daring exploits resulted in his death but his indomitable courage, superb leadership, and gallant self-sacrifice reflect the highest credit upon himself the infantry, and the military service.


This and other Congressional Medal of Honor citations may be found at Military Connections.

Friday, May 27, 2005

Job Applications
A recent post by King Banaian at SCSU Scholars and Thursday's Backfence from Lileks in the StarTribune have had me thinking about the various jobs I held when I was younger and the things I learned before I snagged the college sheepskin.

My introduction to the workforce came when I was 12 and started pumping gas at my father's service station. These were the days when a service station really meant service, not "self-service." We washed windows, checked the oil and sometimes the tires, and tried to mollify customers upset when the price went up from 34 to 36 cents per gallon overnight. After a busy summer day it would seem as if I could still hear the driveway bell ringing in my ears. I remember the heat of accidentally laying my bare arm on a blisteringly hot piece of chrome and the chill of gasoline splashing on my leg, and standing on tiptoes to reach the last blob of bug guts in the middle of a windshield.

This was also where I learned that a screw-up by me or one of the other pump jockeys reflected on the man who's name was on the business, and it was drilled into me how important it was to remember customers' names, to meet and even anticipate their needs and to build repeat business. In contrast, several years later I went to work for a gas station located on an interstate instead of a neighborhood, and went about my job the first day in the way I had been trained. After about an hour the owner called me over and profanely asked me what I thought I was doing washing windows and talking to people. "Give 'em their gas, get their money and get them out of here to make room for the next guy," was the gist of it. "You're never going to see these people again," he said.

In between those jobs I took a position as a lifeguard at a municipal pool in a small town. I'd already had Red Cross training and I was told it was an easy job sitting in the sun where you were supposed to watch girls. Sounded good to me...except that it turned out that anyone over the age of 12 in that town swam in the river and the young ones who came to the pool were trying to stay in training over the summer for annoying their teachers. I also learned that no matter how I sat, or what lotion I used, I was almost incapable of tanning and that no one trusted a pale lifeguard.

I lasted a month and then took a job on a county road crew cutting brush and repairing pot holes. Here I discovered that I'm not allergic to poison ivy and that ticks can get into the darndest places. Once, when I swung my brushhook into a leafy trunk I cut through an unseen piece of barbed wire which, released from tension, whipped out and sliced through the sleeve of my tee-shirt, leaving me an impressive scar on my bicep that I could later tell my children I received in a knife fight (and watch their eyes get as big around as some of those engorged ticks). I also did stints driving anchor rods into the ground for mobile homes with an 8-lb. sledge hammer or, if the ground was especially rocky, a 20-lb. post maul. A couple of times I also found myself standing on the roof of a mobile home, applying KoolSeal coating to the shiny, aluminum skin in the summer heat while the soles of my sneakers fused with uncoated parts of the metal.

Believe me, this was one kid who never had a problem going back to school in the fall.

Even this wasn't much of an escape. One Saturday morning when I was home from college my father asked me what my future plans were and how far I wanted to go with my education. Then he said he was going to help me get a PhD - and took me out to the back yard and handed me a post hole digger.

What does it all mean? I don't know. Sometimes those days come back to me when I feel an ache in my fingers as I squeeze the handle of the gas pump when I fill my own car, or finger the scar on my arm. I know those jobs marked me in subtler ways as well. I'm not nostalgic about them, but they do help me appreciate what I have. I remember that putting others first is ultimately how you build a successful business, that even the biggest job can be whittled down to size if you just keep hacking, that a sledge hammer can get you a better night's sleep than a spreadsheet. And I know I will never take another job that involves wearing a swim suit.

Wednesday, May 25, 2005

We, the Jury
Historical note: 218 years ago today the Constitutional Convention got underway at Independence Hall in Philadelphia. The convention did away with the original Articles of Confederation and replaced them with our Constitution. Thanks, guys!

There has been much debate and concern lately about judges having the authority to override the will of the people as reflected in the legislative process. Not much has been said about the power of the people as represented by a jury to overrule judges.

I just finished conducting a seminar on Constitutional myths and facts. One of the items we covered was the court system and an individual's right to a jury trial in both criminal and civil court. Why was jury trial so important to the founders that they felt they needed to secure it for civil offences and other particulars in the Bill of Rights? (link)

The Constitution, Article III, Section 2, Paragraph 3:
The Trial of all Crimes, except in Cases of Impeachment, shall be by Jury; and such Trial shall be held in the State where the said Crimes shall have been committed; but when not committed within any State, the Trial shall be at such Place or Places as the Congress may by Law have directed.

The Bill of Rights:
Amendment VI
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.

Amendment VII
In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.

Amendment VIII
Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.
I propose that it is because the founders were concerned that judges would eventually usurp the true power of the jury.

Historically the principle of common law jury or trial by country has ruled. This was first established on June 15, 1215 at Runnymede, England when King John signed the Magna Carta. The first Supreme Court Justice, John Jay, put it best when he said, in the case of George Vs Brailsford (3 Dall 1):

"It is presumed, that juries are the best judges of facts; it is, on the other hand, presumed that courts are the best judges of law. But still both objects are within your power of decision ... you have a right to take it upon yourselves to judge of both, and to determine the law as well as the fact in controversy."
Many today are not aware that that right is afforded to a jury. As recently as 1972, however, the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that the jury has an "unreviewable and irreversible power - to acquit in disregard of instructions on the law given by the trial judge."(US vs Dougherty, 473 F 2d 1113, 1139).

If a jury feels a law is unjust the jury has the power to acquit. This was also the decision in the appeals of US vs Moylan, 417 F 2d 1002, 1006 (1969). Additionally, on June 24, 2004 the Supreme Court ruled that a judge couldn't boost a sentence with out the jury weighing in. This in itself brings forth the fact that jurors need to be aware of their duties and rights.

Why have you not heard of these duties and rights? Because it is the citizen's responsibility to know the rights and duties of being a juror.

Let's look again at US vs Dougherty. Another quote from this 1972 case was: "The fact that there is widespread existence of the jury's prerogative, and approval of its existence as a necessary counter to case hardened judges and arbitrary prosecutors, does not establish as an imperative that the jury must be informed by the judge of that power." This is not surprising when you look back to 1895 and the case of Sparf vs US (156 US 51). The court ruled that although juries have the right to ignore a judge's instruction on the law, they do not have to be made aware of their right to do so.

As a citizen you also need to be aware that there are efforts to keep those with this knowledge out of the jury box. We as concerned citizens can learn about those tactics by learning about court procedures. This information can be found in the "Advanced Trial Handbook" produced by Ervin A. Gonzalez and available here.

Be prepared the next time you are called for jury duty or in a court of law. You may save yourself or someone else from pain and suffering.

If you want to know more about your rights and duties as a juror review other sources here and here.

Be Blessed!
All Rise
Scott at Powerline posted this tribute from Justice George Nicholson of California's Third Apellate District Court of Appeal to Presiding Judge Robert K. Puglia, who recently passed away. Included in the account is the moving and personal eulogy that was delivered at his funeral by California Supreme Justice Janice Rogers Brown, whose District Court nomination will soon be debated in the U.S. Senate. Her words help us know the man - and her - so much better, and is well worth reading.

Scott's post also includes the famous "Freedom Is Not Free" speech Justice Puglia gave to the San Joaquin County Bar Association, the last paragraph I've excerpted here:

The rule of law relies on a fragile consensus, which remarkably has endured and allowed us, uniquely among the nations of the world, to live as free people for more than 200 years. It is the guarantor of our freedoms. It emits the glow that illuminates the shining city on the hill, the glow that is never so brilliant as when contrasted to the ominous shadows cast by the brutal tyrannies which have threatened our national existence in this century. More than anything else, the rule of law is at the heart of American exceptionalism. That is the unique place that America occupies among the community of nations.

If your faith in our judicial system and its judges has been diminished by the political circuses of late, reading the Powerline post can be very encouraging.

Tuesday, May 24, 2005

Who's Your Daddy - Big Brother?
My teenage daughter, Faith, loves the Expedia jingle and singing the nasal-sounding phrase at the end of their commercials. A while back we were watching something on television when an Expedia ad came on and she belted out "DOT-COMMMM" in unison with the tv. I looked over at her and said, "Your life is just filled with simple, inexpensive pleasures, isn't it?"

To which she replied, "You wish."

I was reminded of this vignette yesterday after reading two apparently unrelated news stories. The first was in the StarTribune's Business section and described Senator Tom Harkin's concern over the affect advertising has on children and his proposed legislation to control how food companies flog junk food to kids (Aiming at Kids: Pressure Builds on Foodmakers).

At first glance this seemed like some well-intentioned (isn't it always?) nannying, especially since he'd like to limit the use of cute cartoon characters to hustle over-sweetened killer calories. (And somewhere right now Joe Camel shakes his head and says, "Dude, been there.") Sen. Harkin loses me, however, by saying that it takes a law to keep children from being confused by conflicting messages from cartoon characters and their parents.

It's not that I don't recognize the influence of television, and that there aren't a lot of even more insidious messages embedded there that undermine parents, but a little leprechaun is risking his lucky charms if he thinks he's going to override the way my wife and I raise our kids. Are they going to obey a cartoon or their Daddy? (Yeah, I suppose our authoritarianism is crushing their little spirits, but at least they're not choking to death on their own suet.)


The Old Ball Game
Last night you had two teams that really don't like each other go at it again. The team ahead in the standings looked to be a clear cut favorite, but a combination of poor clutch hitting, base running errors and the veteran team leaders looking like overmatched rookies let them snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

But enough about the Senate. Did anyone hear how the Twins did last night against Cleveland?
What the Eck?
What do Luke Skywalker, Adolf Hitler and Eric Draven from The Crow have in common?

Read Kevin Ecker's responses to my five "interview me" questions over at The Eckernet and find out as we take a tour through the mind of someone who was blogging before there were blogs.

Please, no flash photography and for your own safety, stay inside the velvet ropes.

Monday, May 23, 2005

(Re)Live Blogging the MOB at GCFB
No, I didn't live blog the St. Cloud MOB gathering at Granite City Food & Brewery because putting a computer screen in front of my face is like throwing a high, outside fastball to Torii Hunter. We both know we should resist, but we can't help ourselves and we forget about everything else. If I was going to get sucked into anything Saturday night I wanted it to be the dynamic conversations of fellow MOBsters released from their basements. So, on a type-delay basis, here are my observations from the evening.

One, the Queen Banaian does not take a backseat to King in encylopedic knowledge or sparkling conversation. It was a delight to meet her and we enjoyed a stimulating discussion that ranged from soy cooking to the theatre, The Rules and, of course, The Mystery. My wife especially enjoyed the evening, while the Littlest Scholar and my youngest daughter found the most interesting part of the event to be the arrival of a hulking piece of Triple Chocolate cake - which they proceeded to demolish like Mitch Berg going through a Nick Coleman column. The flying forks looked like a light-saber duel from Revenge of the Sith.

Another plus of our fortuitous introduction was that Mrs. Scholar and Night Visions, poised at the twin entrances to our circular booth, were effective pickets against Kevin's efforts to buy beer for my oldest daughter. I finally helped him see reason: whatever threat I represented paled in comparison to what the management and the thirsty people of St. Cloud might do to him if he caused GCFB to lose its liquor license. At least that kept him busy until Cathy in the Wright (aka St. Kate from the MAWB Squad) could hit him - really hard. I don't know what that was about, but I think Cathy may sense that the Force is strong in my daughter and wants to talk to her about world domination.

Of course, the main appeal for an event like this is to meet the people behind the blogs I read, like fellow Mizzou alum Phil from Market Power, who brought me the distressing news that The Old Heidelberg - a campus tavern known in my day for its fried mushrooms and don't ask, don't tell approach to the 21-year-old drinking age - had burned down (and fortunately rebuilt). Phil is an economics prof at Mankata State and I thought it would be interesting to get he and King together to do an Iron Chef-type face-off on the ripple effect of a 10 cents per gallon increase in the gas tax, but no one else seemed to think this a good idea.

It was also fun to see the faces and feel the handshakes behind Heavy-Handed Politics (firm, but not crushing as you might expect) and Speed Gibson (a fellow Powerblogs user) and Martin Andrade, not to mention Flash from Centrisity.

A real highlight, however, was the chance to meet my Blog Buddy, Leo, from Pscymeistr's Ice Palace - a guy I never would have known if not for blogging but whose writing and insights I really appreciate - but not as much as I appreciate the encouragement he's given me.

Thanks, King, for organizing the evening and I look forward to seeing (and recognizing!) you and the other MOB members at future events!

Sunday, May 22, 2005

Passing It On: The "Interview Me" Meme Points to the Eckernet
Apparently my leverage as "Eckernet Reader of the Month" was enough to induce Kevin to volunteer for a turn in the bright lights of the "Interview Me" meme. I would have posted the questions sooner but I wanted to build traffic to my site by having Kevin check back repeatedly.

So, Kevin, here are your five questions. (Other readers may feel free to play along and post your answers to these questions in the Comments or on your own blog). I'll look for and link to your replies!

1. You have been referred to by some as "Young Jedi." Are you really like Luke Skywalker, or are you more Han Solo or ... Boba Fett?

2. What is the first book you read that affected the way you look at the world, and how? What type of books do you seek out now for your own entertainment or self-directed education?

3. How long have you been blogging and what were your objectives when you started? Have your reasons for blogging changed since you began? What has been the most surprising thing to you about blogging?

4. If you could have been an actor in any movie you've seen, what movie would it be and what character would you have played?

5. Describe the best day of your life so far.

(HT to Blogizdat for launching this meme.)

Friday, May 20, 2005

Oh, Theocracy!
There is much consternation, if not outright (outleft?) hysteria in the MSM of late regarding America's imminent theocracy. Indeed, in reading Maureen Dowd, Frank Rich, Paul Krugman or the rendering unto seizure that took place on the cover of Harper's it appears that the only uncertainty is whether or not theocracy is about to take over or if it already has.

All I can say is that if that rapturous moment has occurred I must have missed it ... and you might imagine my disappointment.

And if their vision of theocracy were truly upon us I don't think you'd see such open assaults where people of faith are compared to either the Taliban or the Nazis, which is interesting bit of name calling projection. Last I looked, it wasn't Christians who were going around trying to tear down religious monuments in front of City Hall, or acting like Brown Shirts intimidating others by throwing pies and trying to shout down opposing points of view. In fact the vilification - or demonization, if you will - through outrageous and even libelous hate speech of a particular group of people because of their religious beliefs just sounds so, oh, 1934, don't you think?

Yet for all their cries of oppression where they see religion crossing the line into areas they think should remain secular, the Secularists have no qualms about trying to enforce the secular on what others see as sacred. They will brook no criticism of their own ideals and insist they are being persecuted while simultaneously criticizing and undermining religious leaders (e.g., deriding the Pope as being too conservative, encouraging the Rainbow Sash escapades, trying to redefine marriage). Funny - Hitler persecuted and/or arrested German theologians who opposed him on spiritual grounds such as Niemoller, Bonhoeffer, and Barth and reconstituted the German church with officials willing to replace the Father with the Fuehrer. I read somewhere that that didn't turn out so well.

Here's the deal: this is really an old conflict - even older than WWII. (Public service announcement: Warning - scripture reference coming. Avert your eyes if sensitive to this type of material). Romans 12:2 tells believers not be be conformed to the world, but transformed by the renewing of our minds. It is the conflict of the outside world (which touches our flesh) and the inner man or woman (which is touched by the spirit). The secular world is all about forcing people to conform to their vision; the spiritual instinct is to see people transformed by God. And if they happen to change the way they vote as a result of that transformation, well, that's part and parcel of free will.

Secularists want the government to run things, which is why they get so concerned about who runs the government. (Even though what they really want is to be a law unto themselves). In their quest they want to run everything - schools, public square, social institutions and come against any who say they are not beholden to these or recognize a higher authority. That's because those who obey an authority higher than the government are more likely to cherish their individual right to their own conscience - and the renewed mind resists the old and does indeed become a law unto itself.

And frankly, I don't think that that is such a scary concept to most people, as I described here a couple of weeks ago. It certainly wasn't a scary thought to the founding fathers, as former New York Times reporter John McCandlish Phillips noted so well in the Washington Post (When Columnists Cry "Jihad!" - HT Michelle Malkin):

The fact is that our founders did not give us a nation frightened by the apparition of the Deity lurking about in our most central places. On Sept. 25, 1789, the text of what was later adopted as the First Amendment was passed by both houses of Congress, and subsequently sent to the states for ratification. On that same day, the gentlemen in the House who had acted to give us that invaluable text took another action: They passed a resolution asking President George Washington to declare a national day of thanksgiving to no less a perceived eminence than almighty God.

That's president , that's national, that's official and, alas, my doubting hearties, it's God; all wrapped up in a federal action by those who knew what they meant by the non-establishment clause and saw their request as standing at not the slightest variance from it. It's a pity our phalanx of columnists cannot crawl into a time machine to go back and reinstruct them.



Related posts from other sources:
Flown to the Roll: A Glittering Jewel of Ignorance.

Bogus Gold: "Dispelling the Theocracy Myth and Its Defenders" and "Sullivan, Goldberg and Theocrats, Oh My!"

Fox News: Lawmaker Hopes to Open Churches to Political Speech

Monday, May 16, 2005

A Night at the Prom
Regular readers of this blog know that my wife and I have a pretty simple philosophy when it comes to our teenage daughter, Faith, dating: No. (See here and here.) Therefore you might be surprised to hear that Faith went to the prom last Saturday night. And yes, there was a boy involved from an unrelated gene pool. How did this happen? One word: conspiracy.

Faith has a female cousin just a few months older than her and they've been best pals from the playpen. They both think that boys are nice to have around, but what really makes their hearts beat fast right now are prom dresses. I think we were still taking down Christmas decorations earlier this year when they hatched a plan for the spring dance.

The boy part was easy. The cousin has a boyfriend. The boyfriend has a best friend. The best friend wasn't doing anything the second Saturday in May. The deal was proposed and closed directly: the girls would buy the tickets, the guys would rent tuxes and buy dinner. Now - on to the Mall! It was about this point where my wife became a co-conspirator. I'm not sure how this was accomplished, exactly, but it may have involved lattes.

All I know is I was standing innocently in our kitchen a couple of months ago with my lovely wife and lovely daughter - two people I trusted implicitly - when Faith casually mentioned something about going to the prom. "Hmm," I said, "let me think about that a minute. No."

"I already told her she could go," my wife said, albeit sheepishly.

"Wha-," I said, as the floor began to open beneath me. I began to splutter: "Prom? Boys? Dark cars? Boys!"

I knew I was going down, but it didn't mean I had to make it easy for them. It was pretty clear that fashion, not passion, was behind the conspiracy and I knew that three of the four kids involved were more than trustworthy, while the fourth was new to me but appeared as if he valued his life. Nevertheless it was worked out that my wife would be one of the volunteer parent chaperones at the event, which would require her staying up well past her bedtime. It was also arranged so that the four youngsters would come to the house for a cook-out in advance so I could get to know the new guy better.

When they arrived for the cook-out we all visited for a little while in the living room, and then I went into the kitchen to prepare the hamburger patties, which required carving them from a tube of partially frozen ground beef. I cut a couple of patties with my heavy duty 10" chef's knife when I realized I needed more information. Walking back into the living room, I motioned to the new guy with the slightly dripping point of the knife. Contrary to Faith's report of the incident, the knife was nowhere near his face. I was easily three feet away. Two feet, at least. And besides, Faith can't be a reliable witness because she hid her face behind a sofa pillow when she saw me walk into the room. Nevertheless, knowing something about teenage boys, I had to ask an important question.

"How many burgers can you eat?" I asked the kid.

"How many do you want me to eat?" he said.

"Good answer!" my wife said.

"Kill me now," my daughter said.

Anyway, we all lived through the evening and the weeks leading up to prom seemed to fly by. On Saturday Faith went to her cousin's around noon to begin hair and make-up preparations. At 4:30 I joined the other parents and close family at my sister-in-law's house for the photo op. Altogether there were 11 adult paparazzi and half a dozen cameras flashing the four elegantly dressed youth. It looked like a Hollywood premiere. Faith was especially breathtaking with her hair exquisitely styled on top of her head, long sparkly earrings and an elegant dress that could have used another yard of fabric if you asked me, but no one did.

Then it was time for them to be off, and time for firm handshakes with each of the boys. "Drive wisely," I said, and my voice didn't crack a bit.

The evening went marvelously, and the youngsters were only a little late getting home after stopping to pick up late night tacos and wow the crowd at Taco Bell.

My wife also made it home from her chaperone assignment without falling asleep, largely due to the startling effect of watching what passes for dancing these days. You see, there's this thing called "freak" dancing - because it "freaks" parents out, I think - that involves a young lady(?) placing her fundament against her escort's crotch and both of them vigorously gyrating (music optional). It appears that girls have finally found a way to get the boys out on the dance floor. My wife felt as if she should get out on the floor as well, but with a bucket of water or a garden hose. She settled for prayer instead. It kind of makes the old notion of a guy hoping for a goodnight kiss seem a bit quaint, doesn't it? I mean, after three hours of something like that with teenaged nerve endings a peck on the cheek would be - oh, shall we say - anti-climactic?

Fortunately, the little flock she was most interested in appeared to be having a very good time but at more discreet distances. She does, however, admit to being discreet herself, letting them out of her sight for long, long stretches at a time.

As for the rest of you kids, though, be warned: she's calling your mothers.


Sunday, May 15, 2005

Free Speech: Gotta Love It
Mil-blogger joatmoaf at I Love Jet Noise found the following on the bottom of his flight boot the other day. It's from a blog called Forsake the Troops (joatmoaf's comments in plain text):

This website is proudly dedicated to the notion that our nation's military is grossly overcompensated, at the expense of the American taxpayers. Even as the evil, overspending Pentagon seeks to raise benefits for these scumbags, Forsake The Troops believes that these pukes get pay and benefits tax free when in a combat zone."

Verbatim prolog. I kid you not.
Here's more:

"Our problem is this: the military is a lifestyle these morons chose. What idiot risks their life for a country? It's what they chose. Forsake our Troops! They must think that if they go to war, they don't need to pay taxes just like the rest of us. Let 'em die in combat-- we don't need their ilk! "

I'm not going to give this deluded, anti-troop bowl of dog vomit any more direct links from this blog, or even build his Google index by mentioning the name again, but if you have to see what is there for yourself the URL is http://www.forsakethetroops.info/index.shtml. If you want more information, I'd rather any traffic go first to I Love Jet Noise, an excellent blog who's post on this subject includes Dog Vomit's supposed name and contact number. My reluctance to link to the offensive site, and to include the name and phone number here, is based on a strong hunch that this vomitous mass would love the attention. I probably should just let this pass without comment altogether and not even bother calling more attention to it - but if it's reaction he's after, then reaction is what he'll get.

The content of the blog is so bizarre and so far out beyond where even the bad taste buses run that I initially suspected some kind of Kaufman-esque attempt at humor, even though the sidebar claims the blogger is serious (perhaps a tip-off on its own account). Even if that's the case, he's gone so far that the only punchline I'm interested in at this point is the one that's forming outside his front door. Here are a couple more examples:

NINE MORE MARINES' CAREERS BLOW UP IN THEIR FACES
Don't military pukes learn anything? Nine more Marines bite the big one in combat. Stupid is as stupid does!

Number of US soldiers killed in the Iraq War, of their own doing, because they CHOSE to be leeches: 1,583. These scumbags deserved what they got.

Dog Vomit (and if there happens to be a blog out there that really is called "Dog Vomit" then I profusely apologize for putting your name in proximity with this bulging sphincter of a blog) also promotes a new blog under construction called "Forsake the Police" and includes wording that "this blog is sponsored by The Constitution and Free Speech." No hat tip, however, to the Armed Forces that have helped keep these - and Dog Vomit - living in the style to which they've become accustomed.

Friday, May 13, 2005

Happy Birthday, Little Miracle Flowers
The twins are two years old on the 14th!

Click to enlarge photo.

Rose (left) and Camille are twin blessings for my sister and her husband, and for our entire family.

Early in my sister's pregnancy the girls were identified as monoamniotic monochorionic twins, or "MoMos". This means they shared one amniotic sac, one chorionic sac and a single placenta. It is a very rare condition also very high risk with mortality as high as 50 percent. (You can find out more at this site.)

With God, all things are possible and a strong prayer chain also helps!

They are an active and charming pair and appear to have their own system of language and signals for communicating with each other. They're also very good at getting their points across with regular folk as well!

Happy Birthday, my dears!
UN-dignified
The always very funny Varifrank once again takes a firm grip on the obvious and then flips it over to look at what is underneath. Today he took a look at the criticism of John Bolton, the nominee for US ambassador to the UN.

John Bolton. To hear some talk about him you'd think President Bush appointed Satan's representative here on earth to be the UN Ambassador. Apparently the charges go something like this:

He's a bully.
He's got a funny mustache.
He doesnt like the UN.
He doesnt talk diplomatically.


Since these are serious charges, Varifrank took a look at the qualifications of some other ambassadors from other countries. For example:

Cuba
Ambassador FELIPE PEREZ ROQUE
Apparently he's a critic of the UN Too! But he's a good Marxist-Leninist, so I guess it's ok ... Well, when a Cuban thug criticizes you of not being a legitimate force for human rights, you just know you're screwed, don't you?
And the "Number 2" man at the Cuban UN Embassy was apparently recalled from his previous post as ambassador to Mexico after he broke into their embassy, how gauche...

Palestine
Ambassador to the UN - Dr. Nasser Al-Kidwa
And who's he? Oh he's the late Yasser Arafat's nephew. Oh, and since he's a doctor, he should know if the Israelis poisoned Chairman Arafat, but since he absconded with the medical records, who can tell?

Zimbabwe
Ambassador B.G.CHIDYAUSIKU

He's on record as calling the US "Imperialist". Well thats not very "diplomatic" now is it? ... Yeah. Let's be nice to him. Oh by the way, he's one of the architects of the internationally legal and multilateral boycott on genetically modified food which is keeping food from reaching people in Zimbabwe and thus keeping them compliant and under the control of their murdering dictatorship of a government, lead by the thug Robert Mugabe.

Russia
Ambassador ANDREY I. DENISOV
(photo)
Get a load of this goon. And people bitch about Bolton's mustache? Jeez, this guy could scare the paint off the walls! KGB? He damn well better be with a face like that.

France
Ambassador Jean-Marc de LA SABLIERE

...Now check this out. Apparently the French UN ambassador is an anti-catholic secularist bigot! I think that outdoes anything that John Bolton has been accused of by a good country mile.

"The French government attacked the Holy See delegation at a Wednesday meeting of the United Nations committee that considers official UN status for nongovernmental organizations. After the Holy See delegation made an argument for the UN to protect unborn children, France accused the Holy See of injecting 'moral' and 'religious criteria' into the debate."

Canada
Yvon Charbonneau
, Former Canadian Ambassador to the UN, was removed by Canadian PM Paul martin in 2004 and sent to france and to UNESCO.

And just who is Yvon Charbonneau?

Yvon Charbonneau, former Marxist president of the Province of Quebec’s second largest union, has been vociferously outspoken against Jews, both on the homefront and abroad ... During his years as union president, Mr. Charbonneau once "accused a prominent Montreal Jewish businessman of being an 'economic terrorist'.

Bolton sounds like just the guy to kick some ambassador.






Thursday, May 12, 2005

Interview Me: The "All About Me" Meme
As much as we might try to live our lives to the (hopefully high) standards we set for ourselves, it is perhaps our weak moments that expose and define us. In one such weak moment I succumbed to Sandy's MAWB Squad "interview me" invitation. I may have done this thinking it's a good idea to ingratiate one's self to the future rulers of the planet, but in the interim I rather hoped this indiscretion might fade away unnoticed. Not only was this hope in vain, I see now that the first three questions are not in the vein of "What is your name? What is your quest? What is your favorite color?"

Well nothing to it now but to do it, and realize that some people pay a lot of money to talk about their inner secrets, and this is free. If you, dear reader, would like to take a similar challenge, see the information at the end of this post and help keep this meme going.

1. Pick a country, any country, to emigrate to for a year. What country did you pick and why? Given the opportunity would you make the move? Could you convince your family to do it?
Someplace in the tropics sounds good on this rainy, 30-degree day in May, but then I really don't care for humidity and insects. I have long had a romantic notion, however, of having a smallish croft in Scotland, located on a promontory over the North Sea. I see myself tramping through the heather wearing a tweed coat or wooly sweater with a shawl collar and with a black dog romping nearby, then retiring to a snug stone cottage (complete with broadband and satellite tv so I can pick up ESPN) to read, write, meditate and see what the four seasons are like in this place. This fantasy usually involves someone sending me to this place for a year to write, just to see what may come out, so if this opportunity were offered I may have to take it.

Unfortunately, I'd probably have to do this alone since my Minnesota born and bred wife, who struggles daily to keep warm, has said she wants to spend the last half of her life in a warm climate (a challenge that is also starting to take on an actuarial aspect), and coastal Scotland doesn't fit that requirement. As for my daughters, the giftings in their lives would make such isolation an injustice to them and to the world. Still, if only for a year, ....

2. What do you fear and why do you fear it? What helps you to cope with your fear?


Wednesday, May 11, 2005

I Thought This Was the Original Whizzinator


Onterrio Smith Caught With Kit to Foil Drug Tests


Smith acknowledged to airport police that he was carrying dried urine, along with a device called "The Original Whizzinator" and a bottle of pills labeled "Cleansing Formula." He told police the kit was "for making a clean urine test," according to the police report, and said he was taking the materials to his cousin.

Mark Dayton, Call Your Office
Capitol, White House Evacuated Briefly.

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

Filings: The Catch of a Lifetime




The Minnesota Fishing Opener is this Sunday, and Mother's Day was last Sunday, which is a nice change from some recent years when these events have fallen on the same weekend. It has allowed me, however, to see some similarities between being a good fisherman and being a good husband - and I think I may have some pointers to share from my own experience with "the one that didn't get away" on how to have a trophy wife.

First, let me say that the things I don't know about fishing would fill a hundred books, judging by what I see in my library and at the outfitting stores. You can add several years worth of In-Fisherman magazines to that total as well, and do I have to mention all those television shows? I'm amazed at what you have to know if you expect to hook anything besides the meaty part of your thumb! Likewise maintaining a happy marriage can appear overwhelming at times. I know I've been skunked in both areas at times, but one thing I've realized is that experts gain their knowledge by fervently pursuing the sport they love. With that approach, becoming an expert is fun.

That applies to fishing and marriage. I love my wife and I love being married. Therefore in the 17 and a half years we've been married I've avidly sought out and collected many important bits of information about her in particular and marriage in general that have helped us become each other's favorite pastime. Here are a few tips that have worked for me:

CATCH AND RELEASE? First off, I'm not a big proponent of catch and release when it comes to marriage. I have found, however, that there is a lot of challenge and a lot of thrills in catching the same fish over and over again! I've found that the secret to this is not just to be married, but to be engaged!

THE RIGHT EQUIPMENT: The expert fishermen are always sharing information on what type of bait and what type of tackle to use for different conditions. They can tell you what to use on cloudy days, windy days, sunny days and days when the fish aren't hungry. They know what's best for trolling, jigging and casting and the preferred food of every species. I've wondered, though, how many of those guys know their wife's shoe size, or if she's an autumn, summer, spring or winter in her coloring? Early on I memorized my wife's sizes, favorite colors and preferred styles of clothing. Today, much of what she wears are things I've bought her either shopping on my own or when we're together. Now, I don't think a fish was ever caught because it was honored or flattered that someone had spent so much time and effort to learn about it, but it's sure made an impression on my wife!

LURES: When you think of lures you might think small, shiny objects or furry things work best but the real "power bait" is our words. Men are attracted by what they see (I know I've bought certain fishing lures because they looked good to me, never mind the fish) but women are moved by what they hear. Our words build our wives up and make them feel special and make our relationships special. I try to make sure my wife hears how much she means to me, how much I value her opinion - and how much I like the way she looks in those jeans. Certainly relying on my good looks to win my wife would be like me fishing for muskies with 4-pound test line. I've got to work those lures, paying attention to the conditions and water temperature. Oh, and I try to stay away from the crankbaits.

STRUCTURE: The experts I read are always talking about "structure" or "knowing the bottom" (but I'm not going there).

Monday, May 9, 2005

Avian Flu About to Take Wing?
Several weeks ago I posted an overview of the potential threat that the avian flu in Southeast Asia posed to the world population and economy. This post was based on information and interviews I'd gathered from credible sources as part of my regular job. Since this flu is genetically very similar to the deadly 1918 Spanish flu, my report included estimates by the Department of Health and Human Services of 1.7 million deaths in the U.S. alone if avian flu infected and killed the same percentages of Americans as the 1918 pandemic.

At the time of that post, the avian flu virus still needed an autogenic mutation that would allow it to be passed from human to human. There are now reports that this critical mutation may have taken place and the virus has broken out in seven clusters in and around Haiphong in northern Vietnam. You can read "Has the Next Flu Pandemic Started?" along with other updates at this blog, Avian Flu - What We Need to Know, which is devoted to aggregating reports on this virus.

By the way, the magazine article I was editing and referenced in my original post appeared in the April 15 issue of Risk & Insurance magazine and is reprinted in its entirety here. It includes a table showing projected deaths by age group in the U.S. One of the co-authors of that story, Dr. Michael Osterholm (director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy and a professor of public health at the University of Minnesota), also wrote an article last week for the New England Journal of Medicine describing the critical gaps in our global ability to contain such an outbreak. This article is also on the avian flu site and can be read here.

Keep in mind that the concerns of influenza experts are based on the strong similarities of the avian flu to the 1918 strain and the current logistical handicaps we would face in the event of an outbreak. Projections are still just projections, and the severity of the avian flu strain, if it has mutated, may be less depending on whatever other transformations also may have occurred in the last mutation. As the story in the second link above indicates, those who have been infected so far by presumed human-to-human contact have all recovered, so the strain may not be as lethal as its animal-to-human transmission variant.

That story also points out, however, that the 1918 pandemic also began with relatively mild cases in the spring, but by fall had envolved into a killer. If this topic interests you, I suggest you bookmark the Avian Flu blog.

Sunday, May 8, 2005

Closest to the Heart
When the dust had settled,
He took it in His mighty hand,
and squeezed it close together,
and then breathed life into a man.
He saw that one was not enough,
that man alone was just a part,
and so fashioned woman from a rib,
closest to the heart.

That's why she knows the rhythm,
of the Spirit's inner work;
her ears hear its direction,
and to its voice she is alert.
Some call it intuition,
when she perceives what God imparts,
but she's only taken her position,
closest to the heart.

And now each life beginning,
grows from a tiny seed within,
nurtured by her body,
and all the hope that's placed therein.
For God chose her to be the one,
to give this gift its start,
and to hold it safe against her breast,
closest to the heart.

With Godly counsel and support,
she helps her mate contend,
for by himself he'd be just one,
but she adds the strength of ten.
He'll love her as he loves himself,
(at least he will if he is smart),
and exalt her second only unto God,
and closest to the heart.

And when her days are golden,
and she's given all that she's possessed,
many are the ones,
who'll rise up and call her blessed.
And when she passes through that gate,
into the place that's just like home,
they'll clear a path before her,
and she'll kneel before His throne.
"Arise my precious daughter,
for I've loved you from the start;
come now to the place I've made for you,
closest to my heart."

-JS-

Happy Mother's Day from the Night Writer.

Saturday, May 7, 2005

I Thought I Was John
I got sucked into another one of those "Who/What Are You?" quizzes, but at least this one is a bit more edifying than most: Which Book of the Bible Are You? (HT: Bogus Gold)
You Are Romans
You are Romans.


Which book of the Bible are you?
brought to you by Quizilla

What, not "Song of Solomon?" Oh well, at least it wasn't Deuteronomy.
Hey, Y'all - This Southern Belle is a Peach
One of the coolest things about the blogosphere is the linking and the sometimes surreal "six degrees of separation" experience you can get when, like Alice, you follow the White Rabbit (an Ether Bunny?) through the 'net.

Today I was going through the referral list of my SiteMeter report when I saw a blog name I hadn't seen before. I followed that link and read a post there that lead me to another link, which had a post that lead me to a blog called Suburban Blight, written by Kelley, a desperate housewife in Atlanta-burbia.

Good Lord, she makes me laugh, and we can all use that on a regular basis so I recommend you check her out. Visit her blog and help her come up with a name for her new favorite adult beverage, or find out why her young son asked her to wear a bra - and the blog reaction she's had as a result of that post.

Anyone who enjoys Cathy in the Wright and the rest of The
MAWB Squad
will feel right at home.
All Esteemed Up
It's graduation party season again, and today's StarTribune - again on the cusp of a breaking news story - has tips on how to plan a successful party. Included was this tip from expert Mary J. Anderson:

"Most moms think [their graduates] want to have a party. But a lot of kids don't want the attention. Maybe their self-esteem is low or they don't want to be in the limelight."

This is a horrible implication: children are graduating from our high schools with low self-esteem even though this subject has been the focus of a public school education since this year's graduates were in kindergarten! How are these youngsters going to learn self-esteem now that they're no longer in school?

I guess colleges and businesses will have to add remedial self-esteem classes for those who have graduated, but there's still time to help those yet in school. I propose we add self-esteem to the 8th grade math and language skills competency tests; call it the "No Child Left Behind Hanging in a Locker By His Underwear" program.

Hmmm...if a low-self-esteem grad doesn't want a party, does it mean a kid with high self-esteem could have two parties?

Friday, May 6, 2005

A Peek Into the Future?
If you're curious how President Bush's Social Security proposals, including privatized accounts, would affect you then check out the calculator below. The calculator was designed and originally distributed by the Heritage Foundation.



HT: Kevin at The Eckernet who said:

Using the proposed Bush plan for Social Security I would come out about 28% better. Of course, under said Bush plan I have the choice to be a dumbass and stay under the old way of doing things.

So let's see. I get the choice to make more money with my own money to use in the future so I don't have to use someone else's money as my money??? I keep missing how that is bad...but then again the DFL is smarter than the rest of us.

Thursday, May 5, 2005

Tieing One On at Keegans (or, A Night in the Attic)
The Night Writer and Night Visions teamed up with Jo and Marcus Aurelius from The Attic to form the "People Who Know Stuff" team and to tie the Fraters with 23 points each (after a recount) for this week's Trivia Title.



As the Freedom Dogs said, "The legend grows."
Persistent Questions About Vegetative States
Last Saturday a firefighter diagnosed as being in a "persistent vegetative state" for ten years began to recognize people and talk. Several months ago a woman diagnosed as being in a "minimally conscious state" for 20 years began to talk and carry on conversations and says she was aware of the Oklahoma City bombing and 9/11. (Read the story here.)

My greatest frustration with the Terri Schiavo case was the refusal of her husband to allow further testing and therapy to confirm or improve his wife's condition and the Kafkaesque position of the courts to give credence to the diagnosis of one less than impartial neurosurgeon while steadfastly ignoring testimony from other neurosurgeons, radiologists and Terri's caregivers when deciding a case of life and death. Meanwhile most of the general public thought "I wouldn't want to live like that" - no doubt based in part on the assumption that after all these years there was little hope for improvement - and turned away.

Granted, the cases mentioned in the link above are rare, which is why they were publicized at all. (I also find it interesting that neither of the people mentioned above, upon regaining consciousness and the ability to speak, apparently has said, "Why didn't you just kill me?")

We don't know how high the odds would have been for a similar recovery by Terri, mainly because there was never an independent evaluation of her condition. We do know her parents were willing to care for her no matter how long it took.

Would Terri, too, have started to speak in another 20 years, 10 years - two weeks? That's a question for which we will now never have an answer. It is a question, however, that I hope Michael Schiavo, George Felos and Judge Greer ask themselves everyday for the rest of their lives.

Wednesday, May 4, 2005

Gotham Blog 4: The Limo from Hell
What's a trip to New York without a horror story to take back to Flyoverland?

Our trip had been without significant incident; we hadn't lost the 11-year-old in the crowd in Times Square or ended up on the wrong side of a subway door from her, and we'd even enjoyed a bucolic day at the New York Botanical Garden (it's really worth a visit if you want to, or have to, pull your eyes away from the whirligig of the city). The final step in our last day in Manhattan was to move base camp from midtown to a hotel near the Newark airport.

In reviewing the options for our exit plan we quickly saw that it cost about the same to hire a car service recommended by our hotel to transport the three of us as it would to use the SuperShuttle, plus the car would take us directly where we wanted to go. We made the call and our limo, an older Lincoln, arrived on time and our driver appeared.

She was a very short, very stocky woman of unknown ethnicity and dialect but with forearms like Popeye. She assured me she knew how to get us to the Courtyard Marriott by Newark Airport. As we crept uneventfully downtown through the traffic toward the Holland Tunnel I couldn't help noticing that our driver's eyes barely cleared the knobby steering wheel of the Lincoln. She was humming to herself in a high-pitched, off-key manner that was almost drowned out by the loud radio in the car tuned to the news and traffic report. I was afraid that if I asked her to turn the radio down that she would lose what visual connection she had with road so I opted to ride it out.

New Jersey was a new challenge, however. On the highway and nearing the airport our driver grew more hesitant in her movements, patting the accelerator with her foot so that the car repeatedly surged and fell back in little increments while she wavered between lanes (as did our confidence). She spotted the exit she wanted, but it was too late to make a move. Rather than risk ending up in Pennsylvania she pulled over to the side of the highway - then started backing up toward the exit.

I'm looking out the rear window at the onrushing traffic while simultaneously searching for an ejector seat button and thinking how rich our surviving daughter back in Minnesota is going to be when the insurance pays off. Miraculously the only thing that hits us are the horns of the other drivers and then we're going up the exit.

It's not the right exit after all, however. We drive the frontage road but don't see our hotel and then get back on the highway where we soon see our hotel - but it's on the opposite side of the highway. Unfortunately there isn't an exit handy that we can take - either in forward or reverse. Our driver finally finds an exit that takes us into a neighborhood, where she then runs a couple of stop signs trying to get back to the highway to go in the opposite direction. Her humming is now a loud keening, and I don't know if it's her response to stress or if it's the traditional death song of her people.

We get back on a highway doing a dazzling 40 mph (38 mph, 40 mph, 38 mph, 40 etc.), but it's not even the highway we were on before, so we do not see our hotel even after driving a ways. What our driver does see is another limo on the shoulder of the highway ahead, and she pulls over in front of this car and gets out to ask directions. I have my cell phone, but my briefcase with the hotel's phone number is in the trunk. I'm trying to decide whether to call 411 or 911. I'm also eyeing the distance and service roads we'd have to cover on foot if we abandoned the car right there and trying to evaluate our chances of reaching safety when our driver returns and tries to explain where we're going, waving one hand vaguely toward the windshield while lunging back into traffic.

We take another exit and still no sign of our hotel, but I see a large Marriott sign ahead and - in as calm a manner as I can muster - tell the driver to make for that. Since Courtyards are part of that hotel family I figure if we can just get to the Marriott I can have them call the shuttle from their sister hotel to come get us. After coasting through another stop sign we finally pull up under the Marriott's portico, giddy with relief and feeling as if we should kiss the Jersey earth.

"Don't worry about the tip," our driver tells us. We don't.
Gotham Blog 3: The Secret to Getting to the Top in New York
New York is so complex that it can embrace and celebrate both the Populist and the Power Elite and unabashedly claim both as its own without feeling the faintest hint of inconsistency.

As you keep pace with the throngs on the street you can within the space of a few steps, literally rub elbows with people who look every bit like power brokers to people who appear to be just broke and yet feel as if you're all contributing equal shares to the spirit that makes the city great. On the subway someone wearing Brooks Brothers can be sitting next to a brother in full gangsta regalia, who is turn sitting next to someone wearing a kind of psychedelic Little Bo Peep outfit and give each other room and barely a glance.

Yet Privilege also has its place and its uses and is often wielded by those who have devoted their lives to understanding its science and dynamics and appear able to bend their surroundings to suit them as if by magic. And sometimes a powerful talisman falls right into your hands.

Our last morning in Manhattan is sunny with only a little haze and it looks like our best opportunity for getting a good view from the observation deck of the Empire State Building. My wife and I had been up there before, but Patience hadn't and wanted to go. Two nights before we had tried to take that tour and encountered a sign in the lobby of the building indicating a 90 minute wait. We were hungry and visibility wasn't that great anyway then, so we opted for getting something to eat instead and ended up at Playwright's Tavern and Grill on 35th St., around the corner from the ESB.

The food was good and the waitress very friendly and engaging. In talking to her we mentioned the long lines at the ESB and she told us that the restaurant had a few VIP passes for its customers that would allow us to bypass every line and go straight to observation deck. Unfortunately that evening all the passes were in use, but she told us we could come back anytime during our stay and ask for a pass. Now that we had a clear day it seemed like the perfect time to score.

We went back to Playwright's and swapped a drivers license for one of the laminated, holographic passes, and the bartender told us all we had to do was show the pass to any guard at any line we ran into and we were golden. We then headed over to the ESB and saw the lines were even longer - and at least four people across - outside the building. Feeling a little Minnesota sheepishness at walking past all these people I lead my family up to the main door where the guard turned, ready to banish us back to the end of the line. I tentatively flash the card at him.

Now, in Minnesota, my sense is that if we were in a similar circumstance the guard (who would be dressed like the sheriff in the movie "Fargo") would look at the card, squint and loudly say something like, "Yah, sure you got that there VIP pass now, doncha? Well I guess that makes you Mr. High and Mighty like you were some kind of three-cheese hot dish, eh? What are you gonna want next - a pass to use the HOV lanes? Well, we'll just let youse guys on through ahead of all dese other fine folks then, but you might want to be thinking about what Wellstone would do."

In Manhattan, however, the guard sees the pass, nods his head, steps to one side and opens another door for us. We breeze through feeling a bit guilty and turn a couple of corners and there's one of those winding lines and another guard. Flash. A nod and a sidestep and a path around the line is revealed. We zoom ahead and there's another checkpoint. By now we don't even break stride and the next thing we know we're in an elevator for the ear-popping ride to the observation deck. Total time from the front door to the deck: 12 minutes. I stifle my maniacal laughter when I look over the railing and down to the street below where the line still stretches.

We had had an express trip to the top in New York and didn't even have to sell our souls to get there. All we had to do was eat dinner!

Sunday, May 1, 2005

Gotham Blog Day 2: A Hard Working City (and How to Get a Job in the Arts)
One of the things we've always noticed about New York is how busy everyone is. Everywhere you go, everywhere you look, and even at the edges of your vision when you're looking, people are working. Trucks are being driven and unloaded, sidewalks are being swept, goods are being stacked on shelves, other goods are being pushed on carts through the streets and everywhere – everywhere – food is being sold.

It takes a lot of work to feed a city of some eight million, not to mention the daily surge of tourists like ourselves. We stop for a bagel or huge pretzel at a sidewalk cart and I start thinking about how much flour it took to make every bagel and pretzel that was going to be needed today in Manhattan alone, and how much wheat it took to make that flour, and how long ago the wheat had to have been planted, then harvested, then processed and everything else that was needed to put a soft, hot treat under our noses that we could either purchase or ignore. How many people had a hand in that process along the way, confident in seeing some reward for their labor - and how many people around the world would line up right now for the unused bagels being thrown away as I type this?

Today is overcast and raining steadily. That means the Empire State Building or a trip to the Statue of Liberty or the Botanical Gardens are pretty much lost causes. So what do you do on a rainy Saturday in Manhattan? Museums, of course. That answer is so obvious that the line to get into the Museum of Modern Art snakes back and forth across the lobby, out the door and nearly to the corner of the block where it then bends into an outdoor holding area laid out for more snaking back and forth. Did I mention it was raining? The street vendors selling umbrellas from carts appear to be doing brisk business. Fortunately we came to see the Museum of Art and Design across the street from the MoMA. Once inside we browse the galleries and I notice another important Manhattan job: every gallery has a guard in a coat and tie to make sure we don't step over any lines - literally or figuratively.

After the museum we're out on the street looking for our next destination. Suddenly my wife grabs my arm and Patience gasps audibly and freezes. What? Did some threat get past my radar? My wife directs my attention to the opposite corner of the intersection and I see that we may indeed be in line for a mugging. It's American Girl Place.

A year ago I had no idea of the marketing volcano that was about to erupt under our feet. Then some black-hearted scoundrel slipped Daughter Two an American Girl catalog - the first one's free, kid - and her life changed. American Girl dolls are a vertically integrated economic powerhouse. The dolls themselves go for nearly $100 a pop, but that’s just the threshold - the dolls represent different eras and ethnicities in American history and most are the stars of one or more books put out by the company and has full line of accessories, not to mention the magazine (catalog) that appears regularly at our house. My daughter and her friends now can recite model numbers, back stories and accessory details with each other the way my friends and I once were able to argue the finer points of a '63 Impala or '67 GTO.

When Patience picked her favorite from the catalog - an American Indian called Kaya - we said that if it was that important to her she would have to earn the money herself. A born entrepreneur she quickly grasped the profit and loss mechanics of a lemon-aid stand and the economic rewards of an untapped market - extra chores - to build liquidity. With a seed loan from Mom she bought lemons and sugar, and with marketing advice from me ("put 'Fresh Squeezed' in big letters on your sign"), along with her natural charm and location, location, location she quickly covered her start-up costs and had money to plow back into her business as well as show a profit. This was repeated a couple of more times, and along with the household moonlighting she soon had the necessary discretionary income to buy her doll.

And now we were unwittingly across the street from Mordor, I mean, American Girl Place. It was like setting out for Oz and finding Mecca along the way. I looked around and saw a definite flow of young girls, many with dolls in arms and all with parents bobbing in tow, converging on the store from all directions. We were swept up in the current - as if we ever had a choice - and into the store. The store is impressive in both detail and scope, with three floors of merchandise and a restaurant where you can have lunch with your American Girl doll for just $22 per person. If I’m going to spend that much for lunch with a doll, I want to see the doll cook the meal and then serve it and then give me a quote on painting my garage. Nevertheless the store is jammed on every floor and countless cashiers and floor associates are - like everyone else in New York - working hard. Fortunately there were no meltdowns to be observed such as those we'd witnessed at Toys R Us in Times Square the night before, but I did notice a lot of earnest young faces making a case point by point. After Patience parted with more of her profits she'd been saving for this trip we went elsewhere for lunch (Kaya would just die if she knew we’d eaten at American Girl Place without her) and then, since it had stopped raining, we went over to the Central Park Zoo.

We arrive just in time for the Polar Bear feeding and to see another New York career option - bear feeder. At this zoo they feed the Polar Bears by first luring them out of the habitat enclosure and into their dens where they can presumably be locked up. Once that is accomplished a zookeeper enters the habitat and hides buckets of food - fish, apples and some veggies frozen in a block and smeared with peanut butter - in the enclosure. While we’re watching this preparation we speculate that there’s probably some initiation for rookie keepers where, once they’re in the middle of the enclosure with bear chow and an open jar of peanut butter, someone plays a loud recording of a Polar Bear huffing and roaring.

Finally we find ourselves in Grand Central Station, which happens to be hosting an arts and crafts show. As we browse we come across a booth where an Oriental couple - Japanese, I think - are selling lovely printed scarves and pocket squares. Patience knows how to fold and tie pocket squares so that they look like a rose, and is demonstrating this to her mother when the woman in the booth notices her skill. She asks Patience to show her how she does that, and then shows Patience a couple of new techniques for doing other flower shapes with longer pieces of silk. They have a great time trying these out and then the woman asks Patience if she lives in New York, and would she like a job? When that proves impractical she asks if Patience wants to work there at the booth the rest of the evening, tying flowers for potential customers.

Patience turns to my wife and I, "Please, please, pleeease?" she begs. My wife and I look at each other and consider, then agree she can for as long as we're at the show ourselves. The deal is closed and when we return later we stand off a little ways and watch as Patience ties a scarf into a flower for woman in front of the booth and shows her how it can be worn over the shoulder. We collect our daughter and she collects her "pay" - a scarf of her choice from the inventory. As we leave I think Patience could easily replace the light bulbs in the constellations inlayed into the arced ceiling of Grand Central Station’s main concourse.

Not bad, only in New York two days and she's already had a job in the Arts.