Dec 31

In spite of overwhelming evidence to the contrary that Barack Hussein Obama, Jr., was indeed born in Kenya (not Hawaii, as he claims), Lt. Col. Terry Lakin plead guilty to the charges against him for refusing to ship out with his unit because of Obama’s ineligibility to hold the office of President of the United States.

Lt. Col. Lakin is now serving time at Ft. Leavenworth, KS.  To that end, Saturday, January 1, 2011, is being celebrated as “LTC Lakin Day.”  See details and evidence as to Lakin’s case below….
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From American Veterans in Domestic Defense’s website:

We The People,
 
Our American founding documents, and the people who fought and died for them secured the blessings of liberty we enjoyed for over a century.  Will you do your part to restore our Constitutional Republic?

“With the privilege and honor of knowing of, swearing to, and living under the blessings secured by our Constitution, comes the responsibility, and duty, to defend and maintain it.”
 
Obama has admitted to ineligibility[1]  and has been found guilty of Treason[2] to the Constitution.
 
That means that all executive orders issued and bills signed by him are NULL and VOID, and that every order given as Commander in Chief (ALL military orders originate there) are UNLAWFUL.
Read the rest of this entry »

Dec 31

From Leibowitz’s Canticle article:

For the first time ever, the Obama administration is taking steps to register rifles sold through firearms dealers begininning January 5, 2011.

It seems that otherwise law-abiding rifles used for recreation—plinking, hunting and shooting competitions— and self-defense while north of the Mexican border, turn into stone cold cartel killers once they cross south of the Rio Grande. There’s no data on whether their criminal behavior continues after they return to U. S. or if they revert to their previous good citizenship.

Obama’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has requested emergency approval from the White House Office of Budget Management to require 8,500 federally-regulated firearms retailers in four states to report two or more sales to the same purchaser within 5 days of rifles that fire a round larger than .22 long rifle.

According to Scripps News, the goal isn’t to stop sales but to just allow authorities to immediately seek out the buyer and try to determine his motives. OK, but while they’re at it, how about an investigation of the editorials at Scripps, just to determine their motives?

Read the rest of this entry »

Dec 31

For crying out loud!! One generation of whiney, snot-nose brat begat yet another. While I’m no fan of McD’s or other “fast food,” who the hell holds the wallet containing the cash or debit card? Mom or the three-year-old?

So that she doesn’t have to hear her kid whining at home or in the car–not that hot tea burned her kid’s lips or that there was a dead mouse’s in her kid’s cheeseburger or that there were peanuts in an ice cream dish that was labelled “peanut-free”–Ms Parham decided her ONLY recourse was to sue McD’s?? I.e., whining in front of a judge and possibly a jury, taking up  about McD’s making her kid whine in front of her?? WTH?

Someone call Nanny Jo on Momma Parham, PLEASE!! And I hope Ms Parham loses her case and McD’s gets damages against her for filing a frivlous lawsuit.
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From a Findlaw.com article:

Is this the first lawsuit brought about by whining? A suit has been filed in San Francisco superior court over Happy Meals. After laws passed by Santa Clara County and San Francisco, California, placing limits on fast food meals marketed to children, a private citizen has taken matters into her own hands.

Sacramento mother Monet Parham, represented by Center for Science in the Public Interest, has sued McDonald’s for false advertising and unfair competition, claiming the restaurant chains’ practice of giving away toys with Happy Meals is deceptive to children.

Read the rest of this entry »

Dec 31

From the Homeschooling Information and Resources website:

Homeschoolers’ Role in Opposing Labeling and Drugging Kids

There is wide and growing recognition that terms such as ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) are highly subjective and can be and have been very destructive to children and their families. Using drugs to treat such children often causes more damage. However, these labels and drugs continue to be used and often promoted by classroom teachers, people who conduct preschool and kindergarten screenings, university researchers, professionals at specialized clinics designed to treat ADHD, and drug companies, all of whom are making large profits from doing so. As homeschoolers, we can play a key role in educating people about this unnecessary tragedy and reducing the number of children and their families who are affected. This column presents basic background information. It explains why homeschoolers are in such a good position to take action and suggests what we can do to minimize the damage done by labeling and drugging children.

Important Information About ADHD, Labeling, and Drugs

A recent mainstream newspaper opinion piece by a college professor supports information about labeling and related topics that has appeared in several of our previous Taking Charge columns and adds new information. Stephen Herr’s short, direct, and powerful article applies common sense and focuses on the needs of children and their families. (See “ADHD: Has this diagnostic fad run its course?” The Christian Science Monitor, August 19, 2010.)

Here are some key points from Herr’s article:

• After a generation of diagnosing children as having psychological disorders such as ADHD and giving them drugs like Ritalin, it is clear that the labels and drugs harm children rather than solving problems. Herr points our that it is easier for professionals and institutions to say children have a psychological disorder such as ADHD than to address the difficult conditions they face in daily life, at home, in school, and in their communities. It is now time to stop using the labels and the drugs and instead consider questions such as: Are children getting enough exercise? Enough sleep? A healthy diet? The opportunity to do things that interest them? And to what extent is the behavior that has been labeled ADHD simply part of childhood?

Read the rest of this entry »

Dec 31

Parody song of “Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer,” performed by Elmo and Patsy Shropshire in 1979.

Also see:
http://www.links2love.com/christmas_songs_grandmarunover.htm#video 
http://www.41051.com/xmaslyrics/grandma.html

Dec 26

TRENTON— Senator Michael J. Doherty (R-Hunterdon, Warren) and Senator James Beach (D-Camden) today announced they will present resolutions to the Senate and Assembly calling on the U.S. Congress to end TSA screening procedures requiring full body scans and pat downs at U.S. airports Their action comes in response to widespread concerns over privacy and radiation, as well as reports of inappropriate conduct by TSA agents during the screening process.

“The pursuit of security should not force Americans to surrender their civil liberties or basic human dignity at a TSA checkpoint,” said Doherty. “Subjecting law-abiding American citizens to naked body scans and full body pat downs is intolerable, humiliating, vulnerable to abuse, and is fast becoming a disincentive to travel. Particularly concerning to us is the fact that physical searches result in children being touched in private areas of the body. Terrorists hate America because of the freedoms upon which this great nation was built. By implementing these screening measures, the TSA has already handed a victory to those who seek to destroy our freedoms.”

For full press release, visit http://bit.ly/c0n2FL .

Dec 6

By Sonia Azad via ABC local

HOUSTON (KTRK) – It’s a fight over a neighborhood in southeast Houston that’s been there more than 50 years. Some people are battling historic preservation.

Several residents had signed the petition for historic designation and now there’s a large effort to get those signatures retracted. The neighborhood is the Glenbrook Valley subdivision near the Gulf Freeway and Airport with about 1,200 homes. But now residents, some of them who lived there for decades, are divided.

Joe and Leticia Ablaza have lived in the neighborhood for about 12 years.

“It’s an awesome neighborhood, quiet,” she said. “Our neighbors are very friendly. Everyone seems to get along up until recently.”

That’s because of a petition circulated by the cvic association that would make their neighborhood a historic district. Apparently a number of people who signed that petition didn’t understand what they were signing.

“‘Can you sign the petition?’” Secondino Vazquez was asked. “And I said,’Yeah.’ It sounded like a good idea.”

Vazquez has lived in the neighborhood since 1994, but speaks limited English. He says he was practically forced to sign the petition and promised the city would beautify the neighborhood by shutting down sketchy nearby hotels and motels. Vazquez says he didn’t know anything about the preservation ordinance that he signed off on.

“No one was ever given a copy of the ordinance,” said Ablaza.

When Glenbrook Valley’s application for historical designation was approved with 51 percent support thanks to those petitions, the Ablazas got involved.

“We went down to the city and asked for an open records request,” she said.

They say the discrepancies they found were unbelievable.

“We got people who have deceased, people who have moved, a lot of Read the rest of this entry »

Dec 4

Origina music and lyrics by “Buck Howdy.”

Help You Make it to Your Flight

Take the ribbon from your hair
Shake it loose and let it fall
Leave your shoes right over there.
…Now…
GET UP AGAINST THE WALL!

I’ll run my hands inside your thighs,
Up your legs and out of sight
But you can trust the TSA
To help you make it to your flight.

We don’t profile that’d be wrong
Just ask the A.C.L.U.
We’d rather check your nooks & crannies
And every inch of you.

I’ve got no life except my job,
I don’t mind it, it’s alright,
I get to grope you legally
If you wanna take a flight 

This badge and uniform we wear
Well, it might look like a rent-a-cop
But your life is in our hands
We like it that way
‘Specially if you’re hot! 

It’s awful lonely being me
No girlfriend, boyfriend, husband, wife
So let me squeeze you
OOoo, right THERE!
If you wanna take a flight
You can trust the TSA
You’ll be in our dreams tonight!
Mmmm-hmmmm!

See also:
http://floydreports.com/tsa-theme-song/?utm_source=Floyd+Reports&utm_campaign=db2699d1ae-FR_12_02_201012_4_2010&utm_medium=email

Dec 3

Ron Paul doesn't see any reason to prosecute WikiLeaks' Julian Assange and not the New York Times and other publications that have published his leaks.

Ron Paul came to the defense of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange after Attorney General Eric Holder said the Justice Department was studying whether to charge Assange with a crime for releasing thousands of leaked government documents.

Paul—a Texas Republican House member and libertarian icon—told Fox Business that the notion of prosecuting Assange was a bad one

“In a free society we’re supposed to know the truth,” Paul said. “In a society where truth becomes treason, then we’re in big trouble. And now, people who are revealing the truth are getting into trouble for it.”

Paul compared WikiLeaks to the news media, asking: “I mean, why don’t we prosecute the New York Times or anybody that releases this?”

Dec 3

By Kevin Poulsen via Wired.com

Senator Joseph Lieberman and other lawmakers on Thursday introduced legislation that would make it a federal crime for anyone to publish the name of a U.S. intelligence source, in a direct swipe at the secret-spilling website WikiLeaks.

“The recent dissemination by Wikileaks of thousands of State Department cables and other documents is just the latest example of how our national security interests, the interests of our allies, and the safety of government employees and countless other individuals are jeopardized by the illegal release of classified and sensitive information,” said Lieberman in a written statement.

“This legislation will help hold people criminally accountable who endanger these sources of information that are vital to protecting our national security interests,” he continued.

The so-called SHIELD Act (Securing Human Intelligence and Enforcing Lawful Dissemination) would amend a section of the Espionage Act that already forbids publishing classified information on U.S. cryptographic secrets or overseas communications intelligence — i.e., wiretapping. The bill would extend that prohibition to information on HUMINT, human intelligence, making it a crime to publish information “concerning the identity of a classified source or informant of an element of the intelligence community of the United States,” or “concerning the human intelligence activities of the United States or any foreign government” if such publication is prejudicial to U.S. interests.

Leaking such information in the first place is already a crime, so the measure is aimed squarely at publishers.

Lieberman (ID-CT) has been going after WikiLeaks with a fury he once reserved for video-game zombies, pressuring first Amazon, and then data-visualization company Tableau, to blacklist the Read the rest of this entry »

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