The thoughts and experiences of a law enforcement officer tackling the meanings of faith, the job, the tools and whatever catches his attention.
Explorations in Policing, Faith and Life (With a hint of humor, product reviews, news and whatever catches my attention)
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Monday, June 13, 2011
Our Lives are Governed by the Extremes not the Norms
I am, just like almost every Police Officer I know, a HUGE proponent of the concealed carry laws in 48 of our 50 states. In most cases Police responses take six to eight minutes and require a phone call to start the response clock. In that time frame, a lot of very unfortunate things can happen to you that if you would/could defend yourself, you would at least give us a chance to get their before your are permanently deprived of your possessions, your innocence, your sexuality or your life.
But, of course, to give the opposition the factual ammo to attempt to argue that you, as the average citizen, lack the capacity, the ability and the intelligence to protect yourself in a violent encounter and that you should wait till the experts arrive to help you, because the damage you would create attempting to keep yourself from being a victim would vastly outweigh the consequence of you being the victim, there is the extreme example that is used to (wrongly) prove their position (wow Steinbeck like sentence).
Here is that extreme example, that while I believe its uniqueness proves the rule that the vast majority of Americans are defending themselves in a logical, sane and well intentioned way, the other side is currently pointing to, to have self defense be a governmental only task is the case of Jerome Ersland. Below is the article from CBS (Link to CBS Story).
(CBS/KWTV/AP) - OKLAHOMA CITY - Oklahoma City pharmacist now faces life in prison with the possibility of parole after being found guilty of murder for the death of a 16-year-old who tried to rob his store.
Confronted by two holdup men in May 2009, Ersland pulled out a gun, shot one of them in the head and chased the other away. The drugstore's security camera then filmed Ersland as he went behind the counter, got another gun, and pumped five more bullets into the wounded Antwun Parker as he lay on the floor.
The 59-year-old had been hailed as a hero for protecting two fellow employees.
The Ersland jury began deliberations around 1:00 p.m. Thursday and returned with a the guilty verdict around 4:30 p.m. The verdict stunned the courtroom. Ersland, who many hailed as a hero, sat emotionless as the guilty verdict was read. People sitting behind him were noticeably upset. Parker's mother and her sisters were inside the courtroom most of the trial, and burst out of the room when the verdict was read. They clung to each other and cried in the hallway in an outpouring of emotion.
Erlsand was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs with deputies surrounding him. The wife of the Reliable Pharmacy owner was seen crying as she left.
She was visibly stunned that the jury chose to find Ersland guilty of murder instead of the lesser charge of manslaughter.
Judge Ray Elliott refused to lift the gag order so the prosecution, the defense, and the jury are not allowed to comment on the verdict. But we do know the jury had asked to see the surveillance video of the robbery and shooting one more time before they went up to deliberate.
Ersland will be sentenced July 11, the same day Anthony Morrison and Emanuel Mitchell will be sentenced. Morrison and Mitchell were convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy for planning the robbery at Reliable Pharmacy.
Numbers 14:9
Only do not rebel against the LORD. And do not be afraid of the people of the land, because we will devour them. Their protection is gone, but the LORD is with us. Do not be afraid of them.”
But, of course, to give the opposition the factual ammo to attempt to argue that you, as the average citizen, lack the capacity, the ability and the intelligence to protect yourself in a violent encounter and that you should wait till the experts arrive to help you, because the damage you would create attempting to keep yourself from being a victim would vastly outweigh the consequence of you being the victim, there is the extreme example that is used to (wrongly) prove their position (wow Steinbeck like sentence).
Here is that extreme example, that while I believe its uniqueness proves the rule that the vast majority of Americans are defending themselves in a logical, sane and well intentioned way, the other side is currently pointing to, to have self defense be a governmental only task is the case of Jerome Ersland. Below is the article from CBS (Link to CBS Story).
(CBS/KWTV/AP) - OKLAHOMA CITY - Oklahoma City pharmacist now faces life in prison with the possibility of parole after being found guilty of murder for the death of a 16-year-old who tried to rob his store.
Confronted by two holdup men in May 2009, Ersland pulled out a gun, shot one of them in the head and chased the other away. The drugstore's security camera then filmed Ersland as he went behind the counter, got another gun, and pumped five more bullets into the wounded Antwun Parker as he lay on the floor.
The 59-year-old had been hailed as a hero for protecting two fellow employees.
The Ersland jury began deliberations around 1:00 p.m. Thursday and returned with a the guilty verdict around 4:30 p.m. The verdict stunned the courtroom. Ersland, who many hailed as a hero, sat emotionless as the guilty verdict was read. People sitting behind him were noticeably upset. Parker's mother and her sisters were inside the courtroom most of the trial, and burst out of the room when the verdict was read. They clung to each other and cried in the hallway in an outpouring of emotion.
Erlsand was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs with deputies surrounding him. The wife of the Reliable Pharmacy owner was seen crying as she left.
She was visibly stunned that the jury chose to find Ersland guilty of murder instead of the lesser charge of manslaughter.
Judge Ray Elliott refused to lift the gag order so the prosecution, the defense, and the jury are not allowed to comment on the verdict. But we do know the jury had asked to see the surveillance video of the robbery and shooting one more time before they went up to deliberate.
Ersland will be sentenced July 11, the same day Anthony Morrison and Emanuel Mitchell will be sentenced. Morrison and Mitchell were convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy for planning the robbery at Reliable Pharmacy.
Below is the link raw security camera footage from that day in 2009.
Take a good look at the footage. This is where he goes from hero, defending himself and two other employees from criminals that have no regard for another's life and becomes a murder. Watch when he walks back into the store, walks past/over the fallen body of the robber who met real justice, quick, and up close, and does not glance at him or take any action that would suggest he still viewed the fallen robber as a continuing threat. Yet he goes to the counter, retrieves another firearm, turns and empties it into the robber on the floor.
The simple rule is: if he/she is a continuing threat to your safety or the safety of others you can continue to take appropriate action against him/her. If they are no longer a threat you have to stop. He didn't stop.
You have a right to defend yourself. Americans do not have to wait for governmental intervention to stop from becoming a victim, they can directly stop the victimizer. The fact that this story is being told through all the nation media outlets and is being used by the side that does not believe you have the ability to help yourself demonstrates the uniqueness of this event. What you do not hear is the thousand of times that the potential victim, stays potential and not actual. You don't have long in-depth conversations about why water is wet.
PS: The DA that charged him, asked the Judge to allow him to carry a handgun into the courtroom for his own protection.
Only do not rebel against the LORD. And do not be afraid of the people of the land, because we will devour them. Their protection is gone, but the LORD is with us. Do not be afraid of them.”
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
Example of the "F" Decision
The below article is from Chicago Breaking News and is an example of the "F" decision. He was driving, saw cute little ducklings that were in danger from that nasty high speed expressway, jumped out of his car and lost his life. Had Edward taken a second to consider his decision, he would have come to the realization concerning the level of his personal risk (very high), his personal value (value: high) and that maybe these ducks (value: low) were on the wrong end of an immediate and dynamic act of natural selection. For a full explanation concerning the "A" "C" and "F" decision making processes see blog entry on Tuesday June 7, 2011 (IE the one right before this one).
Man killed trying to remove ducklings from I-294
By Stacy St. Clair and Carlos Sadovi | Tribune reporters
May 31, 2011
(Handout photo)
A Naperville man attempting to help a family of ducklings safely cross Interstate Highway 294 was killed Monday when he was struck by a limousine, state police said.
Edward Gardner was traveling north when he pulled over near Schiller Park about 9:30 a.m. because he saw a family of ducklings on the tollway, Illinois State Police Sgt. Nick Hasan said. That’s when the limousine, which police said wasn’t speeding, hit him. Gardner's girlfriend was inside his vehicle.
The 38-year-old was pronounced dead about four hours later at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, according to the Cook County medical examiner's office.
“That’s totally Ed,” said Jim Gollwitzer, a longtime friend of Gardner’s. “That’s just how big of a heart he had.”
Gardner, who worked in the telecommunications industry, had dedicated much of his life to helping animals, Gollwitzer said. He spent his vacations volunteering at a wolf sanctuary in New Mexico, doing construction work and whatever odd jobs needed to be done there.
“He cared about animals,” Gollwitzer said. “It was one of his passions in life.”
Gardner’s other passion was muscle cars, in particular the 1960 Chevrolet Parkwood that he spent years restoring. Before Gardner purchased the station wagon, it had been used as an outdoor shed and was considered by many to be unsalvageable, Gollwitzer said.
But Gardner spent hours on the vehicle, transforming it from a rusted junker into an award-winning masterpiece. He painted it bright orange, a color choice he made while eating a bag of Cheetos in his garage one night.
To honor his gastronomic muse, he spray-painted a picture of mascot Chester Cheetah on the tailgate.
“He poured his heart into that car,” Gollwitzer said. “It meant a lot to him.”
It also meant a lot to car show crowds, who would gather around his car to reminisce about childhoods spent in Parkwood wagons. Gardner enjoyed listening to their stories and took great pride in the fact this car made people happy, Gollwitzer said.
The Parkwood won about 60 awards after Gardner began showing it, including several national prizes.
He recently disassembled the car to upgrade it in time for the summer show season. Members of his car club -- The Bad Bowties -- plan to put it back together in the coming days, said Gollwitzer, who is president of the club.
“It’s what Ed would have wanted,” he said. “It’s important that we do this for him.”
State police are investigating the incident, but no citations were issued to the driver of the limousine, Hasan said.
Man killed trying to remove ducklings from I-294
By Stacy St. Clair and Carlos Sadovi | Tribune reporters
May 31, 2011
(Handout photo)
A Naperville man attempting to help a family of ducklings safely cross Interstate Highway 294 was killed Monday when he was struck by a limousine, state police said.
Edward Gardner was traveling north when he pulled over near Schiller Park about 9:30 a.m. because he saw a family of ducklings on the tollway, Illinois State Police Sgt. Nick Hasan said. That’s when the limousine, which police said wasn’t speeding, hit him. Gardner's girlfriend was inside his vehicle.
The 38-year-old was pronounced dead about four hours later at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, according to the Cook County medical examiner's office.
“That’s totally Ed,” said Jim Gollwitzer, a longtime friend of Gardner’s. “That’s just how big of a heart he had.”
Gardner, who worked in the telecommunications industry, had dedicated much of his life to helping animals, Gollwitzer said. He spent his vacations volunteering at a wolf sanctuary in New Mexico, doing construction work and whatever odd jobs needed to be done there.
“He cared about animals,” Gollwitzer said. “It was one of his passions in life.”
Gardner’s other passion was muscle cars, in particular the 1960 Chevrolet Parkwood that he spent years restoring. Before Gardner purchased the station wagon, it had been used as an outdoor shed and was considered by many to be unsalvageable, Gollwitzer said.
But Gardner spent hours on the vehicle, transforming it from a rusted junker into an award-winning masterpiece. He painted it bright orange, a color choice he made while eating a bag of Cheetos in his garage one night.
To honor his gastronomic muse, he spray-painted a picture of mascot Chester Cheetah on the tailgate.
“He poured his heart into that car,” Gollwitzer said. “It meant a lot to him.”
It also meant a lot to car show crowds, who would gather around his car to reminisce about childhoods spent in Parkwood wagons. Gardner enjoyed listening to their stories and took great pride in the fact this car made people happy, Gollwitzer said.
The Parkwood won about 60 awards after Gardner began showing it, including several national prizes.
He recently disassembled the car to upgrade it in time for the summer show season. Members of his car club -- The Bad Bowties -- plan to put it back together in the coming days, said Gollwitzer, who is president of the club.
“It’s what Ed would have wanted,” he said. “It’s important that we do this for him.”
State police are investigating the incident, but no citations were issued to the driver of the limousine, Hasan said.
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Quick Emotional Decisions make for...
I believe there are three types of decisions. The "A" decision-the one that helps you. The "C" decision-the one that does not help you but does not hurt you either, and the "F" decision-the one that hurts you.
Two huge factors in determining which type of decision will be the result of your the judgement you caste, is the decision time frame crossed with the level of emotion at the point of the choice. Simply put, quick emotional decisions make for more "F" decisions and the opposite make for more "A" decisions.
I just recently spent a week in the hospital when my wife's great aunt was stricken ill and via the E.R. was placed into the I.C.U. (and I.C.U. too). The relative is in her early nineties and does not get around easily but other than that her health is basically good. She had developed Pneumonia and was having trouble breathing and fluid was building in her lungs. When she made it to the I.C.U., they also discovered that she had a large bleeding ulcer in her stomach that required a tube to be inserted into her nose down to her stomach for drainage. She also had an infection that required an IV drip of antibiotics. She was in bad shape. When we arrived, she did not look good, so I began trying to prepare my wife for the worst. A short time later my mother-in-law arrived and the nurse then stepped into the room.
The nurse said, "Okay I was told by the doctor to wait till you got here to start the morphine drip, so I'll just start it now.
My mother-in-law then said, "Oh no your not, I know what the morphine is for (have you heard any songs by Youth In Asia?)...and it will depress her breathing so it will not be used."
The nurse, looking perplexed said, "I spoke to the doctor and he said...".
But my mother-looked-up and said, "I will not permit the morphine to be used." The nurse then went away looking puzzled.
The next day the elder care physician came in and took the position that the morphine should be used to ease my wife's great aunt's suffering because this patient would not recover and it would be cruel to allow her to continue to suffer. Again my mother-in-law said "no" and the doctor then stormed off.
Now my mother-in-law is a R.N. and had already planned for this eventuality (the relative/patient was in her early 90's after all) and had set up the parameters for the use of morphine or not, long before this day. Now the rest of the family started rolling in. One brother of my mother-in-law came in frantic and upset and decided morphine was the right thing to administer. He was followed by his sister and then the other brother and all voted for the morphine. Their decisions were made in the height of emotion and extremely quickly.
The conclusion? The elder relatives infection is now gone, her ulcer has stopped bleeding and the tube has been pulled. She is eating on her own and is now without any supplemental oxygen and will be leaving the I.C.U. any day now.
So the "A" decision was to keep her alive and the "F" decision would to have killed her with the morphine. Too short decision time frame and too high emotionally would have killed the elderly patient had my mother-in-law not had the power of attorney and made a good decision before she arrived at the hospital.
Two huge factors in determining which type of decision will be the result of your the judgement you caste, is the decision time frame crossed with the level of emotion at the point of the choice. Simply put, quick emotional decisions make for more "F" decisions and the opposite make for more "A" decisions.
I just recently spent a week in the hospital when my wife's great aunt was stricken ill and via the E.R. was placed into the I.C.U. (and I.C.U. too). The relative is in her early nineties and does not get around easily but other than that her health is basically good. She had developed Pneumonia and was having trouble breathing and fluid was building in her lungs. When she made it to the I.C.U., they also discovered that she had a large bleeding ulcer in her stomach that required a tube to be inserted into her nose down to her stomach for drainage. She also had an infection that required an IV drip of antibiotics. She was in bad shape. When we arrived, she did not look good, so I began trying to prepare my wife for the worst. A short time later my mother-in-law arrived and the nurse then stepped into the room.
The nurse said, "Okay I was told by the doctor to wait till you got here to start the morphine drip, so I'll just start it now.
My mother-in-law then said, "Oh no your not, I know what the morphine is for (have you heard any songs by Youth In Asia?)...and it will depress her breathing so it will not be used."
The nurse, looking perplexed said, "I spoke to the doctor and he said...".
But my mother-looked-up and said, "I will not permit the morphine to be used." The nurse then went away looking puzzled.
The next day the elder care physician came in and took the position that the morphine should be used to ease my wife's great aunt's suffering because this patient would not recover and it would be cruel to allow her to continue to suffer. Again my mother-in-law said "no" and the doctor then stormed off.
Now my mother-in-law is a R.N. and had already planned for this eventuality (the relative/patient was in her early 90's after all) and had set up the parameters for the use of morphine or not, long before this day. Now the rest of the family started rolling in. One brother of my mother-in-law came in frantic and upset and decided morphine was the right thing to administer. He was followed by his sister and then the other brother and all voted for the morphine. Their decisions were made in the height of emotion and extremely quickly.
The conclusion? The elder relatives infection is now gone, her ulcer has stopped bleeding and the tube has been pulled. She is eating on her own and is now without any supplemental oxygen and will be leaving the I.C.U. any day now.
So the "A" decision was to keep her alive and the "F" decision would to have killed her with the morphine. Too short decision time frame and too high emotionally would have killed the elderly patient had my mother-in-law not had the power of attorney and made a good decision before she arrived at the hospital.
Thursday, June 2, 2011
End of the World!!!!!!!! Part, I don't know, sixty?
Its the end of the world...proof one hundred and sixty.
A Brief List of Zero Rated Movies and their box office revenue.
Zero Rated Movie Its Revenue
Sucker Punch $89,792,502
Did You Hear About the Morgans? $85,280,250
Saw IV $139,352,633
Bratz $26,013,153
Hostel: Part II $35,619,512
The Devil's Rejects $19,390,029
Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo $45,109,561
Wolf Creek $27,762,648
The Life of David Gale $38,955,958
That's it! Let's pack it all up! We're done here. Let's find another planet to destroy.
References: listal, www.boxofficemojo.com, http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/ and www.imdb.com
A Brief List of Zero Rated Movies and their box office revenue.
Zero Rated Movie Its Revenue
Sucker Punch $89,792,502
Did You Hear About the Morgans? $85,280,250
Saw IV $139,352,633
Bratz $26,013,153
Hostel: Part II $35,619,512
The Devil's Rejects $19,390,029
Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo $45,109,561
Wolf Creek $27,762,648
The Life of David Gale $38,955,958
That's it! Let's pack it all up! We're done here. Let's find another planet to destroy.
References: listal, www.boxofficemojo.com, http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/ and www.imdb.com
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Mentors-Bill Powers
I was cleaning out some of my basement and came across the obituary of one of my Law Enforcement mentors.
I came into this field honestly, IE, I was not a friend of the program either through family, interest or drive. Rather, it first came across my perceptions while I was taking paramedic courses in college in Texas. I realized during my hundreds of hours of on the road clinical time that the police can be proactive and paramedic/firemen can only be reactive. The idea of preventing calamity rather than reacting to it was very appealing. A few years later I found myself in the Police academy.
Fast forward nine years and I found myself in a professional crisis, due to a mixture of my mistakes and a management change that soon found me deselected from the fast track and placed me on the no track. It was looking that I was going to be having a "meeting" once every eight working days on patrol for the rest of my career. I began fishing around to advance myself outside of work. I first did what everyone does in a crisis/test/trial I went back to God. I started leading a small group at my church and set it for Tuesdays at 10:30am so that anyone who was a second shifter could have a Bible study. It was a disastrous. Just in case you are thinking of using that time, while there are a number of people who work afternoons and midnights that need bible study, there are also a number of people that are free during that time mainly due to complete insanity. Anyway one day a Chicago Cop named Mike Touhy came in and had a prayer request for an old partner of his who had just been diagnosed with cancer, Bill Powers. I soon called him, enrolled in the Master program he created and got to know him and learned of his love of the Lord. I was amazed his career path was incredibly similar as mine and he managed to become deputy superintendent (my hopes are not half that high). He provided me with some advice and things immediately got better back at the home department. Because of his mentoring I was able to right a nearly sunken ship and I because a believer in the idea that everyone needs a Christian mentor.
A quick anecdote as to the kind of man he was. My wife and I came to his home during his home hospice on the second to last day that he was on this earth. When we arrived he was a sleep on the couch. My wife and I were sitting across from him when he woke up. He looked up and said, "(my name) how are things? How is school going? How are things back at the department, any better?" I said, "How am I doing!?! I think the only thing that matters today is how your doing!" He looked up at me, sighed and said, "I know how I am but I want to know how you are." He then made me answer his questions. That was the man that he was and a man that I have tried to emulate as I have moved forward in my life. Below is his obituary.
Link to Mike Touhy's truck stop ministry:
Transport for Christ
and a quick article about it
I came into this field honestly, IE, I was not a friend of the program either through family, interest or drive. Rather, it first came across my perceptions while I was taking paramedic courses in college in Texas. I realized during my hundreds of hours of on the road clinical time that the police can be proactive and paramedic/firemen can only be reactive. The idea of preventing calamity rather than reacting to it was very appealing. A few years later I found myself in the Police academy.
Fast forward nine years and I found myself in a professional crisis, due to a mixture of my mistakes and a management change that soon found me deselected from the fast track and placed me on the no track. It was looking that I was going to be having a "meeting" once every eight working days on patrol for the rest of my career. I began fishing around to advance myself outside of work. I first did what everyone does in a crisis/test/trial I went back to God. I started leading a small group at my church and set it for Tuesdays at 10:30am so that anyone who was a second shifter could have a Bible study. It was a disastrous. Just in case you are thinking of using that time, while there are a number of people who work afternoons and midnights that need bible study, there are also a number of people that are free during that time mainly due to complete insanity. Anyway one day a Chicago Cop named Mike Touhy came in and had a prayer request for an old partner of his who had just been diagnosed with cancer, Bill Powers. I soon called him, enrolled in the Master program he created and got to know him and learned of his love of the Lord. I was amazed his career path was incredibly similar as mine and he managed to become deputy superintendent (my hopes are not half that high). He provided me with some advice and things immediately got better back at the home department. Because of his mentoring I was able to right a nearly sunken ship and I because a believer in the idea that everyone needs a Christian mentor.
A quick anecdote as to the kind of man he was. My wife and I came to his home during his home hospice on the second to last day that he was on this earth. When we arrived he was a sleep on the couch. My wife and I were sitting across from him when he woke up. He looked up and said, "(my name) how are things? How is school going? How are things back at the department, any better?" I said, "How am I doing!?! I think the only thing that matters today is how your doing!" He looked up at me, sighed and said, "I know how I am but I want to know how you are." He then made me answer his questions. That was the man that he was and a man that I have tried to emulate as I have moved forward in my life. Below is his obituary.
Link to Mike Touhy's truck stop ministry:
Transport for Christ
and a quick article about it
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Failed Predictions
In honor of the walk of shame that another prognosticator has yet taken once again, a post of Failed Predictions.
Source Credits: Listverse, ODDEE,2 Spare, 2 Thing.org, and Live Science
“There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home.” — Ken Olson, president, chairman and founder of Digital Equipment Corp.
“Lee DeForest has said in many newspapers and over his signature that it would be possible to transmit the human voice across the Atlantic before many years. Based on these absurd and deliberately misleading statements, the misguided public … has been persuaded to purchase stock in his company …” — a U.S. District Attorney, prosecuting American inventor Lee DeForest for selling stock fraudulently through the mail for his Radio Telephone Company in 1913.
“There is practically no chance communications space satellites will be used to provide better telephone, telegraph, television, or radio service inside the United States.” — T. Craven, FCC Commissioner, in 1961 (the first commercial communications satellite went into service in 1965).
“To place a man in a multi-stage rocket and project him into the controlling gravitational field of the moon where the passengers can make scientific observations, perhaps land alive, and then return to earth – all that constitutes a wild dream worthy of Jules Verne. I am bold enough to say that such a man-made voyage will never occur regardless of all future advances.” — Lee DeForest, American radio pioneer and inventor of the vacuum tube, in 1926
“A rocket will never be able to leave the Earth’s atmosphere.” — New York Times, 1936.
“Flight by machines heavier than air is unpractical (sic) and insignificant, if not utterly impossible.” – Simon Newcomb; The Wright Brothers flew at Kittyhawk 18 months later.
“Heavier-than-air flying machines are impossible.” — Lord Kelvin, British mathematician and physicist, president of the British Royal Society, 1895.
“There will never be a bigger plane built.” — A Boeing engineer, after the first flight of the 247, a twin engine plane that holds ten people
“Nuclear-powered vacuum cleaners will probably be a reality in 10 years.” -– Alex Lewyt, president of vacuum cleaner company Lewyt Corp., in the New York Times in 1955.
"It will be years --not in my time-- before a woman will become Prime Minister."
--Margaret Thatcher, October 26th, 1969.
“That virus [HIV] is a pussycat.”
--Dr. Peter Duesberg, molecular-biology professor at U.C. Berkeley, 1988
"Drill for oil? You mean drill into the ground to try and find oil? You're crazy."
--Associates of Edwin L. Drake refusing his suggestion to drill for oil in 1859.
"Reagan doesn’t have that presidential look."
--United Artists Executive, rejecting Reagan as lead in 1964 film The Best Man
"The singer [Mick Jagger] will have to go; the BBC won’t like him."
--- First Rolling Stones manager Eric Easton to his partner after watching them perform.
"Taking the best left-handed pitcher in baseball and converting him into a right fielder is one of the dumbest things I ever heard."
-- Tris Speaker, baseball hall of famer, talking about Babe Ruth, 1919.
"Ours has been the first [expedition], and doubtless to be the last, to visit this profitless locality."
---- Lt. Joseph Ives, after visiting the Grand Canyon in 1861.
Democracy will be dead by 1950.
John Langdon-Davies, A Short History of The Future, 1936.
They couldn't hit an elephant at this dist-
Last words of Gen. John Sedgwick, spoken as he looked out over the parapet at enemy lines during the Battle of Spotsylvania in 1864.
Man will not fly for 50 years.
Wilbur Wright, American aviation pioneer, to brother Orville, after a disappointing flying experiment, 1901 (their first successful flight was in 1903).
The Americans are good about making fancy cars and refrigerators, but that doesn't mean they are any good at making aircraft. They are bluffing. They are excellent at bluffing.
Hermann Goering, Commander-in-Chief of the Luftwaffe, 1942.
... good enough for our transatlantic friends ... but unworthy of the attention of practical or scientific men.»
British Parliamentary Committee, referring to Edison's light bulb, 1878.
Proverbs 12:23
The prudent keep their knowledge to themselves, but a fool’s heart blurts out folly.
Source Credits: Listverse, ODDEE,2 Spare, 2 Thing.org, and Live Science
“There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home.” — Ken Olson, president, chairman and founder of Digital Equipment Corp.
“We will never make a 32 bit operating system.” — Bill Gates
“There is practically no chance communications space satellites will be used to provide better telephone, telegraph, television, or radio service inside the United States.” — T. Craven, FCC Commissioner, in 1961 (the first commercial communications satellite went into service in 1965).
“To place a man in a multi-stage rocket and project him into the controlling gravitational field of the moon where the passengers can make scientific observations, perhaps land alive, and then return to earth – all that constitutes a wild dream worthy of Jules Verne. I am bold enough to say that such a man-made voyage will never occur regardless of all future advances.” — Lee DeForest, American radio pioneer and inventor of the vacuum tube, in 1926
“A rocket will never be able to leave the Earth’s atmosphere.” — New York Times, 1936.
“Flight by machines heavier than air is unpractical (sic) and insignificant, if not utterly impossible.” – Simon Newcomb; The Wright Brothers flew at Kittyhawk 18 months later.
“Heavier-than-air flying machines are impossible.” — Lord Kelvin, British mathematician and physicist, president of the British Royal Society, 1895.
“There will never be a bigger plane built.” — A Boeing engineer, after the first flight of the 247, a twin engine plane that holds ten people
“Nuclear-powered vacuum cleaners will probably be a reality in 10 years.” -– Alex Lewyt, president of vacuum cleaner company Lewyt Corp., in the New York Times in 1955.
--Margaret Thatcher, October 26th, 1969.
--Dr. Peter Duesberg, molecular-biology professor at U.C. Berkeley, 1988
--Associates of Edwin L. Drake refusing his suggestion to drill for oil in 1859.
--United Artists Executive, rejecting Reagan as lead in 1964 film The Best Man
--- First Rolling Stones manager Eric Easton to his partner after watching them perform.
-- Tris Speaker, baseball hall of famer, talking about Babe Ruth, 1919.
---- Lt. Joseph Ives, after visiting the Grand Canyon in 1861.
Everything that can be invented has been invented.
Charles H. Duell, an official at the US patent office, 1899.
Charles H. Duell, an official at the US patent office, 1899.
Stocks have reached what looks like a permanently high plateau.»
Irving Fisher, economics professor at Yale University, 1929.
Irving Fisher, economics professor at Yale University, 1929.
John Langdon-Davies, A Short History of The Future, 1936.
Last words of Gen. John Sedgwick, spoken as he looked out over the parapet at enemy lines during the Battle of Spotsylvania in 1864.
Wilbur Wright, American aviation pioneer, to brother Orville, after a disappointing flying experiment, 1901 (their first successful flight was in 1903).
Hermann Goering, Commander-in-Chief of the Luftwaffe, 1942.
British Parliamentary Committee, referring to Edison's light bulb, 1878.
Who the hell wants to hear actors talk?» H. M. Warner, co-founder of Warner Brothers, 1927.
END OF THE WORLD...well no its um tomorrow...sorry. Or is it the next day...
Person Date
Charles Wesley 1794
John Wesley (Brother of above) 1836
Jehovah Witness 1914,1915,1918,1920,1925,1941,1975,1994
William Miller March 21, 1843 through March 21, 1844
Joanna Southcott Oct 19, 1814
Albert Porta Dec 17, 1919
Nostradamus July 1999
Joseph Smith Feb 1835 plus 56 years.
Pat Robertson End of 1982.
Michael Rood April 15, 2000
Richard Noone May 5, 2000
Rebecca Harrison May 17, 2000
Marily Agee May 28, 2000
David Parked May 28, 2001
The prudent keep their knowledge to themselves, but a fool’s heart blurts out folly.
Saturday, May 21, 2011
End of the World!!!!!!!!
I was going to take a shot at Harold Camping and his mathematical system he created to delve into the mysteries of the Bible that had today as the Judgement Day. But instead I will ask this question instead...If it really was the end of days do you know FOR SURE where you would go? Heaven? Hell? Wal-Mart greeter in purgatory? Drummer for an all girls polka band?
Salvation is the only way to live for eternity with our Lord in heaven.
Romans 3:23 All have sinned.
A sin is anything we do wrong, anything we do that is disobedient to God. This is one reason we should read our bible so we understand what is sin and what isn't.
Romans 6:23 The wages of sin is death
The death being spoken of here is not physical death but it is separation from God for eternity in Hell.
Romans 5:8 Jesus paid the penalty for your sin.
God sent his one and only Son to die for YOU on a cross so that you may be forgiven of your sin.
Romans 10:9-10 Believe in the Lord Jesus and the salvation provided through Him.
It's simple all you have to do is believe that Jesus is God's Son and he was sent to die for YOU upon a cross and confess with your mouth and believe with your heart.
Romans 10:13 Everyone who calls on the name of te Lord will be saved.
All you have to do is pray and ask God to forgive you of your sins and you must repent of (or turn away from) your sin.
Now the end of the world has no fear for you, you now know your final destination.
Salvation Verses
Friday, May 20, 2011
Charles Barkley-You gotta love him...
I was listening to sports radio, Tuesday, while on another marathon vehicle surveillance (can't feel me knees anymore) when an interview came up with basketball legend/Michael Jordan confidant/TNT announcer, Charles Barkley. Since it was with ESPN radio, the sycophantic sportscasters were gushing all over him and pushing the TNT broadcast that he would be on. They asked the enviable question concerning his contribution to Basketball and American society in general.
Charles said this, "I am just an entertainer. I always say that there are only five real jobs. Doctor, Police Officer, fireman, teacher and the military. The rest, while nice, aren't necessary. I am an entertainer. I hope that for a few hours I can let people get away from their problems but my job has never been important."
Wow, can't argue with that. I wish the rest of society would wind that swiftly into the clockwork in their heads. But my hopes are not high.
Ephesians 4:11
So Christ himself gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the pastors and teachers,
Charles said this, "I am just an entertainer. I always say that there are only five real jobs. Doctor, Police Officer, fireman, teacher and the military. The rest, while nice, aren't necessary. I am an entertainer. I hope that for a few hours I can let people get away from their problems but my job has never been important."
Wow, can't argue with that. I wish the rest of society would wind that swiftly into the clockwork in their heads. But my hopes are not high.
Ephesians 4:11
So Christ himself gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the pastors and teachers,
Addendum: I wish I could fully embrace Charles except for the: drunken driving, gambling problems and driving around looking for a "blow job" (Dec 31, 2008).
Friday, May 13, 2011
Life and the Job...Changes
The first vehicle pursuit that I got into I remember thinking, wow this is cool, this is the reason I signed on to be a Police Officer. The lights flashing, the blaring of the radio, the engine noise coming through into the interior because of it's near red-lining, brakes squealing and coming home after that shift with stiff and sore calves because of the continuous *stomp* on the gas followed by *stomp* on the brakes followed by *stomp* on the gas...well you get the idea. Oh and we got him too.
The last one that I got into recently, my feelings were quite different. The thoughts that were going through my mind this time was not about how cool this was, but rather it was *stomp* on the gas, “I am going to get sued and loose my house”, *stomp* “some little kid is going to run in front of me”, *stomp* “if I ding up my car its going to be three weeks of paperwork”, and so on. Oh and he got away.
I always marveled when I first came on the job about how all the veteran Officers seemed so embittered toward Law Enforcement. They would pine over their future retirement at every roll call.
I understand them a little better know that I am half way through. It slowly kills the enjoyment of this job when you begin to focus not on the task at hand or the people you help but rather on the consequences that would happen should it suddenly go all wrong.
Its best summarized this way: in the beginning it was, "Yeah! We got him! Can you believe...(insert story of incident that just happened)", and now its, "Wow sure glad nothing happened! Can you believe what would have happened had...(insert analysis of worst case scenario)...I knew a cop that...(insert story of Officer that got in trouble or lost his job through no fault of his/her own under similar circumstances)".
The first part makes you look forward to going to work, the second part makes you look forward to going home.
Matthew 6:34
Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.
1. 5/04/2011 1:33am
1. 5/04/2011 1:33am
Thursday, May 12, 2011
Back from Vacation
Spent a week in Sedona Arizona for the family's yearly visit and got some much needed R and R. The kids got to run around like manics and my wife was able to be left alone (a very rare occurrence). In order to make the trip more relaxing we decided to leave right after having our 1st floor repainted...it only took three weeks. We are just getting the house back together and are using the total chaos to Spring clean and chuck all the assorted bric-n-brac that have piled up over the years.
So...computer put back together, blogging resuming. Status quo reached.
Psalm 116:7
Return to your rest, O my soul,For the LORD has dealt bountifully with you.
So...computer put back together, blogging resuming. Status quo reached.
Psalm 116:7
Return to your rest, O my soul,For the LORD has dealt bountifully with you.
PS: the house we were staying at is just on the other side of Cockscomb the rock formation pictured.
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Chap-Hop
I was originally going to post this on April 4th after reading about Chap-Hop in the WSJ. But when I searched the internet to listen to a couple of examples of this new sub-genre of Hip Hop, I discovered hundreds of people blogged about it already. So, I waited till now in the attempt to appear fresh and unique, which I am not.
I do have to say I really enjoyed the music I came across and discovered it is legitimate musical form way beyond the apparent novelty aspects it first seems to present. It is a Steam-punk ethic of Hip-Hop. I embedded my favorite four in this post. A Victorian gentlemen hip-hopping about about relevant issues in his day. If you could throw in a dose of Doctor Who into the mix I would never need another type of media to enjoy.
So put on your tweed, send the servants to bed and enjoy the night with a whiskey, neat, and Mr. B or Professor Elemental on the Victrola.
I have to say I really like the music...
I do have to say I really enjoyed the music I came across and discovered it is legitimate musical form way beyond the apparent novelty aspects it first seems to present. It is a Steam-punk ethic of Hip-Hop. I embedded my favorite four in this post. A Victorian gentlemen hip-hopping about about relevant issues in his day. If you could throw in a dose of Doctor Who into the mix I would never need another type of media to enjoy.
So put on your tweed, send the servants to bed and enjoy the night with a whiskey, neat, and Mr. B or Professor Elemental on the Victrola.
I have to say I really like the music...
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Mexican Drug Cartels-making insane decisions-Update
Update...
MATAMOROS, MEXICO-- Ten more bodies were found in a new mass grave in Mexico's northern state of Tamaulipas, bringing the total number to 126 bodies, officials said Wednesday.
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They have terror, they have most of the government paralyzed, they are the second biggest employer next to the oil industry in Mexico...etc. I still can not frame this within an economical model, geopolitical model or even within a terrorist framework. Time will tell.
FYI: Most gang members pose for a booking photo or news photo with their chin up so that the picture can not be used to identify them in a future criminal investigation.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Mexican Drug Cartels-making insane decisions.
Mexican authorities have found 59 bodies on a remote ranch in the La Joya farming village. This occurred in the same area where they had found 72 bodies less than a year ago.
The news link from Yahoo
The story
At least 59 bodies found on Mexico ranch
The Tamaulipas state prosecutor's office said 11 people had been arrested and another five kidnapping victims had been set free in the same operation on Wednesday.
Police and military staff learned March 25 that several buses had disappeared in the area, leading to their investigation which turned up a grisly find: eight mass graves in the La Joya farming village, in the town of San Fernando, the prosecutor's office said.
"With our work that is under way, we are trying to establish if the remains are those of the people who went missing on the buses," the prosecutor's statement said.
Authorities said they feared the number of dead would rise as the remains had only been counted in three of eight mass graves. A military patrol located the mass grave, the source added.
The gruesome find was in the same town of San Fernando where 72 migrants from El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, Ecuador and Brazil were killed in August 2010 for refusing to work for drug traffickers.
Meanwhile thousands of outraged citizens took to the streets of 38 Mexican cities on Wednesday, venting anger over widespread violence linked to the country's illegal drug trade.
The protest marches were organized following the murder of a well-known author's son along with four close friends and two others on March 28.
Javier Sicilia, a poet and columnist for the daily La Jornada and the weekly Proceso -- two of the country's leading publications -- called for the protests following the killing of his son Juan Francisco, 24, near Cuernavaca, 90 kilometers (55 miles) south of Mexico City.
Seven major drug gangs are operating in Mexico whose bloody clashes have left over 34,600 people dead since December 2006, when President Felipe Calderon's government launched a military crackdown that has so far failed to stem the violence.
Authorities said Saturday that 20 people were killed in under 24 hours in Mexico's most violent city, Ciudad Juarez, which borders the US state of Texas.
Ciudad Juarez is considered the most violent city in Mexico, with more than 3,100 homicides in 2010. Most of the violence is blamed on drug cartels who fight for control of lucrative drug routes into the United States.
Just on Monday the United States boosted security at its consulate in Mexico's drug war-rocked northern city of Monterrey, where it built a second protective ring wall.
Two other US consulates on the Mexican side of the shared border were temporarily closed last year. Security concerns forced the office in Ciudad Juarez to close for several days, while another in Nuevo Laredo was closed after an explosive device attack.
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__My thoughts______________________________________
One of the core principles in illicit drug investigations is to approach the enterprise as a business entity and not as a criminal conspiracy. You either attack the supply line or the financial line. It is simple logistics, they have to move product in through a distribution network to their retail outlets and take out their profits, after paying the bills, usually through a different network. They have personnel and raw material costs, banking/financing costs etc. You attack one side or the other and work your way back. It is a logical though criminal system. The violence that a criminal enterprise generates can even be viewed in two ways: one as an internal ( but extremely draconian) self correcting/disciplinary function or a method to gain market dominance.
However these mass killings do not make any business sense and I am having trouble placing them into prospective. I understand that violence can streamline and prevent governmental/law enforcement interference by keeping information under control and increasing local populations participation in the criminal enterprise and decreasing its participation with law enforcement. Further it can create a political climate that is conducive to their criminal activities, but that is usually achieved through different levels and types of corruption (See Chicago, New Orleans). But the caveat to the use of violence to achieve financial ends is that once a certain threshold is reached and maintained the citizenry will rise up and fight back (See Columbia 1990's).
The cartels control almost all aspects of local Mexican governmental bodies. They have almost total "buy-in" from the peasant class. The terror they generate from killing criminal participants within and without their cartels is almost total for the population and sapped the majority of the will to combat illicit drug sales and distribution. These mass killing gain the cartels almost nothing, in fact it is starting to raise resistance. They do not make sense from a money making prospective. It even allows further enticement for the American's to demand and President Calderon to allow, American military cross boarder sorties against the cartels.
So what is this? I can think of only three possibilities. 1st, there is an enforcer for a cartel that really is a serial killer that found his/her ultimate dream job. 2nd, it is another voodoo drug cult like the one where they discovered (04-11-1989) had murdered the 12 American college students in the Mexican city of Matamoros or 3rd some of the cartels have become terrorist groups that have both broad political and and financial goals ( example: al qaeda selling heroin).
I am waiting and watching for the answer.
While Jezebel was killing off the LORD’s prophets, Obadiah had taken a hundred prophets and hidden them in two caves, fifty in each, and had supplied them with food and water.)
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Risk, Death and the Job.
I was notified about Deputy Robert Britton death on duty through the nationwide law enforcement prayer chain that I am a part of because of my membership in FCPO. He was killed by a wounded cow.
The Link to the Story
The Story from the Star Telegram
TYLER, Texas — An East Texas deputy has died of head injuries suffered when he was attacked by an injured cow while he directed traffic around the half-ton animal.
Smith County Sheriff J.B. Smith says Deputy Robert Britton of Tyler died Monday at East Texas Medical Center in Tyler, where he'd been since the incident early Thursday near Bullard, 95 miles southeast of Dallas and 15 miles south of Tyler.
Smith had said the 54-year-old deputy had responded to a report of a stray cow struck by a vehicle and was directing traffic on Farm Road 344 when the cow charged him. He says Britton was knocked into the air and landed head-first on the pavement before the animal continued the attack until other deputies rescued Britton.
Smith says the cow was euthanized.
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The probability of being killed/murdered on the job by the hand of another is very slim. According to the Washington Post there were 160 officers killed in the line of duty in 2010 (all levels, local, state, federal), out of around 900,000 officers country wide. The officers that I have known that have died on the job have been killed in traffic crashes, heart attacks, accidents or environmental hazards. The real risk on this job is the environment in which we conduct our business. This risk is not understood by the public we serve.
In this case Deputy Britton was responding to a traffic accident involving car verses cow. I was talking to my friends about the incident at Baker's Square waiting for our kids to get out of Awana. I was being asked, if the cow was wounded why he didn't shoot it, or why he didn't hear it coming or...whatever. I had to tell them that the cow still has value if it can be properly butchered, if the cow is shot it can not be used for anything. Britton was trying to keep the rancher from loosing out on the total value of his property. Second, when you are out directing traffic, it is noisy and it takes all of your attention. The motoring public does not pay attention and will hit you if you are not watching every direction at once, I have been brushed by side mirrors more times than I would like to remember. Third, most people have no experience with large animals. I have been around a few cattle when I lived in Waco, Texas and they are huge and they are fast (got chased out of a pasture once). I have had a few deer who were struck by a car, suddenly bound up and run away. If they had connected with me what happened here could easily have happen to me.
There were two times where I remember cutting it close. One was a fire department assist for a reported heart attack and another FD assist for a burning stove. The heart attack had been caused because the family that lived in the house had set off about five roach bug bombs but didn't leave the house. I was the first one on scene and walked right in and promptly got poisoned. I was found bent over on the front lawn fighting for air. I beat the FD to the stove fire and met the family standing in the hallway of the apartment while smoke was pouring out of their front door. I was told that "Molly" was still in the apartment, so I ran in to save "Molly" and of course "Molly" was their cat (I think they didn't say please save Molly our pet cat because I would have looked at them with the "yeah right" look), which when I had made it to the back bedroom promptly ran out of the apartment saving itself. And again, I was found bent over on the front lawn gasping for breath.
That's the real risk to this job and since its not sensational or dynamic or "Hollywood", the public just doesn't understand what's being risked for them. Deputy Britton lost his life trying to protect a rancher's property, directing traffic for others safety and just doing his job.
Our prayers are for his family and the ones he left behind
1 Timothy 6:12
Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called when you made your good confession in the presence of many witnesses
.
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The probability of being killed/murdered on the job by the hand of another is very slim. According to the Washington Post there were 160 officers killed in the line of duty in 2010 (all levels, local, state, federal), out of around 900,000 officers country wide. The officers that I have known that have died on the job have been killed in traffic crashes, heart attacks, accidents or environmental hazards. The real risk on this job is the environment in which we conduct our business. This risk is not understood by the public we serve.
In this case Deputy Britton was responding to a traffic accident involving car verses cow. I was talking to my friends about the incident at Baker's Square waiting for our kids to get out of Awana. I was being asked, if the cow was wounded why he didn't shoot it, or why he didn't hear it coming or...whatever. I had to tell them that the cow still has value if it can be properly butchered, if the cow is shot it can not be used for anything. Britton was trying to keep the rancher from loosing out on the total value of his property. Second, when you are out directing traffic, it is noisy and it takes all of your attention. The motoring public does not pay attention and will hit you if you are not watching every direction at once, I have been brushed by side mirrors more times than I would like to remember. Third, most people have no experience with large animals. I have been around a few cattle when I lived in Waco, Texas and they are huge and they are fast (got chased out of a pasture once). I have had a few deer who were struck by a car, suddenly bound up and run away. If they had connected with me what happened here could easily have happen to me.
There were two times where I remember cutting it close. One was a fire department assist for a reported heart attack and another FD assist for a burning stove. The heart attack had been caused because the family that lived in the house had set off about five roach bug bombs but didn't leave the house. I was the first one on scene and walked right in and promptly got poisoned. I was found bent over on the front lawn fighting for air. I beat the FD to the stove fire and met the family standing in the hallway of the apartment while smoke was pouring out of their front door. I was told that "Molly" was still in the apartment, so I ran in to save "Molly" and of course "Molly" was their cat (I think they didn't say please save Molly our pet cat because I would have looked at them with the "yeah right" look), which when I had made it to the back bedroom promptly ran out of the apartment saving itself. And again, I was found bent over on the front lawn gasping for breath.
That's the real risk to this job and since its not sensational or dynamic or "Hollywood", the public just doesn't understand what's being risked for them. Deputy Britton lost his life trying to protect a rancher's property, directing traffic for others safety and just doing his job.
Our prayers are for his family and the ones he left behind
1 Timothy 6:12
Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called when you made your good confession in the presence of many witnesses
.
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Thoughts from the Wire
Just a couple of thoughts that I gathered spending hour after hour on phone intercepts for the last decade or so, at least it seems like a decade.
• No one uses their articles and prepositions’. Don’t think this is a generalization based on creed or ethnicity or home country or origin or religion or social position or education or income level. “You com’n here?” is universal. I wore out the backspace button on my keyboard taking out the “of” “a” “an” “the” “if” etc that I thought was in there when it was not.
• The use of “ing” at the end of a verb is a dying art. Clearly the “g” was late for work and the car pool left without him. “Comin’” “goin” “itchen” “swinn’”. I am going to put up posters on telephone poles to see if anyone has my lost “g” and will return him for an award.
• The proper contraction for “going to” is “gonna”.
• The word “what” has retired, it has been replaced on the job by “uh?”.
• Every drug boss ends up being better than almost all bosses I have ever had. Really, much, much, better in fact. I wonder if I promised to work for him would he stop doing that pesky, murder thing.
• Everyone calls their best friend and demeans someone else. Soon that someone else calls and when they realize who it is they pitch up their voice and say, “Hey dude, been thinking of you”.
• Everyone thinks they are getting ripped off. The other guy is always making more money, selling more product or tagging more women. Strangely that’s true for men and …women.
• Everyone but you is stupid.
• Everyone is an informant.
• Cops are fools, till they get lucky and catch you for the fifth time.
• A ten o’clock meeting for tomorrow in the drug store parking lot really means two weeks from last Wednesday on the night of a full moon in the MacDonald’s parking lot. It’s not code, yet somehow they all know, really, everyone one of them, they all know.
• If you meet a girl at a club for the first time and she lets you take her home that night don’t start dating her. Unless you want to find out that when she is not at your house she’s at your best friend’s house.
• The use of code words always breaks down because the members of the gang forget what the code means and have to explain that a “light bulb” is a pack of heroin..........................................every other phone call.
• That the local drug dealer with millions in the bank is still going to use his/her Link card to buy groceries. They are owed it.
• Every cop out there is watching you...just...you.
• Every hype stutters.
· You date you don’t ever, ever, ever marry.
· The F-word is quite efficient. It is a noun, verb, adjective and adverb.
· Listening to other people swear is contagious. I told my daughter in a nice conversational tone the other day to “practice you mother f@#$%^& piano”.
Proper way to decline a verb:
Indicative
- Present Perfect: I run, you run, she runs, we run, they run, I have run, you have run, she has run, we have run, they have run
- Past Pluperfect: I ran, you ran, she ran, we ran, they ran, I had run, you had run, she had run, we had run, they had run
- Future Future perfect: I will run, you will run, she will run, we will run, they will run, I will have run, you will have run, she will have run, we will have run, they will have run
- Imperative Present run! let's run!
- Present Perfect: I would run, you would run, she would run, we would run, they would run, I would have run, you would have run, she would have run, we would have run, they would have run
- Present Perfect: I run, you run, she run, we run, they run, I have run, you have run, she have run, we have run, they have run
- Past Pluperfect: I ran, you ran, she ran, we ran, they ran, I had run, you had run, she had run, we had run, they had run
- Gerund Past: running, run
Phone Intercept Verb Declination
Indicative
- Present Perfect: I go, you go, she go, we go, they go, I have go, you have go, she has go, we have go, they have go
- Past Pluperfect: I go, you go, she go, we go, they go, I had go, you had go, she had go, we had go, they had go
- Future Future perfect: I will go, you will go, she will go, we will go, they will go, I will have go, you will have go, she will have go, we will have go, they will have go
- Imperative Present go! let's go!
Conditional
- Present Perfect: I would go, you would go, she would go, we would go, they would go, I would have go, you would have go, she would have go, we would have go, they would have go
Conjunctive
- Present Perfect: I go, you go, she go, we go, they go, I have go, you have go, she have go, we have go, they have go
- Past Pluperfect: I go, you go, she go, we go, they go, I had go, you had go, she had go, we had go, they had go
Participle
- Gerund Past: gonn', go
and finally...
- If you loose the target and your on surveillence its the phone rooms fault, unless your in the phone room then its surveillence fault. Meeting to follow.
2 Samuel 10:3
the Ammonite commanders said to Hanun their lord, “Do you think David is honoring your father by sending envoys to you to express sympathy? Hasn’t David sent them to you only to explore the city and spy it out and overthrow it?”
Friday, April 1, 2011
Now we have a Sparkling Wine Dinner
I know that most people that enjoy my quirky blog that attempts to dwell at the intersection of law enforcement and faith while mainlining a full sense of humor are probably not wine lovers. But my wife and I have just started attending these once a month gourmet set menu dinners that emphasize course and wine pairings.
This time it was sparkling wine. Here is the list of the ones that we really enjoyed. You're safe from another blog entry like this for two months till we go to the beer/whisky dinner.
- Vouvray Petillant, Loire, Brut NV Chenin Blanc
- Billcart Salmon, Champagne, Brut Reserve NV
- Graham Beck, Sparkling, South Africa, Brut Rose NV
- 2009 Lini Labrusca Rosso Emilia
- Gruet Demi Sec, Sparkling, New Mexico, NV
2 Samuel 16:2
The king asked Ziba, “Why have you brought these?” Ziba answered, “The donkeys are for the king’s household to ride on, the bread and fruit are for the men to eat, and the wine is to refresh those who become exhausted in the wilderness.”
Thursday, March 31, 2011
The Wire screwed up my schedule but weekends are again free.
Lost my weekends due to the wire schedule cancelling everyone's weekends off but its Monday through Friday again after this weekend.
My wife and I went to a wine tasting fixed menu dinner and what follows is a list of our favorite wines from that night. All are worthy of sliding into the gullet and I have no vested interest in any of them other than for libation.
Genesis 27:28
May God give you heaven’s dew and earth’s richness— an abundance of grain and new wine.
My wife and I went to a wine tasting fixed menu dinner and what follows is a list of our favorite wines from that night. All are worthy of sliding into the gullet and I have no vested interest in any of them other than for libation.
- Cal del Monte 2001 Amarone (Valpolicella Classico Superiore DOC, Italy)
- Sorelle Bronca NV Extra Dry Prosecco (Valdobbiadene, Italy) (Already bought two bottles of this)
- Mastrojanni 2005 Brunello (Montalcino, Italy)
- Palmina 2009 Arneis, Honea Vineyard (Santa Ynez Valley, California)
- Palmina 2009 Dolcetto (Santa Barbara County, California)
Link of Wine Distributor (Cream Wine Company) for the dinner www.creamwine.com
May God give you heaven’s dew and earth’s richness— an abundance of grain and new wine.
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