AmusingComments Off on Hillary Clinton Pimps Out Her Tears For Votes
Feb102008
I’m starting to get the impression that Hillary Clinton is emotionally unstable. Any time the polls don’t go her way, she delivers an Oscar-worthy performance of crying before an audience and always before the camera.
It’s funny that Hillary didn’t shed a tear in public when Bill was staining dresses and sharing his cigar with Monica Lewinsky, but now she can’t seem to turn off the tears.
Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., wipes her eye as she listens to a disabled U.S. veteran in the audience tell his story during a campaign stop at The City of Lewiston Memorial Armory in Lewiston, Maine., Saturday, Feb. 9, 2008. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
AmusingComments Off on 108 Year Old Woman Dies : Credited Coors Light As The Key To Her Longevity
Feb102008
When George Burns was in his late 90s he was asked what his doctors thought of his habits. His answer was; “Every doctor who tried to scare me away from martinis & cigars is dead now, so what does that tell ya?”
Not many people live to be a centenarian, but Alberta Krieg has held that honor, with a little help from Coors Light.
Krieg was 108 when she passed away Thursday morning at Heritage House, Wilkes-Barre.
Krieg had frequently credited drinking Coors Light as the key to her longevity.
“Coors Light keeps me young,” she said in a previous interview with The Citizens’ Voice.
Coors Light was first brewed in 1978, when Krieg was 79. The Coors brewery opened in 1873, just 26 years before Krieg was born.
She was born on Oct. 30, 1899, in Wilkes-Barre, a daughter of the late Henry and Frank Becker Armbruster, and was a 1917 graduate of Wilkes-Barre High School. After graduation, she worked at Nersner’s Store and Kelly’s Five and Dime Store.
Diane Drank of Wapwallopen, Krieg’s granddaughter, remembers her grandmother telling her about riding the trolleys in Wilkes-Barre. But Krieg wasn’t living in the past.
Drank said her grandmother always kept up with the times, especially the styles. When they went shopping together, Krieg would offer fashion advice, sometimes telling her, “What are you buying that for? That’s not in style.”
In October 2007, she had celebrated her 108th birthday with a party at the Heritage House with her family and friends.
“She had a very good life, she was never in the hospital. She was a very healthy person all her life,” Drank said. “She was a very loving and caring person, always there for me and everybody.”
In 1946 the American Transit Association, through its radio program, ‘Speak to America,’ sponsored a nationwide contest to find the REAL Kilroy, offering a prize of a real trolley car to the person who could prove himself to be the genuine article. Almost 40 men stepped forward to make that claim, but only James Kilroy from Halifax, Massachusetts had evidence of his identity.
Kilroy was a 46-year old shipyard worker during the war. He worked as a checker at the Fore River Shipyard in Quincy. His job was to go around and check on the number of rivets completed. Riveters were on piecework and got paid by the rivet.
Kilroy would count a block of rivets and put a check mark in semi-waxed lumber chalk, so the rivets wouldn’t be counted twice. When Kilroy went off duty, the riveters would erase the mark.
Later on, an off-shift inspector would come through and count the rivets a second time, resulting in double pay for the riveters.
One day Kilroy’s boss called him into his office. The foreman was upset about all the wages being paid to riveters, and asked him to investigate. It was then that he realized what had been going on.
The tight spaces he had to crawl in to check the rivets didn’t lend themselves to lugging around a paint can and brush, so Kilroy decided to stick with the waxy chalk. He continued to put his checkmark on each job he inspected, but added KILROY WAS HERE in king-sized letters next to the check, and eventually added the sketch of the chap with the long nose peering over the fence and that became part of the Kilroy message. Once he did that, the riveters stopped trying to wipe away his marks.
Ordinarily the rivets and chalk marks would have been covered up with paint. With war on, however, ships were leaving the Quincy Yard so fast that there wasn’t time to paint them.
As a result, Kilroy’s inspection ‘trademark’ was seen by thousands of servicemen who boarded the troopships the yard produced. His message apparently rang a bell with the servicemen, because they picked it up and spread it all over Europe and the South Pacific. Before the war’s end, ‘Kilroy’ had been here, there, and everywhere on the long haul to Berlin and Tokyo.
To the unfortunate troops outbound in those ships, however, he was a complete mystery; all they knew for sure was that some jerk named Kilroy had ‘been there first.’ As a joke, U.S. servicemen began placing g the graffiti wherever they landed, claiming it was already there when they arrived.
Kilroy became the U.S. super-GI who had always ‘already been’ wherever GIs went. It became a challenge to place the logo in the most unlikely places imaginable (it is said to be atop Mt. Everest, the Statue of Liberty, the underside of the Arch De Triumphe, and even scrawled in the dust on the moon.)
And as the war went on, the legend grew. Underwater demolition teams routinely sneaked ashore on Japanese-held islands in the Pacific to map the terrain for the coming invasions by U.S. troops (and thus, presumably, were the first GI’s there). On one occasion, however, they reported seeing enemy troops painting over the Kilroy logo! In 1945, an outhouse was built for the exclusive use of Roosvelt, Stalin, and Churchill at the Potsdam conference.
To help prove his authenticity in 1946, James Kilroy brought along officials from the shipyard and some of the riveters. He won the trolley car, which he gave it to his nine children as a Christmas gift and set it up as a playhouse in the Kilroy front yard in Halifax, Massachusetts.
All Presidents, like all human beings, get many things wrong. Ronald Reagan’s extraordinary achievement as President of the U.S. was to succeed in getting the two biggest challenges of his time right: defeating the Soviet Union and reviving the American economy and spirit. Neither of those achievements was inevitable. Both were fiercely opposed at the time. But he persisted — his visionary focus matched only by a gentleness of character and a brilliance of communication.
We honor his birthday this past week with an extraordinary video tribute to the greatest President of our lifetime.
AmusingComments Off on Drinking The John McCain Conservative Kool-Aid
Feb082008
I’m not drinking the John McCain conservative Kool-Aid. John McCain calls himself a life-long conservative. But that’s not what life-long conservatives call him. The painful truth is that McCain is really nothing more than Hillary-light.
No matter which of these quasi-liberals, John McCain, Hillary Clinton or Barrack Hussein Obama wins in November our nation is going to leap to the left over the next four years. The two major concerns for conservatives must be the ongoing war against Muslim extremists and the next Supreme Court appointments.
There are attempts already underway to use these two issues as justification for why conservatives must unite behind John McCain. Yet McCain’s past track record lends no clear indication that McCain can be trusted with these two issues any more than he can be trusted to secure our borders, protect free political speech or aggressively interrogate the only people who can tell us when and where the next 9/11 will happen.
McCain’s history is one of being better aligned with Democrats than conservatives. Even now, McCain’s message to voters is this…
“I will reach across the aisle, and work with Democrats. – Conservatives need to calm down. – I know there are things we disagree on, but we must look for things we can agree on and forget the rest…”
McCain will work across the aisle and conservatives will have to “calm down” and learn to live with that reality. Or, they will live with the reality of a Clinton-Obama era that will make Jimmy Carter look like a conservative genius.
I am not angry. I do not hate John McCain. As it stands right now, I will not vote for McCain due to the fact that he is a quasi-liberal and his pissing all over the First Amendment with McCain/Feingold. However, if he were to pick a true conservative as his Vice President, I would vote for him. I would base my change of heart on the fact that McCain is 72 and may kick the bucket (from natural causes) during his term.
And that would be definitely better than Clinton-Obama.