On July 14th the NAACP passed a resolution condemning the racist elements with in the Tea Party movement. Needless to say that didn?t go over well with the Tea Party or the conservative movement in general.
Now, I’ll be honest, I haven?t read the text of the resolution, but I find it hard to believe that the NAACP was actually condemning the entire Tea Party Movement, and was instead just targeting the racist fringe elements, elements that tend to exist within all most any political movement. Elements that most Tea Party leaders themselves have been trying to remove.
So, on the 19th, Andrew Brietbart dug up some video clips from an NAACP awards dinner in March where Shirley Sherrod, USDA Georgia Director of Rural Development gave a speech, edited them to remove any context, and posted them on his site Big Government in an attempt to prove a point. Using editied video to undermine your political opponents has exploded thanks to the advent of the YouTube era.
Archive for March 2009
Local Monopolies
Living in a small rural town means that my options for utilities and other services is fairly limited. If I want cable TV for instance, my only choice is Mediacom. If I want a phone, Iowa Telecom. My water and garbage service is provided by the city of Grinnell to whom I pay my water bill. My only option for electricity and gas service is Alliant Energy. Some of these companies pay a premium to the city council in order to maintain their local monopoly. There is no competition and thus the prices I pay are basically at the whims of Alliant.
In Thursday’s edition of the Grinnell Herald-Register (The only local city based newspaper) was an article citing Alliant Energy’s request for a rate hike. If allowed by the Iowa Utilities Board, will be whopping 18.1% increase for residential services and 14.6% increase for the industrial services.
There are so many things that I can see that are wrong with this system, the first being that there is no competition. The second being that residential parts of town are getting hit with an increase that is 3.5% higher than that of the industrial areas of town. Why do small towns let themselves get put into a strangle hold by utility companies like this and why does the state allow it to happen. I’m all for the idea of free markets and healthy compition, but when there is no competition we become helpless to combat the greed.
I want to urge everyone that would be affected by this rate change to contact the Iowa Utilities Board and speak their voice. This rate increase is wrong and there needs to be more compition.
Movie of the Week

This weeks movie, August Rush, is a great Oliver Twist like tale staring Freddie Highmore, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, and Keri Russell. Freddie, plays the young Evan Taylor, a musical prodigy, who discovers his gift after running away from an orphanage to the streets of New York. He is taken in by man known as “The Wizard”, played by Robin Williams. Wizard simply wants to exploit the boy’s talents, he gives the boy the name “August Rush” and puts him to work pan handling in central park. After the run down theather that serves as the home of Wizard and the children he fosters, is raided by the cops, Evan hides out under the bed of Hope, Jamia Simone Nash, a vocally talented 12 year old who lives in a church shelter with her grandmother. This is a great movie, that I highly recommend. It reminds us that music is the heart of us all and that love will always find a way.
Preview
Slap Guitar
Check after the break for ways to get August Rush?
The Next War
Through out the history of our nation, since it?s founding in the fire of revolution in 1776, we have spent more time at war through either actual fighting or in proxy wars, than we have at peace.
We have fought wars against almost every major European power, including ones who are now our allies, such as Britain, France, Spain, Germany, Italy, as well as nations that are still not so friendly such as Russia.
America?s conflicts 1798 to 2004
This week in Twitter
I’ve joined the ranks of Twitters for the last week or so and it is quickly becoming an obsession. In those few days I have begun following about 350 people and have gained a following of 150. If you don’t know, Twitter is like a cross between an instant messenger service and bloging. Your limited to only 140 characters per post and is sometimes called micro-blogging.
In the last week one of the things I have learned from Twitter is…
That@johnleonardo and a few others seem to have some odd obsession with President Obama’s teleprompter usage, even though it doesn’t appear as if he has used it any more than other Presidents before him. It might be that they are seeing it more because Obama actually talks to people on a regular basis. The have even created a fake twitter persona called @BOTeleprompter.
@michellemalkin: seems to have become the first celebrity to ever reply to one of my tweets. I’m not sure exactly how I feel about that. This is how it went.
@michellemalkinVery effective that almost all GOP house members have text of Dodd/Treasury/Obama provision in poster form/on paper. Driving the point home.
@vastvariety: @michellemalkin If it’s all Dodd and Obama’s fault what was Paulson and Bush responsible for in September when the first money went to AIG?
@michellemalkin:@vastvariety They all have dirty hands, and I have said so many, many times.
@vastvariety: @michellemalkin They do Indeed.
I find myself not too happy with Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) today. It appears that on Wednesday he went on to the liberal talk radio show of Bill Press and said?