Category Archives: General Interest

Happy Trails

In light of this Wikileaks email dump and the tizzy about “Russian involvement”, well, imagine the fun once Putin starts dumping some of those dull “yoga schedules and wedding plans” deleted emails he’s sitting on from Queen Hillary’s private email server.  Oh, I suppose we will find out if Bill Clinton really doesn’t use email, lol, among how Hillary’s vast, spidery wholesale brokering of her State Department position, power and access were used to funnel money through the Clinton Foundation for personal enrichment.  The Clinton Foundation should make her cattle futures look like dried up cow chips…   And, the one thing you can count on with Hillary and Bill – they are sloppy operators, who leave a lot of trails and their cover-ups are always excessive, paranoid reactionary schemes to silence everyone they can.  Trust me on that one.

In 2006, my husband and I were driving to New Mexico to visit our son, who was in the Air Force and getting ready to deploy to Iraq.  We wanted to see him before he left.  It was nighttime and we were driving through some town in West TX called Bovina, when my son called and asked where we were.  I told him we were going through Bovina and I told him it’s really foggy, but this fog is brownish and the smell is really horrid.   He said, “Oh, that’s just “shit fog”.”  He told me that’s what people on his Air Force base call it, as that base also was right outside a cow town.  He said these cow towns, where large herds of cattle are brought into town and held in pens, are like that, where the cow crap gets in the air and mixed with the fog.  So, expect before Putin is done leaking, the Clinton Foundation will be engulfed in a massive cloud of  “shit fog”.

Here’s my post from July 5, 2016;

Oh, those “what ifs”

Putin is the one to watch now in this endless thatwitch2016  never-ending soap opera.

Well, now that the President Obama has thrown the full force of  his presidency behind Hillary, trying to rewrite her private email server narrative as just a careless mistake, but NOT criminal, we shall see if her email server really was hacked by hostile countries’ intelligence.

What if Putin starts leaking the most damaging emails, his intelligence services are sitting on, in Western media?

The plot might still have a few unexpected twists and turns in the very near future.

The ball is now in Putin’s court and I wonder if he is going to hold his cards, to use later, or release enough to destroy Hillary politically now?

Keep the popcorn handy, this show isn’t over yet;-)

Oh, those “what ifs”

I feel almost psychic, lol.  Anyway, the same advice holds, keep that popcorn handy, this show is just getting started;-)

Happy Trails, as these electronic trails wind their way back to the ole’ cattle futures queen…

 

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Filed under Foreign Policy, General Interest, Politics, Public Corruption, The Media

Putin moves?

About a month ago the DNC reported that the Russians had hacked their computers:

http://hotair.com/archives/2016/06/14/russia-hacks-dnc-steals-democratic-oppo-research-file-on-trump/


Rumors float about that Wikileaks is a Russian front:

https://20committee.com/2015/08/31/wikileaks-is-a-front-for-russian-intelligence/


And now, as Hillary’s coronation process is set to begin, Wikileaks dumps thousands of DNC emails:

http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2016/07/detailed-list-findings-wikileaks-dnc-document-dump/

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jul/24/clinton-campaign-blames-russia-wikileaks-sanders-dnc-emails


These emails show clear MEDIA COLLUSION to undermine Sanders.  I am sure there was MEDIA COLLUSION between the Trump campaign (or Bill Clinton’s minions) to aid the “GOP Insurgency” too, so Trump and his groupies might not want to scream foul about Hillary and the DNC too loudly.

This entire campaign is a total fraud and the so-called “free press” is a national disgrace and a huge player in this CORRUPT, RIGGED system.

If the press COLLUDES with candidates to spread their propaganda and to help destroy opposing candidates,  the American people are just dupes to sophisticated propaganda and really are the “low-information voters” the left talks about or Trump’s 5th Avenue Loyalists, who will follow him even if he shoots someone on 5th Avenue.  Now the part that isn’t out in the open yet is the POLLING KABUKI – where the media uses polls to brainwash and push public opinion to whatever side of issues or whichever candidates they are SELLING.  This combination of coordinated talking points messaging, collusion with the media and then the reinforcement with relentless repetition of polling data is INFORMATION WARFARE being waged against the American people by the corrupt Democratic political machine.

Republicans never win in the mainstream media, yet for about 8 months CNN, MSNBC and FOX all were selling the “GOP Insurgency” to make sure Trump threw the GOP primary into chaos.  Then in March CNN and MSNBC turned on Trump after those “fascist memes” spread.  This was one political party determined to make sure Hillary wins – NO MATTER WHAT.


Here’s the timeline on those Trump fascist memes:

February 28, 2016 – Trump retweets a Mussolini quote and refuses to denounce David Duke on a Sunday talk show.

March 3, 2016 – GOP debate where Trump defends Mussolini quote and doubles down on his committing war crimes to defeat ISIS.

March 5, 2016 – Trump does a staged raised arm pledge rally where the Nuremberg imagery smacked you in the face. He read a prepared card with that pledge. I’d love to know who came up with that pledge rally idea and if it was Trump, did anyone try to dissuade him.

March 10, 2016 – Michelle Fields claims she was strong-armed by Lewandowski leaving a press briefing. I have wondered if he was a handy Clinton middleman, because it sure seemed like he was set-up as the thug in that Michelle Fields controversy. I watched that video over and over and did not see him grab her arm where the bruises were and I believe she sounded very deceptive in interviews.

The Trump controversy builds. And then he walked into the home of wacko leftist central, Chicago.  The timeline suggests that  Trump was duped into setting up his own bonfire and lighting it, before he was tossed into it by the left-wing mob.

March 12, 2016 – Leftist ground zero, Chicago, Trump faces massive organized leftist mobs and cancels his rally.

Those protests in Chicago were staged and funded by leftists – and Soros very likely played a large role.  This riot in San Jose is just part of that continued staged agitation propaganda to try to incite violent clashes with Trump supporters.  I still wonder who in Trump’s campaign egged him on with this strong-man themed garbage?  Was that pledge rally a Trump brain storm or was Trump sold on it?   Soros and other far-left groups are likely funding, organizing and staging these riots and street clashes, but who in Trump’s campaign came up with these strong-man talking points in the first place???   That’s what I would like to know, because it sure looks like he was massively set-up.  When he did that pledge rally, where the liberal press was primed with making that Nuremberg rally comparison immediately, almost like they had received some talking points.  Was there MEDIA COLLUSION and if so, with whom???


Once again, here is what I believe:

EPIC influence-peddling and public corruption led to the mass media created hyped “winning in the polls”. That is WHOLESALE PUBLIC CORRUPTION.

Trump used the borrowed Clinton-style scorched earth/mass media saturation strategy.

The Carville, Begala, Stephanopolis team introduced America to this mass media saturation INFORMATION WARFARE, with their “War Room” and then they decided to wage “scorched earth” during the Impeachment scandal in 1998.

Mass media saturation is the military strategy of swarming juxtaposed to a mass media battlefield

Scorched earth is the military strategy of scorched earth (a war crime under the Geneva Conventions btw) juxtaposed to a mass media battlefield.  Scorched earth information warfare is a take no prisoners blitz of vicious character assassinations AND mass media saturation on steroids.

Combined, they have been ruthlessly used to divide America into hostile, warring factions

Now, a friend of the Clintons, a corrupt crony capitalist, waged scorched earth/mass media saturation INFORMATION WARFARE against the GOP, cast as the “GOP Insurgent”, is how his media enablers spun him.

During the Benghazi hearing, Hillary sailed through that hearing and the Dems on the committee never wavered from their talking points.:

“This hearing is a right-wing witch hunt” and

“This is costing the American taxpayers $4.7 million.”

A few of those Dems, to include Congressman Cummings, groveled so shamelessly, that’s it’s obvious they wanted to secure enough Clinton brownie points to merit consideration for cabinet posts in her administration.

Every dem on that committee did what Trump has done for 10 months – repeated the same short talking points for 11 hours straight. They did not deviate. Then the media and some high-profile big name peeps did interviews to dismiss the Republicans and then the news media declared Hillary won and the polling got driven home that she “won”. You can’t break through mass media saturation. It creates a messaging wall – those talking points are what gets driven home. That is the only thing most people remember – it is mass media brainwashing! Watch any dem on TV – they repeat their talking points as often as they can and they circulate these talking points to a virtual army of media folks – TV, print media, online, they even have hordes of them on comment threads, they were in those Excite politics message boards back in 1998. The liberal media colludes to facilitate it.

FOX News opened shop in America to fuel the right-wing, in massive agitation propaganda efforts.  Or as the left dubbed it (Faux News). FOX News has gone all-in to promote the Trump “GOP Insurgency”.  Hostile foreign intelligence agencies engage in active measures – some have stayed active to destroy America from within for many decades.  Soros funds much on the left – to include BLM. Saudi Arabia and some other Arab states have funded the spread of Wahhabism in black communities, and black colleges, since the late 1970s.  Americans, by and large, prefer to remain Trump’s 5th Avenue Loyalists or the left’s Low-information voters – they remain mindless idiots.

The mass media saturation strategy was developed by far-left Alinskyite Marxists.  The messaging wall required for mass media saturation to succeed requires the active collusion of the mass media NEWS outlets to facilitate it, by actively and relentlessly repeating the messages of the political candidate or activists using this “buzz word, catchphrase spin. Mass media saturation INFORMATION WARFARE requires mass media collusion to succeed.  This strategy can NOT succeed without mass media messaging dominance to CONTROL (“win”) the 24/7 news cycle (or as the Clinton team dubbed it – the spin cycle).

SPIN is prepackaged, mass distributed LIES to manipulate public opinion by manufacturing opinion cascades.  It is a very sophisticated, and very complex mass media form of INFORMATION WARFARE.  It can NOT be waged by a couple of inexperienced staffers from the Potemkin Trump campaign staff.

http://stellamorabito.net/2016…

https://www.washingtonpost.com…

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Filed under Culture Wars, General Interest, Politics, Public Corruption, The Media

Photo practice

Since I’m beginning to get the hang of uploading photos with my cellphone, these are just a few photos I snapped this morning.

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This is my willow tree in my backyard.  I thought it was a weeping willow tree when I planted it as a bare root tree, which looked like a stick with a few roots on the end, about 20 years ago.  It’s not a weeping willow tree.  This tree came from the Arbor Day Foundation.   That corner of my backyard was always swampy for weeks after it rained and this willow tree, whatever kind it is, did the trick of keeping that section of the yard drier.

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Just a pot of assorted succulents, which were all pieces from other plants that I stuck in this pot to root.  Time to divide some of these too.

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A rose bush from my front yard – time to dead head for sure.

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The last bloom on my hydrangea in the front yard.  It needs some fungicide to deal with those spots on the leaves.  I’ve been slacking.

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My neighbor’s crepe myrtle.  Too bad I didn’t get the hang of this uploading business when the azaleas were blooming during the Spring.

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Some cool looking mushrooms that sprouted in my hibiscus flower pot on my front porch about a month ago.  They collapsed and died a day later.

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A blah hosta….  ho-hum….

 

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Filed under General Interest

Forgotten war heroes

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Note: The floral background is my coffee table runner, which I sewed from Wal-mart clearance fabric.

The information age makes so many tasks easier and accessible to ordinary people.  My husband went and bought our first personal computer in 1997 after months of me arguing, “Who needs a computer in their home?”   He kept telling me it would be great for the kids and that brought forth my argument about how much money we already wasted on our two sons and their endless need for a newer gaming system.  Our two daughters never took much of an interest in computer gaming.

After we had a PC, the kids began to complain to my husband that I was hogging the computer and my husband would smirk and remind me of all my arguments against purchasing a PC.  I was completely wrong and this same argument goes to the cellphone craze.  I rarely used my cellphone, and had my husband take internet off our phones years ago.   We still have a landline at home and I don’t travel much.   I didn’t need a cellphone at my job.  Assuredly, I didn’t need a smart phone.  Last year, my husband told me he wanted to get an Android phone and he said I should get one too.   Here again, I didn’t see the point, so my son, who is a software engineer, told me I was thinking about a cellphone in the wrong way.  He told me I needed to stop thinking of it as a “phone” and start thinking of it as a portable computer.

Being technologically challenged, my forays into the computer world always start with baby steps, then I’ll have some epiphany leading me towards my son’s much clearer vision of technology, both the marvelous good and the ominous, potential bad.

Robotics are being used to improve the lives of many people with physical disabilities, in industry and many other positive ways.  Yet, after the Dallas police shooting, I hadn’t given a second thought to the robot armed with C-4 the Dallas police used to take down the shooter, but my son pointed out some nightmarish scenarios combining militarized police and robotics, that gave me pause to reflect.  My thought was that I was just glad the police had neutralized the shooter without any more police officers being injured.  Such is technology, it can be put to good or evil and as I’ve mentioned before about what a “threat” is:

“Here’s another one of those home truths that I am so fond of using to make my point.  Let’s state what should be obvious, but apparently needs to be driven home once more – any weapon, be it a slingshot or a nuclear weapon, is an inanimate object.  Inanimate objects aren’t the problem.  Yep, it’s always the people that pose the problem and let’s be more precise here, it’s what’s in the hearts of man that can turn that slingshot or nuclear weapon into a “threat”.   We’ve always got to contend with people first and the rest of the inanimate objects truly rank as a secondary issue.”

https://libertybellediaries.com/2013/06/18/global-zero-another-nothing-burger-plan/

While my son brought up nightmare scenarios, in my life, I’ve been trying to incorporate computer technology into my life in positive, helpful ways, with my crafting, cooking, writing and definitely with my love of books.  A couple posts back I mentioned printing out a vintage print for a craft project, which I found at a free site.  There’re plenty of free sites for many things, from coupons to full novels no longer under copyright.  I keep trying to find more ways to incorporate computer technology into my daily tasks, from finding recipes to paying bills to historical research, to my blogging.

Around the Army, it’s like a true melting pot of America and I learned so much from all the people we met along our travels as an Army family.  Many years ago, my husband, kids and I had gone to Augusta to visit a Desert Storm friend of my husband and his wife, whom had also been our neighbors in Germany during Desert Storm.

Often, enlisted soldiers come from poor backgrounds, like my husband and I did.  However, around the Army I noticed that among enlisted leaders, who move up the ranks, there are a lot of very smart, hard-working people, who read a lot.  This friend and his wife loved to read as much as my husband and I do.

During this visit, my husband’s friend, who has rural GA roots,  and I began talking about several things as I was looking at some of the books in his home.  I love browsing through people’s home libraries or even their periodicals, as it tells me a lot about them.  In fact, when my kids were young, I told them if they go in a friend’s house and there are no books, find other friends.

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Above: My grandmother’s two books on herbal medicine

This friend had several books on old folk medicine and home remedies in the South and also on oral histories.  Both topics have been of interest to me since my early teens.  When my maternal grandmother died when I was 11, my mother, inherited some of my grandmother’s books and a unique revolving wooden bookcase, that was about 40 inches high.  I became fascinated by two books on herbal remedies, while my mother, a registered nurse and dedicated believer in modern medicine, refused to consider herbal remedies.

My maternal grandmother preferred natural remedies over chemical ones.  The early PA Dutch used a faith healing called Pow wow medicine combined with herbal remedies.  My grandmother embraced Pow wow medicine and both herbal and modern medicine, so I guess she wanted to cover all the bases.  My mother didn’t want to hear about Pow wow medicine or herbal remedies.  My paternal great-grandmother, like my maternal grandmother, embraced all three.  As a child, my great-grandmother sent me off to wander the fields and woods to gather items for her.  Among her home remedies, she made a salve from the knots on pine trees, so I would go cut off knots on pine trees for her and she made a tea from some weed, the name escapes me at the moment, that was good for whatever ails you.  My mother constantly warned me not to drink any of her teas, as I had bad allergies.  I sipped my great-grandmother’s teas and survived…  That salve she made was actually a good drawing salve for cuts.

On the history channel, when it still was a “history” channel, I watched a show on ancient Egypt and there was a segment on ancient medicine, where the narrator mentioned honey being good to aid in fighting infection and healing cuts.  I’ve tried it many times and it works.  The ancient Chinese also used honey.  I met a young Army wife from south Texas, who babysat my kids when we lived in Germany, who told me to wet a wad of tobacco and stick it on a bee sting to draw out the venom.  It worked, so I use it.  My late mother would be appalled, but there you have it.  She lamented my pack rat tendencies constantly and despaired,  when she would ask me why I was keeping all this “junk” and I would  respond, “I might need it one day.” And in exasperation she would say, “You are just like your grandmother!”  So, I am like my grandmother in many ways….

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My grandmothers were just ordinary, poor women in the backwoods of PA, but they worked hard, they were great cooks and bakers, did lovely needlework and quilts, and although “uneducated” they both valued learning.  My great-grandmother had a third grade education, married when she was 13 or 14 years old, raised 9 children, ran a farm, she was an expert gardener with shelves midway up her kitchen windows filled with African violets.  She taught me how to propagate African violets from leaf cuttings and other plants from cuttings.   She taught me how to spot plant insects, diseases and signs of over or under watering.  She told me it’s always better to under water than to over water and from my experience that is the truth.  She spent her life being productive until she was almost 90 years old.  She was in her 70s when I was born and she taught me needlework and I helped her with selecting the fabrics, from boxes of fabric scraps she had acquired from a local blouse factory, and then cutting out her quilt pieces for her.  She also patiently helped me learn how to write my letters, while we sat at her kitchen table.  She taught me how to read crochet patterns, but despite her best efforts I never caught on to crocheting.  She read the newspaper every day.

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Above: Government leaflets on where to write for records

One summer, I had been up in her attic looking through boxes and came across post cards and old photos, so I carted them downstairs.  My great-grandmother, with the third grade education, had somewhere picked up the habit of having  tea with cookies or pastry in the afternoon, so we sat at her kitchen table many afternoons, as I would show her old photos and write the names on the back, as she struggled to remember who the relatives in the photos were.  This led to my interest in genealogy.  So, I did some research and found addresses to write for information on birth and death records, marriage records, and divorce records.

Herein comes this conversation with my husband’s friend about oral histories, where the information age can greatly aid in not only genealogical research, but in compiling and saving oral histories.  Several years ago, an elderly customer in the store where I worked asked me for assistance and we had an amazing conversation, after I commented on the WWII baseball cap he was wearing.  He was a local farmer wearing overalls, from out in the boonies in rural GA.   As he started to tell me of his WWII experiences, it struck me that his was a tale of a soldier from my favorite WWII movie, The Big Red One, which I wrote about in a long ago blog post:

“Being sort of squeamish and abhorring violence, I’m not a fan of war movies, but one of my favorite movies, oddly enough, is The Big Red One, the 1980 Sam Fuller WWII epic.  Being a lowly private in the Army, stationed in southern Germany in 1980, our movie theater was located across a parking lot,  behind my barracks.  My kaserne, perched atop a picturesque southern mountaintop, was a vintage German army post and the Germans built their posts in a consistent, orderly fashion, with the companies neatly arranged around a parade field in the center and all the lesser support facilities beyond that tight circle.

There wasn’t much to do on small kasernes, like the one I was at, but being a little country girl, I found everything new and interesting. I could imagine I was Heidi in the Alps (well, okay, the Swabian Alps), following the footpath down the mountain to the town proper or let my imagination run wild,  gazing out the large window at the end of the female hallway, where a view to rival the famous Neuschwanstein Castle, greeted me each morning.  My view, a lovely old monastery perched upon another mountaintop in the distance, fueled my ever-fluttering flights of fancy.  Of course, I took several trips to that old monastery to explore it close-up.

Now, having a movie theater within walking distance seemed a luxury to me, because the nearest movie theater, where I grew-up in the mountains of  PA, was 10 miles away.  I would always ask a few of the guys to go to the movies with me and first we’d go to the snack bar, next to the movie theater, for ice cream, because I loved eating my vanilla ice cream first.  These uncomplaining young men, in gentlemanly fashion, usually insisted on buying my ice cream too.

I met many wonderful young men in that unit and as an aside to this tale, gentlemen were still in plentiful supply in the US Army in those days. Back to my story,  the only drawback to our movie theater was the same movie played for weeks on end, until something new arrived from the States.   I watched The Big Red One over and over and each time I came away remembering some new details I had missed before.”

https://libertybellediaries.com/2014/03/24/who-will-defend-our-castle/

This old farmer is one of America’s heroes, who will likely never be remembered for his sacrifices to our great country.  If you’ve got old war veterans in your family or neighborhood, just taking a few minutes to record their stories and preserving them in an online journal or creating a blog to share with other family members could preserve more of the real history of our American heroes.

My interest in these old family photos gave me a deeper appreciation of my  uneducated, backwoods ancestors.  A few times while having tea in my great-grandmother’s kitchen, one of her sons, my Great-Uncle Clark, stopped by and he took an interest in what I was doing. He served in the South Pacific as a Marine in WWII and was seriously injured.

Years later, when my husband and I were visiting my parents in rural PA, my mother told me, “You should go visit Uncle Clark while you’re home.  He asks about you all the time.”  So, I drove over to his modest home.  His wife is a typical PA Dutch homemaker.  The house was charmingly decorated and very clean.  My Uncle Clark had pursued the genealogy search with a vengeance and he wanted to discuss his findings with me.  He had several boxes in the basement he wanted to retrieve, so I trailed along to the basement, where everything was arranged in an orderly fashion and there were shelves lined with home-canned vegetables and fruits.

We carted the boxes up to his kitchen and chatted for several hours.  My Uncle Clark passed away several years ago and his genealogy collection, I believe, is with one of his daughters.  Someday I’d like to visit her and see if I can take photos of some of his collection and create an online journal, but the one thing I never talked about, nor did my Uncle Clark ever talk about, was his wartime experiences in WWII.   I wish I had gotten his war story and not just “old” family history.

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Filed under American Character, American History, General Interest

Coincidences?

Coincidence?  Trump borrowed the Clinton mass media saturation/scorched earth strategy to wage his “GOP Insurgency”, which relied on media elite collusion to give him 24/7 news cycle control for the primary.  CNN and MSNBC  switched back in April to running the Clinton scorched earth to take down Trump, but that left FOX as the all-in for Trump channel.

So, here we are today where the GOP dies and becomes the Party of Trump and oddly enough, FOX News loses it’s American CEO, a former Republican media consultant, and now will be run by Rupert Murdoch, a mega-rich foreigner with no loyalty to America.

One can only wonder that FOX – the “conservative-leaning”, American flag-waving channel loses it’s American CEO on the very same day that the GOP turns over it’s party to a total fraud, NY liberal, who hired first Roger Stone (a crook), then Lewandowski (a thug), and then Manafort (an even bigger crook) to orchestrate his campaign.

On the very same day Trump secures the GOP nomination, the last bastion where he has a 24/7 loyal cheerleading section on cable news also changes leadership.  We’re in July or I might fancifully wonder if the Ides of March are upon the GOP….

The coincidental timing is amazing.

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Sore losers?

Often choices in life and politics are presented as being binary; you either select one or the other.  This presidential election rests as one of those being presented as a binary choice and it may well come down to either Trump or Hillary.  However, in reality our Constitution allows for each  American adult to make his/her own choice, so while we are conditioned to believe and thus fall into the belief that only a candidate from one of the two dominant political parties can win, it is not impossible for another candidate to win.

In the age of mass media, it is not inconceivable that a write-in campaign could be orchestrated and succeed, although admittedly such a thing happening is highly unlikely.  Before last year, would anyone have predicted a loudmouth, New York liberal celebrity real estate developer would launch an “insurgency campaign” and hijack the Republican Party?  With these two unpopular 2016 presidential choices, the odds aren’t in the realm of the impossible.

When politicians and their mouthpieces present you with binary choices, they’re trying to push you into believing you have no choice other than the two presented.  It’s a political form of strong-arming people and I automatically rebel against being pushed.  So, up front, Americans have other choices and while it hasn’t happened in the past that anyone got elected without being on the ballot and part of one of a major political party apparatus – it isn’t impossible.

After this post, I am going to forego a litany of criticisms of Trump or spewing about the Republican Convention.   I’ve written plenty of posts on what I believe is the wholesale political corruption attacking the very lifeblood of American liberty, so I am not going to do a “let me count the ways”, of why I believe both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump rest as  unfit to lead our great nation, again.  I want to write more about the American character and about things that matter a lot more to me than politics.

With that said, the dangerous events swirling outside our borders leave me feeling a deep, unsettling fear for our future.   There are a lot of grave foreign situations brewing that should have all of us worried, in fact, the collapse of  American foreign policy, coupled with the domestic political rabid partisanship, under President Obama finds America at a pivotal point.  I believe neither Hillary nor Trump possess the character necessary to lead our great nation.

At this point I don’t know who I will vote for in November.  I will not ever vote for Hillary or Trump.  My #NeverTrump is not because I am a “sore loser”, as smarmy Mike Huckabee stated and his equally smarmy,  full-of-it daughter, who has landed a job as an adviser on the Trump campaign, assert.  Yes, I found her brand of propping up thuggish Corey Lewandowski really offensive.   And for people who claim to be “upright Christians” who pretend Donald Trump is morally upright, when his business record, his personal life, his PUBLIC statements all show him to be otherwise offends me a great deal.

The low-points came early and often with Trump and his pathetic gratuitous insults., so while Mike Huckabee sits poised, hoping to land a cushy position in a Trump administration, as does his smarmy daughter (nepotism much),  I remain just an ordinary homemaker, with no connections to people in power and actually probably a great deal at risk from a Hillary administration.

I refuse to pretend one evil is better than another, when both of them lead to the same end.

Although I can’t prove it, I still believe Trump used the Clinton mass media saturation/scorched earth strategy and I remain convinced he didn’t figure out how to run that sophisticated information  warfare strategy on his own.  So, when I believe someone cheated to win- I refuse to ever support that person.   And I believe somewhere in the orchestration of the Trump “GOP Insurgency” are the hands of probably America’s best political strategist, one William Jefferson Clinton.  So, while people will claim, “you’ve got to respect the will of the voters”,  if wholesale public corruption led to the biggest con job ever pulled on the American people – my response is, “NO I DON’T!”

I will never support someone, whom I believe cheated to win.

That’s just how I am.  In my life, I stand up and speak out when I believe something is wrong and I walk away from any group where I believe the leadership is corrupt.  I’ve often stood up and taken an unpopular stance on an issue.   I quit the rifle squad I was on in my high school band, even though, being a person with no coordination, I had worked extremely hard to make that squad.  I had stood outside in the backyard, day after day, until it got dark practicing and feared I could never learn to do the flips and twirls.

That is the only time my father ever suggested I quit, because I think my parents were pained watching me try so hard and make no improvement.  My father came and told me that I am good at so many things and maybe I should try out for something else in the band.  I am tone deaf and the school band director had told me I was wasting my time trying to learn to play an instrument in grade school.  Two of my sisters and my best friend were in the marching band and they talked about all the fun they had, so I wanted be a part of the band too.  I certainly had no hopes of twirling a baton or the flag twirling team, so the rifle squad was my only hope.

I told my father, that I was going to practice every spare minute until try-outs and one afternoon, I had a breakthrough moment and got the hang of it and I made the team.  The captain, a girl whom I had no animosity toward,  was allowed to march at Friday football games, despite not showing up for band practices during the week.   The rule was,  if you don’t show up for practices,you don’t march.  She marched and changed the routine during the half-time performance, so the rest of the team looked like we were lost.  I went to the band director and he made excuses for why the rules didn’t apply to her and I quit the squad.

I have been like this throughout my life.  I quit a volunteer position at the Red Cross as the casework chair,  handling Red Cross messages, when the station manager started lying repeatedly to the military command about the status of Red Cross messages, which he kept misplacing.  He also engaged in behavior that gave the appearance of gross impropriety.  That man lost just about every piece of paper he touched – he would pick up case files and set them down all over the several Red Cross offices,  leaving us hunting high and low, trying to track down case files. It got so bad that I would not let him walk off with any of the case files I was working on.   I quit, even though I loved that volunteer job.

Last year,  I quit my job at a store, where I had worked for almost 15 years, due to a store manager, whom I believed was severely, ethically challenged.   I miss my paycheck, but I have no regrets.

So, no, I won’t ever be getting on board the Trump train, despite the strong-arm tactics by Manafort, Priebus, Giuliani, Gingrich, Huckabee and other Trump mouthpieces.  Calling those who have serious, legitimate, deep concerns about Trump’s fitness for office “sore losers”, while making excuses for Trump’s lies, appalling behavior, bizarre antics as “that’s just Donald Trump being Donald Trump”.  However, it’s not just Trump being Trump;  it’s  MORAL RELATIVISM AND POISON TO THE AMERICAN CHARACTER!  They have sacrificed their integrity, because every single one of them knows what a morally-bankrupt, fraud Donald Trump is and just because he isn’t  quite to the level of immoral and corrupt as the Clintons, is no selling point, in my opinion.

People are free to make their own choices in America and  live with their own conscience. I’m comfortable with my choices

I remain yours truly,

#NeverTrump&NeverHillary                                                     #NoMoreScorchedEarth                                                             #SayNoToPublicCorruption

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Filed under American Character, General Interest, Islam, Politics, Public Corruption, Uncategorized

Has Obama consulted BLM yet?

So, another lethal assault on law enforcement today.  I was busy steam-cleaning my carpets, did I miss another big White House meeting where President Obama and Loretta Lynch can seek the expertise of Al Sharpton and more BLM anarchists???

Attacking law enforcement is anarchy.  From the White House on down, this line of vile race-baiters,  are encouraging this BLM anarchy.  BLM should already be on a terrorist watch list.  Some stupid BLM woman was on a group discussion on Megyn Kelly’s show last week and she said we need to abolish the police.  Well, wake-up America, that’s ANARCHY!  BLM, Sharpton, President Obama and Loretta Lynch callously and cynically exploit police shootings against black men for their partisan propaganda purposes.  The goal is to advance President Obama’s plans to federalize policing in America and to enact stricter gun control.

I’ve been thinking about Jade Helm 15 a lot in recent days.  What was that really all about???

Whenever you ask questions of the Obama administration, they paint you as a tinfoil hat conspiracy nut, to marginalize you and SILENCE you.  This too is an old communist tactic.

 

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Filed under Culture Wars, General Interest, Politics, Public Corruption, Terrorism

My “I love America!” room

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Since I’ve been going on and on about politics so much lately, today I’m going to go on and on about a few of my hobbies.  So, upfront here’s a warning to male readers, this is about crap 99.9% of you have ZERO interest in:-)

Aside from needlework, I love collecting antiques and knick knack stuff, especially old knick knack junk.  Now, the term “antiques” gets tossed about a lot, but in my mind I think most of what gets called “antiques” is just old junk.  I have acquired some of both.

In recent years, this modern, minimalist decorating trend has come into style, so I am still stuck in not exactly a “country style”, but an eclectic style, that I think of as “American clutter-bug “style.  That’s me.  My long-suffering husband likes Spartan living.

I love to, over time, collect things, to create tablescape vignettes or arrangements for my walls.  This all started when my grandmother gave my oldest sister a multi-volume set of interior-decorating books in the late 60s.  My oldest sister is 8 years older than me, so she was a teenager, while I was probably around 8 or 9 years old.  I poured over those interior decorating books and thus began this life-long love of decorating.

My foyer is my “I love America!” room.  When we bought this house in 1994, I told my husband that I want our foyer to shout, “I love America!”, whenever anyone steps foot into our home.   After a few years in this house, I found a wallpaper that I thought had an English hunting vibe and my husband hung the wallpaper for me.   Then gradually, I started adding stuff and I’ve even taken away stuff, to try and keep it from getting overwhelming.  As I didn’t want our whole house to become red, white and blue, I’ve managed to keep it confined to the foyer and I’m maxed out on patriotic-themed stuff there, except at some point, I’m going to buy a painting I saw online years ago, that I want.  This painting has a quote I love on it:

“God grants liberty only to those who love it and are always ready to defend it.”

– Daniel Webster, 1834

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The above photo is a small counted cross stitch piece I made decades ago and it’s got an “I support the troops in Desert Storm” pin on the lower corner.  Somehow, through no real design, I ended up with a lot of pins over the years too, lol.  The other photo is actually a medicine cabinet I found at an antique/consignment shop, which I had my husband hang in the foyer.  Anything requiring anchors is a call-in the guys job in my book, although I do know how to do it.  I can see that tea towel needs to be washed and pressed again, sorry it’s awfully wrinkled.  The God Bless America stitched piece one of my sons made in elementary school.  I taught my sons, as well as my daughters, how to thread a needle and sew when they were young.  Everyone should know how to sew a button back on, imo.

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Along  one wall in my foyer, I have a narrow table filled with American-themed stuff.  On the left is a carnival glass, bicentennial Liberty Bell plate, which I really love.  In the center, I took an old child’s stool (yard sale find) and used it as a display stand for some of my flag-themed figurines.  At the bottom-center is a small counted cross-stitch piece I did last year.  That gold frame was one of my typical repurposed projects.

I had gone into my local Goodwill store, in search of an old book to tear apart for those paper wreaths I was working on.   I had been looking for the “right” frame for this “Let Freedom Ring” piece, when I spotted a small, square, brown-framed mirror for $1.99.   So, I looked at the back to see how it was put together and instantly thought, “I could use some gold leaf on that frame and it would be perfect!”  So, when I got to the register the cashier told me that colored dot on it meant it was on sale for half-price.  Wow, who knew that even the Goodwill does sales to move merchandise, lol.

It only took a few minutes to take that mirror apart and apply the gold leaf.

The rocking horse on the right is another yard sale find, 50 cents or a dollar, I think.  I rarely pay more than a dollar for knick knack finds.  The two larger teddy bear figurines in the back were a gift from my oldest daughter.  The two beanie babies teddy bears in the front were from an old junk store.  I sewed the table runner from clearance firecracker print fabric I found at Wal-mart.  That’s it on that table, because it can’t hold  anymore of my “junk”.

The other photo is of the wall above the table, with this country-style shelf.  The framed vintage print is something I found online, printed out and glued onto poster board. Then I cut out a “frame” from plastic canvas and stitched the red, white and blue frame with yarn.  I used craft glue to glue the “frame” to the print.  The three antique milk bottles on the right, my father gave me long ago.

As a kid, I started collecting old bottles.  Often in the woods, near old farmsteads, you can find a lot of old bottles, from their old trash piles where farmers threw trash, before modern sanitation collection.  I found several old trash piles walking around in the country where I grew up.  I started carefully digging around and uncovering unbroken bottles.  I have a lot of old brown glass Clorox bottles, among many others.

Once I started coming home with these old bottles, my parents added to my collection with bottles from antique stores and flea markets.  On the top of that shelf is a box of M&Ms from Air Force One and a little wooden figurine of the Birthplace of the Republican Party, which my youngest sister gave me.

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On the floor next to my table, I have a doll cradle (another yard sale find) filled with books and a yard-sale red, white and blue banner on the wall.

Above left is a pin quilt, that a dear friend made for me, to stick some of these pins I end up having….. I don’t go buy them.  The Reagan campaign pin one of my sons gave me.  Near the bottom is a John Heinz pickle campaign pin, I love, that I acquired long, long ago when I was still a teenager and living in PA.  I actually met John Heinz when I attended the Presidential Classroom for Young Americans as a senior in high school.  While I love my Heinz pickle pin, I think I love my 1st Place ribbon at the bottom most.  I won 1st place in a cookie-baking contest at the store where I worked years ago.  Behind the 1st place ribbon is my 3rd place ribbon from our pie-baking contest.  I made shoo-fly pie, but I lost to TWO sweet potato pies and I learned an important lesson in regional taste buds.  Living in GA, I should have heeded that sage advice about “when in Rome”, but I didn’t and placed only 3rd….  On the right is a jigsaw puzzle I put together and glued together and mounted on foam core board.  Jigsaw puzzles are another hobby of mine, but these days I stick to http://www.jigzone.com/.  That site has tons of cuts to choose from.  The “lizard cut” is one of my favorites for some reason, although I like the 184-piece crazy cut a lot too.  I also started doing Mahjong Titans recently and that is the extent of my online gaming, lol.

Guess it’s obvious I love teddy bears too:-)

That completes the tour of my “I love America!” foyer for this morning:-)

Oh, here’s the photo from last year of that paper wreath I mentioned:

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And, I’ll end with two photos below.   I like “bunny stuff ” too.  The simple blue and white design rabbits I stitched decades ago.  To the right is a photo of the shelves on the bookcase hutch above my computer here.  The “Somebunny loves you” cross-stitch I sewed decades ago too.  The octagon-shaped Oriental design plate is another $1 yard sale find.

Have a great day:-)

I decided to add a few more photos;

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The first photo is of  one of several PA Dutch hex signs in my foyer.  The second photo is a birdhouse gourd, painted by the Amish, that my son brought back from a recent trip to PA.  I hung it at the center of the mantle on my fireplace.  The last photo is one of my favorite cross-stitch pieces, that  I stitched probably 25 years or so ago.  I just love that design.  I took an old beat-up frame, sanded it, and painted it gold and also I couldn’t find a mat in the the color I wanted.   So, I took an old, off-white mat, I already had and painted it blue.  To the right of the cross-stitch piece is a copper Turkish mess kit, with three stacked compartments for food.  My youngest sister found the mess kit while stationed in Turkey, during her Air Force career, and she gave it to my husband.  To the left of that cross-stitch picture there are a couple old electrical insulators……. my father gave me several of those.  Like I said, I have acquired a lot of old “stuff” and “knick knack stuff”.  My youngest daughter keeps her house to the minimalist look, so I think the endless stuff to dust in my house traumatized her;-)

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Civic virtue in America

Above is a half-hour lecture on Civic virtue in Early America, by Dr. Saul Cornell, the Paul and Diane Guenther Chair, American History, Fordham University.  Dr. Cornell explains the vital role of Civic virtue in the thinking of our Founding Fathers and also in Early American society.

At minute 26:56 Dr. Cornell discusses how after the American Revolution women in America started including elements of American civic values into their needlework samplers, which strikes a chord with me. As an avid needlewoman, I’ve done a great deal of reading about needlework and samplers are my favorite needlework design, actually.  A sampler was a personal stitch guide that young girls sewed, as they mastered new stitches.  They would use it later as a guide to help them remember the various stitches, which was extremely useful in an era before printed references and literacy were widespread.

Even among educated women, a sampler provided a very useful reference, where you could look at the actual stitch on fabric and see how a stitch was worked.  Although samplers served a utilitarian purpose, as with needlewomen for millennia, women add their own personal flourishes and artistic elements to turn the prosaic into something pretty. It is most definitely a “female thing”.

I posted this photo of one of my samplers a while back. Sorry the lighting was bad, but here is one of my samplers with American motifs awaiting pressing and framing. This one was a pattern designed by a modern-day needlework designer:

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In previous posts I’ve mentioned Rose Wilder Lane, who besides being a famous early 20th century journalist, novelist and political theorist, was an accomplished needlewoman.

In 1961, Woman’s Day magazine invited Rose Wilder Lane to write the story and history of the development of the needlework arts in America. Just as the spirit of individual liberty invigorated American political and commercial life, it invigorated American women and their needlework. Lane writes:

“The first thing that American needlework tells you is that Americans live in the only classless society. This republic is the only country that has no peasant needlework. Everywhere else, peasant women work their crude, naive, gay patterns, suited to their humble class and frugal lives, while ladies work their rich and formal designs proper to higher birth and breeding.

American needlework is not peasant’s work or aristocrat’s. It is not crude and it is not formal. It is needlework expressing a new and unique spirit, more American than American sculpture, painting, literature or classical music.”

p.10, Woman’s Day Book of American Needlework, , by Rose Wilder Lane, Copyright 1963

Here are a few more of my other samplers needing some pressing to block the designs (make sure there’s no stretching out) and then framing.  Part of the distortion is my poor photography;-)

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Although modern day feminists scoff at needlework, personally I think needlework teaches many lessons way more useful than droning about the evil male patriarchy.  It teaches patience, self-discipline and perseverance;-)

 

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Filed under American Character, American History, General Interest

Throwback Thursday with Bill Clinton’s “strong-arm” tactics

Last summer the Clintons and President Obama vacationed at Martha’s Vineyard.

Check out the friendly body language (starting at 0:08 ), of former President Bill Clinton showing his “strong-arm tactics” to President Barack Obama, lol? Was long-time Clinton-friend, Vernon Jordan, along as a referee between two American presidents intent on protecting their legacies?

Or, just a friendly golf outing at Martha’s Vineyard last summer?

Instead of hearing just “crickets”, I wish the crickets in the grass could talk, lol

Time to move on…

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Filed under General Interest, Politics, Public Corruption