Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Why was Dr. LaRavia fired?

Folks are talking on the Hard Copy board about Dr. Dennis LaRavia's firing from the Bogalusa LSU Rural Residency Program. Wednesday's Daily News had an editorial about the "outrage."

We suspect it had something to do with this formal complaint (about one-third of the way down the page):


Dennis A. LaRavia, M.D...... L4514........... 6/4/07...... Unprofessional conduct; violation of state or federal law; violation of board rule regarding Physician in Training permits.
Please note that these are allegations, not yet proven.

The matter is set for hearing by the Texas State Office of Administrative Hearings, Texas Medical Board in April 2008 - PDF file of the docket here. See page 37.

Friday, November 23, 2007

Accident?

Looked like cleanup of a bad accident, possibly involving a cop, at the intersection of West 21st and South Tyler in Covington about 12:30 a.m.

Hope nobody was badly hurt.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Iraq is a quagmire - for al Qaida

From the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, seen at Gulf Coast Pundit:

Jihadis, money and weapons were poured into Iraq. All for naught. Al-Qaida has been driven from every neighborhood in Baghdad, Maj. Gen. Joseph Fil, the U.S. commander there, said Nov. 7. This follows the expulsion of al-Qaida from two previous “capitals” of its Islamic Republic of Iraq, Ramadi and Baquba.
[...]

Al-Qaida’s support in the Muslim world has plummeted, partly because of the terror group’s lack of success in Iraq, more because al-Qaida’s attacks have mostly killed Muslim civilians.
[...]
“The situation has changed so unmistakably and so swiftly that we should be reading proud headlines daily,” said Ralph Peters, a retired Army lieutenant colonel. “Where are they?”
Read the whole thing. Then ask yourself if journalists deserve any respect for the lying, twisting, and obfuscation they've done about the war.

Recall the themes of nearly all the news about Iraq and our troops, according to most reporters: Our soldiers are savages, Iraqis hate us, the world hates us, 9/11 was our own fault, Iraq is another Vietnam, we'll never win, blah blah blah. Barely a word about the defeat of al Qaida in Bakuba, Ramadi and Baghdad, or the deaths of terrorists over there. Thousands of words about the few atrocities committed by a tiny number of our troops, and deaths of civilians and our soldiers.

I spit on you, Mainstream Media.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Site of the day

Monday, November 12, 2007

Seriously injured

We've heard that a local teacher was seriously injured in an automobile accident this a.m., and will post more info when we have confirmation.

Or, I pray, we'll be back with an apology that it was a misunderstanding.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Trial delayed in St. Bernard pet killings

Excerpt:

A St. Bernard Parish sheriff’s deputy and a former deputy are set to stand trial separately early next year on felony aggravated cruelty to animals charges stemming from the alleged fatal shooting of dogs on the streets of St. Bernard in the days immediately following Hurricane Katrina.

Clifford “Chip’’ Englande, a sergeant assigned to administrative duties, and Michael Minton, who is no longer working for the Sheriff’s Office, pleaded innocent in February and were scheduled to be tried together this week.

As it stands now, Minton will be tried Jan. 29 by a jury in state District Judge Robert Buckley’s courtroom and Englande will be tried Feb. 14 by the judge, a spokeswoman for state Attorney General Charles Foti said Wednesday. Link
Let's hope justice prevails.

Also see: Trial date set for [alleged] dog shooters

Lines run amok!

I dunno what happened, but the lines between posts have grown. Please disregard while I try to figure out how to truncate them :-).

Support our troops

Buy their books: House to House

Must-read at Blackfive

Islamic Army turns against al Qaeda - at Blackfive:
It was not a forgone conclusion that the population would rise up against these foreign ass-hats that want to not only kill us, but to enslave and kill them too. [...]The throat cutters from Asscrackistan, or where ever they came from are in trouble, big trouble.







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Thursday, November 08, 2007

"Rescuer" = hoarder

WTAE-TV4, Pittsburgh:

CENTERVILLE, Pa. -- Police and humane officers raided a kennel at a home in Centerville, Washington County, and said they found dozens of dead dogs on Tuesday evening. Animal control officers said there were dogs in cages inside and outside Calico Creek Critters Rescue, and even in a nearby incinerator.

Wouldn't be the first time a so-called "rescue" was actually the sick manifestation of an animal hoarder or collector.

From the Tufts site, links about hoarding in the media.

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Killer Bees!

According to a post at the Hard Copy board, Africanized bees have moved as far north as Rio.

Be careful out there.

Pray for solution to invasive species?

At Invasive Species Blog:

There's an interesting little piece in today's Christian Science Monitor about an invasive species control method that I must admit I have never considered: prayer. The author of the article notes that global efforts to manage invasive species are stalled by politics and by social issues, and goes on to suggest praying as something that can be done right now and that could inspire folks to come up with potential solutions and lead to greater cooperation.
Hey, why not? What with local nurseries selling invasive Ligustrum (privet), there's a lot of material to pray about.

Dear Lord,

I never thought I'd ask you
To strike the shrubbery dead
And brown the foreign fescue
Which fills my heart with dread.

While you're on this killing spree
Please smite the nasty tallow tree.
If you're inclined to really hustle,
Zap to death the zebra mussel.

Formosan termites need a blast,
As does that thug called Johnson grass.
Fire ants, kudzu, Ligustrum vulgare,
A list too long for this brief prayer.

Take no prisoners, leave no seed,
Thanks for helping in my hour of need.
Amen.

Winning ways?

We're glad Franklinton High School has a winning football team. Maybe they oughtta crack the books more.

SPRING 2006 GEE SCORES, GRADE 11: link

Franklinton High School (scores well below statewide average):

Advanced,Mastery,Basic,Approaching Basic,Unsatisfactory

English - 0, 7, 43, 28, 22
Math - 3, 12, 38, 17, 30
Science - 3, 5, 37, 32, 24
Social Studies - 0, 1, 43, 28, 27

Bogalusa High School:

English - 1, 13, 39, 31, 16
Math - 3, 8, 44, 22, 24
Science - 1, 3, 24, 32, 40
Social Studies - 0, 2, 41, 26, 31

No enormous differences here.

Guess it must be the parents of football players who're busing their kids to the "better" high school in Franklinton...

Terrorism news

20 arrested in Italy

Children recruited, groomed for terrorist attacks

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Pass the boiled peanuts

They help protect against disease:

Boiled nuts help protect against illness

Fri Oct 26, 3:45 PM ET

For lovers of boiled peanuts, there's some good news from the health front. A new study by a group of Huntsville researchers found that boiled peanuts bring out up to four times more chemicals that help protect against disease than raw, dry or oil-roasted nuts.

Lloyd Walker, chair of Alabama A&M University's Department of Food and Animal Sciences who co-authored the study, said these phytochemicals have antioxidant qualities that protect cells against the risk of degenerative diseases, including cancers, diabetes and heart disease.

"Boiling is a better method of preparing peanuts in order to preserve these phytochemicals," Walker said.

The study will appear in Wednesday's edition of the American Chemical Society's Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. The other co-authors in the study are A&M researchers Yvonne Chukwumah and Martha Verghese, as well as University of Alabama in Huntsville researcher Bernhard Vogler.

Walker said peanuts and other plants use phytochemicals for things such as helping avoid disease and insect attacks.

"These things are not nutrients; at the same time they have health benefits to humans," he told The Birmingham News. "The trick is to keep those health benefits, not to process them out of the foods."

According to Walker, water and heat penetrate the nuts, releasing beneficial chemicals to a certain point. Overcooking the nuts destroys the useful elements.

Alabama is third in the nation in the amount of peanuts produced with a crop valued at more than $67 million last year.

___

Information from: The Birmingham News

-------------------------
Note: Entire article copied here because Yahoo's news archives disappear.

Progress in the war

From Countercolumn: Zero casualties in Al Anbar last week - for the first time since 2003.

Guess these guys were wrong: Anbar province "politically lost", 9/11/2006. Heh.

Anbar background

Al Qaeda arrests around the world [from Long War Journal]:

Six in Spain
Seven in France

Best. News. Ever. - "The darkness has become pitch black" - Osama runnin' scared, lol.

Troops unite to save soldier knifed in head

Seen at Grunt Doc:

His survival relied on the Army’s top vascular neurosurgeon guiding Iraq-based U.S. military physicians via laptop, the Air Force’s third nonstop medical evacuation from Central Command to America, and the best physicians Bethesda National Naval Medical Center in Maryland could offer.
Read the whole thing at Army Times. Wow.

On horses

We've been hearing scuttlebutt about some horses that may not be well maintained - possibly inadequate shelter, poor nutrition (visible ribs), etc. So here, links to the basics on what you're lookin' at and who to call to make a complaint.

The horse's body condition is scored on a scale developed by Dr. Don Henneke, called, unsurprisingly, the Henneke Scale. This is an MS Word doc that will download and open, so you can easily save it for future reference or printing. If that bugs ya, google the phrase "Henneke Scale" for a different format.

Here are some photos of horses, rated by the author of the page. Not for the faint of heart. In a nutshell, you shouldn't be seein' ribs, overgrown hooves, wounds attracting flies, or too much fat.

Who to call? We've heard that humane enforcement by Bogalusa Police Department and the Washington Parish Sheriff's Office is spotty and inconsistent.

We recommend phoning Humane Society of Louisiana, 1.888.6 HUMANE, or fill out their online form, which can be done anonymously. They were prompt and effective at getting care for the animals at Cassidy Park.

You can also contact the Louisiana Livestock Brand Commission Crimestoppers at 1.800.558.9741.

Yon on Beauchamp

Required reading:

Some months ago, a soldier in Baghdad wrote a piece on the way war can degrade the morals and affect the judgment of combat soldiers. His story was published at face-value in The New Republic magazine. In it the soldier wrote terrible things about his unit, making the article sensational.

I was in Iraq when it first hit the stands and someone asked me about the plausibility of the events described in the article. I skimmed the story but it did not even pass a simple sniff-test. With a shooting war going on, there is no time for trivial pursuits, so my only comment was something like, “It sounds like a bunch of garbage.” Turned out it was.

The soldier’s name was Beauchamp. He’d tried to hide his identity, but poor Beauchamp had no idea that the blog world would get on his trail and tree him like a coon. Beauchamp crawled up to the top of that tree, looked down into the snarling spotlight, and suddenly knew he was caught.

Also Michelle Malkin: The New Republic Comes Out From Under Its Desk.

Oriana Fallaci, 1929-2006

Who was she? Via Wikipedia:

A former partisan during World War II, she had a long and successful journalistic career.

She has interviewed many internationally known leaders and celebrities such as the Dalai Lama, Henry Kissinger, the Shah of Iran, Ayatollah Khomeini, Willy Brandt, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Walter Cronkite, Omar Khadafi, Federico Fellini, Sammy Davis Jr, Nguyen Cao Ky, Yasir Arafat, Indira Gandhi, Alexandros Panagoulis, Archbishop Makarios III, Golda Meir, Nguyen Van Thieu, Haile Selassie and Sean Connery.

After retirement, she returned to the spotlight after writing a series of articles and books critical of Islam and Arabs that aroused substantial support, controversy and accusations of racism and Islamophobia.

Probably 10 percent of my readers have heard of her. And here I am trying to entice y'all to purchase one of her books via Amazon.

Michelle Malkin has an article:
She refused to candycoat her criticisms of Islam. She refused to submit to jihadi thugs. Her books, her life, her rage and her reason serve as fiery inspirations in an era of flinching dhimmitude.*

Buy her books if you haven’t yet to see why the jihadists wanted her put in jail for “insulting Islam:”

More.
-----------
*dhimmitude: see here.

One mo' time: Buckle up!

And put those babies in car seats.

Infant dies after accident ejected him from vehicle

I dunno what year 4Runner they were driving, but the 2008 model was made to hold SEVEN. They were carrying EIGHT.

The driver oughtta be charged.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Animal neglect by the City of Bogalusa

Visitors to Cassidy Park noticed that one of the goats could barely walk - it ambulated mostly on its front knees. Its front hooves were at least six inches overgrown. Then there was the donkey with a fly-blown wound on its neck.



Some people posted about it on the Washington Parish Hard Copy board; someone else posted the video above on Youtube. One of the volunteers for Humane Society of Louisiana arrived at the discussion and promised to sort out what was happening at the park. He returned to the board on Monday, Oct. 8, to inform us that a vet had been out to care for those animals and there would be regular vet visits going forward.

In my opinion, someone at the City should be charged with neglect. This was inexcusable.

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Friday, October 05, 2007

Today's must-read

Having volunteered for Iraq, Mark Daily was killed in January by an I.E.D. Dismayed to learn that his pro-war articles helped persuade Daily to enlist, the author measures his words against a family's grief and a young man's sacrifice. Link.
via Gulf Coast Pundit

Friday, September 14, 2007

Much ado about almost nothin'

There was a uniform crackdown at Bogalusa Middle the other day. Big deal in the city schools, wearing the uniform and wearing it properly. Bunch of kids were pulled out of class to be written up for such minutiae as wearing socks that didn't show over their shoes.

I'm all for discipline, but with poor academic performance, it doesn't make sense to further lower kids' instructional time over what they're wearing.

How 'bout a sign around their neck labeled "violator" instead, and send a note home?

Saturday, September 01, 2007

Graft and corruption, waste and cheating.

From The Hill:

“The amount of money that has been wasted on these so-called ‘recovery’ efforts has been mind-boggling,” said Tancredo... Citing administration figures, the lawmaker said that $114 billion has been spent on the effort... The lawmaker criticized in particular the amount that has been wasted through fraud and abuse, estimated at $1 billion.

$1 billion lost to fraud out of $114 billion is less than 1.0%. Guess I've been in Louisiana too long; doesn't seem like a lot to me.

Friday, August 31, 2007

Great news in the blogosphere!

The Diplomad is back!

Mortgage lender implosion

144 lenders down the tubes since late 2006.

Message for friends...

Oh, you can't scare me, I'm sticking to the union,
I'm sticking to the union, I'm sticking to the union.
You can't scare me, I'm sticking to the union.
I'm sticking to the union, 'til the day I die.
From Union Maid, by Woody Guthrie

Why you need a union.

Update on accident

Her friends say the injured teen is recovering.

Media bias

An outstanding article about media bias in reporting on the war.

Obviously, we can't expect Big Media to police itself. They're too busy publishing forged documents as true, ditto using faked photos, and hiring liars.

All to advance their America-hating, jihadi-loving agenda. Older readers will recall the similarity with coverage of Vietnam.

UPDATE: The Daily News also a bit truth-challenged.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Local accident - developing

We have heard that several area young people were injured in a car accident, one of them seriously.

Keep them in your thoughts and prayers.

Justice at long last

James Ford Seale.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Is this ethical journalism?

On July 25 there's a terse correction (click to enlarge and read):















The original article was here. Click it now and see this:













Are we to believe that the Daily News never makes mistakes? lol. They're rewriting their own online history.

I expect the disclaimer to fade away, too.

You can't find the old article online through internet archives, either. The Snooze prevents their site from being crawled.


Ethical? You decide.

Friday, June 08, 2007

Parish council meeting

We were unable to attend the last parish council meeting and must rely on reports from friends.

Citizens asked questions, and the theme of the replies was mostly, "The law doesn't say what you think it says." Pray tell, then, why don't they rewrite it?

One landowner south of town asked why large farming properties were included in the map as Suburban Residential. She was told that she lived near town, so she's suburban - doesn't explain the "residential," does it? And that the map was drawn to include in that designation properties with city water. However, the area in question does not have city water; they have parish water, I discovered via a phone call.

The council members and planning commission had no current map at the meeting.

A comment equating the zoning law with communism got applause from the audience. The room was packed to overflowing.

There was a comment made by somebody on the council - maybe Toye? - that the parish is expecting a huge amount of growth. I disagree. Like many others, I believe the post-Katrina boom is over.

I, too, am in an area apparently designated "Suburban Residential" by the zoning map. No, it doesn't affect me now. But it will very effectively limit the number of buyers for my property if I decide to sell. On suburban residential, you cannot have horses or livestock. One of the reasons to move out of the city and into the country is to have horses, a few chickens, maybe raise a pig every year - activities that are prohibited in the SR district.

This is a bad law.

Go to this page and email the council members to vote No.

Sunday, June 03, 2007

Looks like another land grab to me.

From the dead-tree version of Sunday's Daily News:

Washington Parish residents wanting clarification of the proposed Land Use plan - which is 381 pages in its current state - have one more opportunity to try and get their questions answered.
[...]
Opponents of the plan, who have become more and more vocal in the criticisms of the plan and their call to take more time to fine-tune it, are expected to turn out in force.

Get thee to the Parish Council meeting Tuesday, June 5 at 6:00 p.m. They say they're gonna vote on this crap on June 11. Yes, crap.

The Washington Parish Model Land Use Management Code is online here [PDF file].

The proposed map of the new zones is online here, at the Washington Parish Planning Commission website.

I don't understand why the Planning Commission couldn't put a better, larger, more detailed map online. I had to download the thing and open it with another map of the parish next to it to see that they seem to be trying to designate a bunch of rural property south of Bogalusa as Suburban Residential - meaning:
  • Day care centers serving no more than 17 persons - PROHIBITED. Guess you'll have to drive even farther to have 3-year-old Suzie cared for while you work.

  • Greenhouses, non-commercial, as accessory to residential use - CONDITIONAL. No protection for tender potted plants or growing of winter salad greens, huh? Unless you beg the Planning Commission and pay a hefty fee, I'll betcha.

  • Horse stables, non-commercial - PROHIBITED. People have bought and built on acreage outside city limits to be told what to do like this??? Doubt it.

  • Churches, temples, synagogues, and places of worship, including cemeteries as accessory uses - CONDITIONAL. This oughtta get people riled. No more little neighborhood churches without a special permit or whatever the procedure is gonna be.

Here's another prime cut, from the Executive Summary [my comments interspersed in brackets and italics]:
It is found that non-agricultural uses when contiguous to farmland can affect how an agricultural use can be operated, which can lead to the conversion of agricultural land to urban, suburban, or other non-agricultural use. [You buy property outside city limits and there's a farm across the street, it's glaringly obvious. And you shouldn't be able to make the farmer shut off his tractor or quit fertilizing.] It is a goal of the Parish Comprehensive Plan to preserve agricultural land in the jurisdiction that is not otherwise identified in the Comprehensive Plan as necessary for development.

It is the policy of the Parish to preserve and encourage agricultural land use and operation within the jurisdiction, and to reduce the occurrence of conflicts between agricultural and non-agricultural land uses and to protect public health, safety, and welfare. [Why are you trying to designate a bunch of land used in agriculture as Suburban Residential, then? One of your pals wanna put up a subdivision?]

It is the policy of the Parish to notify applicants for building permits for buildings or land use permits for uses on non-agricultural land abutting agricultural land or operations with notice about the Parish’s support of the preservation of agricultural lands and operations. An additional purpose of the notification requirement is to promote a good neighbor policy by informing prospective builders and occupants of non-agricultural land adjacent to agricultural lands and operations of the effects associated with residing or operating activities close to agricultural land and operations. [Because they can't look next door or across the street and notice the cows and horses? Sheesh.] Another purpose of this Ordinance is to reduce the loss of agricultural resources in the jurisdiction by limiting the circumstances under which agricultural operations on agricultural lands may be deemed a nuisance. [Yeah, you're gonna limit that by calling a bunch of agricultural land "Suburban Residential" and driving out the farmers.]

It is further the policy of the Parish to require all new developments adjacent to agricultural land or operations to provide a buffer to reduce the potential conflicts between agricultural and non-agricultural land uses. By requiring a minimum 150-foot agricultural buffer on abutting non-agricultural lands, the Parish finds it will be helping to ensure prime farmland remains an agricultural use. Buffer requirements are further outlined in subsections of section 4-3.


It's gotta be all about the money. Call a big area Suburban Residential, and before you know it, it'll be incorporated into the city of Bogalusa. Then the city gets a nice windfall in the form of their share of state property taxes.

Get to the Parish Council meeting Tuesday at 6.

Floating houses

I've been sayin' for about 14 months now that you couldn't get me to live in most parts of New Orleans unless my house was on pontoons.

Now somebody else has the right idea:

There are existing precedents of cost-effective amphibious houses, or houses that normally rest on the ground but float on buoyant foundations during a flood, both abroad in the Netherlands and at home along the rivers and bayous of South Louisiana. Why not capitalize on the advantages of buoyant foundations in the rebuilding of New Orleans and flood-prone areas throughout South Louisiana?
Why not, indeed?

Indoctrinate U

Speech codes. Censorship. Enforced political conformity. Hostility to diversity of opinion. Sensitivity training. We usually associate such things with the worst excesses of fascism and communism, not with the American universities that nurtured the free speech movement. But American higher education bears a disturbing resemblance to the totalitarian societies that are anathema to our nation’s ideal of liberty. Evan Coyne Maloney’s documentary film, Indoctrinate U, reveals the breathtaking institutional intolerance you won't read about in the glossy marketing brochures of Harvard, Berkeley, Michigan, Yale, and hundreds of other American colleges and universities.
Put your name on the list to get a screening in our area here. Bogalusa will be on the map as soon as they count my vote ;-).

Via Gates of Vienna, a Very Important Blog.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Bless our troops

America's Finest:


Hue, South Vietnam, February, 1968: A U.S. Marine carries a wounded Vietnamese child, wrapped in a blanket, to an ambulance for evacuation from the war-torn city. John Olson, Stars & Stripes.





















Submitted by Maj. Nancy Torres, 113th Medical Co., Iraq Sgt. Ramon Melocarela, a mental health specialist with the 113th Medical Co., gives a blanket to an Iraqi woman and her child at the Civil Military Operations Center. From Stars & Stripes.





Never forget:



Saturday, May 26, 2007

1, 2, 3, what're we fightin' for...

Here's a hint:

Freedom of religion
Freedom of speech

Etc.

Contrary to what the mainstream media, the Left, and CAIR are continually screeching, the islamofascists aren't going to leave us alone if we exit Iraq, exit the Middle East, or any of that other nonsense.

Radical Islam has spoken. The U.S. is the enemy, and they intend to wipe us out. Their goal is to kill all unbelievers. We are to convert or die. No ifs, ands or buts. No discussion.

People who have lived under tyranny understand:

I have a friend at work, a Vietnamese guy named Do... He's pushing into his 50's, came over with the boat people.
[...]
When we talk about the GWOT and Iraq he shakes his head. He cant believe that Americans cant understand who they are fighting against. "These people no different than the communists. If you dont do what they say, they kill you, kill your family. You cant talk them away or make them like you. You have to kill them, Kill them all untill they stop. People in America have it real good. They dont know there are evil people like that. They think you can talk everything away."
Sing it, Brother Do. Sing it loud.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Regarding Sicko

Michael Moore's made another crockumentary, this one trying to convince us that the U.S. healthcare system is broken and we should emulate Cuba's. Free healthcare for the masses, better than in the U.S., Moore says.

There are two, possibly three, healthcare systems in Castro's communist sh*thole:

One for the citizens.
One for Castro's favored elite (although even he flew doctors in when he needed surgery).
And one for foreign visitors.

The care that the vast majority of Cuban citizens receive is inadequate and appalling [caution - kinda gross pictures].

Michael Moore is a liar.

Need help!

We need to network with other parents who have kids at Bogalusa Middle School and are unhappy with the way a particular course was taught in the spring '07 semester.

Please leave a comment or send an email.

This is important stuff, folks. Let's get together and help each other out, and make a positive change.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Breaking news.

We have just received a text message that BHS has received a bomb threat and the school is on lockdown.

More as we know it.

UPDATE: Not to worry. Read about it at Nola-dot-com [this is an editorial].

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Yup. The crime rate.

The Daily News has finally caught up with topics we think are important. First quarter crime stats alarming, it says:

A council district-by-district breakdown shows 323 "serious" crimes reported through the first quarter - including two murders, six rapes, 10 robberies, 60 burglaries, 148 thefts, nine auto thefts, 17 aggravated batteries, 56 simple batteries, 11 aggravated assaults and four simple assaults.

Yeah,that's alarming. As I posted back in July of '06, referencing 2004 numbers, the city already had a hellacious crime rate. My crime post was paired with "Just Go Home" written on the same date, referencing this op-ed which was unsigned in the online version.

The author blamed the crime problem at that time on thugs from out of town - also known as come-heres, in the local parlance. And my crime post pointed out that Bogalusa was a hotbed of crime, higher than the national average in many areas, before the Katrina evacuees arrived.

Here, the crime numbers from 2005, compared to Oxford, Mississippi, a town slightly larger than Bogalusa (click to enlarge):
































Depressing.

I agree with the article that Neighborhood Watch will help. I've seen that program work very well in other cities.

Once NW gets rolling, perhaps a "Court Watch" group can be formed. People can rotate on and off and go to criminal court and observe. Is there a lax judge? Is the DA not prosecuting criminals with the zeal we'd like? Showing favoritism?

Part of reducing crime is arresting your way out of the problem, a/k/a lockin' up the bad guys, or my personal favorite, takin' out the trash. Neighborhood Watch puts criminals on notice and helps the cops (all nine of them). Court monitoring tells the judge(s) and DA that we care what's happening in the courtroom.

One more thing. Nobody's going to get arrested for a crime that isn't reported. I can't tell you how many times I've heard people say they didn't bother to call the cops and report their shed break-in because "They won't find out who did it anyway," blah blah blah.

What if the crime rate is higher than even the above numbers indicate? Report, report, report. Every. Single. Incident.

If Bogalusa needs more cops - which it surely does - we'll need to know the true figures to influence the City Council into budgeting for and hiring them.

Links:

Court Watch
Citizens Court Monitoring - New York
Watch - Minnesota. Good resource page.

Sunday, April 08, 2007

Global warming?

That's what must be to blame for this unseasonably cool weather, huh? LOL.

Possibility of sleet was predicted, but I didn't see any - though we weren't up all night. Gentle rain falling on the hacienda now.

We spent a lot of time spreading mulch over the newly sprouted beans and such, to save them from being beaten to death by falling ice. I'm glad it wasn't needed, although the kids sure would like to see weather weirdness.

NWS screen shot this a.m. - click to enlarge:

Fifty lenders have gone bust.

That's right. Fifty. Read it and weep.

Monday, April 02, 2007

Michael Yon

An extraordinary journalist.

If you aren't familiar with his site, g'wan over there now.

Nice preview with pics here [PDF].

The heat is on!

Suffocating temps are on the way, and we get a sneak previous of that in April.

Check your air conditioning filter. Change it or wash it.

For the window units, best thing is if you can remove them, take off the outer housing, spray with water and brush the dirt off the coils. Let dry in the sun, reassemble and slide back into place. Dirty coils can be one reason they'll "freeze up" with ice and/or leak water into your room.

The cost of electricity only goes up, so it makes sense to keep your a/c operating as efficiently as it can, by cleaning it yearly, and changing/washing the filter monthly.*
---------------

* Clean/change filter more often if your equipment is exposed to a lot of dust.

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Mortgage lender implosion

The number of defunct mortgage lenders has risen to forty-four.

Bogalusa city audit

Federal violations detailed:

"...the City did not comply with requirements regarding procurements that are applicable to its Disaster Grants-Public Assistance Program, nor with requirements regarding allowable costs, Davis-Bacon Act, and procurement that are applicable to its Airport Improvement Program."
[...]
In his report, Seal wrote, "Most, or all, of the 2005 findings could have been avoided if effective internal controls had been maintained. Most of the noted weaknesses in internal control and findings were not hurricane related."
Will somebody please make the necessary arrests?

Jindal talks, but says nothing.

At WWL online:*

Public housing should be made available for working class families and the elderly, not a haven for the criminal element of society, Rep. Bobby Jindal (R) said Friday...
The law already prohibits drug convicts from living in public housing in New Orleans. Plenty of public housing residents were working poor and the elderly before Katrina. Duh, Bobby.

Further into the article, he says:
“Let’s make sure we don’t allow the drug dealers, the gang members, the sex offenders, those that have committed acts of domestic violence, let’s not them back,” Jindal said.
I appreciate the sentiment behind this. Recidivism being as high as it is, chances are that allowing convicted criminals into subsidized housing means there will be a whole lotta criminal activity goin' on there. I hate druggies, and I hate living near 'em, and many people in public housing share my sentiments.

I guess you could change the law to keep out other convicted criminals. I don't see how you'll extend the ban to "gang members," unless they're ex-cons, though. And I hardly think you can ban people who don't work. What about the disabled, and people receiving welfare?

The banned people will end up living in poor neighborhoods, most likely. In low-rent districts - many of which are adjacent to the housing projects. We'll move the problem a few blocks, is all.

We punish sex offenders forever, by making them register and other requirements. I don't think we should add restrictions to other ex-cons. We want them to go straight and integrate back into society. They already have a tough time getting jobs and education - drug offenders are prohibited from federal educational aid. I don't think the potential of a ban from public housing in future will be a deterrent that keeps people from dealing or using drugs. But it might discourage them from going straight after they've served their time.

* Registration required. Use Bug me not.

Saturday, March 24, 2007

My eyes! My eyes!

I can tell every year when spring is well underway; the populous areas of Washington Parish turn a screaming, bilious hot pink.

Azaleas. They're everywhere. The South is overloaded with 'em, along with crape myrtle (more pink!) and Loropetalum (even more pink!). I won't get into those dang Bradford or Callery pears, which should all be torn out (they're invasive). Thank goodness they aren't pink, y'know?

We have many charming native shrubs which are waaaay underused.

If you've gotta go with azaleas, choose native cultivars. They are a shy but lovely ballerina next to the big, blowsy hot pink things that hurt my eyes. And they're often fragrant.

MSU Extension Service published a nice page with pics detailing 30 native shrubs for your landscape. Some are fragrant; many provide wildlife food.

And they don't hurt my eyes ;-).

Coming soon: A rant on invasive plants.

Friday, March 23, 2007

Sunspots or what?

We've been having connectivity problems, hence the paucity of new posts.

Some folks with the same ISP claim that the problem originates at the uplink; others say it's caused by solar flares.

Regardless, it's been making the connection time out. Plenty of problems surfing, and much worse when doing something interactive like filling in forms for blog posts.

We're very much looking forward to DSL by the end of this year :-).

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Cathy Seipp - In Hospital

From her blog:

I'm at her bedside now, holding her hand. I tell her she has 292 comments on the latest blog post..her last but she just squeezes my hand. She was very happy with this blog. In honor of her, if you can...support the American Lung Cancer Society and or adopt stray dogs and cats from the pound. Those were her causes.

UPDATE: Thanks to everyone who posted. As of 7:45am this morning she is still breathing and pulsing but is passing peacefully.

She was a wonderful writer and a very brave woman. If you pray, say a prayer.

If you've never heard of her - start reading.

UPDATE: Link fixed.

Friday, March 16, 2007

Black and white and read all over

We heard today that a teacher at one of the public schools read aloud an opinion piece from the Daily News as an example of bigotry.

I agree, wholeheartedly, enthusiastically, in spades, and with bells on. So the opinion piece is gonna receive a fisking.

By Lou Major:

It's bad enough we have horrid academic achievement in the Bogalusa school system, but hand-in-hand with the despicable safety and security problems, we have that age-old menace: Racial Divide.
This promises to be exciting, doesn't it? Danger, failure and "Racial Divide" all at once! Capitalized, even!
There have been many meetings over the past year and-a-half about the fast deterioration of the quality of education in the local school system. School Board members, some parents, teachers and politicians have all joined the quest for improvement. We have been told over and over that this will take time; it cannot be achieved in just one year.
It took more than a year for the problems to develop and become serious, and surely it'll take more than a year to solve them. That makes sense.

If you are going to claim that the deterioration was "fast," I want to see that backed up with stats. The problems have existed for the several years we've been here.
"Zero tolerance" of fighting, insolence and threats has been put into place, presumably as the best thing so far to try to solve those problems. Various thrusts at academic improvement have been introduced at every level.
Sounds pretty good so far. Give "zero tolerance" time to work.
And all the while, very, very few people have wanted to face up to the "racial divide" problem. It is there. Less than a handful of people at all these meetings have dared to talk openly about one of the serious problems that leads to so many of the other problems. They talk in numbers, for the most part. The numbers show that all of the students leaving the Bogalusa schools are white kids. Nobody knows for sure where they are all going and from what I can determine, nobody is zeroing in on finding out.

"The word" is that they are going to Franklinton, Pine, Bowling Green, St. Tammany and Mississippi.
I know that some of them are going to the Franklinton school district, where the parents I spoke to are claiming that the high school is "better." If they think it's academically better, I shot that down in "Dishonest or dumb?".

It's white flight, is all it is. Considering the parish's history, my conclusion is logical.

C'mon, you guys voted for David Duke. And you're surprised there's white flight? The irony has overtopped my hip waders.
Immediately following Hurricane Katrina, Bogalusa students were allowed to go to other schools, presumably until the local school system got up and running again. Hordes of them did just that. The only problem is, they have not come back, and almost all of them are white kids. After the immediate shock of Katrina ended, displaced students were supposed to "go home" to their normal schools. It didn't happen. At one of the meetings recently, it was stated that schools which allowed the Bogalusa students in following the hurricane were supposed to send them back; it was a matter of honoring school boundaries.

That has all added to the growing "racial divide" in the Bogalusa schools.
I thought students were supposed to go to their district schools, unless they were enrolled in a private school - which, naturally, might be outside the district lines. In some places, attending an out-of-district school is illegal.

If anybody's breakin' the law, maybe the DA oughtta get involved, hmmm?
Two years ago, there were 1,270 white students in Bogalusa schools. This year, the number is down to 806. Two years ago, there were 1,595 black students in Bogalusa schools. This year, the number is 1,604. So while there are 450 fewer white students, there are the same number of black students.

As the trend has continued, this means that five years ago there was a 50/50 ratio of white to black students in the Bogalusa schools. Today, the ratio is 65 percent black to 35 percent white.
If we want our kids to grow up to be able to work with people of other ethnic backgrounds, we need to quit caring about this. Yes, just quit caring. Don't see color, see people, and you'll teach your kids to do the same.

That's the only way to stop the "Racial Divide" if by that phrase you mean bigotry.

Sadly, as I read on, it appears that you mean something else.
This growing preponderance of black students is manifesting itself in ways that most people don't even realize.
What? The nearest store sells less Prell, more Hair-Gro?

Forgive me, I couldn't resist. Hang on, it gets much better.
The Bogalusa High Paper Dolls illustrates the point. In 1970, there were 27 Paper Dolls, the dancing group which struts at football games, parades, etc. Of the 27, only 2 were black girls; 25 were white. By 1992, of 23 Paper Dolls, 21 were white and 2 were black, still about the same as 20 years earlier. However, by 1997, the numbers changed to 21 white girls and 6 black girls. In just the next three years, the numbers had gone to 15 white girls and 7 black girls.

Continuing the quickening trend, the next year there were 22 white girls and 11 black girls.

This year, the "racial divide" was glaring. There are 11 Paper Dolls at BHS; not one of them is white.

Additionally, the varsity cheerleading squad this year is made up of 12 girls. Only one is white.

A look at the BHS Band tells the same story.
All this tells me is that the white kids either aren't trying out for the Paper Dolls and varsity cheerleading, or they aren't making the grade. Apparently the white kids aren't choosing band as an activity, either.

Why don't you do some research and find out why this is? And publish what the black/white ratio is at the high school, too. If white students are a small minority, it shouldn't shock you that some extracurricular activities are all black.

Now your editorial sounds like the whine of a white supremacist.

"Waaaah! The blacks have everything! They locked us out! Waaaaah!"
At most of the "curative" meetings, I recall one person willing to stand up and recognize there is a problem: Rev. Coleman Moses, one of the school system's Task Force members who has continued to be active with the group initially appointed by School Supt. Jerry Payne. Rev. Moses has repeatedly spoken out about the need for all of the school disciplinary problems to be attacked first at home. That is the obvious starting place, but getting that accomplished is another thing.

Getting down to the nuts and bolts, how do you get into the homes of the most unruly kids and get their parents, many of them only the mother, to make their kids obey the rules, be polite, study hard, cause no trouble? I sure don't have the answer and it seems like nobody else has, either.

The problems are more than readin', writin' and 'rithmetic.
I definitely believe that "zero tolerance" needs several years to show results.

However, I am dismayed at this juxtaposition of "the blacks have it all," a bunch of white kids left, and discipline problems in the editorial. There's a very unpleasant implication floating between the lines, there.
Elementary school kids are still staying in the Bogalusa school system. Even the discipline nightmare at the Bogalusa Middle School (junior high) has not sent white students running elsewhere. But the trend at Bogalusa High is alarming. The numbers prove the point. Something has to be done or the enrollment of white students will continue to dwindle until "racial divide" will be almost complete.
This won't be PC, Lou, but I can and will explain it to you.

We ain't from here. But we have had the distasteful experience of being told by white "born-heres" that we should send our kids to another high school, out of the district, because otherwise those boys will try to date our girls.

They weren't talkin' 'bout white boys.

You may recall from a previous post that back in the 60s, the FBI considered Washington Parish to have the highest per-capita membership in the KKK of any county in the nation. Do the math. It's those klukkers' grandkids that are being pulled out of Bogalusa High and sent elsewhere.

You think attitudes like that change in one or two generations? I know better. Judging from how I've been warned of the "dangers" of BHS, those attitudes are alive and kickin'. Kickin' hard, Lou.

I've never been anywhere else in this whole wide world where so many whites were so willing to be upfront and vocal about their racism. Anywhere else, the majority of the white population would shun them.

"Run, run! They'll rape your daughters!" Sheesh.

Gee, maybe the black parents are the ones who should be worried. There's a lot more historical precedent about white boys raping black girls, isn't there?

Let the bigots pack their sheets and leave the system. From what I've seen, the kids that remain at Bogalusa High - of all races - get along across racial lines and have a decent, open-minded attitude. I applaud them. They are our future; perhaps this is the generation that will bury the sorry past.

Y'all definitely need fresh blood, y'know? More come-heres, to dilute out this nonsense.

Daily News watch

Oops, they did it again. Looks like an unrelated photo and article are paired in the online Daily News. I think this lady's picture probably belongs with an obit (click to enlarged):

Thursday, March 15, 2007

New blogs!

New to me, that is, and they're cool, so I added 'em to the blogroll.

First is The Answer Bird. Marvin the African parrot gives advice - keyboarded by his human, Steve Graham. Set down yer coffee, or lose yer monitor, lol.

Mostly Cajun blogs from southwest Louisiana. Today's post, Critters and electricity, is a hoot :-).

New stuff

In the left-hand sidebar, I've added a current weather sticker from Weather Underground.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Global warming?

Wishing ain't gonna make it so:

Entergy said this winter has been colder than any since 2003-04...Link.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Insensitivities

Usually I am more likely to gripe about the nuttiness that is political correctness, but this is givin' me a real "duh!" moment.

Via Lou Minatti:

Boeing is studying the 737 replacement. The Times understands that two early prototypes have been drawn up: a wider, twin-aisle version and a shorter, single-aisle jet. These have been dubbed Fat Boy and Little Boy. Link

For the young 'uns who don't get it: Fat Man and Little Boy.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Mortgage lender implosion, again

The number gone kerplunkt is now THIRTY-SIX.

Friday, March 09, 2007

You'll never look at a burger the same way. Heh.

Cows with guns

Mortgage lender implosion

THIRTY-FOUR mortgage lenders have gone bust.

Previous:

If I had any extra money... -- posted Sunday, March 4, 2007. Three more MLs down the tubes since this post.

Hello again!

So many visitors from interesting places. I'd love it if you posted in the comments where you're from, and how ya got here.

----------

So busy [sigh]. It's spring, and that means extra chores, what with stuff growin'. There aren't enough hours in the day to get everything done sometimes, know what I mean?

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At the Hard Copy board, all the old posts on the page disappeared and it started over with a clean slate. That's a Very Good Thing; it was getting quite difficult to sort wheat from chaff.

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Gorgeous weather. Enjoy it! I'll be making a couple posts later on with news, opinion and gossip.

Sunday, March 04, 2007

If I had any extra money...

... I'd probably buy silver coins and bury them in Mason jars in the backyard.

Stock market shenanigans. Subprime lenders going bust. Housing prices and the bubble. It's all there at Housing Panic, and it ain't goin' away.

Read the posts, the links and the comments, and plan accordingly.

UPDATE: Thirty-one mortgage lenders have gone bust since late 2006.

Garden planning

I usually spend my "seed money" at Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds.

They ship promptly. Their prices are decent.

And they've got the most interesting stuff!

Cassabanana or Melocoton:

The fruit are brilliant, flaming red and are about 2' long, one of the most beautiful things I had ever seen! They have bright orange flesh that is sweet and is used in drinks, jellies and other desserts, it has a unique tropical fruit taste. The fruit are so fragrant and keep for a long period, like squash, making this a hot item for fall sales for pumpkin growers. Huge vines can grow to 50' and are quite ornamental, but they do require a long season.
Guess I'll need to put up one heck of an arbor, for a 50-foot vine. Yikes.

49 varieties of heirloom tomatoes - and that's just the red ones!

We'll be canning white tomato sauce this year.

They also have gardening forums.

Note: I am not connected with nor an affiliate of Baker Creek. Just a satisfied customer.

Slothful Sunday

I took a nap.

How 'bout you?

Our filthy computer

We had to replace the CD-ROM drive and as long as we had the case open, added some memory.

Whew! was it ever dusty in there!

So off we went to Wal-Mart for a can or two of compressed air.

None to be found. None in the back, none at the front.

None at Rite-Aid or CVS. None at the various dollar stores.

How and why did the whole town run out of canned air?

Bring in your pets!

It's gonna be pretty cold tonight and every night this week comin' up.

Don't make Phideaux and Fluffi suffer outdoors. Man's Best Friend and your feline both deserve a spot by the hearth.

Friday, March 02, 2007

R.I.P, David Creed Rogers

Sad news [link]:

David Creed Rogers, 85, one of the last remaining links to Washington Parish's bloody civil rights legacy, died Monday at Good Samaritan Nursing Home.

And excellent news:
"We have some very hot leads on this case," Jim Bernazzani, special agent in charge of the FBI in New Orleans, said.

It's a shame Mr. Rogers didn't live to see justice. He surely wanted to.

But he isn't the last remaining link to those times. The last links are the people who know -- the people who need to unburden themselves by calling the FBI, before they've gotta try and explain it to St. Peter.

Get on the phone and do the right thing, folks. Help put the murderers in prison where they belong, and truly end Bogalusa's sordid legacy of lynchings and killings and bigotry.

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

The murder of Oneal Moore

A Google news alert showed up in my inbox, with a link to this at the Times-Picayune - also being discussed on the Hard Copy board. Excerpt:

The unsolved 1965 killing of a black Washington Parish sheriff's deputy by a group of white assailants is among roughly a dozen unsolved murders from the civil-rights era that the FBI is giving new scrutiny, said Jim Bernazzani, special agent in charge of the bureau's New Orleans office.

The murder of Oneal Moore is one of 10 to 12 unsolved inquiries into suspicious deaths around the country that FBI Director Robert Mueller said Tuesday the agency is re-examining.
Further down in the article [emphasis mine]:
Ironically, Moore and Rogers were hired in part to help quell racial unrest in Washington Parish, which at the time was thought to have more members of the Ku Klux Klan per capita than any county in America.
I believe it. Remember David Duke's run for a seat in the Louisiana legislature?:
Duke actually carried Tangipahoa Parish, a rural county which is one of four in the district, and finished second in another rural county, Washington Parish. Link
And here's an excerpt from a 1965 Time article:
Governor McKeithen offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to a murder conviction, promised to "demonstrate to the world that Louisianans are law-abiding, Godfearing citizens, and that our state is no haven for cowards and murderers."
Sadly, he has been proven wrong. In this case, Louisiana, specifically Bogalusa, was indeed a haven for a murderer and his two accomplices.

Turn them in. This is a terrible blot on the city, and it's way past time for justice.

Cell phone crackdown at BHS

One of the students had their cell phone on, or they were playing with their ringtones, or somethin'. A search was instituted. We were told some phones were seized.

Please, kids, be a bit more considerate of others. The students involved in after-school activities will be greatly inconvenienced if they have to walk around in search of a pay phone to call their parents and get a ride home.

And that's what'll happen if you keep screwing around like this, and cause cell phones to be officially banned at BHS.

DSL internet service

Somebody at the Hard Copy board mentioned that a Bellsouth employee said DSL internet service will be available all over the area by the end of the year.

I went to the Bellsouth site and had an online chat with a customer service rep.

Yes, it's true. BS DSL will be available all over the place by the end of 2007.

Yippee!

Go to your doctor...

... and get a flu shot, if you haven't already.

This year's virus is awful.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Sorry for the hiatus.

We've been down with the flu.

Will be back posting Sunday [tomorrow].

Hope y'all are having a nice weekend, and stay safe through the storms tonight :-).

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Penn Masala

I never heard of 'em, until I ran into one of their videos on Break.com. Not surprising. With the thousands or tens of thousands of musicians and groups, who can follow them all?

Penn Masala, the Hindi a cappella group. Wow.

Listen to Aankhon Mein Tu Hai. A little hip-hop, a little bit of ballad, hauntingly beautiful tune and clean lyrics - Hooray! Teenage daughter loved it.

Go to their site and buy their CDs.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Slothful Sunday

I was able to sit down for a while and finish reading Hard Truth by Nevada Barr.

If you like mysteries, it's a good one. Ms. Barr is a ranger for the National Park Service, and she sets her books in one of the parks.

Friday, February 16, 2007

Trial date set for [alleged] dog shooters

Arraignment of Minton and Englande was Tuesday in St. Bernard Parish.

Trial will be May 8, 9 or 10.

Full story on this page.

Special thank you to Pasado's Safe Haven animal rescue org for traveling all the way from Washington state to help and show support in this very important matter.

For those of you who didn't see my previous post on the topic, you can write a note to the judge here.

For y'all who have companion animals, or understand the love people feel for their pets, why not help Pasado by buying a T-shirt? I like "Not Without My Pets" :-).

Thursday, February 15, 2007

The traitorous little jihadi had a blog.

Daniel Joseph Maldonado - also known by some Arabic-sounding name... You know, the fool who's a US citizen and took off to Somalia to train as a "holy warrior" and kill people for al Qaeda.

He's now in US custody.

And he was a blogger.

Don't forget to read the comments. Bad language, sexual references, but a lot of 'em are a scream.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

St. Bernard dog-killers' arraignment tomorrow

In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, in St. Bernard Parish, victims of flooding left their dogs at Beauregard Middle School, scrawling heartrending notes on the walls with their names, their pets' names. "Don't shoot my dog," one reads. "Very nice dog in here," says another. They left what food they could, and water.

All in vain.

Their dogs were shot and left to suffer. Shot in the stomach, the legs. Some starved to death. This, after deputies promised the owners that their beloved pets would be cared for.

This, as animal rescuers were beginning to arrive in South Louisiana to save pets' lives.

David Leeson, a Pulitzer prize-winning journalist, was driving around in St. Bernard Parish shortly after the storm, looking for the small, oil-soaked dog that he'd taken a picture of. Instead, he filmed three deputies, also driving around, shooting dogs. Showing no emotion. Not putting them out of their misery, but leaving them to whimper and cry on the ground until they died of their wounds.

Tomorrow morning, two of the perpetrators - Michael Minton and Clifford Englande - are being arraigned in the St. Bernard Parish Courthouse. They have been charged with aggravated animal cruelty. They have also been sued by the pet owners.

You may write a note to the judge here. It'll be hand delivered by the folks with Pasado Safe Haven.

Read the whole story.

"Fighting Words"

Seen at Blackfive (which y'all should be reading daily), Trace Adkins' song set to pics by Subsunk:



More about these Congressional Medal of Honor recipients:

SFC Paul Ray Smith, US Army. Bio.

CPL Jason L. Dunham

Heh.

Tonight's headline at Drudge [click to enlarge]:

Sex tours - at the zoo.

Tampa's Lowry Park Zoo calls it the "Wild at Heart" tour. At New York's Central Park Zoo, it's "Jungle Love." San Francisco offers "Woo at the Zoo," and in Boise, Idaho, it's possible to enjoy "Wild Love at the Zoo."

When Valentine's Day rolls around, zoos around the U.S. have become an unlikely locale for adult-oriented entertainment with risque tours that couple champagne, chocolate-covered strawberries and candlelight dining with impressive facts about how animals mate.
[...]

Credit for the zoo sex tour concept goes to Jane Tollini, a former penguin keeper at the San Francisco Zoo. Tollini conceived the idea two decades ago while watching her penguins' courtship ritual, which culminates in what she describes as "bowling pins making love."
Read it all here.

For those who prefer visuals in the privacy of their own home, tortoise porn at Youtube. Enjoy!

Animals. Attacking.

In the past two-three weeks:

Bull kills farmer in Wisconsin.
Cow kills Ohio farmer.
Cheetahs kill woman at zoo in Belgium. This idiot entered their enclosure, as though they were pets. Sheesh.
Bull sharks sink fishing boat.

I'm sharing my steak with Fluffi tonight, stayin' on her good side ;-).

Monday, February 12, 2007

Weather follies

Hard to figure out to wear when there are such disparate weather reports. Both are screenshots from today, early a.m. Note the temperatures:


Slothful Sunday

Not.

Not a moment's rest all weekend. Even this post is a day late.

Hope you had some leisure time!

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Accident

A generous soul snapped some shots of a truck in the ditch on Spring Valley Rd tonight and sent them to us :-).

Cause of accident, and whether there were injuries, unknown.

UPDATE: Click on the pics. They get huge, and y'all can see detail.



Friday, February 09, 2007

Free credit report online

Read all about it at the Federal Trade Commission.

Helps protect against identity theft :-).

Beware of copycat sites; some of 'em are phishing.

"Fraudera Ranch"

You've got to read this post at Bubble Markets Inventory Tracking [excerpt]:

12 Quartz Ln., Ladera Ranch, CA 92694
--05/2004: purchased for $421,500.
--06/2005: purchased for $530,000 by Angelica, associate of "The Family."
--06/2005: Angelica immediately deed the title to Janneth.
--01/2006: sold to Saul the truck driver for $630,000.
--07/2006: NOD filed, Saul just committed a first payment default.
--11/2006: REO
--Total Profit: $100,000 for "The Family."
There's more. Much more. To the tune of a profit for this family of around half a million dollars.

Tons of it at Mortgage Fraud Blog.

Casey Serin blogged his shenanigans.

Check out the Mortgage Lender Implode-O-Meter. Twenty mortgage lenders gone bust in the past couple-three months.

Hang onto your hats. We haven't seen the bottom yet.

UPDATE: I fixed the nonworking link. Sorry 'bout that.

Thursday, February 08, 2007

Bank account spam

Seems like a day doesn't go by when I don't get one. "Attention, someone tried to access your account, so come to our fake bank site and give us all your secret information."

The latest one was from soapstone@yahoo.com. Why not send soapstone an email? Heh.

The email told me to login here.

Screenshot from dumbass spammer site:

Afghans for Afghans

I was at Michelle Malkin's site reading this post...

and followed the link to Crochet Guild of America's charity page...

and thence to Afghans for Afghans:

afghans for Afghans is a humanitarian and educational people-to-people project that sends hand-knit and crocheted blankets and sweaters, vests, hats, mittens, and socks to the beleaguered people of Afghanistan.

This grassroots effort is inspired by Red Cross volunteers who made afghans, socks, slippers, and other items for soldiers and refugees during World Wars I and II and other times of crisis and need.
Knit one, purl two for a great cause.

Where y'at? And why?

We're getting visitors from all over.

Are you displaced residents? Folks with family in the area?

Leave a comment and tell us your story :-).

NOTE: Comments don't always work correctly, and there isn't much I can do about that. Just keep tryin'.

Graffiti or something more sinister?

At The Aviation Nation:

The first time flight attendant Charlotte Smith* found the mysterious writing inside the bathroom cabinet of a 757 aircraft while flying for a major airline, she got spooked. It was February 23, 2005. A flight attendant for twelve years, Charlotte was working the coach class cabin of flight 853 traveling from New Jersey to California. Everything was normal, until her discovery.

In the first of a series of interviews, Charlotte explained:

“By a fluke, I opened up a compartment in the mid-galley lav [lavatory] and there it was, on the back of the cabinet behind where you refill the paper towels:

CHENAULT LIVES

ZATU


The three words Charlotte found were handwritten in black marker and in capital letters. Puzzled by the presence of odd handwriting on an area of an airplane that is off limits to passengers, Charlotte began to look further. She then opened up each of the compartments in that lavatory, carefully examining each panel wall. That’s when she discovered another set of words, also written in black marker, but inside a different cabinet.
Read the whole thing.

ADDENDUM: I finally moseyed over to the graffiti page. 64AB... I'm not connected with law enforcement, but the thing that comes to my mind with the letters "AB" is the Aryan Brotherhood.

And as the article points out, "Chenault" could stand for Marcus Chenault, the nutjob who murdered MLK Jr's mother in 1974.

Perhaps this graffiti isn't related to Islamic terrorism, but a more homegrown group of extremists?

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Intrepid at Walmart

Listen, darlin'. If you can't see a vehicle smack dab in front of you with a turn signal on, and beginning to turn, you need to get your eyes checked. How'd you get home without running into a parked car?

Thank you for giving me the opportunity to tell my children that you should always pass up a parking space if it appears that someone else is waiting for it.

You've gotta be a native Washington Parishite. The immigrants aren't that rude.

Monday, February 05, 2007

ROTC news

Bogalusa High's JROTC Armed Drill Team placed third in the recent meet in New Orleans.

Good going :-)!

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Dilbert - "The Knack"

Slothful Sunday

My plans are to NOT wash the truck. Heh. That's kinda cheating, as I never wash the truck.

Prolly will do some gardening, but that's a pleasure, not a chore. I need to dig up and move one more blueberry bush, get it out of the path of tractors and such; it's too close to the gate.

What aren't you gonna do today?

Saturday, February 03, 2007

The state of Bogalusa schools

There've been a number of articles published recently in The Daily News detailing the trials and tribulations of our supposedly rotten school system. There are discipline problems, attendance problems, and low achievement.

Parents blame the teachers and the school board. Teachers blame the parents.

I've got to side more with the teachers here, folks. I'm old enough to remember the "good ol' days." Thirty years ago, there were not these huge problems in the schools that I went to, which I admit were more upper middle class than the ones in Bogalusa. So that may have skewed things.

One thing that has changed radically in the past few decades is the number of single-parent families. When one person is trying to do too many things, something is gonna suffer. We've seen the news items about how more juvenile thugs come from single-parent homes. We know that intuitively, eh?

Single-parent homes are also more likely to be poorer homes economically. Poor kids don't do as well in school as better-off kids, generally.

A recent article in The Daily News says the school board and city are going to try and place a "resource officer" at Bogalusa Middle - basically, a uniformed cop. Will that help? Does that help? Or does it simply mean quicker arrests?

If there are gangs, as school board member Raymond Mims claims, Know Gangs is one site with info. Gangs or Us is another. And here is a list of links courtesy of Michigan State University.

I suspect what Bogalusa Middle needs - more than a cop stationed at the school - is a couple more full-time counselors and after school programs with room for any child who wishes to participate.

Addendum: From the MSU site, and thanks to the internet archive - Developing a Gang Prevention Program.

Monday, January 29, 2007

Plumbing problem?

A student at Bogalusa Middle told us there was a busted pipe or some such on Monday (1/29) which flooded floors.

R.I.P., Barbaro

Euthanized today.

Sunday, January 28, 2007

Latest spam

Introducing the morons who've filled my inbox:

  • PaulRubeal - with the busted spacebar.
  • Dan Molinaro, who says he's from Bismarck, North Dakota.
  • Ethan Wayne
  • Saunders Triplett
  • Perry Mertens
  • ned aleta - of the broken shift key
  • Kathrine Haney
  • Raymundo Titor
  • Vito Peel - sounds like a blender. "Ladies and gentleman, I'm here to demonstrate the amazing Vito Peel. It chops, it dices!"

I also get a bunch of messages from "Free Hoodia," could be a rallying cry. Free Hoodia! "Jose Hoodia is still being held as a political prisoner in this humid tropical dictatorship..."

My favorite subject lines are the ones that promise to help me with my "tonnage." Hey, since when is an extra 15 pounds "tonnage"? Ya catch more flies with honey...

The good ol' days

Seen in the comments at Blackfive:

Take Me Back to the Sixties.
Turn on your speakers and enjoy.

Barbaro has another setback :-(

He's in trouble again:

After Barbaro developed a deep abscess in his right hind foot, surgery was performed Saturday to insert two steel pins in a bone, one that was shattered but now healthy, to eliminate all weight bearing on the ailing foot.

The procedure is a risky one, because it transfers more weight to the leg. If the bone were to break again, chief surgeon Dr. Dean Richardson said: "I think we'll quit."
Hang in there, fella.

PS - The article has good background, if you haven't been reading the Barbaro news.

Slothful Sunday

As you might guess, today's Slothful Sunday wasn't as relaxing as I might wish, heh. There was nothing I could leave undone today.

But I've been getting in a little relaxation by watching movies, yesterday and today.

Darling Daughter and I had a Harry Potter festival. I'd never seen any of the Harry Potter films, and she's got the complete set.

My verdict is: very entertaining. And the set decorators must've had a blast. Wonder if there's someplace I can buy a set of those spine candles?

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Justice at last

Good news [emphasis mine]:

A white former sheriff’s deputy who was once thought to be dead was arrested on federal charges Wednesday in one of the last major unsolved crimes of the civil rights era — the 1964 killings of two black men who were beaten and dumped alive into the Mississippi River.

The break in the 43-year-old case was largely the result of the dogged efforts of the older brother of one of the victims, who vowed to bring the killers to justice.

James Ford Seale, a 71-year-old reputed Ku Klux Klansman from the town of Roxie, was charged with kidnapping hitchhikers Charles Eddie Moore and Henry Hezekiah Dee, both 19. He is expected to be arraigned on Thursday in Jackson.
Maybe there will be more word soon on Oneal Moore's murder, too:
The crime occurred around 10 p.m. in Varnado, a village on the outskirts of Bogalusa. Rogers and his partner, the first two black sheriffs deputies in Washington Parish, noticed they were being trailed by a pickup truck with a Confederate flag emblem on its front bumper. When they crossed some railroad tracks on the way to Moore's home nearby, they were fired upon. Moore was killed instantly, and Rogers lost an eye in the shooting.

One hour later, Mississippi authorities stopped Ernest Ray McElveen in nearby Tylertown. He was driving a truck that matched Rogers' description, and authorities said he was armed with a .45 caliber pistol and a .22 caliber pistol. But two weeks later, the local district attorney released McElveen, and nobody was ever tried in connection with the shooting. Attempts to reach McElveen, who lives in Bogalusa, were unsuccessful by presstime.
[...]

In a 1998 interview with Gambit Weekly ("The Last Klan Case," Dec. 15, 1998), Rogers said he hasn't forgotten the night of the attack. "The older I get, the more it gets to me," he said.

There were three original suspects. McElveen has died. If he was guilty, presumably he's down in that hot place. As for the other two, there are a couple of the worst murderers living among us. Could be my neighbors. Or yours.

Turn 'em in, people. Closing ranks around this kinda scum is inexcusable.

Open note to Creed Rogers: Keep after the FBI, sir. I wanna see the perps fry.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

School arrests

There may have been students with weapons as I was told by a student on Monday.

The Daily News has the info:

The day of in-school disturbances began Monday at Bogalusa Middle when a fight broke out and school officials called in police.

The early morning incident happened at about 8:30 a.m. and involved three youngsters, all of whom were sent to a regional juvenile detention facility, Darden said, following a written order by Juvenile Court Judge Bobby Black.

At about 11:30 a.m., another fight broke out at the middle school. This fight led to the arrest of seven students.