Daily Archives: October 8, 2007

Melange


Melange

Farewell To Africa, Good Morning Iraq!


Farewell To Africa, Good Morning Iraq!


It was time for me to come home from Africa. I didn

Politics As Usual


Politics As Usual


A couple of years ago, I heard of pleas going out to citizens

Universe Makes Push-Starting Your Car That Much Harder


Universe Makes Push-Starting Your Car That Much Harder


I certainly feel a deep kinship with the surrounding universe. Particularly after reading how, like my own waistline, it is continuing to expand as it gets older. According to an article in TIME magazine, there are a number of discoveries that answer fundamental questions about the mysteries of space

Truth Is Stranger Than Fiction


Truth Is Stranger Than Fiction

Indians Target Map-Makers For Massacre


Indians Target Map-Makers For Massacre


The apprehensive Kickapoos watched every move the surveyors made on the morning of Oct. 8, 1938, knowing from bitter experience that, when white men came to measure the land, settlers were not far behind.


A ghost town now for more than a century, Old Franklin was in the early days of the Texas Republic a jumping-off place for the central frontier. A steady stream of surveyors stocked up on supplies at the outpost before plunging into the trackless wilderness to lay out homesteads for impatient pioneers.


Two days out of Old Franklin in October 1838, a surveying party camped for the night at Parker

DPS Spends $166,000 Of Taxpayer Money To Conceal Public Information


DPS Spends $166,000 Of Taxpayer Money To Conceal Public Information


Corruption is a blatant and contagious disease!


The Department of Public Safety is trying to con taxpayers that it has the right to conceal images on cameras inside the state capitol from the public view, explaining that it is doing so to protect the public from possible terrorists and volatile terrorist actions.


Bah! Humbug!!!


“IN A TIME OF UNIVERSAL DECEIT,


TELLING THE TRUTH BECOMES


A REVOLUTIONARY ACT.”


Will You Vote For A Nerd For President?


Will You Vote For A Nerd For President?


Message to Presidential hopefuls: Now might be the time to get in touch with your inner nerd. If the barometer of popular culture

Nuclear Dictatorship


Nuclear Dictatorship

Hook, Line, Stinker


Hook, Line, Stinker


There is no debate over the risks of mercury in fish.


There hasn

Cheating The Vultures


Cheating The Vultures


As Uncle Hugh used to say, “Everybody

CLIFTEX Digging Deep Into The Vault


CLIFTON

History Of Fort Worth Comes To Life In New Book


Bringing Americana To Life ‘The Gougers’ — ‘A Long Day For The Weathervane’


‘A Long Day For The Weathervane’


AUSTIN A new musical release by The Gougers “A Long Day For The Weathervane” will likely take the alternative country genre by storm, for its rich lyrics and mesmerizing melodies score a bulls-eye when it comes to roots music, which is how alt-country has often been described. This album, however, has elements that trip into other genres, making it so special that it could redefine, or at least shift, the typical country-western platform that too often tends to be one-dimensional.


The Gougers is a four-piece band, born in Texas, that boasts of a new sound with a lot of soul and eloquence that resonates flavors of rock, folk, roots, and country from the guts and from the heart.


This multi-dimensional album has an appeal that could even breach the borders of pop and blues.


The CD, which is scheduled for release on Oct. 16, features the dynamic, wrenching, spellbinding vocals of singer-songwriters Shane Walker (who hails from Crawford, Texas) and Jamie Wilson (from Sealy, Texas). Walker also performs on the guitar and harmonica, while Wilson also plays acoustic guitar. The foursome is completed with Cody Foote on electric and upright bass and John Ross Silva on drums and percussion.


Some of the songs feature Walker, while others feature Wilson, as the lead singer. The CD lives up to its promotional material when it states: “The outstanding vocals of Walker and Wilson wrap around a ringing guitar, sometimes a laidback one, a drum riff, echoes or reverb and always a great lyric.”


“The Gougers’ sound takes in most genres, constantly moving in and out of country, rock, folk, roots, or mixing them up, as Walker and Wilson experiment and evolve as songwriters whose words stay with listeners and make them think. Dreamy ballad, up-tempo urban anthem: They’re playing with rhythm and instrumental effects, too, along the lines of influences and music mavericks Ryan Adams, Emmylou Harris and Bright Eyes and premier musical partners David Rawlings and Gillian Welch.”


“Weathervane” was produced by Texas singer-songwriter-guitarist Keith Gattis and mastered by the band’s percussionist, Silva. The album, that is drenched in depth and emotion while its individual tracks tell a story, consists of these numbers:


Ron Paul Rakes In $5 Million For Prez Race


WASHINGTON, D.C.

Patriot Act Parts Struck Down


SEATTLE, Wash.

Gov. Perry Backs Israel Commerce, Not Iran


Texas-Israel Chamber of Commerce To Be Created


AUSTIN, Texas

Thwarting Nuclear Terror in Texas: Investigation — Did ‘Ghost Troop’ prevent a nuke scheme on its first mission?


Did ‘Ghost Troop’ prevent a nuke scheme on its first mission?


HOUSTON The so-called “global war on terror” entered a dangerous new phase for Americans on March 11, 2004, when bomb explosions within the Madrid, Spain transit system killed 191 people and wounded 2,050. Within a day of the bombing, Fox News laid responsibility on “Al Qaeda Terror,” claiming it was now “90 percent ready” for a “Black Wind of Death” attack on America. Other global media speculated that Al Qaeda had acquired a suitcase nuke from somewhere within the former Soviet Union.


These media have warned the public repeatedly ever since that it is no longer a question of if, but rather of when Al Qaeda will explode a nuke on U.S. soil.


Ominously for Texans, a year earlier the Bush Administration had released an NSA intercept that Bin Laden wanted to hit the Houston area petrochemical complex. On February 23, 2003, the Houston Chronicle ran on op-ed emay, “Don’t Laugh at Duct Tape, It Saves Lives.” In it May argued that the Houston area was unquestionably a top terror target. It was the nation’s fourth most populous city, the home of the Johnson Space Center and the declared hometown of the Bush family. Lastly, it not only had the nation’s largest chemical district, but also a climate that could enhance the lethality of a chemical attack.


The “black wind” threat sounded like it could involve a possible mini-nuke attack on the petrochemical industry. This could spread toxic clouds over Houston similar to the catastrophe in Bhopal, India.


May was a former U.S. Army Intelligence officer and a longstanding Houston resident. In all probability, no one in the Bush Administration anticipated that a person with his professional qualifications would eventually form a “Ghost Troop” of anti-war activists and charge members of the Bush team with foul play.


Paradoxically, back in 2004 May’s most senior officer of Ghost Troop was Chase Untermeyer, May’s long-time friend, who had served as best man at his wedding. Untermeyer was a former Navy lieutenant and Bush family intimate who later became assistant Secretary of the Navy under Ronald Reagan. He was also the White House transition team leader between the Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations. The presence of a high-level insider lent credibility to the early stages of May’s black sheep cyber-intelligence unit.


At this time, Ghost Troop had dozens of former military and civilian members. They included Captain John Spooner, an Air Force Korean War veteran; Staff Sergeant Lee Neadows, an Army air cavalry Vietnam Veteran; and Kay Lucas, Director of the Crawford Peace House. All are still active in Ghost Troop, and believe that their collective efforts after the Madrid bombings affected US and world history.


The aggressiveness of America’s national media in blaming Al Qaeda for the Madrid bombings aroused suspicion in Ghost Troop. The Spanish government originally blamed the Basque separatist group ETA. The bombings came only four days before national elections, and with the bombings blamed on ETA, political analysts believed that the electorate would favor the anti-terror policies of the party in power. Supposedly these tough policies had reduced ETA to desperation. On the other hand, if Al Qaeda was involved, the Spanish public might perceive this as blow-bac

October 2007
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