Daily Archives: July 28, 2008

Come Here And Retire, Unless You


Come Here And Retire, Unless You

Letters To The Editor


Dear Editor,


Here are the Top 5 reasons why the Dallas Zoo should retire Jenny to a sanctuary rather than ship her off to a foreign zoo:


1. At a sanctuary, Jenny

Spaniard Survives Eight Years In Texas Wilderness


Spaniard Survives Eight Years In Texas Wilderness


After wandering for eight years in the dangerous domain yet to be named Texas, Cabeza de Vaca reported in person to the Spanish viceroy in Mexico City on July 25, 1536.


A decorated defender of the Spanish empire, Al Nunez Cabeza de Vaca was rewarded in 1527 with an all-expenses-paid trip to the New World. But no sooner had the expedition made landfall on the coast of Florida than he wished he had stayed home.


Sending the ships on ahead, the reckless commander led the rest of his men into the unmapped everglades. When their comrades were a no-show at the rendezvous, the impatient fleet weighed anchor.


Preferring to take their chances at sea rather than face certain death on dry land, the stranded soldiers cast off in a fragile flotilla of handmade boats. All but two of the crude craft vanished beneath the waves, and the remaining pair washed ashore on a desolate strip of sand off the Texas mainland.


Even though the ferocious Karankawas seemed friendly enough at first, the sunburned Spaniards chose to play it safe and put back to sea. But the crashing surf swamped their small boats and ensured an indefinite stay on Galveston Island.


While four intrepid souls headed inland, the first Europeans to set foot on Texas soil, the other 80 or so conquistadors dug in for the winter. Ravaged by disease and driven by hunger to feed on the dead, only 15 survived until spring. Warm weather revived their wanderlust, and those that could walk fled the deathtrap they called Malhado, the Isle of Misfortune.


Too weak to travel, Cabeza de Vaca and two more sickly Spaniards were left to the not-so-tender mercy of the local Indians. Having lost many tribesmen to the same epidemic that claimed the lives of the white strangers, the Karankawas blamed the calamity on the uninvited visitors. However, instead of executing the trio, the aborigines drafted them as medicine men.


When Cabeza and his terrified companions turned down the offer, the Indians simply starved them into submission. If they wanted to eat, they had to play doctor.


Depending upon folk remedies and the power of prayer, the Spaniards reluctantly treated the stricken Indians. The miraculous recovery of several patients surprised no one more than the nervous amateur physicians.


Cabeza regained his own health about the time the unpredictable Karankawas picked him to be the tribal slave. Constant labor and physical abuse eventually convinced him he had nothing lose by making a break for freedom, and he successfully escaped into the interior.


For six years, Cabeza subsisted as a combination trader and healer never knowing whether the next day might be his last. According to legend, his medical skill improved to the point that he actually performed the first surgery in Texas history by removing an arrowhead from the chest of a wounded warrior.


Loyalty kept Cabeza in the hazardous vicinity of Malhado. Once a year he risked his neck by returning to the island to beg the last Spaniard to go to Mexico with him. The fainthearted friend finally agreed in 1532

Life Is Not A Ride In The Cash Cab


Life Is Not A Ride In The Cash Cab


I

The Growing Crisis Of Uninsured Children In America


The Growing Crisis Of Uninsured Children In America


How did America get to the point where 9.4 million children have no health coverage, but 90-percent of those children live in families with at least one working adult? Across the country, children like three-year-old Katie Hebert from Pasadena, gamble every day without health insurance, despite dealing with serious and life-threatening medical conditions. Many are uninsured simply because their parents earn a fraction above the income limit to qualify for SCHIP. For Katie

The Land Of 10,000 Lakes And Even More Guns


The Land Of 10,000 Lakes And Even More Guns


I just visited Minnesota, which is not only a beautiful state, but an interesting one. It

Spray Your Worries Away With High-Tech Condom


Spray Your Worries Away With High-Tech Condom


Isn

High Gas Prices: Political or Economic Issue?


High Gas Prices: Political or Economic Issue?


There is a lot of blame being thrown around for the high costs and prices of gasoline.


Apparently, nothing will stop Democrats from pointing their fingers at the GOP and vice-versa, to blame each other for all our woes regarding gasoline usage and high costs.


Many people point their fingers at oil companies as the source of the problem, stating that these companies are pushing prices up for profiteering motives.


Others look at OPEC for exploiting its “power & control” over the world

Sunshine, Lollipops, And U.S. Terrorism Watch List


Sunshine, Lollipops, And U.S. Terrorism Watch List


The U.S. Terrorism Watch List is bullshit. To say that the list is “poorly managed” because it has too many names to be effective is just bullshit on top of bullshit.


The mere existance of such a list is un-American to the core. If the Founding Fathers had wanted a “Terrorism Watch List,” they would have written “Ha-ha! Just kidding!” at the bottom of the Constitution.


The list in its current form is a weapon of fear and intimidation, and the Bush administration intended it to be so from the start when it ordered other federal law enforcement lists streamlined to one.


Just look who has been harassed due to some problem with the List: Yusuf Islam (formerly known as singer-songwriter Cat Stevens), 1960s civil rights leader Rep. John Lewis, former South African President Nelson Mandela, current Bolivian President Evo Morales, U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy, Bush

Soul of a Horse


VALLEY CENTER, Calif.

On the Water with Scott Suggs — Night Fishing


Night Fishing


Growing up, I couldn’t wait for summer to arrive. For me, summer meant longer days to do all the fishing and hiking and camping that I wanted to do. But as I travel the country as a professional angler, I realize that to a large portion of the country summer means one thing: blazing heat. When the temperature reaches into the triple digits, most people would rather retreat to the air-conditioned comfort of home instead of enjoying the outdoors. Unfortunately, that means a lot of people are left without someone to take them on the water and introduce them to the great sport of fishing.


But fishing in the summer doesn’t mean you have to melt. When the sun goes down and the temperature starts to dip there are still plenty of fish to be caught. Night fishing is not only a great way to stay cool and get more people into the sport, but it’s also a great time to catch fish.


In addition to staying cooler, fishing at night also means that you will probably have a lot of water to yourself. No pleasure boaters and skiers to contend with, you are free to bob up and down on the water and listen to the sounds of a summer night. And the fish, which spend a lot of their day trying to stay cool like you and I do, seem to feed a little better at night.


Fishing at night can be done just about anywhere (consult your local regulations) in pursuit of just about any species. From the biggest lakes to the smallest ponds, night fishing can be great for bass, catfish, sunfish, crappie and walleye. But if you fish from a boat at night, you need to exercise a little more caution.


When fishing for bass at night, there are a few baits that are not only easy to use but also very effective. Big spinnerbaits with large blades put out a lot of vibration that attract a lot of attention from feeding fish. These baits are easy to use and can be fished with a variety of retrieves around the mouths of creeks and coves where feeding bass are likely to be. Also, a medium-diving crankbait is good for locating feeding fish

Congress Restores 35-Year Exemption For Recreational Boats From Proposed EPA Permitting Requirements


Proposed Ocean Bill Concerns Anglers — Fishery Management Council Process Could Be Subverted


Fishery Management Council Process Could Be Subverted


WASHINGTON, D.C. Congress is considering legislation which would result in new and potentially harmful fishing regulations, say opponents of H.R. 21, also known as Oceans 21.


The proposed law would set new requirements on fishermen and fisheries managers outside of and on top of the established process under the nation’s primary fisheries law, the Magnuson-Stevens Act.


This legislation would establish a comprehensive National Oceans Policy and guiding principles for use and management of U.S. coasts, oceans, Great Lakes and their resources.


While the intention of this legislation is to improve coordination among federal agencies, laws and regulations, H.R. 21 would only result in additional layers of bureaucracy within the management of federal marine fisheries, claim anglers.


For more than 30 years, federally managed species have been regulated through the Magnuson-Stevens Act. As currently written, H.R. 21 would create a separate and likely conflicting bureaucratic regime under which fisheries would have to be regulated.

Maine G-roots Aims To Repeal REAL ID Law


PORTLAND, Maine

Pelosi To Netroots: Need Moar Powah!


Bloggers get

Possible DU Pollution Stirs Colorado Official


FORT CARSON, Colo.

Dallas Democrat Leading GOTV Group


WASHINGTON, D.C.

NYT Said


AUSTIN, Texas

AMA Apologizes For Racial Inequality


CHICAGO, Ill.

Texas Senators Vote Against AIDS/HIV Bill


WASHINGTON, D.C.

July 2008
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