Daily Archives: December 31, 2008

Cactus Jack And FDR End Up Not On Speaking Terms


Cactus Jack And FDR End Up Not On Speaking Terms


John Nance Garner put on a happy holiday face for his family on Dec. 25, 1938, but there was no hiding the fact that the Vice-President

Here


Here

Now What? A Tsunami?!


Now What? A Tsunami?!


Like most people these days, I

Deregulation Of Electricity Was An Accident Waiting To Happen


Deregulation Of Electricity Was An Accident Waiting To Happen


Once upon a time in American history, “deregulation” was a good thing. Few wanted government involved in our daily lives; however, that was then, and this is now. Various industries have become too greedy for profits. For many years in Texas electric cooperatives have been protected from oversight. They do NOT come under the same laws and scrutiny that other electric companies must.


Finally Pedernales Electric Cooperative (PEC) and its questionable activities are being investigated.


It also is important to look at the Attorney General and Office of the Travis County DA

The Joke


The Joke

Okay, Maybe Fruitcake Doesn


Okay, Maybe Fruitcake Doesn

A Road Is A Road Is A Road


A Road Is A Road Is A Road


As Uncle Hugh used to say, “I had a choice when I was on the run. The two safest places for me were Louisiana and Oklahoma. They run me outa Louisiana because I wasn

Press Pool Refuses Beer From Obama


HONOLULU, Hawaii – A few members of the press pool following President-Elect Barack Obama in Hawaii refused to have a beer on his tab last week.


Obama had been on a holiday vacation in the state he once called home when the refusal occurred.


The press pool was sitting outside the club house of a golf course on which Obama had been playing poorly by his own admission.


Obama offered the round of beers at the snack bar half way through his five-hour game of 18 holes.


The pool noticed that Obama ran up a $17.75 tab that consisted of two spam masubi rolls among other items.


Spam musubi is made from spam and a fried egg on a bed of rice on a dried seaweed wrap, according to the New York Times.

WSJ Drops Few Sports Puns In Obama Basketball Story


NEW YORK CITY, N.Y. – The Wall Street Journal went easy on the basketball puns in a recent story about the president-elect

Ringing In New Year Is Old Tradition — Year Used To Consist Of 10 Months


Year Used To Consist Of 10 Months


CRAWFORD While the notion of ringing in the new year has been around for quite some time, celebrating on the first of January is not nearly as old a tradition. In fact, March 1st was designated the beginning of the new year according to the early Roman calendar.


In those days, the year consisted of just 10 months, a fact that is still evident today in the names of certain months.


For example, the months of September through December, currently the ninth through twelfth months of the year, were originally positioned as the seventh through tenth months of the year.


The name September is derived from the word “septem,” the Latin word for “seven.” The ensuing months of October (derived from “octo” for “eight”), November (“novem” for “nine”) and December (“decem” for “ten”) all trace their origins back to the early Roman calendar.


Nowadays, of course, the new year is celebrated on the first of January, a month that did not even exist until 700 B.C., when the second king of Rome added the months of January and February to the calender.


It wasn’t until 46 B.C. that January 1st was officially decreed the new year by Julius Caesar. That tradition would last more than half a millenium until 567, the period known as the Middle Ages. Deeming the new year celebrations pagan un-Christian, the Council of Tours abolished January 1st as the official start to the new year. Through Europe, the new year was then celebrated at various times, including December 25th, March 1st, and March 25th.


In 1582, the Georgian calendar restored January 1st as the start of the new year. However, the British Empire and its American colonies did not adopt that calendar for another 170 years, and the British and their American colonists continued to celebrate the new year on March 1st until they officially adopted the Georgian calendar in 1752.

2008


WASHINGTON, D.C. – The nation

2008

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Multinational Monitor released its 20th annual list of the top 10 worst corporations last month.


Some of the usual suspects returned to the list. “But we

Heat Tops Threats On


WASHINGTON, D.C.

Bush Lets


WASHINGTON, D.C. – The healthcare industry can refuse medical treatment for patients on moral grounds, according to a midnight rule change by the Bush adminstration.


If healthcare workers – be it doctors, hospitals, or volunteers in medical experiment – find a procedure to be against their conscience, then they have the right to not perform it.


So birth control, abortion, emergency contraception, stem cell research and assisted suicide could all be dead on the operating table, so to speak.


The 11th-hour rule was published last week in the Federal Register and goes into effect once President George W. Bush leave the White House.


President-Elect Barack Obama has already criticized the rule and went on record in support of women

Party With


AUSTIN, Texas – The team that produced the documentary about the residents of Crawford, Texas has launched a new creative effort to screen their movie.


To get these screening parties off the ground, the producers of

Best And Worst For 2008


The Icon of the Year is:


The Republican Presidential Ticket, Plus One


2008 was a year in which America realized it was about to go “full retard” and then didn

Best And Worst For 2008


The Iconoclasts of the Year are:


Those who saw the Wall Street “bailout” bill for what it really was

December 2008
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