Secretariat’s Gallop into Greatness, Movie Fame has W&L Tie – Roanoke.com

 

I saw this on my alma mater, W&L’s,website earlier today…

And I’ll never forget going to the Kentucky Derby with my Washington and Lee friends in 1978 when Secretariat was still a vivid, recent memory….

 

He was one of the greatest sports stars to ever come out of the commonwealth.

He is the subject of a new movie starring Diane Lane and John Malkovich.

He is a horse.

The 1973 winner of the Triple Crown will jump from the pages of history to the multiplex when the Walt Disney Pictures film “Secretariat” opens across the country Friday, giving folks the chance to learn — or be reminded — of the Virginia roots of both the famed horse and the family who owned him.

Secretariat was born at The Meadow, a Caroline County horse farm founded by Washington and Lee University graduate Christopher Chenery. Secretariat, who lived and trained for two years at The Meadow, won the Triple Crown in blue-and-white racing silks — the school colors of Chenery’s alma mater.

via Secretariat’s gallop into greatness, movie fame has W&L tie – Roanoke.com.

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Southern Baptist leader on Yoga: Not Christianity – Yahoo! News

These people are truly crazy….

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – A Southern Baptist leader who is calling for Christians to avoid yoga and its spiritual attachments is getting plenty of pushback from enthusiasts who defend the ancient practice.

Southern Baptist Seminary President Albert Mohler says the stretching and meditative discipline derived from Eastern religions is not a Christian pathway to God.

Mohler said he objects to “the idea that the body is a vehicle for reaching consciousness with the divine.”

“That’s just not Christianity,” Mohler told The Associated Press.

via Southern Baptist leader on yoga: Not Christianity – Yahoo! News.

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Sammy Davis, Jr: It Ain’t Necessarily So…

There’s a great CD recording of  “Porgy and Bess”  with Sammy and Ella…

Here’s Sammy doing a great job of covering the male songs on a TV Special from 1973:

 

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John Edwards Case Subpoenas Issued

The fun never ends.  This soap opera seems to be warming up for Act 2.

RALEIGH, N.C. — Federal prosecutors have issued a fresh round of subpoenas for a probe into John Edwards’ campaign finances, an attorney for the two-time presidential candidate said Wednesday.

Lawyer Wade Smith said he has learned from other attorneys and other sources that several new subpoenas were issued. Smith said Edwards didn’t violate any law.

“We want them to look as carefully as they wish,” said Smith, who declined to discuss who got subpoenas and what they were seeking.

The subpoenas indicate signs of life for an investigation that hasn’t publicly shown activity for a year. Edwards mistress Rielle Hunter and former aide Andrew Young made appearances at the federal courthouse in Raleigh a year ago to testify before a grand jury.

Young says he testified about vast sums of money that changed hands to help keep Hunter in hiding.

via John Edwards Case Subpoenas Issued.

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Some Thoughts on Polling

As the elections approach, I’m reading a lot about the polls predicting Republican gains.  I may be delusional, but I just can’t believe this many people are planning to vote Republican after the mess of the Bush years, the GOP positions out of alignment with mainstream values (privatize Social Security) and what happened the last time the Republicans controlled the House.

So, I started wondering about the polling.  The last couple of elections have shown some surprises that were not reflected in the pre-election polls.

Most Republican voters are older and white.  Most, or many,  Democratic voters are younger, more tech savvy, better educated and/or non-white.

Most polling depends on making telephone contact.  The Democratic voter base is less likely to have land lines.  There is no national directory of cell phone numbers as Verizon, T-Mobile and other large carriers don’t release their numbers.

How are the pollsters contacting the Democratic base?  It’s much easier t0 find the number for older Republican voters, but how do they get contact information for Dems?  Not to mention Caller ID….

So, I’m wondering- and hoping- there may be some more surprises this year due to pollsters not being able to reach the Democratic voters to poll them.

We’ll know in a few weeks if the flaw is with the pollsters or the judgment of the Electorate…

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Think Progress » Beck On Family’s Home Burning Down As Firefighters Watched: ‘We Are Going To Have To Have These Things’

Unbelievable…

As ThinkProgress reported yesterday, last week South Fulton Fire Department firefighters from Obion, Tennessee, stood by and watched as the Cranick family’s home burned down — which also led to the death of the family’s three dogs and a cat — because their fire-fighting services were available by subscription only, and the family had not paid the $75 fee. Immediately, right-wing writers at the conservative movement’s bulkhead magazine, The National Review, defended the county and argued that firefighting should not be a public service available to all, regardless of ability to pay.

Now, yet another major conservative has joined the defense. On his radio show this afternoon, leading right-wing talker Glenn Beck and his producer Pat Gray openly mocked the Cranick family. After playing a news clip explaining the situation, Gray adopted a southern drawl and began to mock Gene Cranick’s explanation of how the county’s firefighters refused to help his family.

Beck then went on to complain that “those who are just on raw feeling are not going to understand” that the county’s actions in refusing to assist the Cranicks were justified. He explained that America will be having the “argument” about the case of the Cranicks and that it will go “nowhere if you go onto ‘compassion, compassion, compassion, compassion’ or well, ‘they should’ve put it out, what is the fire department for?’” Beck then went on to say that the Cranicks would be “spongeing off their neighbors” if the fire department had helped them put out their fire. The radio host concluded his rant by saying “this is the kind of stuff that’s going to have to happen, we are going to have to have these kinds of things”:

via Think Progress » Beck On Family’s Home Burning Down As Firefighters Watched: ‘We Are Going To Have To Have These Things’.

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Op-Ed Columnist – Third Party Rising – NYTimes.com

Great column from Thomas Friedman in the Times this morning…

The comparison to the Roman Empire is one that has crossed my mind many times…

A friend in the U.S. military sent me an e-mail last week with a quote from the historian Lewis Mumford’s book, “The Condition of Man,” about the development of civilization. Mumford was describing Rome’s decline: “Everyone aimed at security: no one accepted responsibility. What was plainly lacking, long before the barbarian invasions had done their work, long before economic dislocations became serious, was an inner go. Rome’s life was now an imitation of life: a mere holding on. Security was the watchword — as if life knew any other stability than through constant change, or any form of security except through a constant willingness to take risks.”

It was one of those history passages that echo so loudly in the present that it sends a shiver down my spine — way, way too close for comfort.

and

“We basically have two bankrupt parties bankrupting the country,” said the Stanford University political scientist Larry Diamond. Indeed, our two-party system is ossified; it lacks integrity and creativity and any sense of courage or high-aspiration in confronting our problems. We simply will not be able to do the things we need to do as a country to move forward “with all the vested interests that have accrued around these two parties,” added Diamond. “They cannot think about the overall public good and the longer term anymore because both parties are trapped in short-term, zero-sum calculations,” where each one’s gains are seen as the other’s losses.

We have to rip open this two-party duopoly and have it challenged by a serious third party that will talk about education reform, without worrying about offending unions; financial reform, without worrying about losing donations from Wall Street; corporate tax reductions to stimulate jobs, without worrying about offending the far left; energy and climate reform, without worrying about offending the far right and coal-state Democrats; and proper health care reform, without worrying about offending insurers and drug companies.

“If competition is good for our economy,” asks Diamond, “why isn’t it good for our politics?”

We need a third party on the stage of the next presidential debate to look Americans in the eye and say: “These two parties are lying to you. They can’t tell you the truth because they are each trapped in decades of special interests. I am not going to tell you what you want to hear. I am going to tell you what you need to hear if we want to be the world’s leaders, not the new Romans.”

Click here for the full column:  via Op-Ed Columnist – Third Party Rising – NYTimes.com.

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Chapter 25: Queer in the South: My Story, Part 2 | My Southern Gothic Life

New post up on my other blog.

Here is an excerpt and a link to the full post:

Let me start the second part of sharing this journey by pointing out that the story has a happy ending. I like to think I ended up a fairly well-adjusted, happily partnered Gay man. But it’s not something that just happened on its own.

Let me also say, I think my journey would have been easier if I had not been stuck in Danville, Virginia during the early years of my coming out and coming to terms with who I really was.

There is a monologue by  Little Edie, in “Grey Gardens” that always makes me think of Danville.  She might have been talking about Long Island and other circumstances, but it always reminds me of Danville:

Honestly, they can get you…for wearing red shoes on a Thursday – and all that sort of thing…They can get you for almost anything – it’s a mean, nasty, Republican town.”

I was also working in banking there and believe me, bankers are the most self-important creatures ever to walk the earth. They had very firm ideas of how one was supposed to conduct themselves both at and out of the office. That was another role I couldn’t play…

But getting back to the Gay thing. I don’t think people realize how tough it apparently still is for gay kids and adults in places like Danville and Mississippi. People think all gay people live in San Francisco or New York or Greensboro or Richmond or Charlottesville. Not in small towns and cities that aren’t as progressive as some of the areas mentioned above.

via Chapter 25: Queer in the South: My Story, Part 2 | My Southern Gothic Life.

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Tens Of Thousands Of Progressives Rally At The Lincoln Memorial For Jobs, Justice And Education

Funny that this got hardly any press and the Glenn Beck Rally was all over the news….

Tens of thousands of civil rights, labor, and other progressive activists gathered on the National Mall today for the One Nation Working Together rally, meant to bring attention to the fight for jobs, justice and education and energize the left one month before the midterm elections.

“October 2nd is about November 2nd,” SEIU President Mary Kay Henry recently told MSNBC host Ed Schultz, who heavily promoted the event on his show and gave opening remarks today. “And it’s about what we do after November 2nd to hold elected officials and corporate America accountable to getting us back to work.”

More than 400 organizations representing tens of thousands of individuals sponsored the rally, bringing together groups like the Sierra Club, United Mine Workers of America, and the NAACP. Backers were touting it as the most diverse march in history.

via Tens Of Thousands Of Progressives Rally At The Lincoln Memorial For Jobs, Justice And Education.

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My Southern Gothic Life | Trying to Stay Sane in a Crazy Southern World…

New post up on my other blog:

I struggled with how to title this post, but I decided to go with the pejorative terminology.  Now is not a time to be delicate or sensitive.

I’m just going to lay out the facts.  I’ve been very honest on this blog about my family and I’m going to try to be equally as honest about myself.  Fair is fair.

Some of you know part of this story.  A very few know it all.  Most of you don’t know any of this….but with us facing at least 6 suicides by young gay men this week, I decided to move up the time clock and tell it all.

I’m going to tell my personal story, but I don’t think it’s a singular story.  One of the things we learn as we grow older is that we aren’t as special as we once thought we were.

via My Southern Gothic Life | Trying to Stay Sane in a Crazy Southern World….

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