Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Right to Vote in Elections

I am looking at the closely contested Governor's race in my home state of Connecticut.


Currently, the count is 517,209 to 515,437.  


That means that 1,032,646 (more or less) people voted in the Nutmeg State.


According to Wikipedia "Connecticut is the 29th most populous state, with 3.5 million residents"  and has over 2 million registered voters. belonging to 27 parties. I do not know which parties endorsed the Gubernatorial candidates other that the Republican Party and the Democratic Party.


I am kind of proud of my state. We had a voter turnout of approximately 50%. That's about the highest I ever heard of. I believe that there was so much publicity about our Senate race, that people actually showed up to voice their opinion.


The Candidates for Senate from my point of view:


Linda McMahon (R)) - Believe it or not, she was the CEO of the entertainment company World Wrestling Federation. She and her husband built the company from a smallish regional business into a multi billion dollar organization.  She stepped down to run the Senate race. Although her campaign had many positive things to say, I think what did her in was her negative advertising. It was 30 seconds of Dick Bluenthal did this bad thing Dick Bluenthal said this bad thing, asked if you wanted Dick Bluenthal to be your next senator. Then the ad finished with a nice bright cheery I'm "Linda McMahon and I am running for senate". Dumb Dumb Dumb ... repeat the other guys name 3 times and yours once. Okay. Now you are in a voting booth and see the names against each other. Which one do you fill in the blank for? Of course. The one whose name you heard most often. I heard some people say that is why they voted against her.


Dick Bluenthal (D) - Career politician. Was our Attorney General for years and had lots of fun throwing spectacular lawsuits around. I think his heart is in the right place, but he sold out years ago and will do or say anything to anyone to get elected. I would not trust him to hold my coffee. He would spill it on his lap and sue me for burning his willy. Most recently his party tried to deny voters wearing the garb of their favorite wrestlers the right to vote! claiming it was political advertising.  


I wore my Clearwater Shirt. Now That's political advertising, isn't it?


Interestingly enough, I believe our Founding Fathers did not want career politicians. They wanted merchants and traders and manufactures to spend some of their time serving their country in office, then go home to their jobs.







Tuesday, August 17, 2010

I love Summer

Bill has been managing his time well, so I am only needed in the shop here and there for errands.  I think tomorrow I am going 90 miles round trip to Irvington, NY. This is actually working out well because the bass fishing is pretty good right now. Last trip to Marshepaug I even caught a rainbow trout ... the caveat being that the water is so warm that any trout you catch you must kill because the water is so warm and the stress of being caught would kill the fish anyway.

That worked out fine.  The trout tasted great grilled in foil and eaten with fresh sweet corn on-the-cob.  Summer is a great time.

I had a fabulous time at Falcon Ridge.  Since I never know who I am camping with, I have had to revamp my gear a little so I don't bring so much. I find it hard to believe that a few short years ago I went camping on a motorcycle. Now I fill my Jeep from tailgate to passenger seat with necessities. And I nearly used it all!

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Tarpon Fishing

I do not know how much detail I  should get into about Tarpon fishing with a fly.  I will try to be informative and tell a story. Today is my Fourth day out, and for Tarpon fishing I would call it a pretty good day.

We (me and my captain) are trying to present a fly to fish we have seen. Tarpon can be caught with live bait and are, I am sure very exciting with light tackle, but that is not the same as actually seeing the fish you are presenting your fly to. Today we saw few fish, and had few opportunities to present the fly, but for those we did, we had 3 "eats".  An eat is defined as a tarpon went totally ballistic when it saw what it thought was food and ate it. Since tarpon fishing is at best a low percentage sport, this is actually a good day.  One of those eats might have been a caught fish if I hadn't been so enthusiastic about striking the fish and breaking the line.

Yesterday, day 3 was actually more typical. It was storming early, so we went out late, it was blowing like stink, the push pole broke, and I spent a couple of hours casting blindly in the back country waters. I wore out very quickly, so we quit early.

I really should keep better records of eats, jumps and caught fish, because Day 2 was magical. I had lots of eats, but the highlight was hooking and keeping on my line a 90 pound Tarpon.  Because the Tarpon are so valuable as a sport fish, we count a fish as "caught" when we have the leader in the guides of the fishing rod.

The Big fish ... Almost to the tippet!

I did that twice with this fish before we set the reel to maximum drag and it broke itself off. I feel I could have landed the fish, but it would have taken another 45 minutes and the fish would have been totally whipped before returning it to the sea.  Sport fishing is called that because it is a sport to hunt and catch one of these magnificent ancient creatures on a rod and reel. We don't want to tire them unnecessarily.

Day one:  I always consider my trip to be a success if I catch one fish. That i did within 20 minutes of stepping into the boat. There was something going on to excite the fish ... my Captain referred to it as a "hatch".  There were lots of birds wheeling around us and dipping into the water to feed. The water was dead calm, and the sun was still below the horizon. We could see the Tarpon moving on the surface ... it is said they come up for air and actually process air for oxygen exchange. I threw my fly out, and lo and behold , the water boiled and I had a hold of 15 pounds of furious fish leaping out of the water to escape my line. This little fish I actually handled with a special pair of gloves and retrieved the fly.

See the red lights on the horizon?  Still before sun-up!


A jump is defined as ..the hook went into the fish, he started screaming line off your reel and he makes a jump. This first jump is critical because when it happens, it is very early in the fight  and you will find out if the fish is well hooked. So a jump is an eat with a little more excitement.

A jumped Tarpon


I plan to be on the water again tomorrow at 6 AM ... wish me Tight Lines.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

NSAIDS day 3

For the uninformed, and NSAID is a Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, As good as I felt this morning, I quickly deteriorated at work. I felt very irritated and have a little tintinabulation. I only lasted a couple of hours before I had to call an end to the day.Actually not bad considering we are just on Day 3 and I am not compelled to protect my supply of NSAIDS like an addict hordes his drugs. I went to the Haitian Deli for lunch and I am enjoying their special of the day.  I think they are callled camerons with fried yucca and yellow rice. Looked good.  Tasted great.  Thank heaven for antibiotics!
No headache
achy neck mostly gone
rest of me is  ... ah well ... still almost 59 years old and ready for my afternoon nap.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Bedtime Day 2

I have already called my boss to tell him i will be available for limited duty tomorrow. I am going back slowly, but I am already going nutso-fartso watching daytime TV.

In sum: no more headache, I can mostly turn my neck, I anticipate a good night's sleep, I don't watch the clock for my next NSAID fix.  I feel much better.

I am however taking everyone's advice and continuing the Amoxicillin for the full 3 weeks.

Hugs and love and kisses to all who care enough to read about this.

4 hours

Its been 4 ... count them ... 4 whole hours since I took my last Motrin. My big problems that remain include sore neck and itchy nipple.  I may even call Bill to see if he needs some little things done for a half day tomorrow.

One thing I am worried about is what happens the next time I get it? Will it be less virulent the next time I have it? Is that why people don't discover they have this disease ... because they had it so many times before they just don't notice the symptoms?

Day Two

With (as Missy put it) speed-ball dosing of acetaminophen and ibuprofen, I think I am even with the fever and headache. I actually slept some last night and even finished my lunch about 2 AM. I figure my sleep cycles are all f***ed up because for the last few days I have been sleeping very fitfully. And I started keeping a log of meds and how I feel. The upshot is that today I am feeling hurty but much better. I am even considering keeping my standing movie date tonight. I hope I can turn my head then. I have been doing Tai Chi stretches with it

Progression of my Lyme's disease

At first, I thought I had the flu after a weekend at my fishing cabin. So I did the Zicam thing because I truly believe that Zicam helps colds end faster. So I was working hard and getting a little sore. And one of my nipples itched a little.  By the end of the second week I was really sore. I was losing sleep to the headaches and body aches.  On Thursday I was kvetching about my finger joints which I passed off to having worked the day before with a gel stain that required mashing it into the wormholes in the wood. I remember asking my boss if my headache could be a hangover from the volatiles in our varnishes and stains. Sunday I simply called in "sore". Monday morning i had decided that Doctor was more important than work.  I could scarcely turn my head. I bought a thermometer and enough Acetaminophen and Ibuprofen for a small army.

Friday, March 5, 2010

The Laramie Project

I rarely feel strongly enough about a topic to write and essay about it, but this is one of those rare times.

The Laramie Project is a theater piece about the brutal beating of Matthew Shepard in Colorado, and his death from those injuries just a few days later. The key point to this is that Matthew Shepard was alleged to have been gay.

But that is not the reason I am writing this essay ... enough has been said about Matthew's murderers who will live out their natural lives in prison. What I am writing about is the fact that a local theater company is presenting a legitimate piece of theater about this event, The Laramie Project. And there is a church group  traveling all the way from Kansas to protest the presentation of this play. Can you imagine such a thing? A group of adults are so incensed about this play that they would take their kids out of school to go protest a play about a brutal murder? Maybe these wannabe "Christians" should re-read their Bible. Number one in the Ten Commandments is thou shalt not kill.  I do not remember any commandment that says thou shalt not love your fellow man.

At least some local kids are willing and able to protest against these protesters. I truly hope it remains peaceful even though some warped adults feel that murder of a child is justified. I am very proud of our local students who organized this Angel Action counter protest ... the students will wear large white wings and surround the dissenters.

It still boggles my mind; that a church group would protest against a play about a brutal and senseless murder.

Article from the Danbury News-Times:


Flock of 'angels' plan to surround picketers outside Brookfield play

Published: 10:45 p.m., Thursday, March 4, 2010
BROOKFIELD -- A group of protesters who plan to picket a play based on the murder of a gay man being staged at Brookfield Theatre for the Arts can expect to be the subject of a protest themselves.
More than 200 local students have signed up to wear tall wings made out of white sheets and to surround the protesters, blocking them from public view.
"I am hoping for a very positive and peaceful demonstration," organizer Timothy Breuer, a Brookfield High School senior, said in a Facebook message.
Members of the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kan., plan to picket outside the theater at 182 Whisconier Road on March 13, when its last performance of "The Laramie Project" is scheduled.
The play is based on the murder of Matthew Shepard, a 21-year-old gay college student who was kidnapped, beaten and left to die in Laramie, Wyo., in 1998.
The playwrights -- Moises Kaufman and members of the Tectonic Theater Project -- conducted more than 200 interviews with residents of Laramie in the year after Shepard's death.
There will be seven protesters, said Shirley Phelps-Roper, a Westboro Baptist Church member. She said she has already booked her ticket to travel to Brookfield and plans to bring her 10th child, son Noah, 11.
"The message we bring is that because this nation has fully rebelled against the commandments of God and teach their children that God is a liar, your destruction is imminent," Phelps-Roper said in an e-mail.
According to the group's picketing schedule, church members are protesting events around the country, including a funeral and a Jewish carnival at a high school.
The local students are adopting the "Angel Action" tactic, the counterprotest strategy used when Westboro Baptist Church members protested at Shepard's murder trial. Romaine Patterson, who organized the first Angel Action protest, is the main character in "The Laramie Project."
"We are all attending because we love our community and want to send these people the message that they are not welcome and have no followers here," said Breuer, 18.
The play's director, Michael Burnett, said nether the theater nor the cast is focusing any energy on the possible pickets.
"This production deals with compassion and equality, and that is definitely the message and intent on which we are focused," Burnett said. "The best thing I think that people can do is to experience the production with us (and) see for themselves what it may inspire in their everyday lives."
Breuer said this is the first time he has organized a protest.
"I have strong opinions on many subjects, but the immense amount of hate this group preaches urged me to act instead of keep my opinions to myself," he said.
The event listing on Facebook has more than 200 confirmed participants. Most of the students are from Brookfield High School, but others are also coming from neighboring high schools, Western Connecticut State University and the University of Connecticut.
"Surprisingly enough, we as (administrators) of the Angel Action group only invited our friends on Facebook to join and nothing else," Brookfield High School student Eric Owen said in a Facebook message.
"No more than a day later, our group had spread very quickly to not only Brookfield students but to many local schools in the area and even in other states," Owen said.
"I am extremely proud that this group reached out to so many people, because it created a sense of unity between Brookfield, neighboring towns, and with individuals in other states who sadly can't attend the protest."
The play is recommended for audience members 13 years and older. Performances are Friday and Saturday and March 11, 12 and 13 at 8 p.m., plus a matinee this Sunday at 2. Tickets are $20 for general admission, $15 with a student I.D.