Monday, July 16, 2007

Shake, Rattle & Roll

 
Once again, Japan is being rocked and not in a musical way.  Everytime
I hear or read about an earthquake over there it takes me back, oh so many years, to my stay in Tokyo.
 
For those of you who have never experienced an earthquake, yes - the ground moves under your feet. You can be knocked down by it, I was tossed out of my bed one time onto the floor. What a way to wake up!
So I can understand what the people are feeling over there.
 
I received an email from Aikiko saying how scared she was and the little ones were too.  She had not experienced an earthquake for many years because of living here in Florida.  It makes it doubly hard to think that they are in harm's way due to our  governments stupidity.
 
If any of you are not familiar with her story please look back at my postings and you will see her whole story, it's very sad.  The more people who know about it, the better...maybe something can be done at ground roots level.  Government is supposed to be by the people for the people...not that we are under a dictatorship of rules and regulations that make no sense.  Our laws, our rules are a living, breathing entity in themselves...meant to be fluid for a reason. So they can be changed, if needed, by the people - for the people. 
 
So if you read her story and feel compassionate, please do forward the link page to others so that her story can be told. Maybe we can embarass the ones making these rules if enough of their stupidity is shown to the rest of the world.
 
 

Monday, June 11, 2007

Unbeliveable..total stupidity

I almost feel that I should stop watching TV, listening to the radio or even reading commentaries on the net.

I'm not a pacifist, nor a flag burner. If anything, I've always considered myself to be a proud American, proud of my country and my fellow countrymen.

At the same time, I do yearn for peace.  The kind of peace that allows our young men and women to live a full life in our wonderful country and not lose their life-blood upon foreign sands.

Yes, watching an old time movie can make patriotic feelings surge evoking images of  Mom and apple pie.

Today, one of our respected leaders made several very stupid assertions with regard to Iran.

Let's see...we are fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan. Neither one is resolved to any great conclusion, just a constant blood letting of our youth. Remember WMD? Found none.

Now, we are being told that Iran is supplying men to fight in Iraq.  Wonder if we were to search for the camps supplying these men, would the results be the same as WMD?  A case of the tail wagging the dog?

I am so tired of politicians, their theme song should be "watch my feet, I'm dancing as fast as I can". 

Granted we have to be diligent in protecting our country, but I cannot see rhyme or reason for a strike against Iran.

Four years ago, we should of gone after Bin Laden with a passion that would not stop till we caught the mother. But no, let's spread ourselves all over the place. Are we really in a position to be the world's hammer? Coming down on anyone or anything that we feel might be a problem to us in the future?

I look in the mirror today and I don't see the guys in the white hats anymore.  All I see is greed, money, oil and blood.

 

 

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

A Terrible Miscarriage Of Justice

Bring Akiko Home!

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The Story

After a brief courtship in her native country of Japan, Akiko and Keith decided to marry. U.S. officials told them the fiancée visa Akiko needed to come to the United States would take 3 to 4 months to process. To be safe, when they set a date for their Hawaiian wedding, they allowed an extra month for it to arrive. The visa never came. Faced with disrupting the lives of guests in two countries, a huge financial loss, they asked the government what to do. Following the govt's advice, Keith and Akiko got married as planned. Then Akiko left her new husband and returned to Japan to await her visa.

Two months later, with fiancée visa finally in hand, Akiko came to America. Once reunited with Keith, she applied for a status change. Now the U.S. government claims the Campbells broke the law and has accused them of deception and fraud.

Keith and Akiko have spent the last nine years and thousands of dollars trying to rectify the mess. Last year, they finally got good news. They received a letter from the Department of Justice saying Akiko’s visa petition had been approved. All she had to do was to go the U.S. embassy in Tokyo pick up the new married visa and re-immigrate and all would be OK.

Akiko headed to Japan, taking her children along to visit their relatives. She believed the issue would soon be resolved forever. At her appointment, not only was her visa denied but Akiko was told there was never any chance she’d get it. Later the U.S. Embassy in Japan told Keith that people with visa problems are often deliberately misled so they leave the country.

Now Akiko has been stripped of her passport and cannot go anywhere. Unless a hardship waiver is granted, she and the boys are trapped in Japan for at least 10 years.
 
Please help us bring them home!


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Sunday, June 3, 2007

I Am Beyond Anger, a higher level than anger

Happy, smiling faces stare back at me from my photo collection. These are the faces I love more than anything in the entire world.

Instead of my grandchildren having a normal childhood, filled with dreams of fairies, goodness and love.  They have to deal with the fact that madmen want to blow up their neighborhood.  They live right next door to Kennedy Airport, for all I know the gas lines could run right under their house...deep below hidden in the earth.

The insidious plot that was stopped by the concentrated efforts of government powers was hatched from pure evil.  Now these evil men with pure malice in their hearts plan horrific events as easily as if they were planning a birthday party.

Destroy JFK? Destroy all the neighborhoods from the Brooklyn tanks through to Queens ending at the airport fuel depot? Has anyone calculated the amount of people who would of been killed?

These terrorists came from different countries, meeting together with a common bond...murder and mayhem done in the name of Allah. 

The rest of us, Americans, came from all over the world with a common bond...give me freedom, to live, to grow, to love, to prosper...no matter what my color is nor my faith...it doesn't matter. This is our dream...the American Dream, and yes, it is not perfect but it's damn close to it. 

I am, right now, a very irate grandma.  The thought that these faces that I love could of been wiped from this earth by sheer evil is beyond my ken.

Fighting overseas is not going to change this. This has to be a grass roots movement, the everyday common man, and yes the irate grandma too.  We must be vigilant in observing our neighbors. If something does not look right, feel right or smell right...call homeland security. I never thought that I would push for Big Brother, but I honestly believe that is the only thing that will work against this type of terrorist.

Andagain, I state...where are the Moslems speaking up against this? When you stand and fight for what you believe in that is what your children remember and will grow up to emulate. Instead, they grow up and strap bombs to their bodies, all in the name of Allah, blowing themselves and everyone else to Kingdom come. Shame on you for being silent.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Who The Hell Does He Think He Is?

I watched a video on AOL's front page today.  It made me so angry.   A young man, an American turncoat, was speaking for terrorists threatening to do more harm to us.

According to him, we should remove our presence from any country that has a Moslem population.  We also need to stop any support to "that bastard state Israel".  Folks, I think you know the only bastard in this story, is the speaker himself.

It is one thing for your enemies to hate you, taunt you but for it to be homegrown.  Raised within our bosom, having sucked on freedom's teat for his entire life...only to turn against everything that raised him.  To state, without remorse, that we should fear much greater devastation than 9/11...his new religion has turned his heart to stone within his breast.

You know I am quite tired of being politically correct.  I, as you too, have children and grandchildren; I want them to live free enjoying the liberty that our forefathers gave them with their lives.  When such a piece of crap threatens my world, I would call on whatever powers that be to reign down on his head. 

His parents must be so proud.   Better he should of rolled down his father's leg.

I'm in a quandary, my normal state is happy go lucky, loving people but right now I could kill.

I've said it before and I'll say it again.  If the Moslems around the world who do not want constant bloodshed were to stand up against these fanatics we would be on the way to peace.  But I guess the majority are cowards afraid to speak up.

I have a real hard time with a religion that calls for your enemy's heads and considers anyone not their religion to be an enemy.

Please someone, somewhere target this creep. 

 

 

Monday, May 28, 2007

Memorial Day Thoughts

Another Memorial Day is almost over.  The vast majority of people remember this day in simple ways. A bowed head, a whispered pray...moments of silence that count in the eyes of God.

Those of us who have been lucky enough not to be touched by war can only imagine what it feels like to be in one.

Down through the years, I've had many a conversation with older generations who have participated in war.  What I have been told is not a pretty tale, they are stories of bravery, stupidity, comradery and tactical brilliance.

My Greek grandfather was a doughboy in World War One, "the war to end all wars". If only it had been true. He had only been in America a short time before enlisting to defend his new country.  He did so with pride.  Thank God, he returned in one piece and went on to produce children - which I'm thankful for or I wouldn't be.

Papoo's two sons joined the navy during the second World War. Both of my uncles survived.  Uncle Billy had a nervous breakdown, due to working on the ships that came back from Hawaii. He was stationed in Norfolk, his hometown.  In later years, both of them would just say it was something that they had to do.

My own father was a Marine. He started out in the Asian theatre. His story is different from most. All his life he had been involved with horses and racing. He was stationed in Hawaii on the island of Maui...well, they raise horses there too.  One of the hot-shot generals found out about my Dad and wanted him to be a jockey for his racehorse.  You know, sometimes just sometimes, the fates are very fickle.

My Dad was removed from his unit, and did what the general wanted done. Raced his horse.  On one such race the leather girth under the horse split, causing the saddle to slide and my Dad was thrown off the horse while it was running at top speed.  Landing from such a fall would be bad enough, but the old horse parks used to have these wooden/metal spikes set around the track on the inside lane.  My dad's head landed directly on one.

They thought he was going to die. Then, as now, it was a case of uh-oh cover up the dirt for the general. Dad was placed in a hospital to recover.  While this was going on his whole unit was shipped out.  They were headed to the worst fighting of the war...the small islands. Now, the ironic twist to this story is that almost all his friends were killed. Dad was trained as a machine gunner, they were given less than five minutes to live in a fight.  So a horse, a crooked general and Hawaiian humidity saved his life.

There is more to his story but that will be for another day.

Now, my father-in-law Jim was amazing in his war experiences.  He was with the European front for a while and then also in the middle east. He was an expert marksman and won the army's rifle medal.  They had engaged the Germans in a battle somewhere in Italy. Unfortunately his unit was over-run and captured. Jim was placed in an Italian prisoner of war camp.  Well, being a stubborn New York kind of guy, sitting there didn't sit well with Jim.  He and another prisoner escaped, they managed to commandeer a motorbike with a sidecar.  They were being chased, his friend was speeding as fast as he could. They came to a spot where a train was coming across and his friend tried to make it across. He didn't.  Somehow Jim was thrown from the sidecar, quite bruised but in one piece.  The train hit the motorbike and his friend was gone in an instant.  Within minutes the Italians had Jim back in custody and back in prison.

He was told he had one strike against him. It was decided that he would be sent to a camp in Germany. He decided to try again and did. Joe has his Dad's prisoner of war tags showing the stalag that he eventually wound up in. I hold that small piece of metal in my hand and I know that he must have suffered much during that time. 

That was the spirit of the American soldier...never give up, never say die and don't let them see you sweat.

Jim never told his stories easily. My husband was amazed that his Dad would speak to me about his experiences.

To all our past, present and future soldiers.  I salute your courage, your compassion and your unending bravery.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Random Thoughts

I thought I would be brave and experiment with the digital camera...I was my only target.  I kinda like this scrolling thing that the picture thingy does now.  It sort of caresses the photograph with a soft grazing flow to it.  Do you all like this? Have you experimented yet?

Hubby and I took a mini vacation this past weekend. It was fun.  We headed to Treasure Island for sand, water and sun.  Actually we found an old treasure in the form of an old 1950 style motel, right on the beach.  Laid back, had a swimming pool.  Didn't even have a restaurant or anything with it. Our room turned out to be three rooms, living room, kitchen, bedroom and bath.  They had ones in front that have balconies on the second floor. Next time we will try for those.

These places are disappearing very quickly.  The land is worth so much more to a developer for a hotel or condos. In fact, hubby's job site was right next door to this little place. He's working on a huge Marriott Hotel, that will provide hundreds of rooms for tourists. 

So floating on my back in the pool I could gaze up and see the scaffolding on the ninth floor where my hubby would be back working on Monday.  All I could say was...Oh my God that's really high up there.  He is a supervisor and really doesn't have to be out there anymore, but he does it anyway.  I guess it's a man thing.

I tell you, not for nothing, but I could really see myself getting spoiled just laying back, watching the surf, the sunshine, the birds overhead and the sound of the sea.  All just so relaxing.

Right before we left we rebooked for Joe's birthday in November, this time we got the end unit with the lovely balcony......