Welcome to Swamp Gas in the Imajica. Similar to the You Can't Make This Shit Up (YCMTSU) section, Swamp Gas will focus solely on news and items of interest in the sunshine state of Florida.
They say, "All the nuts in America roll downhill to Florida." So let's just see how true that phrase really is.
The toddler's mother, Melinda Duckett, gave interviews (1,2,3) to the news media, but seemed uncooperative to local police and other observers. Unlike the toddler's estranged father, Joshua, Melinda did not take a polygraph. She also seemed very vague about her whereabouts and activities during the day leading up to reporting Trenton missing.
One of the interviews Melinda Duckett gave was with CNN Host Nancy Grace. Grace kept asking why she would not take a polygraph. (transcript) Hours before the show was to air, Melinda Ducket was found dead from an apparent suicide at her grandparent's house. (video) That was the reason for the squadron of news helicopters I witnessed hovering over a local subdivision of homes.
The upcoming national elections and the anniversary of 9/11 have the nation and our politicians talking about Iraq. Most of the talk gets boiled down by the media to a cartoonish and juvenile level that reminds me of that classic song lyric by The Clash, "Should I stay or should I go?" Few people in the Dumbocratic or Republicon political party have anything more to offer than hatred for each other. Bullshit bumper sticker phrases like "cut and run" and "stay the course" do not help Americans understand the reality of our options concerning Iraq. Politicians that use these phrases should not be supported or re-elected.
I am supportive of those fewpoliticians, from either party, that dare question the Bush/Cheney administration and their blind maintenance of the original neocon fantasy in the Middle East. It is not working. The recent speeches by the president, and the subsequent parroting of talking points by the rubber-stamp Republicons, are nothing more than arrogant, drowning old white men that are too stupid to remove the war profit gold from their pockets to save themselves.
In order to improve the situation in Iraq, one would have to have some clear understanding of it. The Bush/Cheney administration is verifiably delusional. The only other explanation is that they know the truth and are simply lying to the people of the country in order to stay in power, politically.
It's no wonder that Dubya decided to quote so-called communications from Osama bin Laden in his latest speeches. Both Dubya and Osama sound like Baghdad Bob and have no credibility. Zero.
Regular readers know that I like to put links in my blog to the White House. I think people should listen more carefully to the communications coming out of the Bush administration, since we know that they aren't very prone to tell the American people very much.
One thing I've noticed over the years at the White House site is that the Bush/Cheney administration fully understands that Americans are reluctant to believe them nowadays. Recently this year, the White House website has now taken to adding some cute links to supplemental "Fact Sheets" that bullet point their delusions into the adminstration's talking points for propaganda pundits.
"Since the September 11 attacks, America is safer, but we are not yet safe."
I read this and see a dependent clause that is a continuing pathological lie combined with an independent statement that is an ongoing excuse for the political, philosophical and bureaucratic failures of this administration for the last half decade.
The administration's own Strategy for Success in Iraq calls for monitoring the three tracks they have defined: Political, Economic and Security. The Political track is falling apart as evident by the obvious Kurdish desire for independence from Baghdad. The Economic track is failing, because we are spending billions per month to prop this neocon experiment up. The Security track is failing because the Defense Department is too scared to admit failure by changing their tactics beyond the current whack-a-mole security operations.
To fix the security problems would require more U.S. troops, or Iraqi troops, in order to quell the violence in Baghdad or the western Anbar province, or growing Shia southern violence, or should the Kurds bail out from the idea of a unified Iraq.
Well, I waited almost two weeks for the Atlantis shuttle to launch. Then, when it did finally launch, I didn't blog about it -- because thinking about 9/11 puts me in a mood that makes me not want to talk to anyone, in person or via the blog. I get so angry, and sad. I spent both Sunday and Monday hunkered down in a very anti-social frame of mind.
I apologize for the auto-loading flash file in the 9/11 entry. Regular Thunderstorms readers with dial-up modems are probably gathering pitchforks and lighting their torches to storm the Imajica. It's there primarily to motivate me to move forward, blog, and knock it off the main page.
I did watch the shuttle launch Saturday via NASA TV. I'm sure most people have seen newsbytes of it. If you want to check out something interesting, read the STS-115 launch blog. It has links to video footage from Saturday's launch, and odd little notes, too. I never knew that some of the astronauts were in a rock band called "Max Q."
The one thing that really puts me in a good mood is the work that the astronauts (and all of the dedicated NASA personnel) are doing right now. In a few hours, STS-115 crew members will secure the P3/P4 trusses to the ISS during their first EVA of the mission. If you want to know what they'll be doing each day of the mission, check out this handy flash file. This flash also has assembly animations for the STS-115 mission and the completed International Space Station.
Another thing that cheered me up was that Pluto Girl visited the blog. I affectionately gave her the nickname Pluto Girl, though. I thought she was funny and smart. The nickname she uses is BravesGirl5 on YouTube. She's quite a prolific video blogger, even though her beloved Atlanta Braves are doomed. She should major in mass communications, but she'll probably be a biochemist, or something.
As for me video blogging, let's just say I have a face fit for Klingon iTunes podcasts. Also noteworthy: Star Trek turned 40 this weekend. I checked out some of the fan films and I was amazed at the quality of projects like New Voyages and Starship Exeter. As much as I thought myself to be a science fiction fan, I never knew about this growing phenomenon of actual films being produced. May they live long and prosper!