Tag Archives: national

Wayne LaPierre and the NRA – The True Terrorists

It certainly has been interesting seeing the aftermath of the Boston bombings, the hunt for the suspects, and the reactions after one was killed and the other captured.  I’m not trivializing the bombing.  It’s horrific event, perpetrated by a couple of very screwed up, evil men.  However…in what many are calling the first “terrorist” killing in the U.S. since 9-11, there were 3 people hurt, along with several score injured. 

On April 15th, the day of the bombing, there were ELEVEN Americans killed by guns.  The day after, on Tuesday, there were FOURTEEN Americans killed by guns.  The next day?  FIFTEEN gun deaths.  And so on…and so on…and so on.  Over 3,500 Americans have died due to gun violence, JUST since Newtown happened in December…a four month period.  That’s an average of about 30 deaths per day.  Gun deaths in the United States routinely top 12,000 a year, and nobody bats an eye.  An AVERAGE day in America and many more are killed by guns than were killed by the one “terrorist” event in the United States since 9-11.

But then again…what constitutes a “terrorist”?  If a Muslim guy blows up a bomb at a marathon?  You bet, says America!  It’s “terrorism”!  It’s a no-brainer!  A bomb is involved, and a Muslim is involved!! 

But what if a young white man who is NOT Muslim commits mass murder?  Is it called “terrorism” by the press?  Are there calls to suspend Miranda rights?  Are there calls to suspend due process under the law?  No.  If a white NON-MUSLIM commits mass murder, it’s a mental health issue, the act of a troubled young man. It’s NOT ever labeled as “terrorism”.  An young guy equally as troubled as the Tsarnaev’s from Boston walks into a grade school in Newtown and takes the lives of over 20 young children, a death toll that far surpasses Boston, but the “terrorism” label was never applied to that case. 

So again…what constitutes ”terrorism”?  What consitutes a “terrorist”? ”Official” definitions for “terrorism” usually infer violence with a political purpose.  However, in America, since 9-11, it seems that the term “terrorist” has unfortunately taken on religious connotations, with the religious background of the person evidently more important than the crimes that were committed.  Were there any political claims made by the Tsarnaev brothers for the Boston bombings?  Wouldn’t a “terrorist” claim responsibility in the name of a cause?  The Tsarnaev’s certainly didn’t attempt to claim responsibility, and certainly didn’t pronounce the bombing was for some political cause.  However, the event is widely labeled as “terrorism”, a label that has become further entrenched in Americans’ minds after it became known the brothers had at least some involvement in the Islamic faith.

It’s sad that we can spend SO much time and energy focusing on controlling “terrorism” in the United States, but completely ignore “everyday” violence that claims the lives of MANY thousands more Americans than does “terrorism”. 

If “terrorism” can be defined as a “violence with a political motivation”, then America is FULL of (as yet) unrecognized terrorists.  Look at how political the issue of gun control has become.  Even a simple, sensible, straight-forward piece of legislation to increase background checks and keep guns out of the hands of criminals and the mentally ill is turned into a political argument.  When I see THOUSANDS of Americans being killed every year by gun violence, I see MANY violent deaths that are ultimately due to political motivations. 

With THOUSANDS of highly preventable gun-violence deaths in America each year, if we are to follow the standard definition of “terrorism”, those that ENABLE those gun violence deaths should be defined as “terrorists”, just as those who provide bomb-making equipment and training are considered as “terrorists”.  If “Violence ultimately due to a political motivation” is the definition of a “terrorist”, then there’s little doubt that Wayne LaPierre, the head of the NRA, should be considered the most dangerous “terrorist” in America.  Thanks to the efforts of LaPierre and the NRA, criminals and violent mentally ill persons can easily obtain weaponry that no other Western culture allows such easy access to. 

Boston was a sad event to be sure.  The Tsarnaev brothers were sick, evil human beings.  But it’s stunning to me that Americans can tolerate the equivalent of 10 Boston bombings  PER DAY in America, in terms of deaths due to gun violence, and not get nearly as worked up as they do about a once-in-a-decade event.

College Bowl Season – Yawn

Last night, I was doing other things when I remembered that the national championship game between Alabama and Notre Dame was on TV.  While playing around on my iPad, I turned the game on with half-hearted interest, paying more attention to the iPad than the TV.  I did end up having the game on for about the first 3 quarters, bring the total number of college bowl games that I watched to a grand total of….one.

One.  This, from a born-and-bred Nebraskan, someone with college football in my blood.  On fall Saturdays, I used to love watching college football.  It didn’t matter who was playing, I still enjoyed watching the big games, and watching games in the Big 8 and then Big 12 conference.  I still have the interest in the Huskers, but even that has changed compared to what it once was.  Throughout the entire college football season, there were very few times I even watched part of a game that didn’t involve Nebraska. 

How does college football largely “lose” a diehard Nebraskan?  I have no doubt that much of it is just changing priorities in life.  I used to take Nebraska football too seriously, letting losses fester and getting way too worked up about the games.  As I’ve gotten older, you realize…it’s a game, played by a bunch of kids you don’t know.  The whole thought of team sports in general is a curious one.  Why SHOULD people have an interest in watching other people play a game?  Deep stuff!! But as things happen in life and as I’ve matured (Ok, gotten old), I’ve certainly come to realize what’s important in life, and what’s not.

Other than changing priorities though, college football has done a lot to ruin what was once special about the sport…the tradition.  When I was growing up and through college, the tradition in the Big 8 winner going to the Orange Bowl was special.  National championships were of course treasured, but just winning the Big 8 and going to the Orange Bowl made any season succesful.  Nebraska/Oklahoma games usually decided the Big 8, and if the home team won, a response by some was often oranges being thrown onto the field.  New Year’s Day would came, and it would be an orgy of college football, with ALL the big bowl games being played on the one day.  New Year’s Day for me and most college football fans was always a 12-hour marathon of bowl games, with multiple bowl games on at once, and the ability to choose the best game happening at the time.

Now?  January 7th…well over 3 weeks after the first bowl game…and we finally had the national championship game.  New Year’s Day?  Yes, there were some of the big games on, but come 4:00 or so when the Rose Bowl started, the big BCS bowl games were the only games on, and they were played in sequence, with one at a time on.  Come January 2nd, most people go back to work…school starts again very soon…and it no longer feels like a holiday.  It no longer feels “special”.  Pardon me if I don’t get too excited over a Sugar Bowl game or Orange Bowl game played during a weeknight after the New Year.

It’s not just the changing of the bowl schedules that has made college football less unique, less special.  As I had the game on last night, at one point they showed a picture of Nick Saban, Alabama head coach, with his salary and bonuses.  A college football coach, and his BASE salary is $5.3 million, with a few hundred thousand dollars in “change” being given for winning his conference or national championship.  College football coaches have become the highest paid folks on college campuses, by far.  The entire identity of colleges has often become synonymous with the success of their college football team.  When Ohio State’s former coach, Jim Tressel, ran afoul of NCAA regulations a few years ago, the Ohio State president Gordon Gee had a press conference where he was asked if he were going to fire Tressel.  Gee’s infamous response was “I hope he doesn’t fire ME!!!”.   At Penn State, the infamous Jerry Sandusky child molestation scandal was handled by a football staff and by the university president as if the reputation of the football team was what was at stake…not the lives of the victims. 

I used to be an NFL fan growing up.  I rarely watch NFL games any more, even playoff games or the Super Bowl.  As I grew up, I realized that the NFL simply couldn’t compare to the tradition of college football.  The NFL wasn’t “special” like college football was.

As I’ve come to realize, college football isn’t “special” either.  It’s a for-profit business that for all intents and purposes, is another version of the NFL.  College bowl season?  It’s over?  Yawn.  I missed most of it, but I certainly didn’t “miss” watching a holiday (and post-holiday) bowl season designed for the sole purpose of raking in as much money as possible.

Today’s Rememberance…and The Average NRA “Member”

Average NRA "Member"

I've had multiple blog posts about my feelings about the typical NRA "member". Today's gutless comments from NRA leader Wayne LaPierre, offered just a few moments after a touching remembrance of Newton's Sandy Hook victims, certainly reinforces my feeling about gun-toting wackos and their need to "compensate" for other things they seemingly lack in life.

I have the day off, getting ready for a weekend of family celebration and fun. While running errands this morning, I was stopped cold in my tracks when I passed a TV and saw a “special report” breaking into regular programming, as the TV stations carried a remembrance and moment of silence for the 27 kids and teachers slaughtered last week in Newtown, Connecticut. I stood there next to a lady and her daughter as it started. The daughter was a beautiful young girl who had to be around the same age as the innocent 1st graders who were gunned down last week. As the moment of silence began, the television carried a loud bell chiming 27 times, once for each life lost. With each chime came a picture of the victims…27 times…in alphabetical order, until the last, a 6-year old Allison Wyatt, was shown. Miss Wyatt looked remarkably similar to the young girl standing next to her mom, and the already flowing tears of the mom next to me turned into a full-body sobbing as the last bell chimed, and the TV lingered on this last victim. I’m a guy, so I’m not supposed to react that way in public, right? While I managed to suppress the full-body sobbing of the mother next to me, I also had tears on my face as the moment ended and they resumed normal programming. I’m sure that any parent with a young child felt the same at that moment. I would hope ANY human being felt the same at that moment.

Just a little later in the morning, National Rifle Association leader Wayne LaPierre provided the NRA’s first public statement after the massacre of a week ago. LaPierre, as noted by NBC, took a “defiant” tone, stating that “the only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun“.  I’m sure the 20 families with children slain in Newtown took comfort in LaPierre’s statements.  I’m sure that family of Allison Wyatt and the other beautiful young children feel comforted to know that the NRA is working to solve the problem by recommending armed guards at every school across the nation. I’m sure that families of gun violence victims across the nation take heart in the notion that the NRA will be fighting the evil media, Hollywood, and the music industry, the TRUE perpetrators of the culture of violence in the United States, according to Mr. LaPierre.

After all, it’s not the GUNS that perpetuate a violent gun-based culture in the U.S., right?  It’s not groups like the NRA that perpetuate gun violence, right?  There’s no blame to be assigned to the NRA’s insistence that private citizens have the same access to weapons of mass destruction as do our military soldiers, right? No!  Of course not!  Don’t be silly!!  It’s an evil media misrepresenting the NRA and a gun-based culture!  It’s Hollywood sensationalizing the USE of the weapons that the NRA endorses!  It’s popular music that glamorizes gun violence that results in freely available semi-automatic weapons being used to gun down 20 children in the span of a few minutes!!

It was quite the stark contrast this morning, seeing the incredibly moving remembrance of the Sandy Hook victims, and just a little bit later, hearing the incredibly callous and out-of-touch comments from NRA’s LaPierre. 

Bear with me for a moment as I get to my point here, but…I’m a scientist.  A large part of my job is communicating the work of my team with outside scientists and other potential users of our research and data.  When I was in high school and early in college, I was scared to death to speak in public.  The turning point for me?  Experience, especially after becoming a teaching assistant in grad school, but a large part of the turnaround for me was also seeing first-hand that the biggest BLOWHARDS, those who sometimes seem to be the confident with other people, are, in actuality, the most insecure (and the most full of shit).  I’ve said it out here many times…it’s those folks that are incredibly insecure, those that are the LEAST sure of themselves, who are also often the ones who feel the need to brag…to gloat…to ACT “confident” in public. 

Hence my analogy to the average NRA “member” above.  Disgusting display by Mr. LaPierre today, but it’s nothing new to the insecure, out-of-touch nuts that populate the NRA.  If guns are a big part of your life…you’re definitely compensating for “shortcomings” somewhere else in your life.

An afternoon in the Everglades

Wood Stork

Wood Stork feeding in the shallows in Big Cypress National Reserve in Florida.

I had a work trip to southern Florida last week, somewhere I’ve never been.  I DESPERATELY wanted to get out and do a bit of birding. Specifically, I wanted to see the Everglades.  In a busy week of being gone, I found several hours one afternoon to get away and explore the Everglades a bit.

Roseate Spoonbill

Roseate Spoonbill, taken in the Everglades

What a blast!  I’m always amazed at how some birding trips turn into seemingly lifeless trips, where few birds are seen or photographed.  At other times and places, birds can be incredibly abundant.  It seems like I get 90% of my photos in about 10% of my birding efforts, and this was one of those ultra-productive times. Birds were everywhere!  Given that I’d never been in the area before, I ended up picking up photos of 10 species I didn’t have before…pretty darn good for a few hours of birding, when I’ve been taking photos of birds for about 12 years now.

Red-shouldered Hawk

Red-shouldered Hawk from the Everglades. I moved to within 10 feet of him at one stage, and he basically ignored me.

The Everglades were great. Some mentioned to try Shark Valley, an area on the northern edge of the Everglades that was relatively close to where I was staying.  It wasn’t yet the “prime” time of year for Shark Valley, I was told, as bird really would start to concentrate in another month or so.  Despite that, there were water birds galore.  White Ibis, Little Blue Heron, Anhinga, Great Blue Heron, Great Egret, and more.  The main path at Shark Valley is a 15-mile loop, with a 7-mile long canal of water along the west side of one half of the loop.  After only about an hour of walking along that path, I picked up several new species, and many great photos.  But, given it was my one afternoon to get out, I didn’t linger, and wanted to look around at other nearby locations.

Short-tailed Hawk

There are perhaps only 500 Short-tailed Hawks in the U.S. They're a bird of the tropics, and in the U.S. they are only found in southern Florida. I was thrilled to see one, and get a (somewhat less than stellar) photo of one.

Someone at Shark Valley had mentioned a couple of roads in the Big Cypress National Reserve that were just 10 miles or so west of Shark Valley.  I next went to Loop Road in the reserve, a 22-mile loop that goes through the Big Cypress National Reserve, with cypress swamp on both sides of the road.  What an INCREDIBLE birding location!   The cypress swamp was pressed up against the road on both sides in most locations, making photography or spotting birds very difficult.  However, there were many culverts and mini bridges, in some places, bridges spaced every 100 yards or so.  On either side of the road near the mini-bridges were little openings in the cypress swamp.  You’d drive through thick forest, come up on one of these openings, and it was like a series of little dioramas.  You never knew what the next little opening might have!  It seemed like EVERY opening had some birds (or alligators!) hanging out.  There were many birds at Shark Valley in the Everglades, but the number of birds there was dwarfed by what I saw in the Big Cypress National Reserve.  Wood Storks were downright common (another new species!), along with more of the wading bird species that were seen at Shark Valley.  Red-shouldered Hawks were hanging out by the road in a few locations, and were incredibly tame, allowing very close photos.  In the hour and a half I drove through the 22-mile loop, I ended up taking almost 500 photos!  It was one of the most productive photography times I’ve ever had.

Anhinga

One of the more common sights in both the Everglades and in Big Cypress...an Anhinga. Another lifer for me, since I've spent very little time in the Southeast since I started birding.

As the clock hit 4:00 and the sunlight started to fade, I tried one more road in the Big Cypress National Reserve, and if anything, this road on the north side of Highway 41 had even more birds than did the Loup Road.  An absolutely fabulous way to end a great day of birding, seeing scores of wading birds and other birds flying in to their nighttime roosts.

It’s definitely a place I want to get back to some day, and spend more than just a few hours!

Huckabee: Guns not the problem, it’s a “God” problem

After what’s happened in Connecticut, there’s been the typical reaction after one of these (all too common) events…an outcry for gun control by many, and a defense of guns by the testosterone-driven loser gun crowd.  The one that takes the cake for me though is Mike Huckabee, who says that changing gun laws won’t change anything, but instead, the reason for the shooting was a lack of “God” in our schools.

Yes, Mr. Huckabee, THAT’S the reason a wacko with 3 firearms goes into a school and starts blasting away at little kids.  If ONLY those kids were being raised in a religious setting, this never would have happened.

We’re the only “western” nation with such lax control on gun purchase and possession.  In countries where gun control laws are very strict, this type of event simply doesn’t happen. IN ONE EVENT, this man killed twice as many people as were killed in Great Britain by guns in a typical YEAR.  PLEASE, loser, testosterone (or politically) driven gun wackos…SPARE US THE CRAP about gun laws not mattering.  Gun violence simply isn’t much of an issue in countries with strict gun laws.

It’s not a lack of “god”, Mr. Huckabee.  It’s about a gun culture in the U.S., where a bunch of men with tiny little pinky-sized penises are trying to compensate for their inherent lack of confidence in their own manhood (is that direct enough of a point?).   It’s about a political culture where wimpy politicians are too scared of the NRA to DO WHAT’S FREAKIN’ RIGHT, to prevent such slaughters.  It’s about an American culture so used to gun violence, that even an event like this will largely be forgotten by this time next week.

Husker Football, And Woodpeckers

Pileated Woodpecker - By Terry Sohl

Great day, first getting photos of this Pileated Woodpecker, and then watching the other "Big Red" get a win against the Michigan Wolverines.

A wonderful day yesterday, on multiple fronts!   As with any football Saturday where the Huskers are playing at home, thousands make the trek to Lincoln for the game.  But I bet there are very few that made it a combined football/birding day, like I did!

I left yesterday morning and stopped at the DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge on the Nebraska/Iowa border.  It’s a beautiful, heavily wooded area along the Missouri River with a series of sloughs and ponds along the river, as well as with some large open grassy and weedy areas.  From a birding standpoint, it’s known for large numbers of waterfowl that utilize it in migration, often including thousands of Snow Geese.  Given the diversity of habitats there though, it’s a very good birding destination for all sorts of species.

I really didn’t have any particular “target” species in mind yesterday, but was thrilled to death when I came across a big Pileated Woodpecker, foraging low in the forest canopy, right after I got to the NWR.  Pileated Woodpeckers are the largest remaining woodpecker in North America…if you believe the Ivory-billed Woodpecker is extinct (I don’t).  In South Dakota, there are tiny numbers of Pileated Woodpeckers in the northeast part of the state, and there are sightings every once in a great while in my part of the state in the southeast, but I’ve never seen one in South Dakota.  Not only did I get great looks at this bird, but I was able to get a series of very nice, close photographs.  Great way to spend a chilly fall morning!

Then the game!  Nebraska!  The mighty Michigan Wolverines, the team with the most wins in the history of college football!  At night!  It was a wonderful, big-time college atmosphere, and a great game for a Husker fan.  Very nice to see Nebraska play well against a big-time opponent.

Nebraska beating Michigan, AND a “life” photo bird!  Great day overall!

You are NOT entitled to your opinion – Shut the hell up

From Patrick Stokes, here’s a nice piece on why you are sometimes NOT “entitled to your opinion”.   The point he’s making is that you are only “entitled” to an opinion that you can make a coherent argument for.  He uses an example of anti-vaccination paranoia to make his point, where the manic anti-vaccine crowd doesn’t have a scientific leg to stand on.  Science is science, fact is fact.  If your opinion is based on conjecture, intuition, “faith”, or other factor not supported by the facts?  Then you are NOT entitled to your opinion, when trying to argue against science and against fact.

Thus, a “Shut the Hell Up” topic for this post.  As we enter the home stretch of the presidential election, it’s rather laughable to read some of the opinions of those on the right.  Do you believe any of the following?  If so, then please do everyone else a favor, and save yourself some embarrassment.  Just Shut…the…hell…up.

- Obama Muslim? Obama a non-citizen? – Do I need to even mention these? Are you a disgusting, racist, pig-of-a-human being who believes Obama is not a citizen?  Do you believe that historical newspaper reports and a birth certificate are simply part of some massive conspiracy? Are you a disgusting, racist, pig-of-a-human being who refers to Obama as “Barack Husein Obama” and believes he’s secretly a Muslim?  If you answered “yes” to any of these questions, PLEASE…SHUT…THE…HELL…UP.

- Evolution Denial – Science is based on theory.  Theories are tested, with evidence either supporting or negating hypotheses.  With evolution, the evidence is extremely clear, both in the fossil record, and in real-world, observable processes.  Do you believe in creationism?  I really don’t care if you believe some omnipotent, all-powerful entity created the earth and the universe, IF you can reconcile that in your own mind with the science.  Do you believe evolution is false?  Do you believe evolution is a “lie straight from hell”, like Paul Broun, quite possibly the most ignorant congressman in the U.S.?  Do you belive the earth is just a few thousand years old?  If so, then SHUT…THE…HELL…UP.  Save yourself the embarrassment that’s sure to come whenever you open your mouth.

- Climate Change Denial – Possibly as soon as 5 years from now, the Arctic will be ice-free in the summer for the first time in at least 13 million years.  The U.S. is about to set a record for its warmest year ever.  Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels continue to rise, and the scientific evidence continues to overwhelmingly point to not only a warming climate, but a warming climate caused by anthropogenic activity.  Do you believe climate change isn’t real?  Do you believe scientists and liberals are involved in some unprecedented, massive conspiracy to somehow consolidate government power by pointing to climate change?  Do you believe that climate change is occurring, but humans have nothing to do with it?  If so…SHUT…THE…HELL…UP.

- Polls are politically biased – Just one week ago, before the debates, conservative talking heads and blogs were expressing outrage over the liberal bias of polls that showed Obama with a healthy and growing lead over Romney.  Obama with a 6-point lead in Ohio?  A 5-point lead in Florida?  BALONEY, said those on the right!  It’s a liberal conspiracy to discourage Republicans and depress voter turnout from the right!!  One short week later, and an Obama debate flop has the poll trends strongly reversing towards Romney. Hey Rush?  Do you still think the polls are biased toward Obama?  How about you other buffoons and blowhards who scoff at polls when they show Democrats ahead?  GMAFB.  The very success and long-term continuance of polling entities depends on them being RIGHT.  If they’re wrong, they are ignored in future elections and the polling group goes out of business.  Are you one of those idiots who thinks political polls are purposely biased towards Democrats?  Do you think there’s some conspiracy in the polls to depress Republican turnout?  If so, then SHUT…THE…HELL…UP.

- 1997 Michigan was better than 1997 Nebraska - A bit off topic, but…do you believe the 1997 Michigan Wolverines would beat the 1997 Nebraska Cornhuskers?  Do you believe the Wolverines were “robbed” when a perfect, 13-0 Nebraska team finished first in the coaches poll, while the Wolverines finished first in the AP poll?  Puh-lease.  The Nebraska ground game easily wears down the Wolverine defense, and the Blackshirts dominate the Wolverines.  Final score if they’d have played?  Nebraska 31, Michigan 13.  Do you believe the Wolverines were the better team?  Laughable!  SHUT…THE…HELL…UP.

- Unemployment numbers manipulated by Obama and Liberals - Unemployment numbers out last week were good by any measure, with unemployment falling to 7.8%.  Good news, right?  Well, to nutjob conservatives, ANYTHING positive that could EVER be attributed to Obama has to be a lie!  A liberal conspiracy!  Clearly Obama has somehow influenced the unemployment statistics!  Are you one of those conservative wackos who believes last week’s unemployment numbers were altered by Obama?  Please, just SHUT…THE…HELL…UP.

- Romney Budget Miracle - Do you believe that you can simultaneously 1) Cut taxes 2) Maintain or raise military spending, and 3) balance the budget?  Romney/Ryan seem to believe in such a formula for long-term fiscal sanity.  Do you believe it’s possible?  GMAFB….SHUT…THE…HELL…UP.

- Voter ID Regulations Are About Voter FraudReport after report show that voter fraud in the U.S. is insignificant.  However, a number of states have pushed strict voter ID regulations, with Republican-led state legislatures and governors leading the charge to increase scrutiny of in-person voters.  If in-person voter fraud isn’t an issue, if very few instances have been documented…why the push by Republican state legislatures to push for very strict voter ID laws?  Under oath, I don’t think you’d even get most Republicans to say the laws are about curbing voter fraud.  It’s about suppressing votes by minorities and other groups who historically lean very heavily towards Democrats.  It’s a form of discrimination, it’s a form of racism, it’s about voter suppression.  If you believe it’s actually about voter fraud?  You’re an idiot…SHUT…THE…HELL…UP.

Romney Tells Governors to Lie About Recovery

Romney and Obama

More deception, more lying from Romney. Is this what happens to a GOP candidate? Is the GOP SO corrupt, that any GOP presidential candidate turns to a lying POS? Before the last election...I LIKED John McCain. I RESPECTED John McCain. They he runs for president, and everything he ever stood for went out the window. Romney is headed down the same path. I USED to think he wasn't bad, a Republican governor with a moderate, pragmatic streak. Now? He's a lying, deceptive, slick POS...

The economy has been recovering in several swing states.  Uh-oh, says Romney, we can’t have that!  At least, we can’t let the electorate know the truth!  Hence, the story of Romney telling GOP governors to downplay any economic recovery that’s happened in their states.  He’s told GOP governors to cool it, and not talk about improved economic conditions, lowered unemployment rates, etc.

After all, we can’t have voters knowing the truth!  It fits right in line with the overall GOP strategy of SCARING voters into voting for them, by either playing to their inner bigotry, or playing up just how “bad” things are, or will be, under Obama. Even if they’re not!

Romney continues to bash Obama on foreign policy and national defense fronts, stating that under Obama, we’re much less safe.  This, despite the incredible foreign policy and military successes under Obama.  When Obama DARED to try to obtain contraceptive coverage for those individuals who wanted it but couldn’t get it through their insurance…Romney fell all over himself stating that religious freedoms are “under attack” by Obama, and would shrivel if he were given another term.  There’s a lovely new attack ad on Obama by the National Republican Campaign Committee that claims under ObamaCare, there are massive new taxes on ‘heart attacks, sick puppies, and new babies’.

Romney and other Republican attacks on ObamaCare alone probably keeps the entire staff of FactCheck.org working 24 hours a day.  What’s one more lie, on top of all the others?  Romney knows that lying works, since far too often, the electorate believes this kind of crap.

Birding Rhode Island – Sachuest National Wildlife Refuge

Purple Sandpiper

A Purple Sandpiper, a specialty of rocky coastlines in New England.

I can’t say as I’ve ever birded in Rhode Island before.  I can’t say as I’ve ever spent more than a few hours in Rhode Island before.  The conference I was at last week was in Newport.  Newport was very nice, and I certainly enjoyed the seafood!  But…that type of area really isn’t my favorite.  Too many people, with just about every inch of coastline having some kind of urban development.  What I also didn’t like is just how much of the coastline is privately owned, certainly a far cry from Oregon (last year’s vacation spot) where the beaches all have public access.

The exception to the development on the coast were the few protected areas.  Sachuest National Wildlife Refuge was only about 10 miles from my hotel.  I had the chance to get there a couple of times while on my trip, including one great morning on the last day of my trip.  My flight didn’t leave until the afternoon, so I had the morning to putz around.  I woke up early and got to the Wildlife Refuge close to dawn, and then walked around for about 3 hours.
Brant

A pair of Brant, another "new" species for me from Sachuest NWR.

I’ve been birding and taking photos for 11 years now.  Unlike when I started, the thrill of a “new” bird is becoming harder and harder to get.  However, in those 11 years, I really hadn’t spent any time in New England, so I was hoping to pick up a few new species. It didn’t take long for me to get my first.  As I approached the NWR, a small group of Brant (a small, dark sea-going goose) were foraging close to the shoreline.  I spent about 10 minutes with them, getting some decent photographs, before heading into the NWR itself.  Sachuest isn’t huge by any means.  When you pull in, there’s a small visitors center, and several trails leading away from it.  I started walking on the “ocean loop” trail, which basically let you walk along the entire periphery of the peninsula on which the NWR sits. 

The weather was cool and crisp, but with brilliantly sunny skies.  Most of the NWR is composed of grassland and some small shrubs, plus the gorgeous rocky New England coast.  Song Sparrows were singing everywhere, and American Goldfinches, Northern Cardinals, and Northern Mockingbirds were also flitting around in pretty good numbers.  But it was the coastal birds that I was after, and it didn’t take long for me to find another “new” species to photograph.  Purple Sandpipers are found on rocky shorelines in New England in winter, and I was hoping some were still around.  I found a small flock of around 10 playing chicken with the crashing waves along the shoreline, picking among the coastal moss/veg for…well, for whatever it is Purple Sandpipers feed on.

There really wasn’t a huge variety of birds as I walked around the NWR, but there were certainly good numbers.  I ran across a few more small flocks of Purple Sandpipers, picked up another “new” species in the Great Black-backed Gulls that were foraging along the shoreline, and watched a pair of beautiful Harlequin Ducks bobbing in the waves close to shore.  Most of the action was in the shrubby and grassy areas on the interior, as the coast itself was actually relatively quiet.  There were decent numbers of Red-breasted Mergansers, but other than those, a couple of Common Loons, and the handful of remaining Harlequin Ducks, there wasn’t much for waterfowl during my visit.

Great Black-backed Gull

One more "new" species, a Great Black-backed Gull, the largest gull found in the United States.

It was a nice morning.  Newport was a nice enough town, but the (often over the top) “old money”, the massive mansions, and the amount of urban development in the area weren’t exactly my cup of tea.  I was glad to find Sachuest National Wildlife Refuge, and it’s certainly worth a visit if you happen to be in the area.

Economy, budget deadlines loom; House Worries about Motto

National Motto

The national motto (whether you agree with it or not) appears on every piece of currency, and isn't exactly being threatened by suggested replacement mottos. However, our beloved House leaders decided that we needed to pass legislation to "reaffirm" the motto.

Thank goodness Congress is listening.  With a 9% approval rating, Congress has gotten the message.  America wants Congress to knuckle down and get the nation’s business done.  The House today focused on the biggest issue facing America – the supposed decline in the use of our national motto.  Rep. Randy Forbes (R – VA), the sponsor of the legislation, said the bill that passed the House today offered “inspiration to an American people who face challenges of historic proportions”.  The bill “reaffirms” that “In God We Trust” is our national motto. 

I’m sure this historic bill will provide a great amount of “inspiration” to the millions of Americans that are out of work.  I’m sure this historic bill will provide a great amount of inspiration to those struggling with out-of-control health care costs.  I’m sure this historic bill will provide a great amount of inspiration to the families of those serving in Afghanistan. 

Rep. Forbes and Congress – Here’s to you!!  THANK GOODNESS you have our backs!  Your work in passing such historic legislation does indeed provide inspiration to us all, and I’m sure your “reaffirmation” of our national motto will help to lift us out of our economic doldrums.

Freakin’ idiots…our political leaders are all freakin’ idiots…