Geiger's Counter

will general motors and chrysler...
cease to exist? do you blame management or the union?
[Full Story »]
two inches of rain in our gauge....
after the most recent deluge. what about yours? be alert for possibly severe weather early saturday a.m.
[Full Story »]

The majesty and glory
I set out on a journey last week to Quail Country Plantation in Arlington, Georgia to do a little quail hunting with a good friend.
[Full Story »]

The moisture is back
I got to spend all day Saturday in the woods. It was a rare occasion. I
love the outdoors but spend much less time there now than I used to due
to family and business responsibilities. [Full Story »]
love the outdoors but spend much less time there now than I used to due
to family and business responsibilities. [Full Story »]
how much rain...
is in your gauge?
[Full Story »]
how not to run a day care center
from associated press reports...
Ten children drank windshield wiper fluid after a staffer at an Arkansas day care mistakenly put the liquid in a refrigerator and served it, hospital officials said Friday.
[Full Story »]
Ten children drank windshield wiper fluid after a staffer at an Arkansas day care mistakenly put the liquid in a refrigerator and served it, hospital officials said Friday.
[Full Story »]

Will what we have left be worth fighting for?
It’s easy to forget about them.
We ride past the monument bearing their names almost every day but we seldom notice it. It is just part of the landscape on the courthouse lawn.
They are the monument men – an all-male roster thus far, thank God. I’m hoping no new names are added to the monument but that of a female would be exceptionally difficult.
The monument is to the men who have given their lives in combat. I visited it Friday as the first name from the euphemistically titled Global War on Terrorism was added.
Davy N. Weaver was an Army master sergeant. His Humvee hit an IED in Afghanistan. He died, plunging the men in his unit and his extensive family back home into deep grief.
I was there when his mother first laid eyes on his coffin as it was unloaded from a jet at Warner Robins AFB. I sat through his funeral in a packed country church. I watched as he was laid to rest with full military honors.
It was a sad time. That sadness was rekindled as I stood with his family once again to watch his name etched into the marble.
This monument is in Barnesville but similar ones mark town and courthouse squares throughout this great nation. They list the names of those who died in hellholes worldwide to protect our status as the world’s foremost nation – its lone superpower.
I wondered as I watched the etching if we can still claim that title. Certainly, the USA is no longer an economic powerhouse. We import more goods than we manufacture – a sure recipe for our downfall.
Our much-ballyhooed ‘stimulus’ plan raises taxes on small businesses considerably. Most of those Americans still employed work for such businesses and increased taxes imperil those jobs.
Such taxes make the assumption that government provides a mechanism or system that allows businesses to thrive. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Government is the small businessman’s worst enemy. Big businessmen are not crazy about it either.
Another $900 million in stimulus funds go to rebuild the Gaza Strip where we were not even involved in the fighting. In fact, the stimulus package doubles foreign aid when we can’t cover our own bills here at home.
There is just something I cannot fathom about selling bonds to the Chinese, a highly productive population, to raise money to increase entitlement payments to the least productive sector of our own population.
Those same Chinese killed some of the men whose names mark our memorial in the Korean War section. Now they are a strong ally and we would be deep into the manure without them.
I thought about all this as I watched the stone artisan do his work.
I wondered if the dead would be as willing to march off in service to what’s left of the country they knew as they were when they committed to their own personal death marches.
I concluded that most probably would.
I wonder if I will be able to make that same judgement 10 or even five years from now.
Will what we have left be worth fighting for? [Full Story »]
We ride past the monument bearing their names almost every day but we seldom notice it. It is just part of the landscape on the courthouse lawn.
They are the monument men – an all-male roster thus far, thank God. I’m hoping no new names are added to the monument but that of a female would be exceptionally difficult.
The monument is to the men who have given their lives in combat. I visited it Friday as the first name from the euphemistically titled Global War on Terrorism was added.
Davy N. Weaver was an Army master sergeant. His Humvee hit an IED in Afghanistan. He died, plunging the men in his unit and his extensive family back home into deep grief.
I was there when his mother first laid eyes on his coffin as it was unloaded from a jet at Warner Robins AFB. I sat through his funeral in a packed country church. I watched as he was laid to rest with full military honors.
It was a sad time. That sadness was rekindled as I stood with his family once again to watch his name etched into the marble.
This monument is in Barnesville but similar ones mark town and courthouse squares throughout this great nation. They list the names of those who died in hellholes worldwide to protect our status as the world’s foremost nation – its lone superpower.
I wondered as I watched the etching if we can still claim that title. Certainly, the USA is no longer an economic powerhouse. We import more goods than we manufacture – a sure recipe for our downfall.
Our much-ballyhooed ‘stimulus’ plan raises taxes on small businesses considerably. Most of those Americans still employed work for such businesses and increased taxes imperil those jobs.
Such taxes make the assumption that government provides a mechanism or system that allows businesses to thrive. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Government is the small businessman’s worst enemy. Big businessmen are not crazy about it either.
Another $900 million in stimulus funds go to rebuild the Gaza Strip where we were not even involved in the fighting. In fact, the stimulus package doubles foreign aid when we can’t cover our own bills here at home.
There is just something I cannot fathom about selling bonds to the Chinese, a highly productive population, to raise money to increase entitlement payments to the least productive sector of our own population.
Those same Chinese killed some of the men whose names mark our memorial in the Korean War section. Now they are a strong ally and we would be deep into the manure without them.
I thought about all this as I watched the stone artisan do his work.
I wondered if the dead would be as willing to march off in service to what’s left of the country they knew as they were when they committed to their own personal death marches.
I concluded that most probably would.
I wonder if I will be able to make that same judgement 10 or even five years from now.
Will what we have left be worth fighting for? [Full Story »]
is our community a safe place...
to live and raise your family? or, does the recent surge in violent crime have you worried?
what should be done? [Full Story »]
what should be done? [Full Story »]

Geiger’s Counter: Southerners are mesmerized by snow
It’s funny how we Southerners are mesmerized by snow.
[Full Story »]
how long does it take...
for snow to get old for you?
[Full Story »]

A couple of interesting quotes
I’ve gotten the e-mail several times over the past few weeks. I’m sure you have, too.
It bears a photo of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher and attributes to her the following quote, “The problem with Socialism is that you eventually run out of other peoples’ money.”
I did not go to snopes.com to verify whether or not Mrs. Thatcher actually uttered those words. In fact, I’m not real sure who Mr. Snopes is or who died and left him in charge of online information verification.
If Mrs. Thatcher did not actually make the statement, she should have for it is an absolute truth.
The e-mail arrived as the so-called stimulus bill was being debated and subsequently signed into law by President Barack Obama. The bill is a combination of tax cuts (one third) and spending initiatives (two thirds) totaling some $787 billion designed to jump start the economy.
It purports to put money back into the pockets of consumers and businesses and create millions of jobs - most of them on public works projects to rehab the nation’s sagging infrastructure. There is also a component that directs millions to making the USA more energy efficient.
The fund also adds some $20 billion in funding to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). SNAP is what used to be called food stamps before it underwent a socialist extreme makeover. Now, instead of food stamp fraud and welfare queens, we can have SNAP beans.
Agriculture secretary Tom Vilsap says the money will help feed families and boost the economy. Critics say it rewards the least productive members of society at the expense of the most productive.
Certainly, we need to create our own energy and kiss the mideast oil barons goodbye. We should harness the power of clean coal, wind, solar and even methane in this battle. That will help.
We also need to rebuild infrastructure. No one wants to see another bridge loaded with rush hour traffic fall into a river.
But, all these jobs are temporary. What happens when the government runs out of other people’s money?
When it got back to work this week, Congress started debating another $410 billion in spending just to keep government functioning.
Those of us who work to pay for all this are, quite frankly, tired of carrying the chronic layabouts who refuse to work for even a minute but demand equal compensation through government handouts.
Which brings to mind another quote.
“The budget should be balanced, the treasury should be refilled, public debt should be reduced, the arrogance of officialdom should be tempered and controlled and the assistance to foreign lands should be curtailed lest Rome become bankrupt. People must again learn to work, instead of living on public assistance.”
Those words were delivered by the Roman philosopher Cicero in 55 BC. Cicero was a firsthand witness to the decline and fall of the Roman Republic.
It is a shame he is not around to advise President Obama during our own great national decline. [Full Story »]
It bears a photo of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher and attributes to her the following quote, “The problem with Socialism is that you eventually run out of other peoples’ money.”
I did not go to snopes.com to verify whether or not Mrs. Thatcher actually uttered those words. In fact, I’m not real sure who Mr. Snopes is or who died and left him in charge of online information verification.
If Mrs. Thatcher did not actually make the statement, she should have for it is an absolute truth.
The e-mail arrived as the so-called stimulus bill was being debated and subsequently signed into law by President Barack Obama. The bill is a combination of tax cuts (one third) and spending initiatives (two thirds) totaling some $787 billion designed to jump start the economy.
It purports to put money back into the pockets of consumers and businesses and create millions of jobs - most of them on public works projects to rehab the nation’s sagging infrastructure. There is also a component that directs millions to making the USA more energy efficient.
The fund also adds some $20 billion in funding to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). SNAP is what used to be called food stamps before it underwent a socialist extreme makeover. Now, instead of food stamp fraud and welfare queens, we can have SNAP beans.
Agriculture secretary Tom Vilsap says the money will help feed families and boost the economy. Critics say it rewards the least productive members of society at the expense of the most productive.
Certainly, we need to create our own energy and kiss the mideast oil barons goodbye. We should harness the power of clean coal, wind, solar and even methane in this battle. That will help.
We also need to rebuild infrastructure. No one wants to see another bridge loaded with rush hour traffic fall into a river.
But, all these jobs are temporary. What happens when the government runs out of other people’s money?
When it got back to work this week, Congress started debating another $410 billion in spending just to keep government functioning.
Those of us who work to pay for all this are, quite frankly, tired of carrying the chronic layabouts who refuse to work for even a minute but demand equal compensation through government handouts.
Which brings to mind another quote.
“The budget should be balanced, the treasury should be refilled, public debt should be reduced, the arrogance of officialdom should be tempered and controlled and the assistance to foreign lands should be curtailed lest Rome become bankrupt. People must again learn to work, instead of living on public assistance.”
Those words were delivered by the Roman philosopher Cicero in 55 BC. Cicero was a firsthand witness to the decline and fall of the Roman Republic.
It is a shame he is not around to advise President Obama during our own great national decline. [Full Story »]
does it matter to you
what they name the institution formed by the merger of griffin tech and flint tech? having trouble understanding the controversy there.
[Full Story »]
get real on race...
timely piece from augusta chronicle...
Get real on race
President should seize chance to lead national dialogue on race
Attorney General Eric Holder said recently that America is "essentially a nation of cowards" for not talking more frankly about race.
Only days later, protesters from the NAACP are demanding the head of an editorial cartoonist because they think he compared Barack Obama to a chimpanzee.
If this is a nation of cowards - and we don't think it is - this kind of thing is precisely why.
First things first.
If we thought for a second that cartoonist Sean Delonas really intended to compare our president to a chimpanzee, we'd be the first to call for his being tossed out on his stump. President Bush was compared to a chimp too, but that in no way carries the racist baggage of doing such a thing to our first black president. And, in fact, no one came out swinging faster or harder than we did when a Marietta, Ga., bar owner last year sold T-shirts depicting Obama as the chimpanzee children's book star Curious George ("Spurious George," May 16 Augusta Chronicle).
We just don't see the same hurtful intent in the cartoon incident. Not at all.
In the New York Post cartoon, police officers have shot a chimp, and one says, "They'll have to find someone else to write the stimulus bill."
Delonas was using the metaphor of the recent police shooting of a chimp in Connecticut that had attacked a woman, in order to make a statement about how brainless he thinks the stimulus bill is.
In a real "nation of cowards," such matters of opinion will be left unexpressed, for fear of offending someone who might take it wrong.
Meanwhile, the New York Post has apologized to those who did take it wrong. But in today's America, you can be taken wrong and apologize and still lose your job.
The truth is, Barack Obama did not write that bill anyway. It was written by an out-of-control Democratic majority led by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who couldn't help but put every pent-up left-wing cause into the massive spending bill. Much of it had nothing to do with stimulating the economy.
It was, as the cartoon implied, a stupid bill.
Still, rather than have a frank discussion, some want the cartoonist's head on a platter.
This isn't the kind of America Barack Obama talked about in his landmark speech on race in 2008. In it, he denounced his former pastor's racist sermons by saying the Rev. Jeremiah Wright "expressed a profoundly distorted view of this country - a view that sees white racism as endemic, and that elevates what is wrong with America above all that we know is right with America."
Likewise with this hyper-emotional reaction to the cartoon - and with the words of Obama's own attorney general.
The president could calm the waters in both instances. We wish he would let it be known that he doesn't take offense to the cartoon. And, as Forbes.com columnist Tunku Varadarajan writes, the president should rebut Mr. Holder's view of America, which is so completely at odds with the nation that just elected a black man president.
"President Obama, could you set the record straight?" writes Varadarajan. "Tell us that your attorney general is mistaken and misguided. Tell us, please, that he ought to know better."
In short, the president needs to lead the discussion his friend is so anxious for.
From the Tuesday, February 24, 2009 edition of the Augusta Chronicle
[Full Story »]
Get real on race
President should seize chance to lead national dialogue on race
Attorney General Eric Holder said recently that America is "essentially a nation of cowards" for not talking more frankly about race.
Only days later, protesters from the NAACP are demanding the head of an editorial cartoonist because they think he compared Barack Obama to a chimpanzee.
If this is a nation of cowards - and we don't think it is - this kind of thing is precisely why.
First things first.
If we thought for a second that cartoonist Sean Delonas really intended to compare our president to a chimpanzee, we'd be the first to call for his being tossed out on his stump. President Bush was compared to a chimp too, but that in no way carries the racist baggage of doing such a thing to our first black president. And, in fact, no one came out swinging faster or harder than we did when a Marietta, Ga., bar owner last year sold T-shirts depicting Obama as the chimpanzee children's book star Curious George ("Spurious George," May 16 Augusta Chronicle).
We just don't see the same hurtful intent in the cartoon incident. Not at all.
In the New York Post cartoon, police officers have shot a chimp, and one says, "They'll have to find someone else to write the stimulus bill."
Delonas was using the metaphor of the recent police shooting of a chimp in Connecticut that had attacked a woman, in order to make a statement about how brainless he thinks the stimulus bill is.
In a real "nation of cowards," such matters of opinion will be left unexpressed, for fear of offending someone who might take it wrong.
Meanwhile, the New York Post has apologized to those who did take it wrong. But in today's America, you can be taken wrong and apologize and still lose your job.
The truth is, Barack Obama did not write that bill anyway. It was written by an out-of-control Democratic majority led by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who couldn't help but put every pent-up left-wing cause into the massive spending bill. Much of it had nothing to do with stimulating the economy.
It was, as the cartoon implied, a stupid bill.
Still, rather than have a frank discussion, some want the cartoonist's head on a platter.
This isn't the kind of America Barack Obama talked about in his landmark speech on race in 2008. In it, he denounced his former pastor's racist sermons by saying the Rev. Jeremiah Wright "expressed a profoundly distorted view of this country - a view that sees white racism as endemic, and that elevates what is wrong with America above all that we know is right with America."
Likewise with this hyper-emotional reaction to the cartoon - and with the words of Obama's own attorney general.
The president could calm the waters in both instances. We wish he would let it be known that he doesn't take offense to the cartoon. And, as Forbes.com columnist Tunku Varadarajan writes, the president should rebut Mr. Holder's view of America, which is so completely at odds with the nation that just elected a black man president.
"President Obama, could you set the record straight?" writes Varadarajan. "Tell us that your attorney general is mistaken and misguided. Tell us, please, that he ought to know better."
In short, the president needs to lead the discussion his friend is so anxious for.
From the Tuesday, February 24, 2009 edition of the Augusta Chronicle
[Full Story »]
another meth lab danger: explosions
The state is assisting Lanier County authorities investigate the weekend deaths of two women who were killed after a suspected methamphetamine lab exploded inside a house in Ray City.
[Full Story »]
[Full Story »]
do you expect any help from the stimulus
package? do you think barnesville-lamar county or anyone who resides here will directly benefit in any way? if so, how?
[Full Story »]