Sunday, February 25, 2007
What Should the Republican Party Do to Win in 2008?
http://www.GOP.com/YourIdeas
"The number one issue that could destroy the Republican coalition and drive conservative Democrats away from us is illegal immigration. If we want to win in 2008, we will stand firmly for border control and against any form of amnesty for illegals already here, such as President Bush's proposed citizenship track, etc. Republican lawmakers at both State and federal levels need to sponsor and pass legislation that will make illegal immigrants want to return voluntarily to their homelands. This would include barring them from healthcare, education, housing, employment, driver's licenses, social security, welfare, etc. There should be absolutely no rewards for breaking our immigration laws.
"Additionally, we must adhere to our conservative principles: low taxes, fiscal responsibility (balanced budget), line-item veto, anti-abortion, and limited federal government."
Feel free to go to the website above and share your ideas with them. Place a copy of what you send on the comments here, if you like.
A Fun Website
Saturday, February 17, 2007
Fearless Forecasts for 2007
Fearless Forecasts for 2007
How time flies when we’re having fun, and even when we’re not. Here it is mid-February, and I still haven’t posted my “Fearless Forecasts” for 2007. These were completed during the first week of January. I do these every year to prove that psychics are no better prognosticators than the average person. (See the entry for January 5, 2007 for how this New Year’s tradition began.) They are in no particular order. So, here goes:
1. Mayor John Peyton will win re-election as Mayor of Jacksonville (FL) handily.
2. Now that Saddam Hussein is dead, things will start to settle down in Iraq. However, U.S. troops will not be withdrawn.
3. We will be engaged militarily with Iran to prevent their further development of nuclear weapons and to keep Israel from acting on it.
4. Osama bin Laden will be captured alive.
5. California, especially San Francisco, will have a very damaging earthquake.
6. Jacksonville (FL) will continue to be hurricane-free. El Nino will continue to suppress hurricane activity, although not as well as in 2006.
7. An F3 or stronger tornado will hit a major American city’s central or downtown area.
8. At least one new case of Mad Cow disease will surface in the U.S.
9. The Jacksonville Jaguars will replace both its head coach and quarterback.
10. There will be a major announcement of a new recreational or tourist attraction, possibly an aquarium or amusement park, for Jacksonville (FL).
11. Construction of the new courthouse in Jacksonville (FL) will still be stalled.
12. With Democrats in charge of revenues and spending, the economy will flat-line unless President Bush finds his veto pen. This year will be the prelude to a recession in 2008.
13. After brief stabilization, housing prices will continue down as unemployment heads up.
14. Nancy Pelosi will find it difficult to manage upstart congressmen with more conservative positions. The Democratic caucus will be more divided than most expected.
15. There will be an accident of some kind (car, plane, something or someone falling) that will really rattle everyone in the White House. It will involve or affect the President, Vice President, or members of their immediate family or closest staffers. No one will be killed or seriously hurt, however.
16. The St. Louis Cardinals will disappoint me this year. (Of course, anything less than another World Championship will disappoint.)
How Many of Me Are There?
HowManyOfMe.com | ||
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Favorite Books
- Adrift by Steven Callahan
- American Jihad: The Terrorists Living Among Us by Steven Emerson
- Christmas Train, The by David Baldacci
- Christy by Catherine Marshall
- Civil War Two: The Coming Breakup of America by Thomas Chittum
- Conquer the Crash by Robert P. Prechter, Jr.
- Contemplation in a World of Action by Thomas Merton
- Dark Night of the Soul, The by St. John of the Cross
- Death Comes to the Archbishop by Willa Cather
- From the Ground Up: The Story of a First Garden by Amy Stewart
- Great Late Planet Earth, The by Hal Lindsey
- Hidden Dangers of the Rainbow, The by Constance Cumbey & Ron Rigsbee
- Introduction to the Devout Life by St. Francis de Sales
- Life on the Mississippi by Mark Twain
- Man Who Walked through Time, The by Colin Fletcher
- My Antonia by Willa Cather
- Old Glory: A Voyage Down the Mississippi by Jonathan Raban
- Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard
- Religions of Man by Huston Smith
- Republic, The by Plato
- Running with Angels by Pamela H. Hansen
- Seven Storey Mountain, The by Thomas Merton
- Skipping Christmas by John Grisham
- The Girl of the Sea of Cortez by Peter Benchley
- The Pleasures of Philosophy by Will Durant
- Walden by Henry David Thoreau
- Walk across America, A by Peter Jenkins