Thursday, January 6, 2011

I'll bet Emilio can't afford the $1M ...

So the rest of us will be picking up the tab!



Okay! Someone wake me up from this nightmare!! It is true that Emilio Navaira was drunk the night in April 2008 when he crashed the bus near Houston, TX. Yes, he was dead wrong for driving in that condition. However, other passengers were drunk or “under the influence as well.” None of them had the proper licensing to drive a commercial vehicle. So, my question to all of them would be, “Why didn’t you hire a person with a commercial license to drive the bus?” Where were your brains? Oh, I forgot – your brains are nowhere near your head! The choices you made to drink and act stupid while on tour is your responsibility, and yet one of you wants to hold Emilio’s family responsible for not just paying your medical bills, but your so-called “mental anguish?” Define “mental anguish," please?” Excuse me, Ricardo Vega, but you deserve your physical pain and “mental anguish” – thank-you-very-much!! YOU made the choice to drink and act stupid!!



Don’t you realize that with every single lawsuit (frivolous, I will add) related to a situation like this forces changes in the auto insurance industry for the rest of us – especially those of us who don’t drink and drive like Emilio did?? In regards to the $1 million dollars you’re demanding, the rest of us will be paying for what Emilio cannot just in insurance premiums!!



Today’s definition of a “douche bag:” People who are so arrogant that they cannot and/or refuse to take responsibility for their own actions, and they use others as scapegoats.



Mr. Vega, this lawsuit is nothing more than a 'get rich quick' scheme! I think it's time that you take a look at your own life and make some changes - like - man up and take responsibility for your own actions! Emilio has enough problems of his own, and the last thing he needs is for you to make it any worse!

Amplify’d from www.ksat.com

Emilio Back In Court, Faces Lawsuit

Former Band Member Suing Emilio Over 2008 Bus Crash

Read more at www.ksat.com
 

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Whoop-dee-doo!! 3 xtra days to file taxes! Let's all party!!

Hey, MSNBC!! I think I just felt a tingle up my leg.

Amplify’d from www.msnbc.msn.com


IRS extends filing deadline for taxes to April 18


Emancipation Day day holiday celebrated in D.C. is reason for moving date

Read more at www.msnbc.msn.com
 

EPA out of bounds with state environmental laws. Gee, ya think? #TX #tcot #EPA #twisters #teaparty

Of course the EPA would go after Texas. It's one of the largest states in the union and a state where many businesses are fleeing to.

Amplify’d from lufkindailynews.com





EDITORIAL: Federal government is out of bounds in its attempt to circumvent state environmental laws


Lost in the holiday shuffle was the latest chapter in the battle
between the state of Texas and its environmental arm, the Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality, and the federal government’s
Environmental Protection Agency. The EPA won the latest round last
week when the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals failed to issue a
stay that would have stopped the EPA from enforcing a new
permitting system to limit carbon dioxide emissions in the
states.

In the original Clean Air Act, passed in 1972, the job of
preventing pollutions is “the primary responsibility of States and
local governments,” not the federal government. Texas complied with
the law by establishing the forerunner of the TCEQ, and issues
permits under state law. Texas and other states issue flexible
permits, which set pollution limits on an entire facility, not just
a single operating unit in the facility. When the Obama
Administration took over in 2009, the EPA wasted little time in
formally disapproving the permit system despite the original intent
of the Clean Air Act.

Texas, under the leadership of Attorney General Greg Abbott, has
been battling the EPA ever since. The next round in the fight came
last year with the EPA’s “endangerment” ruling that classified,
without the consent of Congress, carbon dioxide as a harmful
pollutant. Like many other states, Texas does not deem so-called
greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide as pollutants. But the EPA
singled out Texas, and Texas alone, by announcing it was taking
over the entire permitting process.

Abbott filed a lawsuit challenging the action, but the appeals
court’s failure to issue a stay means the EPA runs the permitting
process in Texas pending the outcome of the suit.

Read more at lufkindailynews.com
 

Monday, January 3, 2011

Is there compassion for the unemployed?

From personal experience, I think compassion for the unemployed can only go so far. There comes a time when the unemployed person must take responsibility for their own lives by cutting their discretionary spending (i.e. multiple cell phones, cable and/or satellite TV [what's wrong with using the digital receiver box?], and most importantly, stop using credit cards!!).

People are awesome when it comes to helping each other out in times of need. Earlier this year, the Guadalupe River overflowed after a storm, and it destroyed homes and tubing businesses. What did the people do? After the water receded, they all got together and began to clean up the mess and rebuild. It took some time, but many of the businesses were up and running and ready for the tubing business. Comal County applied for FEMA assistance (I'm still looking for confirmation on that).

Ever since I was in my 20s, I've been on both sides of the aisle when it comes to unemployment. At different points in my life, I've lived with family and/or friends and relied on government assistance. Food stamps are only for food items. When I lived in my home state of NY, the old "AFDC" check barely covered the rent. I had to rely on family members to provide personal care items and clothing. It's not fun when you can't provide for more than barely your basic needs. Although telephones were necessary, long distance was considered a luxury service. Personal computers were in infancy, and cell phones were unheard of. During those down times in my life, I had a bad attitude. Because of how I was raised, I always thought of myself as a conservative, but my attitude was not proving it. I thought that I was "entitled to" so much more than what I had been provided for via the government assistance. I couldn't understand why the government couldn't provide me with 'minimum wage' income to stay home and do nothing with my life, and I was angry because there was nothing I could do about it ... or so I thought. I was thinking as a progressive liberal, and I didn't like that about myself.

It wasn't until I was in my 30s that I had to make a decision. Was I going to continue living off the backs of the tax payers, or was I going to make a change for the better for myself? I chose the latter. I wasn't sure how my life would play out. It took a long time, and there were moments when I would stumble and fall. Yes, I still relied on some assistance from the state (by then I was in Texas), but I used it wisely. I qualified for housing assistance, and a little food stamps. I eventually landed a really good job and managed to keep it for a little less than 5 yrs. During that time, I got married, and my life changed even more for the better. My husband and I now totally own our house, and although I am now on disability due to a chronic health problem, things are still much better for me than they used to be.

As for compassion for the unemployed is concerned, I can give you another example of that. I am a member of a really great church who has been there for me for over a year. They have an excellent ministry that helps not only their members, but the entire non-member community around them. I've had to ask for help with food, and they came through for me in ways I never expected. To this day, I still have food left over to use up that they sent from their pantry. Ladies from the church come by either once a month, or whenever I need help with anything. I've even asked for help with yard work that I cannot do anymore because of my health, and four guys from the church spent at least an hour to clean up around the yard for me. I'm even learning a lot about cooking from food storage for two people.

My health may not be as good as it used to be anymore, but I'm still able to do what I can to keep my life in order. I don't like having to, once again, rely on the government, but it is what it is - for now. There are some business ideas I have planned to help supplement that income, and I am looking forward to getting started with them. It would even be better to earn enough money from my own business so that I don't have to rely on a disability check.

The point is, people are compassionate. BUT, the individuals affected by unemployment must be willing to accept a temporary "hand up" and make hard, yet necessary decisions for themselves instead of demanding a nearly permanent "hand out!"

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Progressives r going 2 hate this article. #tcot #amplify #RT

The entire article makes a lot of sense to those who understand common sense and put it into practice every day.

Amplify’d from thefamily.com

“The Difference between Conservative and Liberal or Progressive or Neocon.”

Dennis Adamson, for The Family

A young woman was about to finish her first year of college.  Like so many others her age, she considered herself to be very liberal, and among other liberal ideals, was very much in favor of higher taxes to support more government programs, in other words redistribution of wealth.

Read more at thefamily.com
 

Progressives r going 2 hate this article. #tcot

The entire article makes a lot of sense to those who understand common sense and put it into practice every day.

Amplify’d from thefamily.com

“The Difference between Conservative and Liberal or Progressive or Neocon.”

Dennis Adamson, for The Family

A young woman was about to finish her first year of college.  Like so many others her age, she considered herself to be very liberal, and among other liberal ideals, was very much in favor of higher taxes to support more government programs, in other words redistribution of wealth.

Read more at thefamily.com
 

Saturday, December 11, 2010

My Thoughts and Prayers with the Edwards Family

As we have heard, Elizabeth Edwards passed away this week after a long battle with cancer. I'd like to weigh in on how the general public feels and add my own thoughts.

As for John, let me give an example of how I understand what he is going through. My parents were divorced when I was very young. My father was an alcoholic and what they used to call a "womanizer." In other words, he used to chase women. I didn't see my father very much when I was little, but when I did, he had to adhere to rules set up by my mother. Most of the time, it was his children who made the request to see him.

Five years after my father sobered up, lived a clean, honorable life and regained the trust of four of his children, he died unexpectedly. Although my parents never re-married each other, they became good friends, and we included my father's second wife as a part of the family. I was supposed to move in with him after I graduated from high school.

How did my father's death affect my mother? She was understandably devastated. She lost a good friend and the father of her children. It took her a long time to cope with the loss, but her faith in God and the support of our church family and relatives got her through those times. Even my maternal grandparents learned to forgive my father for all the pain he had caused our family.

We all know about the sordid affair that John Edwards had and that it resulted in the birth of a child. There's no need to re-hash it or bring it up, especially now. Doesn't anyone have compassion and forgiveness anymore? It sure doesn't seem that way! I have seen tweets and facebook posts specifically about John since the day Elizabeth passed away that are too vulgar and cruel to repeat. To them I say, "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone!" Doesn't anyone believe that John has the right to grieve his wife's death? I certainly do! He and Elizabeth may have been estranged, but she didn't keep him from seeing their children. I read that John was living in their house for the past few months but had a separate bedroom. They never divorced.

In the video below, John Moylan, a close friend and Edwards' advisor was interviewed by CBS the other day. Here's what he had to say:






Did anyone notice the answer given by Moylan in reference to the guardianship/custody of the two younger children? I noticed that he gave an excellent answer, because now is not the time to discuss that issue. Right now, the focus is getting all of them, including John, through each day, especially now that their mother is going to be laid to rest today. We need to show compassion for all of the Edwards family, including John. Put your hatred aside for once and pray for him, too!