In my mailbox today…

Greetings,

I am Mr. Wang Kuang Hsiang, Director of Operations and Head Wealth Management
Division of Taiwan Business Bank (TBB) Taipei, Taiwan.I have a business
proposal of about $21.5M USD for you. Should you be interested in working with
me on this, do indicate your interest by sending me your full names, phone
number and current residential address. I would prefer you reach me via my
personal email address:

Email: mr.wangkuang52@yahoo.com.hk

Once I hear from you, I immediately will provide you with further information on
logistics of having these funds moved.

Sincerely,
Mr. Wang Kuang Hsiang
X-Server-Name: www.perroquets.fr
X-Script-Name: /templates/mail.php
X-Remote-Addr:
————–

Does anyone really believe this stuff? I guess so. Seems like I just read about someone spending $400,000 on the Nigerian scam?

Her family and bank officials told her it was all a scam, she said, and begged her to stop, but she persisted because she became obsessed with getting paid.

The scheme is often called the “Nigerian scam” and it’s familiar to many people with e-mail accounts. It still exists and it still works.

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National Ammo Day

Hey, hey, hey, read all about it! How come no one in Boulder is protesting?

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Ted Stevens loses

Gotta agree with Glenn Reynolds on this one.

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Boulder bicyclist idiot(s)

Had to go into Boulder to pick up the daughter this evening. It was just before 8pm and the bicyclist comes through an unlighted intersection (29th and Valmont)going north on 29th and turning east on Valmont as shown by the red line on the map below.

The bicyclist had no lights, no reflectors (or useful reflectors) and the intersection has no overhead lighting, not to mention he ran a stop sign. In other words it was dark and he was barely visible. To his credit he turned and stayed in the bike lane but riding your bike in this fashion is absolute lunacy and creates a dangerous situation for all involved.

Last week I saw a Boulder speed trap that was pure pettiness. There is absolutely no doubt the trap was all about making money and had nothing, totally nothing to do with safety. The Boulder police department needs to stop this type of speed trap and work on idiot bicyclists driving without proper lighting or reflectors in the dark.

Fat chance. It seems that if you’re not burning fossil fuels you can pretty much do what you want in Boulder, except jog naked on the Pearl street mall!

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Priorities wrong

Catering to the global warming moonbats and environmentalist wacko’s is a great way to escape from reality.

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Land Grab dispute over!

A minor miracle I’d say. It sure seems that part of the settlement was to say nice things about each other. I also find it interesting the Kirlin’s are going to sell the lot. I’m sure the whole process destroyed the “experience” for them.

Make sure and read the comments.

Dick McLean and Edie Stevens are still scum to me.

Judge Klein, looks like you overcame the best the opposition threw at you and retained your judgeship. I can’t wait until I’m called for jury duty in your courtroom.

Posted in Boulder is stoopid, Judge Klein, land grab | Leave a comment

Freezing heat

More bogus temperature data from NASA. Garbage in, garbage out.

Of course, why worry about facts when the liberal global warming solutions are such a win-win. Only a neanderthal wouldn’t want to proceed.

Posted in Boulder is stoopid, enviro wackos, global warming | Leave a comment

New York Times financial problems

Read about them here. As a paper with an editorial staff that worships at the alter of the Times, one can’t help but wonder how the Boulder Daily Camera’s finances look?

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Armistice Day – a story

As published in his daily column in the Louisville Herald-Post, November 11, 1932

by John Erle Davis*

An Armistice Day STORY

The Armistice in World War I was declared at 11 a.m., November 11, 1918, 14 years ago today.

Armistice Day and its mist of fading memories – some rosy and gold, some gray and sad. Most people had great fun in American cities that day and night. But there were some places where the fun was muted.

The scene is an American base hospital camp near an ancient French city where the cathedral cornerstone bears the legend “Anno Domini 1421.” The morning is mild and clear. Vague rumors of the war’s end are in the air.

An American colonel from the Argonne drive, dragging around on crutches, amiably discusses the possibilities with gas-burned buck prlvates.

A half-blind, one-armed English-speaking prisoner of war hopes to God it’s about all over. He explains, as tears fill his eyes, that he has not in three years seen his wife and young sons somewhere in East Prussia.

Comes 11 o’clock, and the soft breeze is laden with the musical booming of bells in distant church towers. Hobbling wounded…French, AmerIcans and Germans…are grinning and shaking hands, the enemy pathetically eager to be friendly.

Groups are singing — the Germans some measured, mellow, moving song about home; the French their rollicking “Madelon”; the Americans their foolish, stuttering, gay “B-b-beautiful K-k-Katie, beautiful Katie…at the k-k-kitchen door.”

Excitement mounts. It is quiet in the half-empty, long wooden-hut wards. The men are speculating on how soon they will be back in the States. The sergeant major is besieged for passes. Everybody who has francs in his pocket wants to go to town and celebrate, even the hobblers.

The mail comes. The orderly hands a cablegram to the favorite lieutenant of the outfit. He stares at the contents, then says, “Well, I’ll be damned. My mother’s dead.” He giggles a little hysterically.

A sergeant speaks to him, “I heard, lieutenant…I’m terribly sorry,” and offers his hand. The lieutenant grasps it, then hurries to his quarters. There will be no celebration for him this day.

A long detachment of convalescent soldiers in double file, out for exercise, clop-clops through nearby winding village streets chanting the ribald American Army classic “Mademoiselle from Armentieres.”

Now it is night. Place Royale and Rue St. Pierre glitter with festoons of colored lights that have been hurriedly strung on building fronts and across streets in the afternoon. Huge, drab, muddy trucks one after another stop by the big fountain and let out uniformed Americans keen for a big time.

The streets are jammed from wall to wall with French and Americans…soldiers, sailors and civilians. And girls. Everywhere girls — kissing, squealing, romping, making roughhouse with the men. Mardi Gras without masquerading.

Hours of this. Then pairs of American military police come pushing through the crowds, stopping at intervals, blowing whistles, shouting:

“Tenshun, soldiers! All hospital men report to quarters at once! All passes cancelled. Trucks are waiting at Place Royale…Tenshun, Soldiers! All hospital men report…”

Later the trucks rumble back into the hollow square of the camp. All huts, offices and kitchens are brightly lighted. Things are stirring. In the big Receiving Hut, stoves roar and become red-bellied, shooting dashes of sparks into the darkness above the roof. There is a sprinkle of rain.

A sergeant checks the count of clean folded blankets dumped upon a rising pile. Medical officers come in, and nurses in gray dresses, long blue capes and little white caps – ready for business.

The mess sergeant starts the cooks to making cauldrons of coffee and soup, and heating barrels of water for baths.

Over in the village, a long hospital train backs quietly and smoothly in on a sidetrack. Presently the ambulances are coming into the hollow square, to be unloaded by husky litter bearers, then gunning off for another load, and another, and another.

It is a busy night. Three trains. The sprinkle of rain becomes a downpour.

The Receiving Hut is crowded with rows of litters…holding the morning’s crop of slaughter up on the lines…muddy, filthy, bloody, lousy, hungry, tired miserable men. Officers move back and forth along the rows…looking at bandages, reading tags, calling ward assignments:

“Depressed skull fracture. Number three.” “Mustard-gas contact, Number seventeen.” “Compound fracture of right femur. Number nine.” “Phosgene gas inhalation. Number six.” And so they go.

And the litter-bearers whisk the wounded away to clean beds, fresh dressings, hot food, baths, rest, peace, sleep… for some the first and last Armistice Day.

Dawn comes. The rain stops. Raw wind whips the dripping trees. They groan.

In the little Dying Room in the prisoner-of-war hut, a blond youth, his skin the shade of putty, lies moaning and murmuring on a bed moans, “Mutter…Mutter…Mutter.”

A comrade stands beside him, fingering a rosary, reciting the Lord’s Prayer in German, “Vater Unser, der du bist in Himmel . . .”

Standing by the window, a medical officer loads his hypodermic. “Poor kid,” he says. “Gas gangrene. Not a chance he’ll ever see his mother again…”

Armistice Day, and its mist of fading memories.

*Sergeant 1/C, Base Hospital 11, 35th Division, AEF (American Expeditionary Force)

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California’s priorities

Schwarzenegger fiddles while California’s economy sinks.

Priorities: California is headed toward fiscal disaster, thanks to the worst performance by any state, ever. So what does Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger do? Convene a big meeting on global warming, of course.

Posted in global warming, politics, stoopid politicians | Leave a comment

Boulder is a Stoopid Place

“The atmosphere is so unbelievably intimidating”

Follow this link, skip ahead in the video to 10′ 15″. That’s exactly what it’s like for a conservative in Boulder. I doubt this bothers the Boulder lefties in the least. Just remember, 1 out of 4 citizens in the County is a spy!

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District Judge, 20th Judicial District

Judge Klein “wins” easily.

Roxanne Bailin 85,394 22755
Maria Berkenkotter 82,260 22,373
Gwyneth Whalen 77914, 26589
James Klein 71939 37554

It’s really no surprise that the citizens of Boulder County would vote for legal land theft. When it comes to personal property rights, they barely exist. I’m not sure how this will haunt the county one day, but it will.

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Troubling

An interview that never aired. I wonder why?

Posted in Culture of Corruption, ethics | Leave a comment

Audacity of Hope

I agree with Glenn Reynolds that this is a great place for the “audacity of hope”.

Plus, they’ll be greenhouse-friendly! If America cares about the environment, we’ll deploy them everywhere! Yeah, there are a few skeptics out there, but we’ve got to show the audacity of hope on this project.

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Obama’s gift to the market

Would the market have performed differently if McCain had won? I don’t honestly know, but it’s easy for me to believe it would have. Oh well!

Posted in finance, Obama, Obamanomics | Leave a comment

Voter Fraud

The problem is real

But even though we dodged the bullet this time, with an election whose margin was greater than the margin of fraud, the problems remain. The winners don’t want to address them–because, you know, they won–and the losers aren’t able to address them, because, you know, they lost. But the problems remain real.

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Slowest vote counting in the state

Boulder County has the slowest vote counting in the state.

A full day after polls closed — and long after Barack Obama claimed victory in the presidential race — fewer than half the ballots cast in Boulder County had been counted, earning the county the dubious distinction of being the slowest vote counter in the state.

If the current counting pace continues around-the-clock, county residents won’t see final results until late Saturday.


The excuse? Dust!

Oh well, I sorta predicted this in my previous post. I believe this is a problem that needs new leadership, not more money.

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Will Judge Klein keep his job?

We’ll know soon enough. The question is how fast can Hillary Hall count votes. Color me a cynic, but I suspect Boulder will still be one of the last Colorado counties to get their votes counted. Hopefully, with all the early voting, perhaps that won’t be the case.

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Stereotypical Boulder liberal

I’m not much on stereotyping, but hey, if the shoe fits. This post at the Daily Camera blog site is a good education on the Boulder political climate for “outsiders”.

A perfect election day blog don’t you think? I’m sure the Daily Camera editors would love to have put this on the editorial page, but the little journalistic integrity they have left prevents them from doing this (believe it or not!).

Posted in arrogance, Boulder is stoopid, Boulder libs | Leave a comment

What a surprise

Poll: College voters lean toward Obama

News from the Daily Camera.

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