Poison Pero is RIGHT!

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

HAPPY ANNIVERSARY MELISSA!!

26 years!  26 amazing years!!  26 amazing years, with the MOST AMAZING WOMAN!!!

I learned long ago that marriage is the ultimate 'high-wire act.'  Like 'walking the wire,' marriage can be dangerous; people get hurt; sometimes people die.

Both are best pulled off by partners who place absolute trust in each other not to fall off the wire, and by partners who use each other's strengths to augment the other's weaknesses - to keep each other on the wire.

Unfortunately, too many Americans get on the high-wire with safety-nets and cords - in case they fall off...Melissa and I have never taken these 'precautions.'  We got on the wire to stay there, and didn't give ourselves the option of 'falling off.'

I have to admit, I'm sure Melissa would prefer if I quit putting blindfolds on, doing back flips, juggling bowling balls, and trying a variety of other crazy tricks on the high-wire...Lucky for me, she always has both eyes wide open, and keeps me from getting too insane up there :)

"If you're afraid of falling, then don't look down...We're walking the wire, LOVE!"


"I'll hold you close, I'll stay the course.  I promise you from up above, that we'll take what comes, take what comes.  LOVE."

I love you, Melissa!  I hope the danger of 'walking the wire' has been worth it - and will continue to be worth it...Thank you for always 'taking what comes, LOVE!'

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Sunday, July 29, 2018

PRAGER UNIVERSITY: Blacks in Power Don't Empower Blacks

"We teach what isn’t taught." - Dennis Prager

This semester of Prager University is presented by:  Jason Riley

"When blacks had little political power they nevertheless made significant economic progress...Before any 'affirmative action' the number of blacks in middle-class professions quadrupled.  In other words, racial gaps were steadily narrowing without any special treatment for blacks.  And then came the 'War on Poverty' in the mid 60's...[A] strong case can be made that to the extent that a social program, however well meaning, interferes with a group's self development, it does more harm than good.  Government policies that discourage marriage, and undermine the work ethic; open ended welfare benefits for example, help keep poor people poor." – J.R.


"[D]uring an era of growing black political influence, blacks as a group progressed at slower rates than whites. And the black poor actually lost ground...[T]he evidence...indicates that there may be little relationship between the success of black leaders and the opportunities of typical black families...Human capital is far more important than political capital." – J.R.

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Friday, July 27, 2018

THIS WEEK IN PICTURES

Thursday, July 26, 2018

Korean War Armistice Day - July 27

The Korean War Veterans Memorial - My personal favorite war memorial in Washington D.C. (excluding Arlington, just outside D.C.)...A truly powerful memorial.  The statues are mesmerizing and the Reflecting Wall is amazing, but one simple floor stone caught my attention more than anything else.  It says it all about the war - it says it all about what our men and women gave:


- Dedicated: July 27, 1995.
- Sculptor of Statue(s): Frank Gaylord.
- Walls: 164 feet long, 8 inches thick; more than 100 tons of highly polished granite; more than 2500 photographic, archival images representing the land, sea and air troops that supported those who fought in the war sandblasted onto wall; "Academy Black" granite from California.
- Statues: 19 stainless steel statues; 7'3"-7'6" tall; each one nearly 1000 pounds; 15 Army, 2 Marines, 1 Navy Medic, 1 Air Force Observer; fiber optic lighting.
- Pool of Remembrance: 30 feet in diameter; black granite from Canada.
- 223 piles driven into bedrock, 30-60 feet deep, supporting the statues and the wall.
- United Nations Wall: raised granite curb lists the 22 nations that contributed to this first U.N. effort.
- Land area: 2.2 acres.

2006 Armistice Ceremony - By Dick Cheney

"Americans already familiar with the heroism of World War II and Vietnam are now learning the story of Korea, of what was gained, and what was lost, and of the decisions made so long ago that have a continuing significance to this day.

"When the war began in the summer of 1950, our military had been through years of demobilization and was scarcely prepared for what lay ahead. The South Korean units were even worse off. The first units on our side in the battle area went in without tanks and were severely outgunned. General Ridgway said it was as if a few troops of Boy Scouts with hand weapons had tried to stop a German Panzer column. Another soldier remembers Korea as 'a war of fists and rifle butts.' Yet our troops fought valiantly. In early battles, American and South Korean combat forces were often outnumbered, sometimes by as much as 20 to one. It was, said President Truman, one of the most heroic rearguard actions on record.

"Throughout the conflict, American and South Korean forces found themselves in some of the most difficult conditions any army could face. Their weapons rusted in the monsoons of summer, and froze solid during the coldest Korean winter in a hundred years. Many of our men who fell into enemy hands were treated with cold-blooded cruelty. By the time the fighting ceased and the armistice was signed, 131 Americans had earned the Medal of Honor, and of those, 94 died while earning it.

"In the space of just 37 months, the United States of America lost a total of more than 36,000 of our soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines. More than 90,000 others returned home wounded. And even today, 53 years after the guns went silent, some 8,000 of our men remain unaccounted for. These brave Americans were last seen doing their duty. We know their names. We honor their service. And this nation will persist in the effort to gain a full accounting for every last one of them.

"The cause America stood for in Korea, joined by forces from many countries, was noble and just. It was the cause of human freedom. It was a battle to determine, as General Ridgway put it, 'Whether the rule of men who shoot their prisoners, enslave their citizens, and deride the dignity of man shall displace the rule of those to whom the individual and his individual rights are sacred.'

"All of us look to the day when the light of freedom and progress covers all of Korea, and stability on the peninsula rests on a foundation of peaceful reconciliation. Until then, stability and peace will be maintained by our great military alliance. Tens of thousands of American troops proudly serve in Korea today. We will maintain our presence there. America's commitment to peace in the region, and to the security of our friends, is unbreakable. The United States and South Korea will continue to stand together in defending civilization against global terror, and building the peace that freedom brings.

"Our people stationed in South Korea today follow in the finest of traditions, going back to the 1.8 million Americans who fought there during the war, and the millions of others who have honored this country by their military service. In these early years of the 21st century, the American people have been inspired once again by the bravery and the selflessness of our armed forces. Freedom is not free, and all of us are deep in the debt of the men and women who go out and pay the price for our liberty.

"As President Eisenhower said 53 years ago, Americans who fought in Korea 'proved once again that only courage and sacrifice can keep freedom alive upon this Earth.' By that courage and sacrifice, the United States and our allies held off the aggressive expansion of communism, and helped make possible the freedom and the great prosperity today enjoyed by some 48 million South Koreans. Decades after he left the military, one of our veterans said this: 'I was glad to have served my country, and I've never heard Korean veterans complain. In fact, if we had to do it all over again, we would.'

"Ladies and gentlemen, there could be no more eloquent testimony to the character of our country than those words from an American who served in that war. And it is fitting that every year, on the 27th of July, we honor them all and offer the respect of a grateful nation."

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Tuesday, July 24, 2018

PRAGER UNIVERSITY: Why Did America Fight the Korean War?

"Give us five-minutes and we’ll give you a semester." - Dennis Prager

This semester of Prager University is presented by:  Victor Davis Hanson

"Over 35,000 Americans died in the Korean War.  The war marked the first major armed conflict of the nuclear age...Was fighting the Korean War, and restoring the South, without uniting the entire peninsula worth the huge cost in blood and treasure?...The natural dividend of saving the South was the evolution of today's democratic and prosperous South Korea...South Korea is a model global citizen, and a strong ally of the U.S." – V.D.H.


"Had it not been for U.S. intervention and support to the South, the current monstrous regime in Pyongyang would now rule all of Korea, ensuring its nuclear-armed dictatorship even greater power and resources...The American effort to save South Korea also sent a message to both communist China and the Soviet Union that the free world under U.S. leadership would no longer tolerate communist military takeovers of free nations." – V.D.H.

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Sunday, July 22, 2018

Russia! Russia! Russia! Russia!

I was in my teens and 20's at the back end of the Cold War - and in the Air Force during the very end...I am also a historian; an honest historian.

The Soviet Union of Lenin, Stalin, Krushchev, Brezhnev, etc. it not the Russia of Vladimir Putin...The Soviet Union was a near-peer military threat, with more people than the U.S. and a somewhat-functioning economy.  Current Russia has nukes but a very weakened and old military structure, now has less than half the American population, and it's economy is a joke.  It also has competitors and enemies all around it:  NATO (west), China (southeast), Muslims (southwest), U.S. Navy (Pacific).

Vlad Putin has been the greatest geopolitical poker player since Austrian Prince Klenmens von Metternich (Concert of Europe), but the hand he holds is terrible - he's just played it masterfully...He was left to play alone by Obama, and has been helped by the Western lunatics who can't accept that Hillary Clinton was the worst U.S. presidential candidate ever.  Instead they have chosen to create an all powerful Russian boogie-man rather than sucking it up and finding a better candidate to run against Trump in 2020.

Of course Trump would be better off if he didn't constantly run his mouth - I readily admit this.  But he is what he is, and he's going to run his mouth...Luckily, what he says doesn't always reflect what he does.  And truth be told, as long as he does good things (even if by accident or unwittingly) that's what really matters.

So, let's look at someone who has real concerns about the Russian situation - instead of the constant noise coming from Americans, most of whom have no clue what they are talking about or are just liars pushing a personal policy.

By:  Mikheil Saakashvili - Former President of Georgia (not the state in the U.S.)


"…I have personally experienced the devastating consequences of Putin’s expansionism. In 2008, when I was the president of Georgia, Russia shocked the world by invading my country. To this day, one-fifth of Georgia’s territory remains under illegal Russian occupation."

"After a lifetime of firsthand experience with Russian aggression, I must evaluate Trump’s actions against the proper historical context. In doing so, I have found that Trump’s actions speak for themselves…Trump’s actions toward Russia speak louder than words - and so did his predecessor’s. Indeed, the Obama administration’s foreign policy undermined America’s credibility in my region…By contrast, Trump authorized the sale of lethal defensive weapons to both Ukraine and Georgia in 2017. The Trump administration went beyond the congressional mandate in sanctioning Russian authorities involved in the annexation of Crimea. Earlier this year, the United States imposed the harshest sanctions yet, targeting Russian oligarchs as well as government officials." (italics added)

"We do not know what Trump and Putin discussed behind closed doors in Helsinki, and we should not make assumptions. As Reagan continued to meet with Soviet leadership until the Axis of Evil disintegrated, so Trump should continue talking to Putin."


Saakashvili is a serious man, and his nation has a serious problem - Look at the map, and you will see why:  Vlad considers Georgia's landmass as a bulwark between Russia and the Turks (as it has been for hundreds of years!).  As such, Saakashvili and his people don't  have time or space for the nonsensical 'Russia! Russia! Russia! Russia' BS we pretend to be worried about here in the U.S.  He and his people have legitimate concerns; concerns about the Russian Bear coming over for lunch!

Saakashvili is supportive of President Trump when it comes to talking to and working with Putin and Russia - as well as the way Trump has pushed back on Russia.  This speaks volumes, and it should give Americans pause to consider reality; opposed to the crapola they are inundated with by politicos and talking-heads.

But I know no one cares what some dude from Georgia thinks.  So I'll leave you with some typical American nonsense.


Thursday, July 19, 2018

THIS WEEK IN PICTURES

Monday, July 16, 2018

PRAGER UNIVERSITY:

"We teach what isn’t taught." - Dennis Prager

This semester of Prager University is presented by:  Lenore Skenazy

"Being a kid these days is no walk in the park...My advice to parents is, therefore, short and sweet:   Tell you kids they can't swim alone, or get into a stranger's car.  And then, stop reading other safety-tips, and maybe, just maybe, you kids can have a real childhood." – L.S.


"Don't have fun.  It's too dangerous...Better to keep them (your kids) at home on a hard, non-porous surface, free of dirt and obstacles, checking frequently for venomous spiders, disease-bearing insects, and sewage." – L.S. (said rife with sarcasm)

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Thursday, July 12, 2018

THIS (past 2) WEEK(s) IN PICTURES

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