FYI: SPAM Filters

Being hammered by SPAM again, so if your post tb/comment hasn’t registered in my weekend (or other) linkfest or on the post you commented on

1.) Your comment WAS SPAM (in which case, I doubt you’d read this post *heh*)

2.) Your comment/trackback is welcome by me but fit one of the parameters of my SPAM filters AND it was hidden in a batch of more than 500 comments/trackbacks labeled as SPAM by my filter and I just deleted the batch without skimming them all, cos I just don’t have that kinda time, even setting the scan rate to as fast as my eyeballs can flicker.

If you believe your comment/trackback fits into category #2, do as Bernie at Planck’s Constant did and let me know. Here’s his trackback, apparently missed in a batch of over 500 or so in my SPAM queue:

Barry Chamish and the Ringworm Children Hoax

Oh, and tracking back your own linkfest to a linkfest post? Here’s a hink: I consider that a legit linkfest trackback IF your linkfest is a dual-purpose post, that is, it has some content beyond just :Link me! Link me!” OK? Otherwise, why link it to another linkfest? Nobody’ll read the thing. Hit up Linkfest Haven Deluxe for that.

Linkfest Haven, the Blogger's Oasis

Stop the ACLU: Two ACLU Leaders Causing Harm in Virginia

March 6, 2007

J. Michael Sharman

In an ironic but very appropriate linkage, a Google search on the name “Charles Rust-Tierney” first yields the headline: “Former ACLU Chapter President Arrested for Child Pornography,” and then the very next item is headlined, “Statement of ACLU on Loudoun Filtering Policy: Statement read by Charles Rust-Tierney.”

In that public statement made back in 1998, Charles Rust-Tierney, as the President of the ACLU of Virginia, urged the Loudoun County Library Board not to put any filters on the library’s internet portals. He said, “Recognizing that individuals will continue to behave responsibly and appropriately while in the library, the default should be maximum, unrestricted access to the valuable resources of the Internet.”

Dan at Riehl World View post: “In what amounts to the first two half-real news story on the Charles Rust-Tierney case by the Washington Post and and WDBJ, the story may be even more unsettling to some. Two dozen people, including a neighbor and his former wife, Diann Rust-Tierney, spoke on his behalf, both saying they’d trust him with their kids tomorrow, yet Charles Rust-Tierney was apparently downloading images and video of the sexual torture of infants and toddlers in his ten year old son’s bedroom during the night.

The FBI recently arrested Rust-Tierney for multiple counts of child pornography, which he acquired over the internet.

The 51 year-old Arlington County lawyer and youth sports coach, was named in a criminal complaint filed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Alexandria and was taken into custody on February 23, 2007 by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and Arlington County police.

The web site for Virginia’s ACLU chapter indicates Charles Rust-Tierney served as its president as recently as 2005 , and is still a board member.

Riehl World View “Prosecutors say Charles Rust-Tierney, a former president of the Virginia ACLU, was leading a “double life,” coaching Little League baseball by day and using a computer in his 10-year-old son’s bedroom to view child pornography at night.

It’s also stated that Rust-Tierney was on the ACLU board up until the day he was arrested and has spent the last several years only representing the mentally ill.”

Riehl World View has much more.

The D.C. Bar’s listing for Charles M. Rust-Tierney says he is a lawyer with the Public Defender Service in Washington, D.C. and his office is located in St. Elizabeth’s Hospital.

Since 1991, Diann Rust-Tierney, Charles Rust-Tierney’s wife, has been the ACLU’s lead strategist and spokeswoman on the death penalty as the director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Capital Punishment Project. In 2004, she became the executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.

Maybe she’ll re-think her opposition to the death penalty after seeing and hearing the cries of pre-teen girls being bound with rope and raped on her husband’s videos.

A little further down the Virginia coastline, in Williamsburg, another ACLU leader is also exerting a destructive influence, this time on the nation’s second oldest college.

When the College of William & Mary paid thousands of dollars to host the “Sex Workers Art Show” featuring topless women, bare bottoms, erotic dances, and 200-pound stripteasers using sex toys, College President Gene R. Nichol said, “[I]t’s not the practice and province of universities to censor or cancel performances because they are controversial.”

One might be led to believe that President Nichol is a just a go-along-get-along, laissez faire sort of guy were it not for the fact that a few months earlier, in late October 2006, Nichol ordered a brass cross removed from the Wren Chapel (in the oldest academic building in continuous use in the United States) because, he said, the “chapel, like our entire campus, must be welcoming to all.”

So how can a supposedly intelligent college president reconcile censoring a historic cross out of a chapel because it might possibly offend a few people, while paying for live sex acts that are certainly offensive to many of the college’s students, faculty and alumni?

The answer is revealed by the items listed in Nichol’s official resume on the College’s website which showed he had been: President, North Florida ACLU, 1984; Chair, University of Colorado Task Force on Gay and Lesbian Issues, 1992-93; Colorado Democrat of the Year, 1999; Member, Board of Directors, North Carolina Civil Liberties Union (2002- ); Colorado ACLU (1999- 2000); Keynote Address Speaker, North Carolina – American Civil Liberties Union annual banquet, North Carolina, October, 2004.

A donor has withdrawn a pledged $12 million gift to William & Mary because of Gene Nichol’s ACLU-style logic, and so one can expect that he will soon be out of a job. But he shouldn’t have to look too far for a new one.

Since the FBI’s report says Charles Rust-Tierney confessed to possessing the child pornography, and he will thus be disbarred sooner or later, there’s going to be a vacancy in the Public Defender’s Service office at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. Maybe Gene Nichol can submit his resume to them.

The College of William & Mary link also has an article: Committee’s compromise returns cross to chapel

“According to the new policy, the cross will be displayed permanently in a glass case, which will be located prominently inside the chapel and be accompanied by a plaque commemorating the College’s Anglican roots and its historic connection to Bruton Parish Church.”

Now it’s a non-denominational museum!

This was a production of Stop The ACLU Blogburst. If you would like to join us, please email Jay at Jay@stoptheaclu.com or Gribbit at GribbitR@gmail.com. You will be added to our mailing list and blogroll. Over 200 blogs already on-board.

Weekend Linkfest

Busy Friday. Eaten by locusts before it begins. More posts later. Meanwhile, this is an open trackbacks post, open Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Link to THIS post and track back. 🙂

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Want to Help? Jack Army Tells Me How and an Iraq Surge Update

Back when Jack Army was still in the Army recruiting business, I asked him what was allowed to give to Recruiters. I know back in my dark ages, there was a $4.95 retail value limit on “gifts,” which was revised to be something more intelligent just before I retired in 96. I thought the troops at the local station might enjoy a pizza or something like that, but I wanted to make sure so they weren’t in an uncomfortable position, If I sent a few large pizzas to their door. Not worth losing a career/position over. He gave me permission to provide some info extracted from his two emails.

“Jack” is a busy man and currently in the later part of his deployment to Iraq, but he made time to answer up. I got an answer I think we all might be able to give the overworked recruiters with:

As for your question, what is acceptable for a recruiter to accept? Certainly an occasional pizza will be heartily received and small tokens like that are fine. I don’t believe there is a regulation prohibiting recruiters from receiving gifts from private citizens, most would be too humble to receive much more than pizza and a soda or something similar.

I would tell you that the one thing that you could give a recruiter that would mean more than anything is a solid lead. A name and phone number of some young man or woman that would benefit from what the Army has to offer… you would have Army coffee cups, pens, desk calendars and just about any other lickies and chewies USAREC throws out there coming out of your ears!

I don’t need another coffee cup, but I think the recruiters could appreciate just what he asked for: Solid leads. Put your networking hats on, and get back into service, being an advocate for military service and the recruiters. We know they have problems in some areas getting into schools and universities, so complimenting their work would be a big boost for them. Keep your ears to the tracks and listening for that opportunity in a conversation to guide someone their way….and, just if you have the urge, maybe stop by with some coffee or donuts or pizza for them and tell them they are doing a great job.

Now, news from Iraq from “Jack:”

It has been a fast and furious time since about August 2005. As you probably know, I’m currently in Iraq. Things are going really well in our area of operations. Our Iraqi Army counterparts are progressing well and things in this zone are relatively quiet compared to zones on our borders. There are great things happening every day but there is still so much work to be done.

Somehow I don’t get the same picture from the MSM….so, from real boots on the ground, a senior NCO says it’s better.

While I tend to paint a rosy picture of things here (I am an optimist!), there are challenges. Corruption has been a problem. For example, Iraqi Army Soldiers and Iraqi Police officers used to demand bribes to get through some of the checkpoints in our area. The Iraqi Army commander here had signs put up at the checkpoints with his phone number on them stating that bribes where illegal and call the number to report IA or IP who demanded them. Also, obviously, he ordered the practice to be stopped as well. After he put the first violator in jail for a few days and took away a few days’ pay, that practice pretty much went away. Now, the only folks that will get hassled at a checkpoint is those that are suspicious or violate the law. Things are getting better.

Sounds like someone sees it’s time for a change, and it’s great to hear that the Iraqi officer is taking the lead in solving a problem.

So, the recruiters are in the fight, too. Help them out if you get the chance.

T-13, 1.20: 13 Things to Hate about the IRS

tax_slave.jpg

This is an easy one, except for the part about limiting it to thirteen things…

1. The taxpayer is always guilty until proven innocent.

2. Withholding. See #1 and add in, “Where’s the interest on the money stolen before it’s really due on April 15?”

3. The forms, the forms… *arrrrrggghhhh!*

4. About #3… I’m sure the IRS can make the print smaller and the paper of crappier rag, but I’m unsure whether they chose the ink for its ability to cause an allergic reaction leading to total mental breakdown or if that’s just a psycosomatic reaction…

5. “Advice” from the IRS. First, can ya think “Conflict of interest”? Then, go ahead: ask the same question of three (or four) folks with the IRS. You’ll probably recieve four (or five) contradictory answers, most of them designed to cause you to get a nastly letter down the pike from someone else (or sometimes the same dumbasses) saying you are in error for following their counsel. Catch 10648 (that’s Catch 22 cubed).

6. Following on 5, if the IRS makes a mistake, IT IS YOUR FAULT. Remember that one: IT IS ALWAYS YOUR FAULT. It’s a simple corrollary of number 1.

7. Paying the borg for the priviledge of being financially and mentally raped. Thank you, Mr. Revenooer… We pay the IRS’s wages, exhorbitant operating expenses (and screwups associated with “updating” the RS’s antiquated computer systems, etc.). So, naturally, as with other feddle gummint bureaucracies, those who pay the costs are the slaves of the servant. Figures. (See the Kipling cited in “Read more here” below *sigh*).

8. The lies I. The taxes you pay to the IRS on or before the April 15 deadline every year reflects your effective tax rate to the feddle gummint, right? Nope. That’s a baldfaced lie. You also pay ALL the taxes on ALL the goods and services (added up all down the supply chain to the end user/consumer) of ALL the businesses producing goods and services you purchase (on those goods and services you purchase). Your effective tax rate is really more like at least double what you see on April 15 every year.

9. The Lies II: Pictures like this at the smarmy IRS website:

happy_taxpayers.jpg

Instead of the more honest:

slave_driver2.jpg

10. The very thought of IRS drones feeding at the public trough. Just think: if even half of them worked at productive jobs instead (while the other half went on the public dole), we’d be far, far better off.

11. Tax courts. See #1 again.

12. Damned snoops! (And I think I may well be using the term with theological accuracy–*heh*) Even friends of tax collectors get their own place in Dante’s Inferno, IIRC…

13. The ultimate indignity: being forced, by a monstrous tax code, to pay one shark (or more!–tax lawyer, accountant, TurboTax *spit*, whomever) to snatch a small portion of one’s carcass from the jaws of a bigger shark.

I could rail all day, but then I’d probably be singled out (may well be already) for harrassment by the IRS.

Noted at the Thursday Thirteen Hub and Trackposted to Outside the Beltway, The Virtuous Republic, Blog @ MoreWhat.com, Perri Nelson’s Website, The Random Yak, basil’s blog, Stuck On Stupid, Conservative Cat, Faultline USA, Right Celebrity, Allie Is Wired, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, Pirate’s Cove, Overtaken by Events, Blue Star Chronicles, The Pink Flamingo, Dumb Ox Daily News, High Desert Wanderer, and Gone Hollywood, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Continue reading “T-13, 1.20: 13 Things to Hate about the IRS”

So much for the “dumb hick” meme/OTA

I’ll get to the subject in a tad, but meanwhile, this is an open trackbacks post. Link to THIS post and track back. 🙂

If you have a linkfest/open trackback post to promote OR if you simply want to promote a post via the linkfests/open trackback posts others are offering, GO TO LINKFEST HAVEN DELUXE! Just CLICK the link above or the graphic immediately below.

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Prisons for kids lesson 10013: City kids are dumber than rural kids, at least largely because of incarceration in citified prisons for kids, AKA “public schools”.

Outrageous statement? Here’s a data set in support:

Urban Horrors

In the United States, [military] recruiters have noted a steady decline in the proportion (to their population) of recruits coming from urban areas. This is largely because so many potential recruits have to be turned down because of the poor education they have received in urban schools. While only 21 percent of Americans live in rural areas, 44 percent of the qualified recruits come from these areas. What’s strange about all this is that the rural areas spend much less, per pupil, on education, but get much better results. Part of this can be attributed to differences in cost of living, but a lot of it has to do with simply getting more done with less. Per capita, young people in urban areas are 22 percent more likely to join the army, than those of the same age in urban areas.

OK, so part of the result is because–proportionally–more rural folk volunteer for military service than citified folk. But the rub comes where more of the citified volunteers are washouts because they’re simply not good enough, smart enough or… “have a bad attitude, as well as a difficult time getting along with others, and following instructions.” Yeh, kudos for the fine “socialization skills” y’all inculcate in our youth, pubschool weenies.

The rural recruits are also a lot easier to train, and generally make better soldiers. The urban recruits often have a bad attitude, as well as a difficult time getting along with others, and following instructions. The urban schools deserve some of the blame for this, as rural schools tend to be far more orderly, and put more emphasis on civil responsibility. Many of the urban recruits are aware of these problems, and joined the service to learn useful (for getting a job) social skills. Those skills are more often found among rural recruits because out in the boondocks, people are more involved with local government, and more involved in general.

Sure, pubschools are still crappy in rural regions, but at least they’re less crappy (in turning out decent citizens) than urban schools. The reasons are legion, and worth another, separate, post. But for now, remember to be grateful for rednecks. Without them, you’d have to rely on city kids to enlist in defense of this country, and that’d be a nightmare…


Tax Day/Open Trackbacks-Linkfest

The day set aside to weep and wail and gnash teeth: “doing” (and cursing and steady monitoring blood pressure… Can I charge the IRS directly for medical care resulting from having to navigate the twisted path laid out by the tax code? Pain and suffering? Punitive damages? *heh*) taxes. *sigh* Yet another reason to support The Fair Tax: No more IRS; no more “tax day”…


This is an open trackbacks post. Link to THIS post and track back. 🙂

If you have a linkfest/open trackback post to promote OR if you simply want to promote a post via the linkfests/open trackback posts others are offering, GO TO LINKFEST HAVEN DELUXE! Just CLICK the link above or the graphic immediately below.

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Guard the Borders: A Pattern of Malicious Prosecution by U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton

[Editor’s Note: This article is reprinted with permission from American Freedom Riders.]

by American Freedom Riders

Written by his own hand, former U.S. Border Patrol Agent Gary Brugman tells how, in the performance of his duty, he was falsely charged and convicted of violating the civil rights of an alien caught entering the U.S. illegally at the Mexican border. This case, along with the cases of Ramos and Compean, Hernandez, Sipe, and who knows how many more, serves as proof of the agenda of malicious prosecution by Johnny Sutton against law enforcement officers who dare to uphold our immigration laws. (Sutton bio – Note the joined-at-the-hip relationship with George W. Bush)

Once again, as in the Ramos and Compean case, Sutton worked in concert with the Mexican Consulate to locate a deported Mexican national and paid his way back to the United States many months later to testify against a Border Patrol agent on false assault charges. A Mexican national who had registered no previous complaint against Agent Brugman. What incentive was he given? Who knows. It is known that a member of his family subsequently received chemotherapy treatment in the U.S. In a post trial interview, Johnny Sutton went so far as to thank the Mexican Consulate for cooperation in locating the deported alien. (DOJ Press ReleasePDF file.)

A scandalous, but creative twist to this prosecution was that the Sutton gang also brought a convicted and incarcerated drug smuggler from his prison cell to testify against Agent Brugman. A drug smuggler who Agent Burgman himself had captured six weeks after the incident for which he was being prosecuted. Once again, there had been no previous accusation of any civil rights violation. Now however, the convicted drug smuggler conveniently offered supporting testimony to the prosecution’s false accusation that Gary Brugman was a rogue agent and a criminal. The false and vengeful testimony of this convicted drug smuggler should never have been allowed by the judge.

No one would listen to Gary Brugman several years ago and he spent two years in the general population at federal prisons wearing newspapers and magazines taped to his body as hopeful protection against inmate attacks. In view of what has recently been disclosed about Johnny Sutton’s malicious tactics, his story will be viewed with great interest now. Gary lost everything and his life was ruined but he survived his sentence and is now a free man again. Gary Brugman remains a patriotic American and tells his story now only in an effort to help Ignacio Ramos, Jose Compean, and Gilmer Hernandez prove their innocence against the power, influence, and treachery of the U.S. Attorney and George Bush water boy, Johnny Sutton.

Note: Gary has been a Harley rider for twenty years and on February 18, 2007 he rode with the American Freedom Riders and joined the families of Ramos, Compean, and Hernandez in El Paso, Texas to protest the conviction of the “Texas Three”. He is an honorable man and we are proud to call him our brother.

Read “My Story”, by Gary Brugman 2-20-07, now…


This has been a production of the Guard the Borders syndicate. It was started by Euphoric Reality to educate the public about the vulnerabilities of our open borders during an age of global terrorism and the resultant threat to our national security and sovereignty. If you are concerned about the lapses in our national security and the socio-economic burden of unchecked illegal immigration, join our blog syndicate. Send an email with your blog name and url to admin at guardtheborders dot com.


[Comment: “U.S. Attorney and George Bush water boy, Johnny Sutton”–Wow! Vicente Fox’s lapdog has a water boy!]

Facing the Issues II

Last Monday, I posted a quasi stream of consciousness outline of issues facing our society–Western society in general and U.S. society specifically–and “threatened” a continuance of the post as a series of posts on individual issues. I listed, in no particular order, a non-exhaustive list of issues that I felt were ourgrowths of moral failiure on the part of our society. That list included:

The lack of a reasonable immigration/border control policy
Attacks on essential liberties/lies from the Left… and the Right
The growth of anarcho-tyranny (and the death-by-inches of justice)
Islamic Jihad/GWOT
Education, so-called
Abortion, or “murder by euphemism”
Science and pseudo-science (a materialistic approach to/denial of truth)
Energy, productivity and responsible management of resources
Work ethic… or lack thereof.

Today, I’m briefly addressing the last item in the list above. Briefly, because every person who reads this can supply multiple examples of poor work ethic from life experience, and because the issue is so intertwined with so many other issues that the fabric will have to be woven a thread at a time as some of the other issues listed above (and not listed) are mentioned later. But meanwhile, a few illustrative examples:

Woman Fired For Writing About Avoiding Work

“This typing thing seems to be doing the trick,” she wrote. “It just looks like I am hard at work on something very important…. I am only here for the money and, lately, for the printer access. I haven’t really accomplished anything in a long while … and I am still getting paid more than I ever have at a job before, with less to do than I have ever had before. It’s actually quite nice when I think of it that way. I can shop online, play games and read message boards and still get paid for it.”

That’s right. The woman had been told by a supervisor to stop “working” on her personal journal at work and do her job, so she started keeping her journal–which eventually reached over 300 single-spaced pages–on her work computer. Instead of doing her job. When fired, she filed for unemployment compensation, but in a rare case of judicial commonsense, her claim, taken to court, was denied, because

the journal demonstrated a refusal to work, as well as Bauer’s “amusement at getting away with it.”

At first glance, this may seem to some to be an extreme example of poor work ethics, but is it really all that much out of line with everyday slacking off? Sure, it might take two or three “normal” slackers to add up to this kind of behavior, but we can all come up with two or three slackers at any one job in our present or past, can’t we?

Teachers who are just marking time, going through the motions until that (relatively early) retirement. Repairmen who submit bills for NOT making repairs (I have more of those stories than I could possibly have room or time to relate). Supervisors who use their position to wander around (and wander off), slacking and goofing off and using company time and resources for personal use, employee (and frankly, employer–sometimes resulting in stupid damage to the company and “laying off” employees to falsely inflate the bottom line) pilfering. Government employees (though more often those in supervisory roles) wasting resources and placing roadblocks in the way of effective use of taxpayer funds.

Consider another bizarre case in which, strangely, inexplicably, the court system resulted in a commonsense result. Granted, Sandia National Lab is not a direct agency of the feddle gummint (it’s just that it’s totally funded and run under feddle meddle mandate). But it is regulated and run according to federal government rules of employment and management–most particularly security rules. And there’s the rub:

Continue reading “Facing the Issues II”

Monday Linkfest

THIS is an open trackbacks post. Link to THIS post and track back. 🙂

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L’Eggo My Lego

Un. Be. Lievable.

I wish.

The surprising thing? Took place in a private school. The completely UNsurprising thing? The hypocrisy of the teachers. Read the school’s philosophy of education (including the statement below) and reconcile it with the actions taken by the school in the ,linked article (above):

Our program is inspired by children’s curiosity and natural inclination to learn through play. Teachers observe children’s play and listen carefully to children’s questions so they may support emergent projects and creations that come directly from the children instead of the teachers.

Riiiiight. Liars.