Why Arlen? Arlen is the TV home of "King of the Hill." It's a small conservative town that is threatened with ruination on a regular basis by twig boys, enviro wackos, diversity nuts, "PC" police and other ivory tower liberals. I like to think of Arlen as a metaphor for this here great nation of ours. |
Friday, July 22, 2005
Posted
4:55 AM
by Hank
ITHACA NY--The Ithaca Police have a new patrol car: a yellow Volkswagon bug. I am not making this up.
Reaction from the community has ranged from disgusted to amused. The Journal, in a bold display of journalistic insight, noted “The cost for the new Beetles may not be justified.” One city council member was insulted that the car was not patrolling his own neighborhood, claiming that the more traditional police cars used in in his district were reflective of “police officers in combat boots.”
“It's not really striking the fear into anyone,” one person told the Journal. Wednesday, July 06, 2005
Posted
8:00 PM
by Hank
"Who am I? Why am I here?" he asked rhetorically in his opening statement. Toward the end, he asked the moderator to repeat a question, saying, "I didn't have my hearing aid turned on." What many didn't realize was that Stockdale lost his hearing as Prisoner of War in Vietnam: Stockdale was made a particular target of his captors. He was the POW leader; it was obvious he was counseling defiance. He was informed one day that he would be taken downtown to read a propaganda statement. "They were always careful not to torture us in ways that would look too obvious, like punishment to the face. They wanted it to seem like we were making these statements of our own free will, which of course would have been ludicrous." "While they were gone, I picked up a mahogany stool and bashed my own face with it," Stockdale says. "Both my eyes swelled up and closed. They couldn't take me out in public now because anyone seeing it would think they'd beaten me to make me cooperate." As punishment, Stockdale spent much of the next two years in solitary confinement, usually in leg irons. He was tortured more than a dozen times. Undeterred, he communicated with other prisoners by tapping out code on cell walls with tin cups. Whenever he was allowed to talk directly with other Americans, he instructed them to resist any form of cooperation with the Viet Cong. Stockdate was a patriot, a war hero and, as Dennis Miller noted, "a brilliant, sensitive, courageous man. And yet he committed the one unpardonable sin in our culture: he was bad on television." Rest in Peace, sir. Monday, July 04, 2005
Posted
9:45 AM
by Hank
From the Finger Lakes Times, a small town paper in upstate New York, comes this combination of good news from Iraq and a nice reminder of what July 4 really stands for: [Spc. Christopher Bean], 20, of Port Gibson, finished up a year-long stint in Baghdad as a truck driver with the 594th Transportation Co., a 101st Airborne division. His time in the military has given him a different perspective on the Fourth of July. Saturday, July 02, 2005
Posted
8:34 AM
by Hank
Apparently, every time a single person tries to talk people out of seeing a movie, its big news in Rochester, New York. A local TV station is reporting that a "a local college student tried to get people to ...not to go to Tom Cruise's latest movie, 'War of the Worlds.'" Fugle believes Cruise is adding to the stigma of mental illness, by talking about his scientology beliefs. Cruise made comments about...post partum depression [and claimed it can be cured] by taking vitamins. Better alert the media, since I plan on telling my wife I don't want to go to anymore foreign art flicks.
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