Friday 21 March 2025 10:53:12 PM CST





Wednesday 12 March 2025 09:42:41 PM CDT


Hard to believe it was over 40 years ago I first heard that on the radio. It had only been a few years since the war ended and I just missed getting in on it as Nixon put a stop to it before I turned 18 in 1974. It's probably one of the best songs about Vietnam I ever heard and interestingly wasn't written by a vet. Charlie was too old to have gone and what I know about the songwiter I can't find just now. Don't know if any songs about it were written by people who were there except for Barry Sadler. Actually it's hard to believe Charlie has been gone near five years. It was way more than 40 years when I heard Uneasy Rider.

Goin' into the Air Force in 1982 I knew a lot of guys who were there and in places like Thailand, knew a few pilots and they liked to talk about their adventures. Saigon wasn't actually a bad place to be except for that little affair in 1968. That was the same year my cousin died there. And the evacuation probably wasn't any fun - I knew an ex-Marine who had enlisted in the Air Force after Vietnam and claimed he was there but from his age I knew he was lying but he was pretty flaky generally. Had a few Army guys did the same - said they figured after that they could do another fifteen or so years of the Chair Force easy. Some of them were pretty nutty too.

Today the first time the weather good enough to walk out on the deck in my socks and enjoy a drink and a smoke. Kitty cats pretty happy too. Of course that means the grass be growing soon and I got four more acres this year and at some point may have to break down and hire a few large sections mowed. As long as they don't get close to the trees and I about got a system for that. Okey-dokey, what we got?

The Wynne paper (website anyway since they don't print a paper since the tornado tore up the office) keeps us up on 'green energy' projects in Cross County. Seems pretty soon you look down at Cross County from up in space like Google Earth or such it'll look like a humongous solar panel with a bunch of windmills sticking up here and there. And it is here and there - not rows of them somewhere in one place but like somebody pumped a dozen rounds of 00 buck into a target from about a hundred yards or so. Not anywhere two of them much closer together than a quarter mile and the whole thing covers probably 20-30 square miles. At my age might be in my urn before the cleanup is necessary but that'd only give me ten years for sure. Anyhow this seems to be the most recent.

This one ain't looking too good with the shape of the Missouri legisltature. No excuse for the Senate not passing it as the ratios of reublican-to-dimocrat aren't much worse than Arkansas but Missouri seems to have more RINOs than Arkansas. Misery is where you get stuff like this.

People ask "how do these clowns get elected?" I then have to explain that some congressional districts have a sufficiently large population of the grievance class to have a representative. Missouri has two of those - the ones around Kansas City and Missouri - and so Missouri gets to send two radical leftist tools to Congress.

MAGAHurtz@MyndCryme



I'd say they pretty much ensnared their selves. The Slimes is likely to settle big or lose bigger considering recent cases but they did what they back when such attacks could be perpetrated with impunity. Times change. Whether the paper's owners will continue their vendetta against truth and decency remains to be seen. Bezos seems to be cleaning up the Compost and the LA Times owners seem to be coming part of the way to their senses. Sarah Palin seems a rather nice if naive person who was the best thing that resulted from the inept McCain presidential campaign. After all the abuse she has suffered for years she has a right to gloat over the state of her tormentors if she wants to.

Wishful thinking and probably some mental self-pleasuring for the Vanity folks. If Marco and Elon or any other cabinet member and Elon or anyone else in there had a disagreement so what? Trump is in charge and his cabinet is the brightest and most cohesive I've ever seen. I hadn't paid much attention to Marco the past few years and am impressed by his growth. Age and experience will do that for the right people and President Trump seems to have a lot of the right people.

I hope the trend in cutting off junk food for SNAP users spreads. The blue states won't do it but like school choice the red states are likely to adopt it. As a taxpayer I don't like watching people buying Doritos and Twinkies that I'm paying for. How does anything that discourages people from eating stuff that makes them unhealthy? They get sick they go to the doctor and I pay for that too because Medicaid.












Monday 17 March 2025 10:25:42 PM CST


That applies to people generally these days. How go I get ahead? Climbing the career ladder is about money and what you can buy with that money. Someone or other said that 80% of success is showing up but what's the other 20%? Mostly politics, shameless self-promotion and a good bit of just faking it. Cop tricks apply to all professions - learning things that are useful even if you don't understand them, getting hold of some information nobody else has or at least before everybody else gets it. Learning how to appear smarter than you are. Maybe that somehow fits in with the Peter Principle - you can scheme and pose and prevaricate just so far.

That's from one of the Memphis TV stations. Considering the audience in a place like Memphis even 30% approving, near 40% some level is surprising. BTW I don't care about college football or any other kind. I wonder what people who strongly disapprove are likely to do. Be on welfare. Less than 3K responses I hafta wonder how big that audience is.

Jonestown paper had the 1-day boycott the other day (I went shopping to see how much stuff I could buy in 24 hours) and one offering his take something either he doesn't understand or undestands he doesn't like because he don't like it. He a economist of some reputation so there's that. Theyy keep the cartoons coming.















Tuesday 18 March 2025 09:23:19 PM CST


Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man is mindless fun and unless you got action or hot chicks or smart-ass dialogue there ain't much point. HDATMM has all three. I probably watched it a dozen or two times back the day when I worked at home a lot and had the telly on one of the movie channels and it come on and I took a 1.5 hour break and enjoyed a beverage or two if it was near noon or later and some mindless fun. It's about as improbable as another mindless fun movie or two that I watched a few times. The only seriously improbable part of F/X2 was how the telemetry suit worked without the kind of power supply it would have needed. And I like Brian Denehey a lot - he could do good guys and bad guys equally well and he and Bryan Brown were probably a more likeable pair than Johnson and Rourke. Idunno if I've seen any of their other movies. Saw a couple of episodes of Miami Vice - the second only because I was a guest and the hosts were watching it. Don was pretty cool in his cowboy getup. Tom Sizemore and Dan Baldwin were good and Tia Carrera was smokin' hot as usual. Just looked at the cast again and noticed Robert Ginty was in it. He had some success in the '80s with the Exterminator films (I suspected at the time somebody was wanting to do The Executioner but didn't figure on it flying) but sadly died rather young from cancer. Okey-dokey, that's the cultural bit for the day.

Goin' back to banks and boardrooms and - focusing on white-collar here but its the same everywhere - somewhere between the primeval hunter-gatherer (primeval may be earlier than that but whatever) we got to the cannibalistic (figuratively speaking) society we have today a bad strain of Homo sapiens began to propagate. Back when people too busy getting something to eat without getting eaten politics and mind games and such wouldn't keep you alive. When did people start trying to figure ways to live off other people's work? I suppose that would be the dawn of civilization. By the time we was civilized enough to have governments and stuff it was pretty well set in DNA stream. It would take some hard times to wring much of it out and I don't want to see the kind of stuff that would take.

Checking up on the kid that was murdered over around Judsonia can't find anything new. The one that was in the Left Memphis jail ain't there now according to the jailbird inventory and the other three went into Memphis jail. Ain't looking through a couple thousand or more and they're probably already out anyway and likely done killed somebody else. Probably won't be any news until the trial is close. Statistical probability is one or more will be deceased by then.

Nothing new on the woman run over by the Jonestown cop and left crippled for life. I don't remember him being fired like the one that beat up the handcuffed arrestee. Some say TANJ but Mack Bolan disagrees. Justice may not happen in this life but it will come.












Wednesday 19 March 2025 11:22:53 PM CST


Had some bad storms Saturday and Paragould got hit - apparently not a tornado like some places got but serious wind. I believe the one that hit my place out on 284 was a low EF-3 but the one that tore up Wynne was higher on the scale. Out my way it was more like several little ones. Anyhow it's no fun being in one and seriously scary. Luckily mine was here and gone so fast I didn't have time to be scared - on the phone the while time it sounded like the big one for sure for about a minute.


Well, J.D. is right and his mother-in-law is wrong. DEI is wrong and it's gone or going away fast here. Plenty of people wanted it gone but like the Plandemic and mentally-ill male specimens being allowed to brutalize - mentally and physically - female ones too many people were afraid to resist. The ones who did are now being rewarded for their integrity. Pretty sure it wasn't my job to educate Muslim women from Afghanistan to begin with and why don't the Omanis let them stay if I stop paying? NPR got it pretty accurate - what else can they do. Trump is always out in the open and says what he means. Too many other places for people to get news and there never were many getting it from NPR.












Thursday 20 March 2025 09:22:53 PM CST


Lots of sports - mostly basketball. Not much bad crime - lot of the usual mischief and sadly somehow a child died at Weiner. Weiner is a wide spon on 49 south of Jonestown. Population about 700 - guess that's big enough for some of the usual drug related stuff.

Paragould paper has an intelligent editorial from the big guys sometimes. This one was decent. If you're not a subscriber or don't know how to read the papers without being one you probably can't see the link so I'll use the orginal source when possible. Cartoons aren't much better.


You can hardly expect the president to allow any propaganda outlets to remain in business on taxpayer money. Back in the day a plausible reason (evil empire) existed but that went away a long time ago. Slate and Salon both have the audience of CNN, MSLSD and BBC and NPR so the latest "Musk is a Nazi" piece is no surprise. Except for people like us who read it to make fun of them they're all preaching to a small choir. The Salon piece is "He's gonna do to us what we did to them" except they actually are guilty.

Should I talk about Memphis schools? Not like we didn't know this would happen. For too long the Memphis people have been allowed to run that place into the ground and the state authorities have understandably been reluctant to intrvene becaus they know what the reaction will be.

"This bill is an attack on democracy," said Shelby County Commissioner Charlie Caswell. "Our schools belong to our communities, and decisions about our children's education should be made by the people who know them best: parents, teachers, and locally elected leaders."

WREG.com
You see Charlie, the 'democracy' to which you refer isn't a democracy of Memphis. It's Tennessee - of which Memphis is a small and increasingly smaller part - of Tennessee. The people of Tennessee elect leaders to govern the state in a manner beneficial to all citizens - not just the city of Memphis. Memphis and the surrounding area are a stain on that great state and the people who live there and govern it are responsible, solely responsible, for its condition. Those people have failed miserably to do so. What do you want? To improve Memphis and make it the city it was forty or so years ago? Or do you want to be the tribal bosses of a decaying city?

Forty years ago I and others from the surrounding area visited Memphis regularly - an average of once a week. Shopping, entertainment, just cruising around. I remember times with a couple of older sisters - before I was old enough to drive - shopping in Memphis. Parking the car and walking all over the place, eating at the restaurants. Even then we were the only or some of very few white people in an area. Everyone was well dressed and friendly, I was never even a little afraid. The last time was close to fifteen years ago, maybe longer, and I didn't feel safe anywhere.

Alex@MyndCryme

I remember it that way. Now I won't ever drive through Memphis - I'll take a forty mile detour to avoid it. Memphis schools are part of the Memphis environment. The entire city should be under state management.

Garcia described the bill as "extreme" and stated that the possibility of the state taking the reins is "frightening."

"This is so much bigger than us... There is nothing that stops some form of legislation that starts doing this to city councils, starts doing this to county commissions. That's how you erode a democracy," said Garcia. "I find it frightening that we are willing to give up power."

WREG.com

Maybe these people really don't understand that the state government has waited for too long and this is hardly about power. The people of Memphis have been trashing the place for many years and the state has delayed because it doesn't want the inevitable shrieks of 'racism'. The entire city is in such a state that something must be done. I have often commented on the criminal spillover into northeast Arkansas - the place is a dump that needs to be cleaned up and it is obviously not going to clean itself up.












Friday 21 March 2025 11:42:30 PM CST


I guess no news is good news when it's crime and stuff. Wynne passed an ordinance allowing places to serve cocktails along with beer and wine. Is that what they call likker by the drink? Used to anyway but don't hear it much these days. Guy I worked with back in the day called everthing a cocktail even if it was a beer. He didn't drink beer but anythime there was a party you'd have some of both. He had some other odd mannerisms and....

What, Chris?

Alright already. The Jonestown paper laying it on heavy with the Trump hate. Don't even bother to be factual - but if you label it opinion you can get away with a good bit. Couple of toons have been funny but the the fun part for me the subtlety of the truth is something the artist probably doesn't get. When they believe or profess to believe that prohibiting discrimination is bigoted and not allowing unqualified people to endanger the lives of other people is bigoted there something wrong in the brain.




























































Got on a plane in Fresco and got off in Vietnam. I walked into a different world, the past forever gone. I could have gone to Canada or I could have stayed in school. But I was brought up differently. I couldn't break the rules. Thirteen months and fifteen days, the last ones were the worst. One minute I kneel down and pray And the next I stand and curse. No place to run to where I did not feel that war. When I got home I stayed alone and checked behind each door. Charlie Daniels Still in Saigon


Vanity Fa Sarah Palin Is Eyeing More Than Just Money in Her New York Times Defamation suit In his new book, ‘Murder the Truth,’ David Enrich chronicles how the former Alaska governor ensnared the paper in a long.. Politics Vanity Fair “Elon Won't Be Reined in”: Inside a Trump Cabinet Attempt to Check Elon Musk Was a fiery showdown between Marco Rubio and Elon Musk part of a broader attempt to clip the DOGE chief's wings? Politics, Givileats Bans on Soda and Candy in SNAP Are Back on the Table, and They're Still Controversial MAHA backers are pushing for restrictions on unhealthy Foods within SNAP, but experts disagree whether th.. Health


I wish I had kept the Nova, and most of the cars I've owned. Especially the '93 Mustang GT. Now where was I? I was working at the First National Bank, Last Nasty as some called it. Including most of the ones who worked there. It didn't take me long to learn why. The bookkeeping department and the tellers were under the supervision of a vice-president - just all about all the officers were some kind of vice-president - but had the old-fashioned title of cashier. He was a country boy like me, but not as smart. I suppose most people of his type are what I call cop-smart, after that dude in The Choirboys. One of the cops, I forget which, was dumb and racist and mean. He liked to beat people and had a trick he'd learned somewhere, pinching some nerves somewhere and making a guy flop around, called it making them 'do the chicken'. Cops are like that, learning tricks from other cops, acting like they're real smart. Monkey see monkey do. A good many people - most people these days - from small town banks to billion-dollar corporation boardrooms (I've been in both) they don't apply themselves to being good at something and always trying to improve. They just pick up tricks, make connections with the right people, get something on other people, climb the ladder and stomp on anyone coming up too close behind you. The fact is it works better career-wise than being the best at what you do. I know because I tried that. I never tried the other way, no matter how well I saw it working. It invariably involved hurting other people at least some of the time. And it's dishonest, deceiving others and deceiving yourself. Self-deception is the most effective kind. I'm no saint, and never pretended to be saintly. But hurting people, even when they deserve it, is hard for me to do. Not so much now at least in my attitude - there's plenty of people need to be hurt, deserve it and it would be better for society if they did get hurt when they need it. But I never could, even when a kid wanted to fight and wouldn't stand for me walking away and slugged me. I'm pretty tough, not big but wiry and fast, but I didn't like hitting people. I'd put my head down and charge, get inside and get him down on the ground, hold him there until he gave up or the faculty intervened.


Chemical Youth 1 hour ago Elon and Trump are both laughing their arses off at that. Not because it's funny - it's only funny if it has some truth in it - but at the misery the sufferers of TDS/MDS must be experiencing. Some people are like Slinkies -- not really good for anything, but you still can't help but smile when you see one tumble down the stairs. Reply +194 [-) Terminus Est 1 hour ago Did he get that Trump did that just to trigger him? Trump is the master troll without really trying. Too clever is dumb. ~ Ogden Nash Reply 1G[-) Nikki Niner 50 minutes ago Sean Hannity did the same thing just. Bought a Tesla to give away. @ I remember now. I remember how it started. I can't remember yesterday. I just remember doing what they told me. Reply 1G[-) Mack Bolan 42 minutes ago I'm about 120% certain he didn't. These people are so dumb to take themselves so seriously. For every action there is a reaction, for every good an evil, for every strength a weakness, and for every injustice there is somewhere a final justice. Reply 8304] -) Phantasm Lord of the Dead 31 minutes ago They need to have their heads remodeled so there's room inside for Trump and Musk at the same time. You play a good game, boy, but the game is finished. Now you die. Reply HG )


Be YS PUY YERe OU WYseUL st UiILUEl, UU NAY 2UUOUES OU bu LE UUoUEE OU IU Uitte Reply 42(+]-) Mack Bolan 1 hour ago * i Well, according to him and his ilk inciting terrorism and assassination is free speech as long as the right people are being terrorized and assassinated. Still completely misses the point. For every action there is a reaction, for every good an evil, for every strength a weakness, and for every injustice there is somewhere a final justice. Reply +6(+|-) Dotar Sojat 49 minutes ago Non-citizens - even legal ones - may be expelled for any reason. There were plenty of reasons for that punk to be expelled. Jam a citizen of two worlds; Captain John Carter of Virginia, Prince of the House of Tardos Mors, Jeddak of Helium Reply +3(+]-) Civil Whites 21 minutes ago I'd prefer to see him arrested and do some prison time before being repatriated. I Would Rather Be Governed By the First 2,000 People in the Telephone Directory than by the Harvard University Faculty. — William F. Buckley Jr. Reply +1(+]-) Goldry Bluszco 33 minutes ago Free speech inciting terrorism good. Free speech at abortion mills and school board meetings not so much. Either he belives that and is nuts or knows better and is evil. It was pittie one so wittie malcontent, leaving reason should to treason so be bent. Reply 42(+]-)


Guard: [Harley and Marlboro are robbing an armoured car] Who are you guys? Marlboro: Well, he's Harley Davidson, and I'm the Marlboro Man. Guard: You look like a bunch of two-bit hoods to me. Harley Davidson: [the car's trunk explodes] Now does that look like the work of two-bit hoods? Guard: Yeah. Pros would've used my keys. [Harley and Marlboro look at each other] Harley Davidson: Well, he likes to blow things up.


KaliforniaDreamin 1 hour ago At least wait until it happens. If it happens. Life is a lemon and I want my money back. ~ Meat Loaf Reply 1G [= Remo Williams 1 hour ago I don't remember cartoons about the destruction of the Biden economy. That's the biz sweetheart. Reply +6 -) Willow Kane 1 hour ago C'mon man, the economy was great until Trump came along. @ Compassion is no substitute for justice. ~ Rush Limbaugh Reply +4 (Sete hour ago At the speed of Trump it will be something else tomorrow and he wants to have a America is at that awkward stage; it's too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards. (Claire Wolfe) Reply 83Gl-)


"Your contact is Nick Carter." Lancer paused and reached for a pack of cigarettes, shook one out and stuck it in the corner of his mouth, Roger knew he was watching for a reaction. Nick Carter. Some entertainer? Wait, secret agent. He'd read some of the spy novels, relics from the 1980s. “Is that the name he'll be using?" Roger asked. "Yeah. Only two or three people know his real name, and I'm not sure I'm one of them.” “And you trust him?" “Completely. Calamus does too, that's enough by itself. But he's been working with us since the beginning, off and on. He gets around, up in Alliance territory a good bit. He's something of a Swiss army knife, if you know what | mean." Roger knew. Few men had that status, and he wondered why he'd never heard of this one. Roger looked down at the dossier. It was just a half dozen pages, probably just the part he would need to know. Balance of Power (2022)


Roger looked down at the dossier. It was just a half dozen pages, probably just the part he would need to know. “What's not in there," Lancer said, “may explain some of the quirks you may notice. Or not. According to Calamus - Carter doesn't discuss it but knows we know - he's a chimera.” “Legendary spy and mythical monster? Anything else | need to know?" “It’s believed," Lancer said, “that he is the result of an unusual birth. Possibly, he and a twin sister were conceived simultaneously, or sufficiently close together that the two eggs fused almost immediately after fertilization, or before, or something like that. Dr. Hamblin is one of several doctors who examined him, some years ago, and suggested recruiting him. That's his theory.” "He's what, intersexed? Bi-sexual, never mind, | don't want to know." “He's completely male, physically. They checked to see if he had any vestigial female internal organs as is sometimes the case with intersexed people. Nothing. But two blood types, two sets of DNA. Conceivably it might have some mental effect, but it's hard to say. “He is autistic, as in having Asperger's Syndrome, but he hides it fairly well. He has the high IQ typical of Aspies, and the curiosity. But he's about as normal as anyone you're likely to run into in this business.” Roger scanned the first page. “Five eight, one sixty. Brown hair with some auburn. Green eyes. Sixty-one years old. He doesn't look it. OK, if that's all the weirdness...” “Pretty much.” Lancer pushed the cigarette pack across the desk. "Try one of his smokes.” Roger didn't smoke much, and cigarettes rarely. But they had other uses. He took one and looked at it. It had a gold band above the filter, and the letters NC in gold. “Like the secret agent," Lancer said. "He carries them. He'll offer you one. If he doesn't something's wrong.” Balance of Power (2022)


Roger lit the cigarette. It tasted expensive. He scanned the dossier. "240 1Q?" Lancer grinned. “The Air Force tested him twice to be sure, back in the day. The average of the two tests was 242. They wanted to recruit him for some special duties, wanted to be sure the first test wasn't a fluke or a clerical error. | believe he tested a couple of points higher on that one, and it was a different sort of test, designed for the purpose. He aced the ASVABs, 90+ on everything.” “Foreign languages. Was he a linguist?" That's what they wanted him for. He flew around in airplanes, eavesdropping on foreign countries. A year and a half of Russian at the language school in Monterey. He speaks Spanish from his school years, decent German and French he picked up in Europe, some others. Studied Latin in school as well. And apparently he's equally good with computer languages - that's what he was doing before the war started. Software developer.” Roger flipped a page. “Old school weapons. Partial to 1911 Colts and Smith .44 Mags?" “He likes them," Lancer replied. “But he uses whatever is appropriate for the occasion. He won't go into a bad situation without plenty of firepower, if it's likely to be needed. “The preferred 1911 is along slide, seven inch, if he doesn't have to conceal it. Sometimes carries a pair in shoulder holsters. The Smith is a Model 29, like Dirty Harry. Sometimes he likes a big Ruger in .45 Long Colt. “Rifles of all kinds he's expert with, including six hundred yard sniping. Or off-hand shooting at running targets. One of those guys that shoots wild hogs from helicopters, or at night with a night vision scope. Pick off one in a group and nail two or three more as they run.” “Impressive. How is he hand-to-hand?" “Uses every dirty trick in the book and some that aren't. You've heard of Jim Garrison?” "Who hasn't? Never met him, but if he's half what they say it's enough to want him on my side." “Carter sometimes teaches at his place. He's ambidextrous, by the way. Makes him even more dangerous in a fight.” Naturally? Or practice. He is two people, sort of. Balance of Power (2022)


casNews She Advanced DEI at Her University. Her Son-in-Law, Vice President JD Vance, Wants to End It Nationwide. Lakshmi Chilukuri helped create a pilot course on race, ethnicity and gender in biology and medicine. Politics NBC News USAID Cuts Could Be ‘Death Sentence’ for Afghan Women studying Abroad More than 80 Afghan women studying in Oman say they face deportation and persecution by the Taliban after the... Politics NPR 5 Things the Trump Administration Did This Week You Should Know About This week, President Trump continued to threaten tariffs as DOGE continued its cuts of the Federal workforce. It was... Politics NPR “Bloody Saturday’ at Voice of America and Other U.S.-Funded Networks Federal officials placed 1,300 employees at Voice of America on indefinite paid leave, while severing contracts with Ra... Politics Slate Elon Musk Wanted the Cybertruck to Look Like “The Future.” But It Reminds Us of One Particular Past. Elon Musk was growing up in Pretoria when the Casspir patrolled the townships. Business salon How Kash Patel Could Quietly — and Even Legally — Use the FBI to Target Trump Critics The newly confirmed FBI director, Kash Patel, does not need a warrant to launch a preliminary investigation Politics


Reply +4 Mandroid 1 hour ago Well, he hasn't killed the economy yet. Why not wait until it happens. And he has “gotten away" with everything they've accused him of so far. Electric eye, in the sky, Feel my stare, always there, There's nothing you can do about it, Develop and expose, I feed upon your every thought, And so my power grows. Reply +11 GI-) Count Smiorgan 1 hour ago Actually it's still improving. I'd probably stay away from the Fifth Avenue comment though - they tried to put him in prison for years and failed bigly. America is at that awkward stage; it's too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards. (Claire Wolfe) Reply +6(+]-) Prime Chuck Norris 50 minutes ago You would think that after they tried to kill him and failed they might get the idea that a higher authority is running things this time around. When I want your opinion, I'll beat it out of you. Reply +4(+]-) Willow Kane 43 minutes ago Facts don't matter. If he says the Trump killed the economy in his mind and the minds of his audience the economy is bad. It is a shrinking audience - when Schumer went on The Spew and made campaign ads for the Republicans very few people were watching and they were already convinced. Compassion is no substitute for justice. ~ Rush Limbaugh Reply 104] -) Twisted Mentat 31 minutes ago I believe Schemer has lost it. Not that there was much to lose. It is by will alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the juice of Sapho that thoughts acquire speed, the lips acquire stains, the stains become a warning. It is by will alone I set my mind in motion. Reply 1Gl-)