Walkathon Across America | Tony the Vet | Skydiving

Tony the Vet is planning to walk from San Diego to New York. He will start on September 11, 2010, and is planning to arrive Sept. 11, 2011. He will be promoting and raising funds for SOVA (Support Our Veterans Association).

But while getting in shape he is inviting you to join him in a mini walkathon this coming Sunday, July 18, 2010. Details below:

“Homeless Veteran Walkathon”

Departure: 7:00AM Sunday 7/18/2010

Mt Soledad Veterans Memorial

Soledad Park Road

La Jolla, CA

Arrival: 12:00 Noon – 1:00PM Sunday 7/18/2010

Veterans Village San Diego (VVSD) Stand Down

San Diego High School (Athletic Field)

1405 Park Blvd

San Diego, CA

To know more about Tony the Vet and his coming walkathon please visit:

www.tonythevet.org

www.youtube.com/tonythevetnews

Skydiving Update

Wartime Vet Launches Walkathon Across America With A Skydive
Anthony A. LoBue, wartime veteran and founder of Support Our Veterans Association, is making a skydive from 13,000 over San Diego to launch his fundraising walkathon across America.  LoBue will be making his skydive at Skydive San Diego on Friday, August 13, 2010 to help generate awareness about the Walkathon.  The SOVA Walkathon across America will begin on 9/11/2010 in San Diego, traveling through Phoenix, Austin, Atlanta, Philadelphia, and ending in New York at Ground Zero on 9/11/2011.
For more info, check out his website at www.tonythevet.org or contact him directly at 619 806 2075.
Tony’s Jump, click below:

Tony’s Send-Off ceremony:

Tony the Vet’s

Walkathon Across America

for Support Our Veterans Association (SOVA) at the

Veterans Museum and Memorial Center

Located in Balboa Park at 2115 Park Blvd, San Diego CA 92101

Phone 619.806.2075 eMail Tony@tonythevet.org

I hope you are planning to be with me when I step off on my pilgrimage. Congressman Bob Filner will be one of our guest speakers. Pre-ceremony Activities: TBD

Welcome 2:00pm Pledge of Allegiance National Anthem (sung by Lee Satterfield) Chaplain Robert Satterfield USMC – RET: Invocation and Memorial Service for the Unknown Soldier 82nd Airborne Honor Guard, Color Guard & Bugler POW MIA Remembrance Ceremony Speakers: Congressman Bob Filner, Tony the Vet, TBD Door Prize Opportunity Drawing: (Donations processed by Veterans Museum & Memorial Center) Patriotic Sing-Along (led by Lee Satterfield) Benediction: Chaplain Satterfield Send Off 3:00pm Tony the Vet leads the first day’s walk of Walkathon Across America to Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery.

The Send-Off Ceremony launches my year-long grassroots movement to Support Our Veterans in a way that “H.E.L.P.S.” all veterans, their families, and their communities:

Health and Wellness

Empowerment through Education

and Employment and Enabling Veteran-owned Businesses

Legacy (esp. the Library of

Congress Veterans History Video Project)

Protection and Advocacy

Social Justice and Social Network

I will also be announcing my petitions for proposed bills at national and state levels. We will be honoring Affiliates, Sponsors, Donors, and Volunteers.

Put on some walking shoes and join me.

Arizona Law (Senate Bill 1070) shows Ignorance and Incompetence.

There is no law or wall that is going to solve the illegal immigration problem. The Mexican Border Fence is a waste of taxpayer’s money; both, the new fence and the law, will only create friction between the countries. The only solution to the problem is social justice. The pressure should be put on social reform in Mexico (and in the US).

There is hunger in many parts of Mexico. If the child below was yours would you risk your life climbing any wall? Of course you would. Erecting fences and implementing anti-immigration laws just show our ignorance, incompetence and immorality. This is morality: “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

If he was your child...

Just across the border from El Paso, Texas

Photos from: Poverty, Immigration, And The Laws

To help you understand: A Vagabond in Mexico

Be aware: Everything is interconnected!

A Dog Story | A Success Story | Faith | Judy Stringfellow

I recently received an email from Andrew Perri http://myspace.com/andrewperri with the following story:

This is really a  remarkable little dog and a fascinating story!

This dog was born on Christmas Eve, 2002. He was born with two legs and of course could not walk when he was born. Even his mother did not want  him.

His first owner also did not  think that he could survive and he was thinking of ‘putting

him  to sleep’.

But then, his present owner, Jude  Stringfellow, wanted

him. She became determined to teach and train

this little dog to walk by himself.

She named him ‘Faith’.

In the beginning, she put Faith on a  surfboard to let him feel the movement. Later she used peanut   butter on a spoon as a lure and reward for him for  standing up and jumping around. Even the other dog at home  encouraged him to walk. Amazingly, only after 6 months, like a  miracle,  Faith  learned to balance on his hind legs and to jump to move forward.  After further training in the snow, he could now walk like a  human being.

Faith loves to walk around  now. No matter where he goes, he attracts people to him.

He is fast becoming famous on the  international scene

and has appeared on various newspapers and  TV shows.

There is now a book entitled ‘With a  Little Faith’

being published about him.

He was even considered to appear in one of Harry Potter movies.



Jude Stringfellow has given up  her teaching post and plans to take him around the world to preach that even without a perfect body, one can have  a perfect  soul.






In life there are always undesirable things, so in order to feel better
you just need to look at life from another direction.

I hope this message will bring fresh new ways of

thinking to everyone and that everyone will appreciate

and be thankful for each beautiful day.

Faith is the continual demonstration of the strength and wonder of life.


A small  request:

All you are asked to do is keep this story circulating.

I am glad to be able to keep the story circulating.
To see a similar story about an amazing man who was
born without limbs please do a search on “Nick” right
on this blog.
I guess human beings are not that different from animals.
Everything is interconnected; everything is “That”.

Dec. 21, 2012 | Hollywood Stuff

What is really expected to happen around December 21, 2012 is the beginning of a new age; a different energy will reach our planet with positive effects. The Hopis foretold that the change would start when a large blue star appeared. And on the year 2007 comet 17/P Holmes shocked the scientific world with a spectacular eruption which made it the brightest (blue) object in the sky.

17/P Holmes

“Some have claimed an alignment of planets occurs on winter solstice, 2012, and will cause a catastrophic reversal of the earth’s magnetic field. There is no such planetary alignment on winter solstice, 2012, and even if all the planets did align in this fashion, it would not cause such a reversal of the Earth’s magnetic field. There have been numerous planetary alignments and they have had no effect on the Earth.”  Griffith Observatory at:  2012.html

“Several prominent individuals representing Maya of Guatemala decried the suggestion that the world ends on b’ak’tun 13. Ricardo Cajas, president of the Colectivo de Organizaciones Indígenas de Guatemala, said the date did not represent an end of humanity or fulfillment of the catastrophic prophecies found in the Maya Chilam Balam, but that the new cycle “supposes changes in human consciousness.” Martín Sacalxot of Procurador de los Derechos Humanos (Guatemala’s Human Rights Ombudsman, PDH) said that end of the calendar has nothing to do with the end of the world or the year 2012.” Wikipedia Main_Page

More information on 2012 at: http://www.december212012.com/articles/mayan/2012_From_the_Mayan_Elders_Themselves.htm 


Amazon Kindle 2 | Review by Lance Ulanoff

The amazon kindle 2, a fair review.

by Lance Ulanoff  Editor in Chief, PC Magazine 

I want a Kindle 2. In fact, I’ve wanted a Kindle for almost a year now. The fever reached its height right around the holidays when I thought I’d buy my wife one. My attempts failed, but my techno lust for the device did not. When I heard about the new Amazon Kindle 2, I tried to ignore it. I was still smarting from Amazon’s rejection. Of course, in the days leading up to the Amazon Kindle 2 announcement, you couldn’t turn a virtual corner without stumbling over leaked information about the second-generation e-book reader.

Now, sitting at my desk after my first lengthy encounter with the new device, I realize just how much I want a Kindle 2, and you should, too. No, I’m not blind to the issues surrounding this product and the technology it uses. I still want it. To be fair, let’s look at all that’s good, bad, and ugly in this elemental, 21st-century device:

  1. It’s too expensive. In talking to friends and followers on Twitter I found that more than one would prefer a sub-$299 e-book reader. One even suggested a price of $199 (in yer dreams, buddy). Sony’s starts at $299 and it has a touch screen. I’m not sure why Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos insists on selling the Kindle for $359. Perhaps the funniest part of the press conference (which was pretty short on laughs) was when Bezos said that Amazon had a deal for Kindle 1 owners: If they ordered within the next 24 hours, they could jump to the front of the queue. There’s no discount or even an upgrade price, just the privilege of spending $359 a little bit faster. Gee, how thoughtful. Thing is, the Kindle really isn’t too expensive. Have you looked at the price of books lately? I’m talking about new books and best sellers. They’re still pretty expensive at Barnes and Noble. Even on Amazon, you’ll pay $15.39 for the Malcom Gladwell bestseller Outliers. Most e-books are $9.99 or less.
  2. Where’s the color? For now, commercial e-ink is still limited to gray scale. Amazon did bump up the technology from 4 to 16 shades of gray, which makes the photos a lot more detailed, but no amount of gray can turn a black and white face into flesh.
  3. The five-way joy stick is simply replacing one bad navigation metaphor (the scroll wheel) with another. I tried out the five-way navigation (it’s like what you find on some smartphones) and found it pretty intuitive though not perfect. The joystick felt a bit stiff under my thumb and because of the idiosyncrasies of e-ink, it’s not always obvious where you are on the screen. I wasn’t sure, but there also seemed to be a momentary delay between moving the joystick and the screen highlighting the next item. I actually wish Amazon would replace the joystick with something like a BlackBerry track ball (or glowing pearls).
  4. It only does one thing. One Twitter follower called the Kindle 2 “monotasking hardware.” I don’t mind single-purpose gadgets. My favorite digital camera really only does one thing very well. Yes, I also like the point and shoots that add video, but ultimately, I want a good camera that can help me take excellent photos. Video recording is just a nice extra. Plus, the benefits of the Kindle 2’s do-one-thing status—even at $359—are pretty significant. You’re not sharing storage for all kinds of content, so you can store 1,500 books on it. You’re not multitasking (watching for calls, downloading maps, mashing in GPS, etc.), so the hardware can apply all its processing power to your reading activities. The network, which is free to use, is dedicated to helping you download more content. If you finish a book, you simply download another one (as long as you’re within 3G wireless access, which you usually are). Also, the Amazon Kindle 2 may have one broad purpose—reading—but it lets you read a number of different content formats: books, newspapers, magazines, and blogs.
  5. It doesn’t always tell you what it’s doing. The Kindle 2 is easy to use. During the presentation, Bezos showed a video where one beta user said he never read manuals (who does?), and he had no trouble using the Kindle 2. I agree, for the most part. However, I did notice that the Kindle never tells you what it’s doing. When I selected the new Text-to-Speech feature, I waited about 20 seconds for the computer-generated speech to start. In that time, there was no visual indication of what the Kindle 2 was doing. I kept flipping over the device, and pressing my ear to the stereo speakers to see if maybe I just couldn’t hear it. When the speech abruptly started, it almost blew my ear out. If Amazon really wants to replace books with Kindles, there should be no surprises.
  6. It’s still too slow. Amazon sped up the Kindle 2’s page turning by 20 percent. I noticed the difference. The screen flash—a function of the e-ink refresh—was much faster than in the previous version. But, it’s still a bit slower than I would like. Plus, loading books and navigating menus was, in my opinion, at times too slow.
  7. It’s too fragile. This is a tough one. Nothing can replace the durability of a good-old-fashioned book. You can drop it, kick it, soak it (but not burn or tear it), and it will still be readable. The Amazon Kindle 2 is a complex piece of technology. Yet, it doesn’t feel flimsy at all. The screen is, of course, the primary concern, and I can understand that. I jam a lot of books and magazines into my backpack, along with my laptop. There’s a lot of pressure in there. Could a Kindle 2 hold up to that? I don’t know. However, if I had a Kindle 2, I’d be carrying half as many magazines and books. Problem solved.
  8. I can already read books on my laptop and iPhone. True. In fact, this past weekend I downloaded a $0.99 novella to my son’s iPod touch. The iPod book reader has gesture-based page turning and is pretty easy to read. However, it really doesn’t fit enough text on the page and I could feel my eyes strain as I stared too intently at that backlit screen. Likewise, I stare at a computer monitor all day. I really want my leisure reading to be far less visually stressful.
  9. Why no touch screen? As I held the Amazon Kindle 2, I had to fight the impulse to touch the screen and navigate and turn pages with gestures. This, too, is something the Sony Reader offers, as does, as noted, the iPod touch and iPhone. While my hope is that Amazon will address this shortcoming in the Kindle 3, this isn’t a deal killer. The Kindle 2 provides ample hardware controls on both sides of the screen—you can operate it right- or left handed (usually with just one hand).
  10. E-books will kill books, publishing, and reading. Bezos’s presentation featured testimonials from Kindle 2 users, saying that they read now more than ever. I buy this. I often leave heavy books and past issues of my favorite magazine (The New Yorker) at home because I simply can’t carry all of them. Plus, I only read what I have on hand. In addition, I tend to end up in the same sections at Barnes and Noble, buying the same kinds of books over and over. I can imagine that the Kindle, with its instant access to a vast number of books (over 230,000) would expand my reading horizons. As for the Kindle killing books or publishing, I think I have to side with author Stephen King (who gave a reading of his new Kindle-inspired novella at the event). He said, “E-books and books are not in conflict. They’re like peanut butter and chocolate. When you put them together, you have a whole new taste.

So, yes, there are many reasons to dislike the Amazon Kindle 2, but as I see it, the benefits still far outweigh the disadvantages. Trust me, you’re going to want a Kindle 2.

See Amazon Kindle 2 at: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00154JDAI?tag=thenet-20

eHow | How To Do Just About Everything

I found a really interesting site for my readers to explore. Not only it has articles on how to do just about anything, but you can also make money writing the articles. I have not started writing for them yet, but what I have found about them is positive so far. Your feedback is welcome!
This is their address: www.ehow.com  

“Dance like no one is watching, Love like you’ll never be hurt, Sing like no one is listening, Live like it’s heaven on earth. ” — William Purkey

Twitter | Is it a Fad?

Spammers abound in most social networks and Twitter is no different. Only a few of my contacts actually communicates.  Should I stay or should I go? I found an interesting article about Twitter and here is an excerpt. To see the whole article go to www.computoredge.com  

Should I Stay or Should I Go?

“Some call Twitter a “fad,” and it’s uncertain how the model can turn a profit. An April 2009 Nielsen report, “Twitter Quitters,” found that “more than 60 percent of U.S. Twitter users fail to return the following month.” In a June 10, 2009 blog post, Nine Inch Nails lead singer Trent Reznor announced that he’s “out” of the social networking game. Reznor said that the noise outweighs the benefits. Since that post, Reznor continues to contribute, but no longer accepts RTs (return tweets).

While there is some obvious fall-off, Neeman said that the audience is there, and the high amount of active users proves it. “If the audience is well read, technologically savvy and connected to the social media,” Neeman said, “Twitter is great.”

While there may be some changes in store for Twitter, Toliver thinks the concept will remain. “All these sites will evolve. I don’t think there’s any going back, though,” Toliver said. “Now that it’s here, we’re all too curious to see what other people are doing at any given time. I know several people who admit to being addicted.””

Texas Rattlesnake | A Picture | Amarillo TX

 

imagesWhen I worked at the Sycamore Ranch in New Mexico. I had to relocate a rattlesnake once. And it is really an easy job; you just scoop them up with a hand net.  It is also safe if you are careful.  But they grow big in Texas. I don’t know how I would have relocated this one: ( 9 Feet, 1 inch, 97 pounds)

 

They are supposed to be a good source of protein.

Recipe below

DEEP-FRIED RATTLESNAKE1 medium-sized rattlesnake (3-4 lbs.), cut into steaks
1/2 cup flour
1/4 cup cornmeal
1/4 cup cracker crumbs
1/2 cup milk
1 egg
1/4 teaspoon garlic powder (not garlic salt)
1 teaspoon salt
dash pepperMix dry ingredients. Whisk milk into beaten egg and use to dip snake steaks.
Then coat them with dry ingredients. Fry, uncovered, in 400 degree oil until brown.
 

This net is all you need (to relocate)
 Magnum_Net_sm

Clarification

Claim: Photograph above shows a 9-foot rattlesnake caught in Texas. (9 feet,
1 inch – 97 lbs.)
Status:   Undetermined.
The proportions seem impossible. A nine foot snake weighing 97 pound would be ten pounds per foot and the appearance of the snake in the picture doesn’t seem to be that hefty. It also seems unlikely that the pole could support the weight and the man holding it could hoist 97 pounds so casually.
After some further investigation I found a page from a zoo that gives a formula for the length-weight relationship of rattlesnakes which states that a seven foot wild rattler would weigh about 15 pounds and an eight-foot snake would weigh 23 pounds. According to this formula nine-foot snake could not possibly weigh 97 pounds. Posted by google answers –czh-ga

Anyway, it is still quite a rattlesnake.

 
“Things turn out the best for the people who make the best of the way things turn out.”–John Wooden

 

For Whom the Bell Tolls | John Donne | W.J. Rayment

Everything is interconnected!

“No man is an island, entire of itself. Every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friends or of thine own were. Any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.”–John Donne

“As a product of the Renaissance, Donne was filled with certain ideals and the passage he wrote in “Meditation XVII” reflects this. He believed that all people were connected by community bonds as well as spiritual bonds. Every event in the life of one man had some influence on the life of all others. The very influence Donne had on authors that came after him is some evidence of the truth of his axiom”.

“When Donne writes of the tolling bell, he is, of course, speaking of the funeral bell. It was traditionally rung three times for a man and two times for a woman followed by a pause and then a toll for every year of age for the deceased. It is a solemn sounding bell as can easily be discerned from the descriptive poetry of Poe’s”

“Ultimately, the point of Donne’s “Meditation XVII” is more uplifting. Even though we all die a bit when someone else dies, the interconnectedness of humanity means that some part of us lives on even after we die”.

Excerpts from: For Whom the Bell Tolls

By W.J. Rayment

We are parts of the Whole. Our ‘individuality’ is just a projection, an interpretation.

Mother’s Day | Gift Ideas | Anderson Cooper

There are really great suggestions in this video for a mother’s day gift. Enjoy!