I met my son and grandson at my dad's grave yesterday.
While I was waiting for them, I wandered around the Veteran’s Memorial
Garden, reading their headstones with names, ranks, branch of service.
Son wanted me to relate to grandson and he some of the war experiences my dad had related to me.
There weren't many.
He'd been at Normandy and the Bulge, but he didn't have much to say about it.
He'd been blown out of a tree stringing telephone wire across it.
He was in communications because, starting out as a truck driver, he
couldn't adapt to driving on the wrong side of the road in England.
He'd string wire for the forward observers ahead of the front lines,
only to have the front lines catch up to and pass him while he was still
stringing wire!
Afterwards we went to a friend's house and did some target shooting.
I pulled my Kahr out of my pocket, stood 30 feet from a white post-it on the target and with left hand on hip fired off-hand, hitting it dead center. And missed the whole thing each successive shot.
Lot of fun was had.
There was an orange golf ball there and I hit it with the iron sights on my WASR-10 (AK) first shot.
I pulled the magazine out and realized that I couldn't clear the last shot as the extractor wouldn't let it go, but the ejector couldn't flip it up to eject it without the bullet tip hitting the top of the receiver!
Finally decided to just shoot it.
Hit the orange golf ball again.
I love that gun.
My son had his Sig 556 and we enjoyed shooting that also, once we figured that the front sight could be flipped up so that it could be aligned with the rear 100 yard peep sight for close in shooting.
Glock 40, Ruger .357 Security Six, Smith and Wesson M&P from the '40s in .38 special.
Nice to have permission to go back any time we want.
God is good (not allah akbar).
Later Scherie and I met them and our daughter-in-law that evening at Haabs for dinner.
I had the "Picnic Special", some ribs, chicken, coleslaw and beans.
Then the waitress brought out the plate with what looked to be ants on it, because no picnic would be complete without ants.
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Monday, May 13, 2013
Sunday, May 12, 2013
So What?
Democrats are claiming that Republicans are using the Benghazi hearings for political reasons.
That they are an attempt to derail Hillary in 2016.
They say that like that's a bad thing.
Given what we know about her actions so far, why would she be, in any way, qualified for the Presidency?
Ignoring Obama's lowering of the standard.
But there is, of course, the fact that the Democrats would never use anything like this for political purposes.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.
I crack me up.
That they are an attempt to derail Hillary in 2016.
They say that like that's a bad thing.
Given what we know about her actions so far, why would she be, in any way, qualified for the Presidency?
Ignoring Obama's lowering of the standard.
But there is, of course, the fact that the Democrats would never use anything like this for political purposes.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.
I crack me up.
Saturday, May 11, 2013
The Post I Wrote a Prologue To
Man, I've been so exhausted lately from long hours at work (those projects are successfully implemented now) and repair work around the house.
That and playing with the new toy Scherie bought me, a 7" Samsung Android Tablet.
Not as intuitive as I thought it would be.
Well: the rest of the story about Toronto, before it gets so long ago, I don't remember it.
We got up that morning to the sound of a pile driver (Jess, you have an alibi?) outside the building.
We went out on the balcony, and surrounding us, in every direction, was building construction!
Somebody's economy is booming.
Our son drove me to the building my class would be in and then went back to get his mom for their day of adventure.
Entering the classroom I was greeted by the instructor, a gentleman of Romanian background. He is the laser safety officer for University of Toronto and very knowledgeable.
Our class was of about twenty. I was the only member without a four year degree minimum.
Most of these students were of foreign (to North America) extraction, so they were representative of the student population as I saw it on the street.
They were post graduate and doctoral students using lasers in very esoteric applications.
The thrust of the course was to protect users from "open" research laser uses.
I've been using lasers for years, but always in a safety enclosure.
Only infrequently have I needed to be in a room or enclosure with exposed laser radiation for troubleshooting purposes.
We were taken to the lab of the instructor (if you read the link to his bio, you'd see that he's more than an "instructor"), an open table top with mirrors and lenses and the opportunity to accidentally deflect a beam to a sensitive tissue, the most sensitive of which is the eye.
We talked a lot about the eye, it's composition and the frequencies it's sensitive to.
We had a diagram projected that showed the makeup of the eye.
The fabulous, remarkable, amazing design of the eye.
Design.
Folks, I don't want to insult you, but if you were to look at the eye and how it works, unless you were heavily invested in denying the existence of a Creator, you would say Design.
The cornea, the pupil, the iris, the vitreous fluid, the rods and the cones.
The optical nerve which some say is really an extension of the brain.
Even the instructor commented that many would look at it and say what a marvelous design it was. Realizing of course what that implied, he then remarked that many would say a Creator did a fine job.
He then said that an evolutionist would of course say that things came together very well.
He then elaborated on how evolution of the eye might have occurred, given that it is so well suited to our environment (the spectrum of sunlight in particular).
I raised my hand and he acknowledged it, whereupon I said that when Darwin saw a sea creature that was photo-sensitive, he wrote that it would be the evolutionary pre-cursor to the eye.
In Darwin's Black Box by Michael Behe, Mr. Behe points out the complexity of the eye, something unknown to Darwin, or he may never would have made that observation.
Some of the students looked like they had never heard such a thing and looked curious.
I had not made a religious statement, just one of fact, a fact they were presumably unaware of.
Later, the concept that the eye was an adjunct of the brain was mentioned.
The instructor said that the eye was only a sensor and that the brain did all the interpretation of data. There are people who have had some brain damage and could no longer detect stair treads because they only saw them as lines, not steps.
Once again, I raised my hand and he acknowledged it.
I said that along those lines, there was a story in the Bible where Jesus was asked to heal a blind man, and the blind man said "I see men as trees, walking".
Jesus then prays for him again, and it appears Jesus got it right the second time.
Or so thought men for years.
It turns out that Jesus healed the sensors the first time, and the brain, the second.
In other words, science has shown us since that the eyes might work, but the brain can't always process what it sees.
A friend of mine's daughter showed an article about this to me a few years ago that astounded me, and clarified that Bible verse for me. Read it, it's short.
The other students actually turned, looked at me as if they'd never heard such a thing and some smiled, not derisively, but as if they'd heard something in a new light.
And the instructor was cool with that, as I'd only reinforced his point.
We had a test at the end of the day, some math, some principles, and I must have passed, or they wouldn't have sent me a certificate later.
Our son and Scherie came and got me and we crawled along for an hour in city rush hour traffic.
They told me about their day and experiences and the wonderful time they had together.
We had dinner at a McD's on the way home and arrived about 11 pm.
When we crossed the border, the US Border guy asked some questions, and then some more and then some more and finally, I got it, and I volunteered that our son had a different last name because he's my step-son.
The officer smiled, gave me our passports and welcomed us back.
At least I learned a lesson going into Canada and used it coming back.
So that's it.
A couple comments unrelated to this story.
It took me three hours to compose this post to my satisfaction.
I had to pull out my old laptop to do it.
Posting on a 7" pad is very limiting.
Have a great weekend, I'll see you at your blogs.
That and playing with the new toy Scherie bought me, a 7" Samsung Android Tablet.
Not as intuitive as I thought it would be.
Well: the rest of the story about Toronto, before it gets so long ago, I don't remember it.
We got up that morning to the sound of a pile driver (Jess, you have an alibi?) outside the building.
We went out on the balcony, and surrounding us, in every direction, was building construction!
Somebody's economy is booming.
Our son drove me to the building my class would be in and then went back to get his mom for their day of adventure.
Entering the classroom I was greeted by the instructor, a gentleman of Romanian background. He is the laser safety officer for University of Toronto and very knowledgeable.
Our class was of about twenty. I was the only member without a four year degree minimum.
Most of these students were of foreign (to North America) extraction, so they were representative of the student population as I saw it on the street.
They were post graduate and doctoral students using lasers in very esoteric applications.
The thrust of the course was to protect users from "open" research laser uses.
I've been using lasers for years, but always in a safety enclosure.
Only infrequently have I needed to be in a room or enclosure with exposed laser radiation for troubleshooting purposes.
We were taken to the lab of the instructor (if you read the link to his bio, you'd see that he's more than an "instructor"), an open table top with mirrors and lenses and the opportunity to accidentally deflect a beam to a sensitive tissue, the most sensitive of which is the eye.
We talked a lot about the eye, it's composition and the frequencies it's sensitive to.
We had a diagram projected that showed the makeup of the eye.
The fabulous, remarkable, amazing design of the eye.
Design.
Folks, I don't want to insult you, but if you were to look at the eye and how it works, unless you were heavily invested in denying the existence of a Creator, you would say Design.
The cornea, the pupil, the iris, the vitreous fluid, the rods and the cones.
The optical nerve which some say is really an extension of the brain.
Even the instructor commented that many would look at it and say what a marvelous design it was. Realizing of course what that implied, he then remarked that many would say a Creator did a fine job.
He then said that an evolutionist would of course say that things came together very well.
He then elaborated on how evolution of the eye might have occurred, given that it is so well suited to our environment (the spectrum of sunlight in particular).
I raised my hand and he acknowledged it, whereupon I said that when Darwin saw a sea creature that was photo-sensitive, he wrote that it would be the evolutionary pre-cursor to the eye.
In Darwin's Black Box by Michael Behe, Mr. Behe points out the complexity of the eye, something unknown to Darwin, or he may never would have made that observation.
Some of the students looked like they had never heard such a thing and looked curious.
I had not made a religious statement, just one of fact, a fact they were presumably unaware of.
Later, the concept that the eye was an adjunct of the brain was mentioned.
The instructor said that the eye was only a sensor and that the brain did all the interpretation of data. There are people who have had some brain damage and could no longer detect stair treads because they only saw them as lines, not steps.
Once again, I raised my hand and he acknowledged it.
I said that along those lines, there was a story in the Bible where Jesus was asked to heal a blind man, and the blind man said "I see men as trees, walking".
Jesus then prays for him again, and it appears Jesus got it right the second time.
Or so thought men for years.
It turns out that Jesus healed the sensors the first time, and the brain, the second.
In other words, science has shown us since that the eyes might work, but the brain can't always process what it sees.
A friend of mine's daughter showed an article about this to me a few years ago that astounded me, and clarified that Bible verse for me. Read it, it's short.
The other students actually turned, looked at me as if they'd never heard such a thing and some smiled, not derisively, but as if they'd heard something in a new light.
And the instructor was cool with that, as I'd only reinforced his point.
We had a test at the end of the day, some math, some principles, and I must have passed, or they wouldn't have sent me a certificate later.
Our son and Scherie came and got me and we crawled along for an hour in city rush hour traffic.
They told me about their day and experiences and the wonderful time they had together.
We had dinner at a McD's on the way home and arrived about 11 pm.
When we crossed the border, the US Border guy asked some questions, and then some more and then some more and finally, I got it, and I volunteered that our son had a different last name because he's my step-son.
The officer smiled, gave me our passports and welcomed us back.
At least I learned a lesson going into Canada and used it coming back.
So that's it.
A couple comments unrelated to this story.
It took me three hours to compose this post to my satisfaction.
I had to pull out my old laptop to do it.
Posting on a 7" pad is very limiting.
Have a great weekend, I'll see you at your blogs.
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