May 21, 2012
Taken with instagram

Taken with instagram

May 19, 2012
Old Centreville Cemetery, Slippery Rock, Pa.

Old Centreville Cemetery, Slippery Rock, Pa.

May 10, 2012
arcaneimages:

wonka truth

True, sadly. We’re in no position to be offended about the banning of Christmas trees when we’re trying to take away an entire group’s right to be happy.

arcaneimages:

wonka truth

True, sadly. We’re in no position to be offended about the banning of Christmas trees when we’re trying to take away an entire group’s right to be happy.

(Source: lmaoatheist, via soupsoup)

May 10, 2012

gjmueller:

9 Dangerous Things You Were Taught In School

(via theatlantic)

May 10, 2012
theatlantic:

‘Lucy’ Obama and His ‘Charlie Brown’ Progressives

Lucy just had one Charlie Brown. Obama has a whole roster of would-be kickers, and a habit of teeing up the ball only to callously pull it away.Don’t progressives see this?
Obama tricked the cannabis community into thinking his Justice Department would go easy on medical marijuana in states where it is legal, broke his promise, then misled voters about his options.
Obama tricked anti-war voters into thinking that he wouldn’t order American troops into battle unless there was an imminent threat to America or a declaration of war from Congress, then went to war in Libya, violating the War Powers Resolution, even though neither condition was met.
Obama tricked transparency advocates into thinking he’d celebrate whistleblowers and set new standards in open government. He has prosecuted whistleblowers as aggressively as any president in history, and presided over a dramatic escalation in what the federal government does in secret.
Obama tricked executive-power critics into thinking he would roll back the excesses of the Bush Administration. He has transformed those excesses into matters of bipartisan consensus, and gone farther in some respects, as when an American citizen was killed extra-judicially on his order. 
Obama tricked immigration-reform advocates into thinking he was a fellow traveler, then upset them with Secure Communities, record-breaking deportation levels, and a failure to improve immigration detention.
Obama tricked Iraq War opponents into thinking that he would exit the country by the withdrawal date that George W. Bush negotiated. The Iraqi government wouldn’t let him keep troops in the country beyond that date, although he tried to break his promise. Now the Obama Administration pays a small army of private-security contractors to protect America’s presence in that country.
Obama tricked critics of indefinite detention into thinking that he abhorred the practice, only to sign a bill that institutionalized it. 
Obama tricked critics of signing statements into thinking he wouldn’t issue them. But he’s done so on many occasions.
Obama tricked critics of the state-secrets privilege into thinking he’d reverse Bush-era uses of the tactic. Instead he’s continued it.
This isn’t an exhaustive list, but these examples are sufficient to draw a conclusion: Progressives shouldn’t trust what Obama says, or what they think he believes. They should judge his actions. It’s the only way to distinguish between promises he aims to keep and things he’s said to mislead small constituencies into thinking he’ll do more for them than is justified by reality. 
[Images: Charles Schultz/Reuters, edited by David A. Graham]

theatlantic:

‘Lucy’ Obama and His ‘Charlie Brown’ Progressives

Lucy just had one Charlie Brown. Obama has a whole roster of would-be kickers, and a habit of teeing up the ball only to callously pull it away.

Don’t progressives see this?

  • Obama tricked the cannabis community into thinking his Justice Department would go easy on medical marijuana in states where it is legal, broke his promise, then misled voters about his options.
  • Obama tricked anti-war voters into thinking that he wouldn’t order American troops into battle unless there was an imminent threat to America or a declaration of war from Congress, then went to war in Libya, violating the War Powers Resolution, even though neither condition was met.
  • Obama tricked transparency advocates into thinking he’d celebrate whistleblowers and set new standards in open government. He has prosecuted whistleblowers as aggressively as any president in history, and presided over a dramatic escalation in what the federal government does in secret.
  • Obama tricked executive-power critics into thinking he would roll back the excesses of the Bush Administration. He has transformed those excesses into matters of bipartisan consensus, and gone farther in some respects, as when an American citizen was killed extra-judicially on his order. 
  • Obama tricked immigration-reform advocates into thinking he was a fellow traveler, then upset them with Secure Communities, record-breaking deportation levels, and a failure to improve immigration detention.
  • Obama tricked Iraq War opponents into thinking that he would exit the country by the withdrawal date that George W. Bush negotiated. The Iraqi government wouldn’t let him keep troops in the country beyond that date, although he tried to break his promise. Now the Obama Administration pays a small army of private-security contractors to protect America’s presence in that country.
  • Obama tricked critics of indefinite detention into thinking that he abhorred the practice, only to sign a bill that institutionalized it. 
  • Obama tricked critics of signing statements into thinking he wouldn’t issue them. But he’s done so on many occasions.
  • Obama tricked critics of the state-secrets privilege into thinking he’d reverse Bush-era uses of the tactic. Instead he’s continued it.

This isn’t an exhaustive list, but these examples are sufficient to draw a conclusion: Progressives shouldn’t trust what Obama says, or what they think he believes. They should judge his actions. It’s the only way to distinguish between promises he aims to keep and things he’s said to mislead small constituencies into thinking he’ll do more for them than is justified by reality. 

[Images: Charles Schultz/Reuters, edited by David A. Graham]

May 10, 2012
"So the question, does God heal? can only be asked alongside the question, does God save? And these are the answers. Does God heal me? Sometimes. Does God save me? Always. Always. Always."

— Sam Wells, Be Not Afraid (via invisibleforeigner)

(via invisibleforeigner)

May 10, 2012
"If you believe this ‘Saul on the road to Damascus story,’ then you are a less skeptical person than I am. Obama is a principled man, but he is also a calculating and opportunistic politician…"

John Cassidy on Obama’s change of course on gay marriage (via newyorker)

May 10, 2012
"What should strike us is Jesus’ initial refusal [in John 9] to make the blind man’s condition a proof of anything - divine justice or injustice, human sin or innocence. We who call ourselves Christians have every reason to say no to any system that uses suffering to prove things: to prove the sufferer’s guilt as a sinner being punishes, or - perhaps more frequently in our world - to prove the sufferer’s innocence as a martyr whose heroism must never be forgotten or betrayed. If this man’s condition is to have a symbolic value - and in some sense it clearly does in the text - it is as the place where a communication from God occurs - the opening up of something that is not part of the competing systems operated by human beings."

— Rowan Williams, Writing In the Dust (via invisibleforeigner)

(via invisibleforeigner)

April 22, 2012
‘They’re killing us’: world’s most endangered tribe cries for help
Gethin Chamberlain, guardian.co.uk
Logging companies keen to exploit Brazil’s rainforest have been accused by human rights organisations of using gunmen to wipe out the Awá, a tribe of just 355. Survival International, with backing from Colin Firth, is campaigning to stop what a ju…

‘They’re killing us’: world’s most endangered tribe cries for help
Gethin Chamberlain, guardian.co.uk

Logging companies keen to exploit Brazil’s rainforest have been accused by human rights organisations of using gunmen to wipe out the Awá, a tribe of just 355. Survival International, with backing from Colin Firth, is campaigning to stop what a ju…

April 17, 2012
America’s best North-South roads
Ryan Ver Berkmoes, lonelyplanet.com
Go west, young man! This his­toric cliché still res­onates when it comes to road trips. But whether it’s bomb­ing to the Bay Area along the often dull-as-dirt I-80 or try­ing to find traces of icon­ic Route 66 amid a tan­gle of bland Inter­states,…

I would love to travel every one of these.

America’s best North-South roads
Ryan Ver Berkmoes, lonelyplanet.com

Go west, young man! This his­toric cliché still res­onates when it comes to road trips. But whether it’s bomb­ing to the Bay Area along the often dull-as-dirt I-80 or try­ing to find traces of icon­ic Route 66 amid a tan­gle of bland Inter­states,…

I would love to travel every one of these.

April 14, 2012
Column: Where Titanic failed, American vessel stood tall

usatoday.com

Susan Gibbs: On this 100th anniver­sary of the sink­ing of the liner, it’s worth remem­ber­ing the SS Unit­ed States with­stood test of time.

April 9, 2012
theatlantic:

Barack Obama Reading Where the Wild Things Are: Now in GIF Form
(via theatlanticvideo)

theatlantic:

Barack Obama Reading Where the Wild Things Are: Now in GIF Form

(via theatlanticvideo)

March 27, 2012

thepittsburghhistoryjournal:

Abie Abraham (July 31, 1913 - March 22, 2012): World War II P.O.W., author and Purple Heart recipient (via

Obituary in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

After surviving disease, starvation and brutal violence during the Bataan Death March and the years of confinement as a Japanese prisoner of war that followed, one might think retired U.S. Army Sgt. Abie Abraham had earned the right to rest.

Instead, Mr. Abraham spent the rest of his long life — until he became too sick at age 96 to continue — working to improve the lives of others, from the families of American soldiers lying in unmarked graves in the Philippines, to would-have-been juvenile delinquents bound for George Junior Republic back home in Butler County, to veterans of his war and others at the Butler Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

“He was a good man, and his story should be told — he touched a lot of lives, not only when he was a soldier, but also helping people at the VA and at George Junior,” said his wife, Christine Abraham, of Renfrew, Butler County. “Whenever he saw a need, he tried to help.”

Mr. Abraham died Thursday after a long illness at the VA hospital where he had, in healthier days, served the hospital’s greatest amount of volunteer time ever: 36,851 hours accumulated over 23 years. He was 98.

Mr. Abraham was born July 31, 1913 in Lyndora, the son of the late Elias and Esther Thomson Abraham. The third of the Abrahams’ 11 children, Abie Abraham completed just two years at Butler High School — but as a young teenager already had earned a place in the Guinness World Records book for sitting in a tree in Alameda Park for 3 1/2 months, his wife said.

In 1932, Mr. Abraham enlisted in the Navy in 1932, followed by the Army in 1934. He was stationed in the Philippines with his first wife, Felicidad, and their three young daughters in 1941 when the Japanese attacked the Bataan Peninsula, beginning a three-month siege that cut supply lines of food, medicine and ammunition to the American and Philippine soldiers. (more

March 23, 2012
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

johnkelso:

This is a horribly recorded sample of some singing out of Lloyds Hymnal at Big Creek Primitive Baptist Church in Blackshear, Georgia last Sunday. It was recorded on my cell phone that was tucked between my legs. Even with the rough quality, it’s one of the sweetest sounds I’ve ever heard.

This gave me chills the whole time and I don’t even know the words they were singing. There’s something special about this kind of music.

March 23, 2012
Today, I’ve realized the chaos money can cause in a life.

There’s a very large chance I could be forced to go to college 4 hours away in a place I don’t really want to go, just because it is the one place I can afford it.

But what costs more? The price of being where I want to be, with the one I’ve loved for years? Or the price of losing her and being far away from the place I’ve loved for so long?

In other words, help me out, please, Allegheny. I have faith something will work out.

Liked posts on Tumblr: More liked posts »