BuelahMan’s Redstate Revolt

A Redneck’s Guide To Reversing The Corptocracy Brainwashing

Archive for October 3rd, 2008

The last 48 hours–

Posted by Lynda on October 3, 2008

I’m not the first to say it, but who can contest the opinion that Sarah Palin is completely ill-equipped to be vice president of the United States. I wonder if she has ever spent time thinking about, or even reading about, any important national or international issues. Some think it is sexism that has encouraged the McCain camp to keep her under wraps, but more and more are realizing, Democrat and Republican alike, she’s not the person for the job. Sen. McCain you have frequently stated that you always put your country ahead of everything else. In this case, that is simply untrue.
We’ve seen how influential the Vice President can be; one has only to look to the past 8 years to know that.
Thursday evening in the nationally broadcast, prime-time debate, between the Vice Presidential choices, we met a woman who has been schooled and prepped these past few days, at the McCain estate in Sedona, on how to answer any and every question thrown her way. Or at least, smile, wink and just answer another question she knew the answer to.
What if they sincerely and pressingly questioned her about any of the many hugely complex issues facing this nation, which will likely be of prime concern for years?
Immigration, Social Security, Health-care costs and more. I noticed Biden just seemed to decide to hang-in at the rate and pace offered. Anything else– like answering with the opinions and knowledge he does have regarding what is going on within our countries government and also exactly how ‘John’ did vote–; would be mistaken my ‘Palin’ praisers as hurtful or something ridiculous. I agree with Newsweek’s Fareed Zacaria when he wrote “…for John McCain to have chosen this person to be his running mate is fundamentally irresponsible”.
Amen.

I’ve had the good fortune to read an interview by Professor Joseph E.Stiglitz., the Columbia University economist. It was shortly after his being awarded the Nobel Prize in economics in 2001. He also served as Chairman of President Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisors. He was able to get complex ideas across clearly, coherently and well enough for a simple soul like myself to understand. He made sense then and is doing so in his comments about the rescue package, bail out of the failings on Wall Street and Main Street. He wrote this morning, “The bailout package the House defeated on Monday was far better than the one originally proposed by the Bush administration. In many respects the rescue plan was better than nothing, and perhaps with a little extra time, our leader can tailor a plan to focus more on our economy than on Wall Street”. That’s easy to agree with. Most economists believe that the 700 billion dollar bailout could be focused more effectively to benefit America’s economy, America’s taxpayers, America’s workers and America’s homeowners. Stiglitz goes on to say “How all this plays out will depend on how the bill will be implemented: The devil is in the details – assuming that most of these same elements will be included in the compromise are left to an administration whose policies lead to the crisis.”So– The bail Out is passed and signed off on; and the vast majority of Americans have no real clue as to how this will impact them– much less what was given up– and given into.

I am confident the middle class is going to pay for a lifetime of someone elses greed.

Posted in 2008 Presidential Election, Accountability, Responsibility & Answerability, B'Man's Crooked Election Watch, B'Man's Hypocrite Watch, B'Man's Patriot Watch, Barack Obama, Big Money, Blogs: Information, Politics and Humor, John McCain, ReTHUGlican, Sarah Palin, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

Did a pin drop!??

Posted by Lynda on October 3, 2008

 

… and Palin wanted Biden to get the quote correct ” Drill baby, Drill”… .

Posted in Accountability, Responsibility & Answerability, Barack Obama, Big Money, Big Oil, Blogs: Information, Politics and Humor, BuelahFamily & BuelahFriends, Bush, Corruption, Demublican/Repubocrat Party, Election Reform, Global Warming, Health Insurance, John McCain, Lynda, ReTHUGlican, Sarah Palin, Video | 1 Comment »

Freaky Sex Friday: Sarah Palin’s XXX Rated Video

Posted by BuelahMan on October 3, 2008

Say What?

Sarah Palin subject of Flynt porno film

October 03, 2008 • 4:11 pm
By Diana Fasanella

Hustler founder Larry Flynt has finished filming an X-rated film about VP candidate Sarah Palin, with a stand-in look-alike, according to the New York Daily News.

Flynt’s team posted an advertisement on Craigslist days after Palin accepted the Republican nomination last month that read: “Looking for a Sarah Palin look-alike for an adult film to be shot in the next 10 days.”

The unidentified actress who got the job was paid $3,000 for the part.

A spokesman for Flynt confirmed that the film had been shot, but would not reveal the title. Various titles have been suggested by bloggers, including “Northern XXXposure” and “Riding Pipeline.”

Thinking cap, don’t fail me now …

“Caribou Barbie bucks the system”

Posted in Freaky Sex Friday, Humor, Sarah Palin | Tagged: , , , | 4 Comments »

Rep Marsha Blackburn Votes Against Wall Street Bailout Package

Posted by BuelahMan on October 3, 2008

I don’t have many good things to say about Mrs Blackburn (we don’t see eye to eye on many issues). But I would be remiss if I were not to express thanks for her vote against the bail out today.

I do have problems with her adoration of Senator McCain since he voted FOR a similar resolution in the Senate, then she says, “Still, I believe that Wall Street has gotten away with armed robbery. They put a gun to the economy’s head and told us that unless we forked over $700 billion, they would shoot.”

If this is the case, it should be paramount that warrants be issued for these culprits and a major change be made to the system to stop it. I have written and linked to various articles that I believe prove that this bail-out will usher in an even bigger problem and so, when the real problems begin, the dollar will be worthless.

The hope is that somehow we can weather along enough to keep us fat, dumb and happy for a while.

But what if the more sinister thing is happening? What if they are purposefully driving down the dollar to break it and come back with a new currency? What if?

So, Mrs Blackburn, thank you so much for standing up for us. But please do not let it end here. Take this initiative (which I believe will held solidify your stance in SW TN) and fix the problem. Join in with Democratic representatives like DeFazio, Sherman and Kucinich, who are presenting real solutions for those of us poor folks who are suffering so much.

Representative Blackburn’s message about the bill posted today on her website:

Washington, Oct 3 - Rep. Marsha Blackburn (TN-7) today voted against the financial bailout package. Her statement follows:

“Today I voted against passage of a massive $700 billion bailout package. The package before us was far better than the ill conceived plan that Secretary Paulson originally delivered to Congress. We had to act quickly, and I do not fault those of my colleagues who voted yes. While we may have disagreed over this vote, we must agree that addressing the root cause is an imperative.

“Senator McCain and my Republican Colleagues deserve our thanks. They stood up for conservative values and made a dismal proposal far better. Many of the components I objected to in the bill have been addressed. The Government will now be able to insure bad loans rather than purchase them. They will be able to use regulatory tools like the FDIC to increase liquidity without leveraging federal assets. Tennesseans will have vital tax equity provisions restored for another year. Had conservatives not fought for our principles, none of this would be possible.

“Ultimately, raising the debt limit to more than $11 trillion without cutting a single dollar of federal spending was a cost too great to bear. I simply could not vote to inflate the federal debt without cutting a single dollar in federal spending in good conscience. If the American people have to foot the bill for Wall Street greed and the Administration feels this is the most prudent way forward; then every Federal agency should be compelled to do their part and reduce what they are spending.

“Still, I believe that Wall Street has gotten away with armed robbery. They put a gun to the economy’s head and told us that unless we forked over $700 billion, they would shoot.

“I am skeptical that this bailout will be the great salvation the Administration told us it would be. Too much has been left unaddressed. The government policy that drove us into this mess remains in place. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives have paid no price for their excesses. Many Members of Congress are unresolved to take the important next step.

“I believe firmly that to put our financial house in order, we must begin to reverse the debilitating policies of the past. The Community Reinvestment Act must be reformed or eliminated and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac must be privatized or dismantled. We must pull government out of the mortgage market as quickly as possible. It is government intervention in the process and hastily crafted legislation that becomes law that started this crisis- it must stop. I pledge that when Congress returns in January, I will make that my first priority.”

Posted in Big Banking, Big Insurance, Big Money, Federal Reserve, Marsha Blackburn, REAL State of the Union, Tennessee | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

B’Man’s Patriot Watch: Rep Brad Sherman Talking About Fear Tactics

Posted by BuelahMan on October 3, 2008

The lengths of fear and intimidation the rip-offs will go to to get this thievery passed includes using Martial Law on America if the Bail out doesn’t happen.

Martial Law? The Real Martial Law?

(Oops… Originally posted the wrong video)

Posted in B'Man's Patriot Watch, Big Banking, Big Money, Video | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Goldman Sachs Bribed Senate To Pass Bailout Bill

Posted by BuelahMan on October 3, 2008

Why did the Senators vote FOR the Bail-Out Rip-Off?

Watch this for the reason:

Posted in Accountability, Responsibility & Answerability, Big Banking, Big Money | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

B’Man’s Patriot Watch: Representative Peter DeFazio

Posted by BuelahMan on October 3, 2008

Who Believes George Bush?

Hank Paulson is a Wall Street Speculator that got us into this mess to begin with. Why would we believe him? Or Bush?

Posted in B'Man's Patriot Watch, Big Banking, Big Money, Video | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Call And Write Your Congressman Today

Posted by BuelahMan on October 3, 2008

We have only one real chance and that is to contact your representative today.

Check here to see if they voted for or against on Monday. Thank them if voting against and ask them to not budge on that vote. If they voted for it, call them and tell them they will lose your vote if they vote for it.

Call 800-473-6711 or 800-828-0498 or 202-224-3121

These are the folks that have changed their vote since Monday- Jim Ramstad (R-MN), John Shadegg (R-AZ), Zach Wamp (R-TN), Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), Shelley Berkley (D-NV), Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO) and John Lewis (D- GA). Other possible switches include Pat Tiberi (R-OH), Pete Hoekstra (R-MI), John Yarmouth (D-KY), Brian Bilbray (R-CA), Steve Rothman (D-NJ), Lee Terry (R-NE), Jim Gerlach (R-PA), Tim Murphy (R-PA), Jason Altmire (D-PA), and Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ). But others may switch from Yes to No, including Ed Markey (D-MA), Charlie Melancon (D-LA), and Spencer Bachus (R-AL).

It is especially important to contact these individuals.

I called Marsha Blackburn’s office in Washington this morning and also sent this email:

Congressman Blackburn,

Thank you for voting against the Wall-Street Bail-out on Monday. I hope that you will not budge one iota (and believe me, we are watching closely here in Savannah).

To my dismay, our Tennessee Senators not only voted FOR this atrocious bill, but Sen Alexander was leading the way.

It is my opinion that our country has made huge mistakes in policy over the last 20 years that have culminated in this disaster. Deregulation, allowing manufacturing to dissolve, forcing us into buying via credit, cheap products from off shore.

We must reinvest in America’s manufacturing. If we are going to use my Tax money, we should use it for something that stands a chance of working. Bailing out the rich thieves on Wall-Street… allowing foreign banks to jump in on the fleecing of America, and the stinking pork thrown into the Senate bill is all the more reason for normal Americans to see that the rich fat cats are simply pillaging our economy and want us poor people to pay for it.

This bail-out will simply do one thing. Make the thieves even richer and disallow them being held accountable.

As for the credit crisis: when I stop seeing the 3-4 credit card company letters EVERY DAY, I will believe it. 10 loan letters a week. Are you seriously believing the lies that are being told. I get offers every day for credit.

Here is my plan for a bail-out.

I pay $25K out of pocket every year for healthcare and it is simply going to bankrupt me. Fix that problem by bailing me out. If you take care of my health and the outrageous premiums and costs, I can handle the rest.

But think about that number, $25,000. I haven’t even eaten yet. How many people in Savannah do you know with health care that expensive?

My point? I am doing all I can to work within the system, but the system is corrupt. The last thing we need to do is pay for the rich folks when it is US poor folks that are hurting the most.

I have already been forced to sell my house and now rent. I am $60K in credit debt that I cannot dig myself out of, because healthcare is eating all my money. I travel with work (sales) and the cost is skyrocketing.

I NEED HELP!!! One heck-uv-a lot more than those rich people who get their $30Billion golden parachutes… or the ex-leaders of Goldman Sachs who is obviously taking America’s money to protect his old company.

Bring manufacturing back.

Focus on America, for God’s sake. Stop taking care of the foreign folks and the tax evaders who have moved their American operations off shore. Stop bowing to the elites who have taken America to the brink of disaster.

Mrs Blackburn, I am asking that you stand up for Americans. Do Not Side with Big Money or you lose my vote.

I hope this is clear.

Posted in Accountability, Responsibility & Answerability, Big Banking, Big Insurance, Big Money, Dissent, Marsha Blackburn, New World Order, REAL State of the Union | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

The Real Reason for America’s Collapse

Posted by BuelahMan on October 3, 2008

It isn’t JUST the housing bubble and sub-prime loans. It is “that almost everything Americans buy is made somewhere else“. I can attest to that statement.

My business is one that is totally focused on manufacturing in the USA. I have been in engineering/management & engineering sales since 1989. During the 90’s things were booming, UNTIL the NAFTA bullshit started taking effect. I knew early on that NAFTA was a clusterfuck of immense proportions because the truth is that by forcing wages lower here (moving manufacturing to Mexico for the lower wages) many people now cannot afford their houses or cost of living. It also stopped food production in Mexico and caused the mass influx of illegal immigration.

Now, it appears that we have become the new China for cheap labor because we forced our good paying jobs off shore to make more profits. Notice how the auto companies are investing Billions here because the wages are now low enough for it to make sense. Purposefully forced down by our government.

These giant corporations that get tax benefits for going off shore have been devastating to America’s economy. I see it everyday, not just in prices of food, etc. but in the fact that it is a daily onslaught of plant closings.

I read this article by Robert McCormick and it nails the issue perfectly:

Commentary: Manufacturers Know All About Economic Collapse

By Richard McCormack
editor@manufacturingnews.com

It is sad what has happened to the United States.

For years, as editor of Manufacturing & Technology News, I have heard dozens of domestic manufacturing company CEOs talk about an impending “collapse” of the U.S. economy. These were the men who were in the unenviable position of having to close their companies or shut down factories and watch as most all of their competitors did the same thing.

These were the men who implemented Six Sigma, lean, ISO 9000, and the Baldrige National Quality and Shingo Prize criteria. They were leaders who agonized over having to move the world’s most efficient production capacity from the United States to Mexico and China in order to stay in business, because no matter how good they were, it wasn’t good enough to survive. They could compete with other companies, but they could not compete against other COUNTRIES — countries that cheated in every way imaginable.

These manufacturing company CEOs were men who loved their employees. Who grew up with their employees. Who knew their families. Who knew in their hearts the economic, cultural, moral and physical destruction that was being wrought upon their communities.

U.S. manufacturing company CEOs died many deaths, watching as Wall Street mavericks and their economic ideological apologists in the U.S. federal government, in Congress and their high-paid agents in Washington, D.C., forced hundreds of thousands of dedicated, hard-working Americans into the street, to fend for themselves in a game that was rigged against them.

Has the financial class driven through the heartland of America lately? Have they not taken AMTRAK between New York City and Washington, D.C., passing through the industrial back lots of Baltimore, Wilmington, Philadelphia, Trenton and Newark? Have they not seen an American landscape stretching for thousands of square miles that looks like it has been bombed out?

There are places in America that are “healthy,” but these places are even worse: shopping and strip malls located on the edges of America’s deteriorating towns and cities, lined with vast parking lots and national chain stores: Applebees, Home Depot, Wal-Mart, Wendy’s, Days Inn, Outback Steak House. They are soul-less places — “Anywhere USA” — as depressing as the crumbling inner city cores of hundreds of American cities and towns. This is what has become of America. Wall Street had a lot to do with this. As part of the financial bail out bill, they needed to include a provision on teaching ethics and civics.

The heroic men running companies that made durable goods wept on the phone when I called to ask about why they closed their factory after it had been in operation for 80 years or more.

These people were not selling financial paper or making products that were obsolete and no longer in demand, like buggy whips. And yet when I speak with economists about manufacturing, they invariably rationalize the loss of America’s wealth-generating sector by claiming the companies that are dying are making “buggy whips.” It is wrong and it is infuriating. We’re talking about the United States economy, which has just suffered a massive financial heart attack.

I remember writing about the manufacturing job situation in early 2004. It was the 35th consecutive month of manufacturing employment layoffs, with the latest BLS figure coming in at 135,000 production workers being told to go home and not ever come back. This was a crisis. I wondered why in the hell not a single person in the Bush administration and only a handful of people in Congress cared about the collapse of the wealth-generating sector of the American economy. As is happening with the financial sector today, manufacturing five years ago was being disassembled in front of their eyes. There were no bailouts — manufacturers weren’t looking for them — there weren’t even bromides.

I remember thinking as Bush invaded Iraq that it was America’s last great hurrah. As America’s military hardware was being shipped to the Middle East, America’s industrial base was being shipped in the opposite direction to China. The war was happening at the same time that “outsourcing” became a big story in the media. But the business press got bored and started covering the incredible run-up of housing prices. “Whoopee,” said all the journalists and economists. “Who needs industry when we’ve got finance and housing!”

But the manufacturing industry’s plight continued. I wanted to rename my publication “One Outrage After Another.” I was constantly questioning whether I should continue writing all the stories of companies dying, of industries leaving, of workers being laid off, of trade deficits skyrocketing, of China cheating, of the perverse reaction among Washington elites to rationalize the destruction. I wondered if I was the problem. If being Irish meant fixating on the negative. But I had covered manufacturing through the 1990s, and the story wasn’t depressing. I even wrote a book about U.S. companies’ adoption of the Toyota Production System and lean manufacturing and the good it was doing. It was not me. It was the story that could not be ignored.

I got to know other people who couldn’t sleep at night fretting over what was happening to the United States industrial base. These were patriotic people who started to coalesce around these issues, who were utterly perplexed by the federal government’s total unwillingness to act on behalf of American producers and their workers.

The government knew what was going on. But its political appointees made nonsensical ideological arguments concerning “free trade” and “free markets.” “We’ve got a war going on, we can’t support U.S. manufacturing” was a refrain I heard over and again by political appointees at the “Commerce” Department and White House.

Manufacturers weren’t looking for a hand out or a bailout. They only wanted one thing: for the United States government to put the interests of American producers above the interests of foreign countries, foreign producers, importers and the multinational companies that were taking advantage of mercantilist practices in China. American manufacturers wanted the U.S. government to put the interests of American producers ahead of the law firms representing foreign shipping companies, the lobbyists representing Wall Street and, again, the multinational companies that were swimming in record profits by sending their production offshore; all while the critical manufacturing sector was left for dead. “Good riddance,” said the financial elite and its power structure: “those jobs sucked anyway.”

Those same free-market, capitalist, anti-government, anti-regulation ideological zealots are now begging — demanding — that taxpayers give them a trillion dollars for destroying the American economy.

I never once reported about the dire warnings of an economic meltdown — about the inevitable financial catastrophe being caused by the asymmetrical global trade imbalances that were mounting by the day. I had my own 401k to worry about along with three older children, and I was not going to be a reporter who stoked the possibility of economic Armageddon.

I guess I was wrong. I guess I should have been reporting on the impending collapse because President George Bush, Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke sure haven’t had any such reservations about scaring the bejesus out of us.

What strikes me as particularly sad, however, is the clear FACT that in all of the discussion about bailing out the financiers and their agents who killed the American economy, there has not been one mention of the real reason for America’s collapse, nor of what is needed to start the long process of restoring the country back to some semblance of economic health.

The housing bubble and sub-prime loans are only part of the problem.

The real culprit is the fact that almost everything Americans buy is made somewhere else. The country continues to ship all of its wealth overseas. Did the economic policy makers not watch the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Beijing? Have they not seen the 200-story skyscrapers going up in Dubai?

The core of America’s economic problems stem from the trade deficit and the elimination of tens of thousands of factories and millions of jobs that were creating the wealth the country needed to pay for everything. Without that wealth, the financial sector invented playthings and the nation borrowed until it could borrow no more.

Oh, but wait! The answer to the problem is to borrow more to bail out the people who over borrowed. The Paulson proposal, unexpectedly defeated on Monday September 29 in a harrowing live television broadcast, was to allow the U.S. government to pay off bad debts by going deeper into debt. It did not sit well with anybody.

September 29, 2008, will be an important day in the history of the American Republic. It is the day the American era ended. Watching the live pictures on CNBC of the traders in the pits watching the television monitors above their heads as the vote on the House floor was tallied was like watching New Yorkers standing in horror as they watched the burning World Trade Center towers in 2001. The congressional vote count was simulcast with the Dow, and they were crashing in unison. There was shock in the eyes of the traders, and a panic among the CNBC broadcasters, who couldn’t believe what they were witnessing. These men and women are consummate professionals and are not prone to panic. But there they were barking out: “What’s happening with gold?” “Look at the oil markets!” The market did what the towers did and what our President predicted: it collapsed. For the second time in seven years, the energy was visibly drained out of Lower Manhattan and the country at large, as it realized a scary new era had begun.

Yet, there is still NOT ONE mention from anyone in power — especially not the two presidential candidates, nor of a single congressional leader — of what is really needed to bail out the United States.

The only way out of this mess is for the United States do everything it can to make the country what it was until 30 years ago: a nation that valued manufacturing.

The U.S. economy long ago collapsed around domestic manufacturers. Now it’s collapsing around the financial wizards who either forget or didn’t know that their livelihoods depended on a robust industry and workers making livable wages.

As someone who works in Washington, attends press conferences, government meetings, congressional hearings and who asks questions of the power elite, I can assure you from first-hand experience that the United States government did not do a single thing — nothing — to re-set the global ground rules to allow U.S. industry and its millions of workers to be competitive. In fact, all the rules were changed to favor the foreign and financial interests. The country is now paying the real price of saving a few bucks at Wal-Mart.

The United States government and its elected representatives long ago stopped representing the interests of American workers and American producers. If there is any silver lining in the historic House vote on the Bailout Plan on September 29, it is that maybe Congress has woken up to the power of the people. Unfortunately it was the wrong time to wake up. “The people” must now pay the consequences of their elected representative’s somnambulance. They must now prepare to confront the “dire” consequences caused by decades of Wall Street’s short-term focus on quarterly profits at the exclusion of everything else.

The country has a lot to learn from American manufacturers and their workers, and it will not like what’s coming one bit

Posted in Accountability, Responsibility & Answerability, B'Man's Patriot Watch, Big Banking, Big Military, Big Money, New World Order, REAL State of the Union | Tagged: , , | 4 Comments »

We Don’t Need Gasoline…

Posted by BuelahMan on October 3, 2008

… and never did

(from BrassCheckTV):

Facts: Scientific and historical about gasoline and alcohol

1. The original automobiles ran on alcohol because when they were invented gasoline was not available.

2. Rockefeller spent $4 million (that we know of) to promote Prohibition, a ban on alcohol manufacturing in the US that started in 1919 just as the car industry was taking off.

3. When Prohibition was lifted in 1933, gasoline stations were ubiquitous and most engines ran on gasoline only.

4. Alcohol can be manufactured locally and on a community level from renewable plant material for $1 per gallon.

5. The growing of plant material for alcohol would have no effect on the price of food.

6. The growing of plants for fuel would more than neutralize the carbon created by burning alcohol for fuel.

7. In Brazil, over 50% of new cars sold can already run on 100% alcohol.

8. Producing alcohol from plant material is incredibly energy efficient.

9. The oil companies aggressively promote garbage science to deceive the public into believing that alcohol fuels: a) will cause starvation, b) are uneconomical, and c) are net polluters.

10. Gasoline is a high toxic material.

11. It is entirely unneeded to fuel our cars.

12. Oil companies like Chevron have pressured PBS, commercial TV networks and other news media to keep this basic information from the public for decades – and the censorship continues to this day.

More at: http://www.PermaCulture.com

Posted in Big Meds, Big Money, Big Oil, BrassCheckTV, Hemp/Cannabis Reform, Video | Leave a Comment »

16 celsius—

Posted by Lynda on October 3, 2008

Yes that is what I am today. I awoke shocked– even though I have been stereotypically dreading today. It was just 1967 yesterday, wasn’t it?  I can’t believe my son is 30 and my daughter is 42!! What happened? My god, drugs I took back in the day didn’t trip-out time this fast! lol lol I have much remaining to do– much I want to do. problem? the body decieves me, let’s me down.  I actually watch people my fathers age and wonder… how in the hell do they do that?  Yes– I am not going into this goodnight gently… but alas, this too shall pass and my pity party shall end… and I will be back to my daily running around and livin’ with out regret. As I blow out the candles this evening, I will be hoping for a huge shift come November. .. and to also get lucky! lol lol lol lol

Posted in BuelahFamily & BuelahFriends, Humor, Lynda, Uncategorized | 2 Comments »