Zeitgeist Zephyr

Spirit of the Westward Wind

Archive for March, 2009


In Case You Missed It…

 

 

 

The Daily Show With Jon StewartM - Th 11p / 10c

CNBC Gives Financial Advice

Daily Show Full EpisodesImportant Things With Demetri Martin

Political HumorJoke of the Day

The Daily Show last night offered some much needed comic relief to the whole economic crisis and who’s really behind it all. Taking aim square in the crosshairs of Jon Stewart last night was Rick Santelli and CNBC and their brilliant outlook on the state of the economy over the last year or so. Why CNBC and Santelli? Need I say anything more than it was CNBC that kept telling us the economy was doing fantastic and they even encouraged us (the average homeowner and buyer) to go out and get mortgages from some of the banks and mortgage houses that collapsed last fall.

Now of course, Rick Santelli says everyone who took their advice doesn’t deserve any government bailout money. But of course the companies that got us into this mess do. I think my brain nearly hemmorraged the first time I heard Santelli’s rant because I was so infuriated.

This video made me smile for the first time in weeks on this whole debacle.

Bridge to Nowhere - Let’s Kill Innocent People!! :)

 Here it goes, people are starting to criticize bridges to nowhere in the Stimulus package.  This one is in Tuscumbia, Missouri, 3 hours from St. Louis.  The bridge is crossing the Osage River and is in a very sorry state.  Even as a Kansan, I think it is a sorry state of the nation when people are criticizing  a project like this, that even when considering the 218 lives that it’s being used for, is $8.6 million still too high a price tag to pay for the common safety of other people (which by the way live and breath like the rest of us)?

The bridge had to be closed to large trucks in 2007 because the bridge is in such poor state and is effectively crumbling as drivers cautiously pass over it.  Yeah, it might not employ a lot of people, but has it occurred to anyone that these 218 people might value their lives?

The Suspect Bridge to NowhereHere’s your Bridge to Nowhere of the Stimulus Package - note the crumbling cement falling off the bridge, clear evidence of the work of Liberal Stimulus Boogeymen and their attempts to steal your MONEY!  Looks like I need to start keeping my money in my mattress! 

Please, people.  Criticizing a project this critical as being a waste of money is low.  What would the families of the 13 who died in the Minneapolis bridge collapse in 2007 say about neglecting a bridge in such a poor condition?

 Those Liberal Stimulus Boogeymen at work again in 2007!  The Stimulus Package is a plot!! NOOO! 

Or here’s the other option: let’s just let the bridge fall apart completely.  Yeah, that sounds like a good idea.  The next closest bridge is upstream near Lake of the Ozarks and for residents of Tuscumbia or its nearest neighbor on the other side of the river, the town of Capps, Missouri, it would take 2 hours to reach each other over the 20 minute drive it takes now with the bridge in place?  Yep, that makes sense to me!  The financial benefits of letting a bridge crumble and neighboring towns being 2 hours away from each other vs. 20 minutes makes a ton of sense.  So much sense, maybe we should just scrap the project and blow the bridge up and into the river to get it over with?  Imagine all the revenue that would generate for the oil companies that would benefit from people driving two hours out of their way because a bridge falls into the river.  

THAT’S what I call stimulation, give money to the oil companies! They’re struggling sooo much right now.

I’m going to go throw up now.

Here’s the story if you want to read it.  It’s the most unbiased version of it I could find. 

Starving Granola II: Zion National Park

zion-national-park-1.jpg  

There are few places in the country, and the world for that matter, that exhibit the beauty and grandeur of God’s creation more apparently than the appropriately named Zion National Park in Utah.  The name Zion itself evokes images of God’s kingdom on Earth.  

First preserved in 1909 under the name of  Mukuntuweap National Monument and later becoming a national park in 1918, Zion has had a sparse history of human habitation making among the most untouched national parks in the nation, save for the modern roads and tunnel paved into the canyon floor.  The earliest evidence of human occupation dates to around A.D. 500 by the Anasazi and Fremont people but by the year 1200, the canyon had been abandoned and received only passing visits by Paiute foragers in search of food.

European exploration of the area was very rare, with the only two significant parties passing through the area, but not the canyon itself, including the Dominguez Expedition in search of an overland route from Santa Fe, NM to Monterrey, CA.  The other noteworthy expedition into the area of Zion was a group of 16 men lead by Jedediah Smith, one of the many fur traders that explored the remote reaches of the Western U.S.It was only after the first land survey was conducted in 1908 that it garnered any significant attention and the spectacular nature of the terrain prompted it’s immediate preservation under the newly formed National Parks System a hundred years ago.  

I visited Zion a year ago on a whirlwind spring break road trip that took us from Kansas City to Los Angeles and back again, stopping over in places like Arches National Park, Bryce Canyon, and the Grand Canyon.  Of all of those places, including the Grand Canyon, I saw nothing more spectacular on that trip than Zion.  That is where a group of friends and myself will be traveling to this spring break to spend 5 days and 4 nights, as opposed to the hour or so that was spent on my last visit.

Due to the remoteness of the location and our projected unavailability of electricity and Internet service, I won’t be cataloguing every day of our experience as it happens, but will instead provide updates on the trip before we leave and then provide a day by day account of our experiences upon my return.  On our way out, there remains a remote possibility of reaching Bryce Canyon, but our trek is most likely to focus on the southernmost reaches of the Utah canyon country and the sweeping panoramas of Monument Valley in Utah and Arizona before traveling back through Colorado on our way home.  

I’ll take a lot of pictures and share the best here, but I can assure you that this starving granola will enjoy a great feast as he in the company of good friends takes in the sights, sounds, and smells of Zion National Park.   

—————– 

Sources:

History of Zion National Park: http://www.zion.national-park.com/info.htm#his

Picture:  http://www.usatourist.com/slideshows/southwest/images/Zion%20National%20Park%201.jpg