POWIP Piece of Work In Progress – Former Abode of Dan Collins

26Sep/110

Cripples and Bedroom Slippers… and the Vanishing G

Can't imagine a Conservative or White Person ever getting away with such things... but then, he slices, dices, and walks on water.

Enoch_Root

Person with kids,a beautiful wife, a job. Catholic of the Latin Rite.

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28Feb/119

Spotlight on Special Olympics

Let me win,
but if I cannot win
let me be brave
in the attempt.

 
 
 
 
 
That is the motto of the Special Olympics.

The Special Olympics was started by Eunice Kennedy Shriver. She explains her motivation in an article she wrote for Parade Magazine in February, 1964

"My sister, Rosemary, is retarded. But I cannot help her with pity-or serve with sorrow the 5 million others like her.

Only by facing the facts and resolving to meet the challenge head-on can something be done. Only if we broaden our understanding can we help the mentally retarded to escape into the sunlight of useful living. Even more important, we can prevent millions yet unborn from ever becoming mentally retarded.

First, I want to shatter the notion that the birth of a retarded child implies some kind of social stigma, something to be hidden and ashamed of. Retarded children are born to the healthiest and wealthiest, to the brilliant as well as the meek. They have been born to actors, generals, tycoons, statesmen and Nobel Prize Winners."

She wanted people to understand that retarded or mentally challenged people were persons.....like everyone else. They were not shameful or burdensome, just persons.

My grandmother used to say that people who were intellectually challenged were whispers from God; reminding us to be kind and decent to each other. I agree.

Special Olympics began in Chicago in 1968 and Eunice Kennedy Shriver was there, even though it was just a few short weeks since her brother Robert Kennedy had been assassinated in Los Angeles. There were less than 100 people in the crowd and about 1000 athletes from 26 states and Canada and that was the beginning of what would become a worldwide organization with thousands of volunteers, millions of athletes in training. From that small turn out in Chicago in 1968 we have come to the World Summer Games which this year, will be held in Athens, Greece.

People with special needs touch everyone's life, here are a couple from mine:

I used to work for a man who has a son with Downs Syndrome. He is a sweet, smart, creative, and imaginative boy. He smiles all the time and can make a game out of nearly anything. I've gone with him to school and seen the looks of pity on the faces of the people who watch him, but he is oblivious to that. Robbie absolutely loves life and enjoys every second. He doesn't feel as if he's living a pitiful life and Special Olympics is one of his favorite things ever. He takes the competition very seriously and loves to win. He also loves to cheer for his friends when they win. It's a place for him to just be kid...not a kid with Downs.

My friend Jenny has son named Jack who has Autism. Jack is another sweet, smart, creative, imaginative boy.

Photo Courtesy of Jack's Mom

I'm going to let Jack's mom tell you a little about what life is like being Jack's mom:.

Dede: How old was Jack when he was diagnosed with Autism?

Jenny: He was 5 which is pretty late. He developed "normally" until the time he should have started talking, and that was his only issue for a really long time. Our family doctor didn't think autism was the issue. We relocated when he was 4, that's when other symptoms surfaced. I knew something was up then, beyond speech, and actually remember wishing it was autism because then I would know what to do. I still laugh when I see those lists of warning signs because he didn't really show any of those.

Dede: What is the most frustrating thing about being the mom of a child with Autism?

Jenny: Housekeeping. He's just really hard on our shit. Not on purpose, but he's always rearranging the furniture to build a spaceship or something. I'm sure all little boys do that to some point, but he is really hard core about it. He also compensates for his speech by drawing, so when he runs out of paper he draws on the walls, and I've let him get away with it too much. Probably because I'm tired, and he's AWESOME. One night I went to check on him in the middle of the night, and he had smuggled a pen into his room. He'd muraled his whole room. I was half pissed and half WOW. Luckily we don't rent.

Dede: What is the most amazing thing about being the mom of a child with Autism?

Jenny: Their talents, the media focuses on all the things they can't or don't do, but it really is like their brains have tunnel vision. They're so focused on whatever their "thing" is that they can do things they'd never be able to do if they weren't autistic. I really don't think Jack could draw like he does if he wasn't autistic.

Dede: Has Jack ever participated in Special Olympics? If yes...what was that experience like for him and for your family.

Jenny: They had an event at his school last year, but Mr. Waite went. He's only 7, so I'm not sure we'd even have him in regular sports yet.

Dede: If no...are you planning for him to participate?

Jenny: If it's something he would enjoy. Me being an anti-social mess will probably be the biggest obstacle to that. But I've always adored Special Olympics and everything it represents.

Dede: How important do you think it is to integrate Jack into the "normal" world? Or do you think it is more important for your family and us to figure out how to fit into Jack's world?

Jenny: This is stupid because it's from a tv show, but I remember the doctor on Parenthood saying something like, "Meet him where he is, and when he's ready walk him into the world." I thought that was brilliant. I think our family's charged with doing everything we can to give help him adapt to the world. It's ok if he doesn't, but my dream for him would be to have and provide for his own family. I think the world should be understanding, but I don't expect people to bend over backwards for him. For example, I don't want him mainstreamed at school if it's gonna significantly disrupt the other kids in his class. The main thing we need from the world (and for it) is to find out what the hell is causing the epidemic. It's gone from 1:1000 to 1:100 to 1:86 boys. Someday they're gonna be men, and we're gonna have a problem.

Dede: What do you want the world to know about what life is like with a special needs child? What do you think is THE most important thing for us to know?

Jenny: I think it's the most important thing that I've learned from this. Short of suspected abuse, trust people to make decisions about what's best for their families. Like to medicate or not medicate, public or private school, 1 income family or 2, Most the time people have good reasons for the decisions they make, and they shouldn't have to justify it to anyone. I think that applies to life in general.

Dede: Given that Eunice Kennedy Shriver started SO out of love for her sister....what do you see coming from your experience being Jack's mom?

Jenny: It's opened my eyes and my heart to people with special needs and mental illnesses in general. I never thought about how our brains really work before. That anyone's brain develops normally blows my mind, so to speak. And you know how my mom had me at 45 and believed I had a 1 in 3 chance of having Downs, so I definitely have a protective instinct for people that can't protect or speak for themselves.

You can follow Jack's awesome mom on twitter @kill_truck Go do it, cuz she's the reason Twitter was created in the first place.

From my friendship with Jenny and Robbie, I have learned that people who are mentally challenged have the same kind of life the rest of us do. There are things they excel at, things they don't, people they like and people they don't. They are part of the fabric of the Human Experience and if you are the family of, or friend of someone with special needs, you know that sometimes they can be the BEST part of the Human Experience. That was Mrs. Shriver's message I believe, we are all here for a reason, an no one's reason is any more or less important than anyone else's.

So, support Special Olympics and support the Human Experience and all of us who make it what it is.

You can get involved in several ways:

Make a Donation

Be a Coach

Find SO near you, and find out what they need.

Get involved. Stand at the end of a finish line and give a hug. Donate some coinage. Give a little time. Be a part of making the Human Experience the best it can be, because that is........

B A N G E R A N G

Cross posted at Balfour's Yard

Dede

Sometimes stuff rumbles around in my brain that's longer than 140 characters and, well......twitlonger just seems like cheating. :)

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18Feb/115

The Weekender 2.18.11

2 federal law enforcement officers were killed in the line of duty this week. 2 ICE agents were shot, one fatally, in Mexico. The general public is now learning that often our law enforcement officers have to do their jobs unarmed when overseas per the respective countries rules.  Mexico needs to change their ******* rules.

In West Virginia a U.S. Marshall was fatally shot trying to serve a warrant.

P.S. I usually don't discuss this publicly, but I'm the wife of a federal law enforcement officer, so if you're thinking, "boy, she's really got her panties in a bunch today."  You bet I do.  This giant hole in my tongue really hurts too.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9C8EUrtEhfM]

The Green Bay Packers are wreaking havoc in Wisconsin. Not really, but if my beloved Bears are guilty by association with Obama and Rahmbo I can't pass up an opportunity to take a cheap shot at my cheesehead friends and family.

In all seriousness, I detest what unions have become, but I have absolutely had it with "online activists" that are too dense (or lazy) to differentiate between coerced union members and the politics and corruption of union bosses.  I'm the granddaughter, daughter, wife and friend of a factory worker, letter carrier, cop and several teachers who have or had no choice but to play the union game in order to stay in their profession.  I also realize that I lack the character and skill to do their jobs.

My birthplace is Moline, Illinois, home of John Deere, at one time the Detroit of farm implements.  My grandfather spent his whole life working in those factories.  The initial conditions were deplorable, and there was a legitimate need to organize.  But eventually every time my grandparents would start to get ahead, they'd go on strike.  They went on strike just about every year.  My grandfather finally got fed up and crossed the picket line to feed his family, and all hell broke loose.  The consequences weren't just inconvenient, they were scary.

I doubt the tactics of union thugs are as barbaric now as they were then, and I certainly applaud and support any union member that has the guts to take a stand, but I will also come to the defense of hardworking teachers, cops, firefighters etc. who aren't in a position to stick their neck out and also aren't available to spend their day defending themselves on freakin' twitter.

I suppose I have the same beef with this type of activist as I do with missionaries.  Bear with me, it's admirable to be a missionary (another job I lack the character or skill to do), but there is sometimes a self-righteousness that I find obnoxious.  My husband put his finger on it while we were listening to a missionary visiting our church a few years ago when he mumbled, "Well, somebody's gotta stay home and write you checks."  Later on, I heard a Catholic priest say it much better, "some people give by going, and some people go by giving."  I suspect that if you look at the financial records of a lot of union members you would see charitable giving to conservative causes exceed the amount of their union dues.

And then there's the union members with Stockholm Syndrome  (I believe my grandfather remained a lifelong Democrat).  I just ask that we don't rush to lump them all together.  It's not that simple.

Kudos to Michelle Malkin for making a point to highlight the difference throughout the day yesterday.

CPAC now under new management, proclaims creepy yet kind of understandable vetting process. On one hand, some clear guidelines on just what a conservative is would curb the infighting (or at least change what we're fighting about), but like Brittany Cohan pointed out this morning, will the next step be vetting individuals?  I hope not.  I understand the need for this mentality, but this kind of mentality is why there's no place for pro-lifers in modern feminism.

Former FNC anchor, Laurie Dhue, shares her struggle with alcoholism. She didn't intend to.  She talked about it at a private prayer breakfast hosted by Cal Thomas, but a reporter in the room wrote about it.  She admits to not being happy about being outed, but she's now embracing it as an opportunity to help others.  She claims to be available via Facebook to those sharing the struggle.  I adore the way she's handled this.

A local man's women's shoe collection has been put on exhibit... in a museum and everything.

"Uncle Leo" from Seinfeld died.

Oh f***! How could I forget that Rahm Emanuel offered @mayoremanuel $5,000 to a charity of his choice to reveal himself.  I was afraid he was responding with some grand suicidal f****** gesture with all that Alice in Wonderland s***, but Axelrod and Carl pulled him out of the box of baby clothes.  He'll be wrapping up his campaign for m*****f****** mayor of Chicago over the next few f****** days, but he's already won mayor of my heart. WOO-HOO, I LOVE YOU MAYOR EMANUUEEEEEEL!!!!

This is what Tucker Carlson thinks about your bow tie jokes (and his ball chair).

The bigoted skank masquerading and border activist, Shawna Forde, was found guilty of 2 counts of murder, among other charges. The murder of a personal friend over 13 years ago is connected to this story.  You can find the hardest thing I've ever written here:

*I'd like doing this link dumps (everything I know about blogging I learned from Dan Collins, except for the stuff I learned from Jim Treacher).  I'd like to do one every friday, so I spent the week trying to think of a clever name for them ("link dump" makes me giggle).

Then I got the idea to go all Rule 5 (I learned a lot from Stacy McCain too) and slander a different blogger/friend with a sexual, misleading headline every week.  However, that seemed a little over the top, so look for them as easter eggs in the tags.

crossposted at mysite and pundit league


Kill Truck

KillTruck is a wife, mother, blogger and native midwesterner now living in Eastern Washington state. She writes about politics, pop culture, parenting, wifing and a few other subjects she has no authority to write about. She has macabre fascinations with prostitution and/or cannibalism. In her free time she enjoys eating and/or drinking her feelings, liveblogging Lifetime movies, thinking about Scott Brown and mocking things she doesn’t understand.

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6Jan/1117

A Bit Touchy. Or, Stepping On Meep’s Better Post Below

In Meep's outstanding post this morning, she puts forth the following argument:

double-dipping, spiking, and other misbehavior is making it less and less likely that taxpayers will care as to the state of the pensions. ...people are becoming more aware of what people are being paid for this job and they do see how leisurely that job is being fulfilled. ...people are getting an idea of what’s involved in a public job, and then they find out the recompense for it, and they do get a bit touchy. When they’re the ones paying for it. And asked to pay for it well after the service is performed and no longer providing benefit.

"a bit touchy"

I about spit my coffee when I read that. Having become an avid reader of Meep's Number Crunching, I have experienced a couple things:

1) this subject, while I never found it unworthy, has come to enchant me

2) this subject, which used to simply piss me off, has really come to stoke the passions of my lower-self

I know Meep is only being as simpatico as possible to readers when she uses a phrase like "a bit touchy." The subject matter is such that even a rookie's reading between the lines is enough to make the blood begin to boil for those of us not at the trough.

But nowadays, I can honestly say that "a bit touchy" doesn't even begin to describe how many of us in the private sector actually feel.

I am not one to envy another man's stuff. His position in life. His creature comforts. In fact, a good gauge to discerning whether Envy is one of the deadly sins you can count among your very own is to ask yourself the following question: if a friend of yours won the lottery, would you begrudge their good fortune or would you be able to be truly happy for them?

Likewise, I am not really tied to stuff... achieving financially in order to have a Mercedes... just doesn't really bother me to know I can't and likely won't ever be able to. This, by the way, is likely part of my woes. I just don't feel the need for stuff.

My point is that the more obvious motivations one could point to as causes for the crescendo-ing of intense hostility toward Public Employees just don't cover it for me.

If we assume that there are many others like me who are blessed enough not to be enslaved by the Envy and/or Gluttoney monkeys (though trust me, I struggle mightily with several of the other Deadly Sins), from where does the intensity of resentment originate?

Thoughts?

Enoch_Root

Person with kids,a beautiful wife, a job. Catholic of the Latin Rite.

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17Dec/109

Give The People What They Want

POWIP's readership, esteemed as it is, keeps company with some very curious passersby.

One can see from the following that POWIP has become the Destination for some interesting searchers.

One can only imagine how disappointed many of those searchers are when they are greeted by Spewey instead of full on prOn.

Nevertheless, much of this is the handiwork of Dan Collins, our host.

And of course, recently Dede's Beefcake series has added to the PrOnWIP collection, adding a much-needed women-who-like-penises' perspective. You will note that her Beefcake Series has earned its very own section (found under the main navigation "Series of Unfortunate Posts" above). I refuse to link to it, as it makes me think of scrapbooking and sex in the city. Not to mention, the men featured therein are naked or semi-naked mens with packages (or bulges).

However, the men of POWIP and all male readership who like boobs, ta-tas, breasts, sweater puppies, cans, jugs, teams, fun bags, angel cakes, baby pillows, bazongas, melons, milk cans, mambos, hooters, bosoms, bra buddies, rib cushions, dueling banjos, headlights, honkers, etc.. have been doing our best to counter the POwPRAH-ization of this section of the intarwebs.

So consider this a post with two objectives:

1) to promote PrOnWIP in general

2) to provide some fair (red-headed to be precise) and balanced coverage with women in bikinis who are hawt women with great legs, occasionally nude women, women wearing thongs, etc.

We understand - we really do.

Give the People What They Want

Also, Aimee Mann - because she is easy to look at.

Enoch_Root

Person with kids,a beautiful wife, a job. Catholic of the Latin Rite.

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1Nov/101

Gutfeld nicely sums up Jon Stewart’s rally

based in part on his life experiences:

My point: every single day of my life was a Jon Stewart rally. Everyone around me was pleasant, usually white, and always reveling in their reflexive assumptions about the "rest" of less hip America. Yep, they were my people when we got hammered. But because of my beliefs, I was not theirs on election day. And they'd hammer me for that.

That's why when I watch the rally, i just wondered, who needs it?

Well, maybe to show a divide between two groups: The tea party was about candidates; The sanity rally was about celebrity.

Because, that was the message. The teapartiers are reacting to alarming stuff: the insane spending, the bottomless deficit, weird appointments, political arrogance -it's real anxiety over real trouble for future offspring.

Stewart's rally says, "Ignore that. Check out Cat Stevens!" With a load of flashy entertainment and outsized personalities - they are the band playing on the TItanic - enjoying the applause as we see the shadow of the iceberg.

There's not much I can, or need add to that.  Except maybe to highlight the fact that at a rally supposedly celebrating tolerance and moderation, one of the headline acts was musician Cat Stevens. Or I should say, formerly known as Cat Stevens, because now he goes by Yusuf Islam.  And what is the singer of the anthem Peace Train most noteworthy for over the last 20 years? For supporting the Fatwa against Salman Rusdie...Which he now claims is all a big joke...

As Cap'n Ed noted:

When confronted with a choice between freedom of speech and homicidal religious zealotry, Cat Stevens chose the latter.

Tolerance! Comity! Moderation! to which I'll add, HYPOCRISY!

[UPDATE]: Daily Caller's Jim Treacher adds his thoughts on Stewart's, "clown nose on/clown nose off", sctick.  This one has plenty of video exhibits, and is well worth checking out.

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1Nov/1018

Urgent: US Pudding Reserve at Historic Lows

Wendell Albright is a 5th-generation Vermont pudding rancher, and he says he's never seen demand for pudding so high:

"Ayuh, it was a good year for us," he says, mucking out the stalls in his barn. "Warn't nothin' bad about the season. So, it don't make much sense, I reckon. Here in Vermont, seems we got almost enough pudding, but I'm hearin' tell of shortages elsewhere."

Department of Agriculture statistics reveal that Albright's correct about the nationwide trend. Grocers are hardly able to keep pudding in stock on their shelves. Ted Rooney, a manager for Hy-Vee in Iowa City, IA, has a theory:

"Pudding is one of the most basic 'comfort foods.' In times of social stress, people turn to pudding. First, all the ready-made pudding packs disappeared, then the packets. We've tried to source some more of the off-brands, but it seems everyone else has, too. The good news is that there may be more in time for Thanksgiving, but if you need some now, and you see it, you'd better grab it."

David Stockman of the American Pudding Institute sees things a little differently. Stockman's widely ridiculed theory is that high demand for pudding somehow forecasts big Republican victories in an election:

"For the past year, or so," Stockman says, "pudding sales have anticipated major Republican victories in political campaigns across the country. Other analysts say that's ridiculous, and it's true that I haven't found a smoking-gun connection that would explain the trend, but it's indisputable. Let's just say that there's a much stronger correlation than there is with hemlines, and people still talk about that."

Stockman says that Noxema sales get a small bump when pudding sales skyrocket, so that perhaps people are more mindful of 'creamy stuff' when they go to the grocery.

UPDATE: Thanks to Maetenloch at AoSHQ for picking up this important story.

Dan Collins

Dan Collins is a dude who blogs. He used to blog elsewhere. Now he blogs here.

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