Friday, October 28, 2005
Willing to Go and Live for His Country
One of my favorite historical figures is General George S. Patton, Jr. He addressed the troops of the 3rd Army in England on May 21, 1944 and said, "Now I want you to remember that no bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. You won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country." That has deep philosophical meaning. And I believe it has deep theological meaning, too.

The other day I was driving to work and listening to the Hallerin Hilton Hill Show on NewsTalk 100.3. Hallerin was speaking with soldiers from the 278th Regimental Combat Team who recently returned from Iraq. Mr. Hill asked the listening audience if they would encourage their grown children to join the military even if it meant that he or she would have to serve in Iraq or Afghanistan. One caller said that he and his family were Christians and that they looked at this question differently because of it. He said that he would encourage his son or daughter to join to serve in, what he called, a "noble cause". He said that even he would be willing to die for America. Right about there I tuned out.

Our enemies are well-known for giving their life for the Cause--giving their life and taking "infidels" with them. Every day we witness a suicide bomber blowing himself (and herself) into Paradise. And you've seen how the press or those that influence social thought are trying to link that horrific activity to all religion and, therefore, to Christianity.

I think it's time that we as Christians change our conversation. Like the gentleman on the phone, we all say that we would die for this or die for that. Or we say that early Christians were willing to die for Christ. Are we? Were they? Were they willing to die or willing to live?

We shouldn't be willing to die for for our country, but live for it. And we shouldn't talk about dying for God, but we should live for Him.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 7:55 PM   2 comments
Thursday, October 27, 2005
Notes to Self
I've had a breeze of inspiration over the past few days and am anxious to blog but haven't had time. Below are topics about which I plan to blog. I wanted to write them down lest I forget.

1. Yearning to live for my God and my country.
2. Priorities.
3. "Theologians Under Hitler"

And I have my business cards on order at work. I know it's not an exciting fact. The cards will have the usual information: phone number, email address and obligatory company graphic. But I talked the lady that orders them into modifying my title. The card will state that I am "His Most High and Excellent Authority of Production Control". I'll post a scanned image as soon as they arrive.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 9:18 AM   1 comments
Tuesday, October 25, 2005
Al Franken is an idiot
That's all. Move on, folks. Nothing else to see here.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 6:13 PM   1 comments
Thursday, October 20, 2005
Another Photo, Though Not as Great
OK, this one probably didn't win any awards. But I needed to share it. It was entitled "Another One of Life's Little Disappointments".

posted by Joe Napalm @ 5:54 PM   2 comments
Wildlife Picture of the Year
The Wildlife Photographer of the Year votes are in and the picture you see on the left entitled "Sky Chase" is the winner (Click on image to enlarge). Manuel Presti of Italy photographed a peregrine falcon swooping in for the kill above a city park in Rome.

The image won the Animal Behavior: Birds category as well as the overal title.

The next image was captured by Martyn Colbeck in the Amboseli National Park in Kenya. And took the prize in the Black and White category. (Again, click on all images to enlarge).

The accomplished photographer and documentary film-maker said that the air was so clear that Mt. Kilimanjaro is visible some 25 miles away.

Alexander Mustard's shot of a bohar snapper almost appears to have been digitally altered. Once you get past the menacing look of the reef predator, you'll see the crowd of other fish.

I read that the fish are normally solitary, but gather in large numbers during the spawning season south of the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt.

The snapper picture won the Animal Portraits category.

And, finally, Ruben Smit from Holland caught this on film: common toads mating. The picture captured the Animal Behavior: All Other Animals category. Now, the picture isn't as exciting as the others, but the story behind the picture is fascinating.

BBC News wrote, "Each spring, common toads migrate in huge numbers to mate in the ponds of Veluwe, a national park just outside the city of Arnhem.

"Wading into the cold, crystal-clear water, Ruben held his camera as low as possible to the pond bottom to get a toad's-eye view of the squirming mass and used a wide-angle lens to show as much of the action as possible.

"'At that moment, there must have been about 200 toads in the water and they were mating with my fingers - they were so horny. The males are searching for any movement and every time I moved my hands the males would go for them,' Ruben recalled.

"'Every five minutes I had to shake them off; I had two or three toads clamped to my hands.'"

You can find the whole story about the competition organized by BBC Wildlife Magazine and London's Natural History Museum
here.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 10:24 AM   0 comments
Wednesday, October 19, 2005
Moreover
There was no interest in the bird flu series, so I'm moving on...

Years ago my family and I went on a road trip. And during that trip we got the giggles about the word "booth". It seems that if you say a word over and over again, it doesn't keep the meaning and starts to sound ridiculous. Booth, booth, booth, booth.

"Too" sounds ridiculous, also. Can you imagine someone that doesn't speak English listening to a conversation with "too" mentioned? Most unknown foreign languages are incomprehensible sounds strung together. So, it'd be something like this: Boog thath merkon blahg, too.

What a ridiculous word! So not only will I pronounce cache CASH, and use disc instead of disk, I'll quit using too, too. Ni!
posted by Joe Napalm @ 10:54 AM   2 comments
Tuesday, October 18, 2005
Coughing, Aching, Stuffy Head, Fever (Part II)

Part two of my very boring--yet stimulating--bird flu series:

Today, I ate Taco Bell at my desk and read through the Center for Disease Control (CDC) and World Health Organization (WHO) H5N1 Avian Influenza Type A (bird flu) websites. Some interesting morsels:

WHO has developed a global influenza preparedness plan, which documents many things including the phases of a pandemic. The phases are:

Interpandemic Period
Phase 1 : No new influenza virus subtypes have been detected in humans. An influenza virus subtype that has caused human infection may be present in animals. If present in animals, the risk of human infection or disease is considered to be low.
Phase 2 : No new influenza virus subtypes have been detected in humans. However, a circulating animal influenza virus subtype poses a substantial risk of human disease.


Pandemic alert period
Phase 3 : Human infection(s) with a new subtype, but no human-to-human spread, or at most rare instances of spread to a close contact.
Phase 4 : Small cluster(s) with limited human-to-human transmission but spread is highly localized, suggesting that the virus is not well adapted to humans.
Phase 5 : Larger cluster(s) but human-to-human spread still localized, suggesting that the virus is becoming increasingly better adapted to humans but may not yet be fully transmissible (substantial pandemic risk).


Pandemic period
Phase 6 : Pandemic: increased and sustained transmission in general population.


Depending on who you ask, we're either in Phase 2 or Phase 3. There has been human infection. And of the 119 that have been infected so far, half have died. But there are no current cases of bird flu infections in humans. And there has been no--or limited--human-to-human spread.

The bird flu is currently passed from birds to humans by physical contact with the infected bird or its feces. Wild birds carry the bird flu naturally in their intestines. It will become airborne transmissible from human to human when the virus changes. And because the virus does not commonly infect humans, there is little or no immune protection in the human population.

So are there any other causes for concern? Yes. Several.
1. Domestic ducks can now excrete large quantities of highly pathogenic virus without showing signs of illness, and are now acting as a "silent" reservoir of the virus, perpetuating transmission to other birds. This adds yet another layer of complexity to control efforts and removes the warning signal for humans to avoid risbehaviorsurs.
2. When compared with H5N1 viruses from 1997 and early 2004, H5N1 viruses now circulating are more lethal to experimentally infected mice and to ferrets (a mammalian model) and survive longer in the environment.
3. H5N1 appears to have expanded its host range, infecting and killing mammalian species previously considered resistant to infection with avian influenza viruses.
4. The behavior of the virus in its natural reservoir, wild waterfowl, may be changing. The spring 2005 die-off of upwards of 6,000 migratory birds at a nature reserve in central China, caused by highly pathogenic H5N1, was highly unusual and probably unprecedented. In the past, only two large die-offs in migratory birds, caused by highly pathogenic viruses, are known to have occurred: in South Africa in 1961 (H5N3) and in Hong Kong in the winter of 2002-2003 (H5N1).

posted by Joe Napalm @ 1:36 PM   0 comments
Monday, October 17, 2005
Bird Flu (H5N1 Avian Influenza)
I'd like to commit the next few posts to the topic of the bird flu. My intentions are not to scare but to inform. Here are is a short list of tidbits that are rattling around in my head:

  • Pandemic - Epidemic over a wide geographic area and affecting a large proportion of the population.
  • The bird flu has infected 119 people since the first case was detected in Hong Kong in 1997. It has killed 60 people in Asia.
  • The so-called Spanish flu of 1918-19 is thought to have been an avian flu. The Asian flu of 1957-58 and the Hong Kong flu of 1968-69 were bird flu diseases that passed to humans and then mutated to the point of passing between humans.
  • H5N1 avian influenza re-emerged in Korea in 2003. It has now been found in birds in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Japan, Kazakhstan, Korea, Laos, Malaysia, Mongolia, Philippines, Russia, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam.
  • The World Health Organization predicts that this strain of flu will make 25 million people sick and will kill 7 million.
  • This morning, Greece confirmed its first case of bird flu was detected on a turkey farm on the island of Chios. It has also been found in wild fowl in Romania and Serbia.
  • Switzerland's Roche Holding AG has developed a pill called Tamiflu to reduce the severity and spread of the flu. Good luck finding it on the retail market because entire nation's are banning its retail sale.
  • The US could buy the flu vaccine and have it ready for many of the "high risk" citizens in 6 months. A news report I heard said that 6 months may not be enough time.
  • The US Government is contemplating using the military to enforce a quarantine of affected areas.
  • Heather and I have discussed stockpiling groceries just in case. Be prepared, right?
posted by Joe Napalm @ 1:47 PM   1 comments
Friday, October 14, 2005
Free Prose Friday
Free Prose Friday is on hold this week. I've been busy at home and at work.

But if you're itching for something good (Which is why you come to this blog anyway, right?) then check out: A Scientist Blames America's Problems on Religion.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 4:44 PM   0 comments
Thursday, October 13, 2005
Lest You Forget
Fall is here. Ah, the crisp, cool mornings! And I know what's on your mind: Thanksgiving football.

Now, I shall remind of last year's winning play.

Our team had established the run. We ran "I" formation, shotgun and attempted the option a couple of times. Our running back (What was his name, again?) was nimble. The game was tied and we all agreed that the next team to score would be the winner.

We were on the 20 yard-line. I can't recall which down. We lined up in the shotgun single-wing. Laura was the center. I believe Jay lined up wide right and Matthew lined up wide left. I said, "Hike!" and Laura flipped the ball back. Now here's the piece de resistance: I faked the ball to the running back who crossed in front. This fake drew the entire defense in. Didn't Dad say, "Ah, shoot"?

Our running back (again, I'm sorry I can't remember his name) ran left and then curled after a couple of yards in case I had to dump the ball. But when I looked up from the fake, Matthew and Jay had streaked down the field and were stacked in the middle of the endzone. Both were behind the defense with Matthew deep. I threw the ball up between them. Matthew came up and caught it. And we have been the reigning champions all year!

Every year it seems to end with the play-of-the-game. One year I remember Laura caught the ball in the middle of the field and then ran for the endzone. She just got inside the marker before being "tackled" by Kelvin. And then one year BJ hit Noel crossing through traffic in the back of the endzone. Noel was able to get a foot down before stepping out.

Beware, I have started to develop this year's playbook. Don't ask. It's top secret.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 8:33 AM   4 comments
Wednesday, October 12, 2005
A Great Opportunity*
"When new words come into the language, they often have different forms for a period until one form wins out over the others. There are occasions when competing forms remain in use for a long time.

"The word disk and its descendant compound compact disk represent good examples of this phenomenon. Disk came into English in the mid-17th century and was originally spelled with a k on the model of older words such as whisk. The c-spelling arose a half century later as a learned spelling derived from the word's Latin source discus. Both disc and disk were used interchangeably into the 20th century, with people in Britain tending to use disc more often, and Americans preferring disk. The spellings also began to be sorted out by function.

"Late in the 19th century, for reasons that are not clear, people used disc to refer to the new method of making phonograph recordings on a flat plate (as opposed to Edison's cylindrical drum). In any case, the c-spelling became conventional for this sense, which is why we listen to disc jockeys and not disk jockeys. In the 1940s, however, when American computer scientists needed a term to refer to their flat storage devices, they chose the spelling disk, and this became conventionalized in such compounds as hard disk and floppy disk. When the new storage technology of the compact disk arose in the 1970s, both c- and k-spellings competed for an initial period. Computer specialists preferred the familiar k-spelling, while people in the music industry, who saw the shiny circular plates as another form of phonograph record, referred to them as compact discs. These tendencies soon became established practice in the different industries. This is why we buy compact disks in computer stores but get the same storage devices with different data as compact discs in music stores. Similarly, the computer industry created the optical disk, the format that the entertainment industry used to create the videodisc." (
Dictionary.com)

So, what is it? I think I'll use "disc" for all occasions. It seems more chic.

* Two years ago at Ft. Rucker, I started an ordeal that lasted several days discussing the proper pronunciation of cache. Most argued that it should be pronounced it CASH-AY. While I argued that it is CASH. Throughout our whole deployment my command tried their hardest to not use the word in discussion or in written orders.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 4:01 PM   0 comments
Tuesday, October 11, 2005
Jesse's Blog
Jesse's blog has got it going on!
Jesse's blog has got it going on!
Jesse's blog has got it going on!
Jesse's blog has got it going on!

Jesse's blog has got it goin' on
It's all I want and I've waited for so long
Jesse, can't you see you're just not the man for me
I know it might be wrong but I'm in love with Jesse's blog

Jesse's blog has got it goin' on
Jesse's blog has got it goin' on

Jesse, do you remember when I mowed your lawn? (mowed your lawn)
Your blog came out with just a towel on (towel on)
I could tell it liked me from the way it stared
And the way it said, "You missed a spot over there"

And I know that you think it's just a fantasy
But since your [I can't think of anything to put here] walked out, your blog could use a guy like me...

Jesse's blog has got it goin' on
Jesse's blog has got it goin' on


It's sooo dreamy!
posted by Joe Napalm @ 12:59 PM   2 comments
Monday, October 10, 2005
Joe Napalm on Sports
Yesterday, I heard that Tiger Woods is struggling to find his swing. An announcer on TV actually had the nerve to say it. So Tiger is struggling, but he's number one in the Official World Golf Ranking. He is number one on the world money list. He's number one in scoring average. And he's number two in both top-ten finishes and driving distance. I wish I "struggled" to find my swing!

Is the NHL season on this year? They could play in my front yard and I probably wouldn't even open the door to see what's going on. The same goes for NASCAR.

No matter what you say, the NBA season is way too long.

Women's basketball makes me nauseous.

The Braves played 162 games in the regular season. They lead the National League East Division. They were knocked out of post season play by a wildcard team. Why did they play 162 games?

I guess this whole post is negative because my camping trip was canceled because of weather.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 11:26 AM   3 comments
Tuesday, October 04, 2005
Homework
Check out the blog titled "Forbidden Thoughts". I found it interesting.

OpinionJournal.com is one of my favorite news blogs.

I rotate through Drudge Report, News.Google and OpinionJournal. And I supplement with a healthy dose of Neal Boortz, Rush Limbaugh and Michael Savage. However, I find Mr. Boortz wrong on lots of issues including Christianity and Intelligent design; but his Fair Tax proposal is fascinating.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 4:33 PM   0 comments
Monday, October 03, 2005
Number?
What number is the limit of human understanding? 107,000 people attend UT football games. Can you imagine that many people? I don't think we can.

How about 50,000? 5,000?

I found a website that says that scientists believe that the largest number that humans can comprehend is 100,000.

Me? I think it's in the hundreds. Say, like seven or eight hundred. Maybe even less.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 1:52 PM   4 comments
Sunday, October 02, 2005
Sunday Thoughts
Wow, what a wonderful day we had yesterday. Good Sunday School lesson. Good sermon. Good fellowship in the Smoky Mountains.
posted by Joe Napalm @ 1:50 PM   0 comments
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