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Hal_Crawford

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Everything posted by Hal_Crawford

  1. Kenk: Congrats to your son. He has every right to be proud of his accomplishment. You have every right to be proud of your son. I've sat on a number of EBORs and seen a lot of other scouts go through the process. Most did no more than your son. Every Eagle has his strengths and weaknesses but they all did their best in the eyes of their SM, their merit badge counselors and those that sat on their Boards of Review (from Tenderfoot through Eagle). No small feat. Hal
  2. "If merely fulfilling all the requirements is what it takes, why doesn't every Scout earn Eagle?" Because not every scout wants to work for it. Really, any scout who wants to do the work can earn Eagle. Part of it is living the Scout Oath and Law which will weed out some but for the most part it is the willingness to complete the merit badges that makes the difference. Is it a diploma or an honor society? It is closer to an honor society. When you get your diploma it is time to clean out you locker and move on to another phase in your life. Many Eagles age out about the sa
  3. Just saw this from Popular Mechanics. One of the stories refers to the Little Sioux scout ranch. http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/worst_case_scenarios/4331486.html Be Prepared! Hal
  4. I just stumbled across this news item and I see the victim was a scout leader and school teacher. A terrible thing for his family, his students and his scouts. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090924/ap_on_re_us/us_census_worker_hanged Hal
  5. Here's a link to his article: http://www.inquiry.net/ideals/within_my_power.htm
  6. Pack: Where were you in Turkey? It was 50 years ago but I remember seeing snow on the ground when I lived in Ankara. Hal
  7. Actually, I don't have a particular objection to much of what they say. I don't think that their expectations that charities will pick up all the nations social needs is particularly realistic. There are some other areas that I disagree with but I think they make some valid points. Non interventionism isn't always a bad thing. I think the country would benefit from hearing the libertarians every time we consider sending in the Marines. As a nation we are too quick to put boots on the ground creating a mess that the next couple of presidents have to live with and/or end. What struck m
  8. Before folks start piling on the Libertarian band wagon they might want to look at where the Libertarian party stands on major issues. http://www.lp.org/issues Hal
  9. I guess I missed the part where Obama refused to send more troops. The request hasn't been received yet and SecDef Gates has said he will not send it to Obama until they finish a discussion of strategy based on previous McChrystal's report of the situation. http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090923/pl_afp/usafghanistannatounrestmilitary_20090923190856 To suggest that Obama is throwing McChrystal under the bus is premature. I wish that LBJ had taken a little more time to consider a strategy and the wisdom of General Westmoreland's troop requests. There's a black wall in Washingt
  10. Looks like he put in a full day today. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_obama;_ylt=At7umlIzz.VCQNDY_wjiB5.s0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTJtbGo3cjU1BGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMDkwOTIyL3VzX29iYW1hBGNwb3MDMQRwb3MDMgRwdANob21lX2Nva2UEc2VjA3luX3RvcF9zdG9yeQRzbGsDc3Rlcm5vYmFtYWNv Hal
  11. Joe Bob, do you have a link to that Pew survey, I can't seem to find it. I did find one that said that Fox's audience was more balanced but nothing about content, or at least nothing that agrees with what you have posted. There were some interesting figures on favorability released a week ago. http://newsbusters.org/blogs/brent-baker/2009/09/14/public-trust-media-accuracy-lowest-ever-liberal-v-conservative-bias-gap As for Obama on Letterman. His appearance did nothing to diminish my respect for him or the office of President. He has a message and he is looking for every way possible
  12. A Mighty Wind is a very funny movie. As someone who has worked on a lot of concerts and festivals it cut very close to the bone. I have been in some of those conversations especially when non-technical producers/promoters feel compelled to give there input on the lights, sound or scenery. Bob Balaban was suberb in the role of the promoter, that is to say, I wanted to smack him. I have also been there when the artist wandered off just before they were supposed to go on (and a number of variations like not making it from the hotel to the venue or not being able to pass the bar in the h
  13. Pack: You mentioned Pete Seeger. As a kid in Greenwich Village, Mary Travers lived in the same building as Pete Seeger. Mary was one rare among the Village folk scene in that she actually grew up there. As a teen she got her start in a group called the Song Swappers backing up Seeger and the Weavers. Who would have thought that she would be gone before Pete? Hal
  14. I don't remember. Thank God they didn't have Facebook back then!
  15. Virginia! I said they got past it... not that they got over it. Actually, here in Arlington we are not really part of the old Virginia as we are much more tied to the Federal City. Not that we don't have our Civil War history; if you dig a hole the odds are still good that you will find a Union belt buckle or a minie ball. Though in Virginia, Arlington (then Alexandria County) was pretty much a Union armed camp with a series of forts that protected the capital city. But now days most of the people here were born somewhere else and we have as many yankees as southerners. We ar
  16. That raises an interesting question. 25 years ago I was teaching at a college in Nebraska. The library had a suggestion box and they printed the suggestions and responses. Someone had suggested that the library should have a subscription to Playboy. While many at the time considered it to be pornographic it was a much more mainstream magazine than things like Penthouse or Hustler. The Library's response was that there was no academic justification for having Playboy in the library. I was conflicted on whether I bought this answer. I wondered if a student were writing an essay on J
  17. When I was in the sixth grade our teacher had us learn Puff and Where Have All the Flowers Gone. It was 1964 so the PP&M albums were still on the charts. I remember that there was a girl across the aisle from me who got teary every time we sang the last verse of Puff and I thought that was silly. 45 years later I get misty when I hear that verse; more now than a week ago. Hal
  18. I've seen it and agree it is a great story and a great documentary. Hal
  19. Skeptic: I knew I was OLD when my my son was taking history in 11th grade. They covered the Vietnam war at the end of the 3rd quarter. I took the same history course during the Vietnam war and now that war was only 3/4 of the way through US history. Arrrgh! Oh well, at least they got past the civil war. Hal
  20. Nike: Amen to that. But I think maybe this has been going on for a long time. I grew up in Virginia (except when we were stationed overseas) in the 1960s and the schools taught US and Virginia history in 5th, 7th and 11th grades. For some reason the first two courses stopped at 1865. I thought that the teachers were just disorganized but later came to think that in Virginia they just didn't want to discuss what happened next. In 11th grade we got the rest of the story. Hal
  21. Vol: You mention holocaust deniers. There are two ways to deny the holocaust, one is to actively say that it didn't happen. Folks that do that here are usually written off as wackjobs (in Iran they are called president). The other way is to not teach it or have books about it in the school library. I fear that is more common. A few years ago I was talking to a fourteen year old from somewhere in the midwest. The lad was on an annual visit to the grandparents. Each year he had visited a couple of the museums on the mall and he asked me if I could recommend something he hadn't see
  22. Vol, I think you have touched on why you don't see that much book banning in the more conservative states, the schools and librarians practice "sensitivity" in ordering so the potentially "objectionable" books are not there in the first place. I suspect if this soft or preemptive book banning were tracked the map would be much more crowded. On one level it may be just common sense. At the extreme it can leave a gaping hole in the education of the students and/or perpetuate biases by providing only one point of view. Hal
  23. Maybe they're morons, maybe they're not but at some point someone will tell the "Teabaggers" what the slang term "tea bagging" means. It isn't appropriate to post on this site or this thread (it is neither courteous nor civil) so if you don't know it, google it. Lets just say I wouldn't want to walk around with a tee shirt that said "Teabagger" any more than I would want to wear one that said "Moron". Hal
  24. Zoom in on the map and then click on the markers and you get a very different picture. In the densely populated Northeast there really aren't that many and some of them are cases where a book was challenged but not removed. At least on case was a Catholic School that banned Harry Potter books. Silly perhaps but it is not like a (tax payer funded) public school system banning books. If you look in the Maryland-DC-Virginia area you see that most if not all the bannings or attempted bannings were in more conservative areas (North Stafford County for instance-they are to the right of Gen
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