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Aloha Pluggers! This gem has been my best play in years. Not a 10, but a 4 bagger. Best wishes for continued success!
Been stuck in this for years. Nice to see a little action. Most in a long one.
Nice activity and pop.
I'm so sorry. I've lost big on other start ups and feel your pain. I'm down 60% but fortunately didn't bet the house on this one. Best wishes to all of us stuck.
First timer here and in for a small chunk at $1.48. Happy 4th to all!
Thanks ECole!
FWIW - taking a small position here at recent lows.
Way to go APDN....Took some profits, now riding free...Been awhile so this is really sweet. Best to all.
I've flipped this for some small profits a couple of times, but bought in bigger at .0011...all this whacking smells like R/S coming?
Nice upswing based upon Builder confidence news...Decided to take some profits - now watch it soar! Best to all...
Glad I sold most in the high 7's. Averaging down doesn't look good until things stabilize a bit more.
Should have bought more at 7.36 etc, but happy with the upswing.
Going to start adding a bit here. Turn around end of 2011 and start of 2012???
For several years I did get up at 3:30am to trade living in Hawaii. When I started making some really stupid trades I decided I was better of catching up on my beauty sleep. Have held ATWT for over 5 years - I am either crazy or really really patient. Good luck all!
Very good. Just saying that when I "close" on a house, it's an occasion to celebrate. Not so much if the prefix is "fore". : )
Closed or foreclosed? There is a difference. ; )
Obama wins! Maui and the world celebrates! : )
LOL - good one. Yep, used to make a few bucks swing trading this a few years ago. Then bought and held for a long swirly. Hopefully we will be able to come up for air someday.;
Best to you and yours
Another week closer to the crapper. Sigh...
LOL- its all good! Gotta take care of the pups! ; )
: ) Holly has quite the voice - nice vid bro! Our "kids" got all excited -especially our bichon/maltese mix Mochi. He was singing along.
Aloha and all best,
Joe
Ya, he's really qwazy. Let's keep taxes low, keep spending, bailing out the fat cats, and just pass along all this me$$ to our grandchildren and their children.
"I'm not retiring until every American agrees with me," Limbaugh, 57, said on his radio program Wednesday.
Ugh...guess we will have to put up with this nut job until they carry him out in a pine box. Totally agree with your assessment of misplaced $$$$$$$ priorities in this country.
Happy 4th!
Thanks - I like it better too. Used to like the Nellie Furtado version the best until I found the Ray Lamontagne one.
Great stuff. That was the last GL album I purchased. One of my other fav's from that album was this cut: Seven Island Suite
Thanks for the invitation to visit. Great board.
Here is a link to cover of gnarls barkley's crazy by Ray Lamontagne that I like.
I guess we will have to agree to disagree on much of what you wrote.
My views tend toward the Humanist / World view / Agnostic.
http://www.humanisterna.se/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=37&Itemid=48
I do not believe you have to be Christian to be civil, loving, respectful of one's neighbor and especially moral. Even the bible says, that those without law are a law unto themselves, and that they show the work of the Law written in their hearts, their conscience bearing witness and their thoughts alternately accusing or else defending them. I think Thomas Jefferson, Ben Franklin and the other founding fathers had it right regarding the separation of church and state balanced with the right to practice ANY or NO religion.
I am sure you have seen kids who are raised in a strict fundamentalist setting go wild at times when their parents or teachers aren't around to supervise them. The difference between claim and conduct is not guaranteed just because one claims to be Christian. Helpfulness out of concern for another is not morally the same as helpfulness for payment = a heavenly reward. We know that truth telling out of respect for accuracy is not morally the same as truth telling for fear of being caught in a lie. In short, simply to equate "good" behavior with morality doesn't make sense.
As for protecting our borders and culture, I agree that we need to have secure borders - but most of those people coming over for years have been Christians, albeit, Catholics who in many ways are more religious than those born here. We just need tougher border enforcement, sanctions for firms that hire illegal immigrants, and a way for employers to verify that job applicants are here legally - so they can pay taxes that help support the entire system. It might make our prices a bit higher at the market, but in the end....
As for your statement, People won't love their neighbor if they can't trust them. I say, people no matter who they are, have to earn my trust. I give them the benefit of the doubt until they show who they really are.
Besides, didn't Jesus teach that we have to love strangers, and even love our enemies? Sometimes it seems like modern Christians are trying to imitate the Pharisees instead of loving strangers. They have a peculiar obsession about keeping the Law and a strange inability to show hospitality to those with whom they disagree.
They can quote the Law of Moses but they do not seem to know the meaning of the Greek word philoxenia ("loving strangers"). They can quote the Levitical Holiness Code but they do not seem to know the meaning of hospitality. They can tell young Christians that the Old Testament law still applies but they do not seem to know what it truly means to "love strangers."
Some of the above are quotes I found, and have helped me put into words what I believe and feel.
I agree with you, that we need education. An educated society is a more civil, hospitable, ethical and moral one. Otherwise we will repeat history and like Rome, revert to "the mob".
LOL - Obama, and The Bible trumps the constitution/Huckabee? You gotta be kidding.
I have my money on Obama and Jim Webb from Virginia. Maybe a veteran with Sec of the Navy experience will help quell the "Obama has no backbone on National Defense" crowd.
Well written IMHO, OP ed piece from the NY times
June 8, 2008
OP-ED COLUMNIST
One Historic Night, Two Americas
By FRANK RICH
WHEN Barack Obama achieved his historic victory on Tuesday night, the battle was joined between two Americas. Not John Edwards’s two Americas, divided between rich and poor. Not the Americas split by race, gender, party or ideology. What looms instead is an epic showdown between two wildly different visions of the country, from the ground up.
On one side stands Mr. Obama’s resolutely cheerful embrace of the future. His vision is inseparable from his identity, both as a rookie with a slim Washington résumé and as a black American whose triumph was regarded as improbable by voters of all races only months ago. On the other is John McCain’s promise of a wise warrior’s vigilant conservation of the past. His vision, too, is inseparable from his identity — as a government lifer who has spent his entire career in service, whether in the Navy or Washington.
Given the dividing line separating the two Americas of 2008, a ticket uniting Mr. McCain and Hillary Clinton might actually be a better fit than the Obama-Clinton “dream ticket,” despite their differences on the issues. Never was this more evident than Tuesday night, when Mrs. Clinton and Mr. McCain both completely misread a one-of-a-kind historical moment as they tried to cling to the prerogatives of the 20th century’s old guard.
All presidential candidates, Mr. Obama certainly included, are egomaniacs. But Washington’s faith in hierarchical status adds a thick layer of pomposity to politicians who linger there too long. Mrs. Clinton referred to herself by the first-person pronoun 64 times in her speech, and Mr. McCain did so 60 times in his. Mr. Obama settled for 30.
Remarkably, neither Mrs. Clinton nor Mr. McCain had the grace to offer a salute to Mr. Obama’s epochal political breakthrough, which reverberated so powerfully across the country and throughout the world. By being so small and ungenerous, they made him look taller. Their inability to pivot even briefly from partisan self-interest could not be a more telling symptom of the dysfunctional Washington culture Mr. Obama aspires to mend.
Yet even as the two establishment candidates huffed and puffed to assert their authority, they seemed terrified by Mr. Obama’s insurgency, as if it were the plague in Edgar Allan Poe’s “Masque of the Red Death.” Mrs. Clinton held her nonconcession speech in a Manhattan bunker, banishing cellphone reception and television monitors carrying the news of Mr. Obama’s clinching of the nomination. Mr. McCain, laboring under the misapprehension that he was wittily skewering his opponent, compulsively invoked the Obama-patented mantra of “change” 33 times in his speech.
Mr. McCain only reminded voters that he, like Mrs. Clinton, thinks that change is nothing more than a marketing gimmick. He has no idea what it means. “No matter who wins this election, the direction of this country is going to change dramatically,” he said on Tuesday. He then grimly regurgitated Goldwater and Reagan government-bashing talking points from the 1960s and ’70s even as he presumed to accuse Mr. Obama of looking “to the 1960s and ’70s for answers.”
Mr. Obama is a liberal, but it’s not your boomer parents’ liberalism that is at the heart of his appeal. He never rattles off a Clinton laundry list of big federal programs; he supports abortion rights and gay civil rights with a sunny bonhomie that makes the right’s cultural scolds look like rabid mastodons. He is not refighting either side of the domestic civil war over Vietnam that exploded in his hometown of Chicago 40 years ago this summer, long before he arrived there.
He has never deviated from his much-quoted formulation in “The Audacity of Hope,” where he described himself as aloof from “the psychodrama of the baby boom generation” with its “old grudges and revenge plots hatched on a handful of college campuses long ago.” His vocabulary is so different from that of Mrs. Clinton and Mr. McCain that they often find it as baffling as a foreign language, even as they try to rip it off.
The selling point of Mr. Obama’s vision of change is not doctrinaire liberalism or Bush-bashing but an inclusiveness that he believes can start to relieve Washington’s gridlock much as it animated his campaign. Some of that inclusiveness is racial, ethnic and generational, in the casual, what’s-the-big-deal manner of post-boomer Americans already swimming in our country’s rapidly expanding demographic pool. Some of it is post-partisan: he acknowledges that Republicans, Ronald Reagan included, can have ideas.
Opponents who dismiss this as wussy naïveté do so at their own risk. They at once call attention to the expiring shelf life of their own Clinton-Bush-vintage panaceas and lull themselves into underestimating Mr. Obama’s political killer instincts.
The Obama forces out-organized the most ruthless machine in Democratic politics because the medium of their campaign mirrored its inclusive message. They empowered adherents in every state rather than depending on a Beltway campaign hierarchy whose mercenary chief strategist kept his day job as chief executive for a corporate P.R. giant. Such viral organization and fund-raising is a seamless fit with bottom-up democracy as it is increasingly practiced in the Facebook-YouTube era, not merely by Americans and not merely by the young.
You could learn a ton about the Clinton campaign’s cultural tone-deafness from its stodgy generic Web site. A similar torpor afflicts JohnMcCain.com, which last week gave its graphics a face-lift that unabashedly mimics BarackObama.com and devoted prime home page real estate to hawking “McCain Golf Gear.” (No joke.) The blogs, video and social networking are static and sparse, the apt reflection of a candidate who repeatedly invokes “I” as he boasts of his humility.
Mr. Obama’s deep-rooted worldliness — in philosophy as well as itinerant background — is his other crucial departure from the McCain template. As more and more Americans feel the pain of spiraling gas prices and lost jobs, they are also coming to recognize, as Mr. Obama does, that the globally reviled American image forged by an endless war in Iraq and its accompanying torture scandals is inflicting economic as well as foreign-policy havoc.
Six out of 10 Americans do want their president to talk to Iran’s president, according to the most-recent Gallup poll. Americans are sick of a national identity defined by arrogant saber-rattling abroad and manipulative fear-mongering at home. Mr. Obama closed his speech on Tuesday by telling Americans they “don’t deserve” another election “that’s governed by fear.” Of the three candidates, he was the only one who did not mention 9/11 that night.
Mr. Obama isn’t flawless. But it’s hard to see him hitching up with Mrs. Clinton, who would contradict his message, unite the right, and pass along her husband’s still unpacked post-presidency baggage. A larger trap for Mr. Obama is his cockiness. His own tendency to preen and to coast could be encouraged by recent events rocking the Straight Talk Express: Mr. McCain is so far proving an exceptionally clumsy candidate prone to accentuating everything that’s out-of-touch about his American vision.
Mr. McCain’s speech in a New Orleans suburb on Tuesday night spawned a cottage industry of ridicule, even among Republicans. The halting delivery, sickly green backdrop and spastic, inappropriate smiles, presumably mandated by some consultant hoping to mask his anger, left the impression that Mr. McCain isn’t yet ready for prime-time radio.
But the substance was even worse than the theatrics. Incredibly, Mr. McCain attacked Mr. Obama for being insufficiently bipartisan while speaking to the most conspicuously partisan audience you can assemble in today’s America: a small, nearly all-white crowd that seconded his attack lines with boorish choruses of boos. On TV, the audience came across as a country-club membership riled by a change in the Sunday brunch menu.
Equally curious was Mr. McCain’s decision to stage this event in Louisiana, a state that is truly safe for the G.O.P. and that he’d last visited less than six weeks earlier. Perhaps he did so because Louisiana’s governor, the 36-year-old Indian-American Bobby Jindal, is the only highly placed nonwhite Republican he could find to lend his campaign an ersatz dash of diversity and youth.
Or perhaps he thought that if he once more returned to the scene of President Bush’s Katrina crime to (belatedly) slam that federal failure, it would fool voters into forgetting his cheerleading for Mr. Bush’s Iraq obsession and economic policies. This time it proved a levee too far. The day after his speech Mr. McCain was caught on the stump misstating and exaggerating his own do-little record after Katrina. Soon the Internet was alight with documentation of what he actually did on the day the hurricane hit land: a let-us-eat-cake photo op with Mr. Bush celebrating his birthday in Arizona.
Anything can happen in politics, and there are five months to go. But Tuesday night’s McCain pratfall — three weeks in the planning by his campaign, according to Fox News — should be a clear indication that Mr. Obama must accept Mr. McCain’s invitation to weekly debates at once. Tomorrow if possible, and, yes, bring on the green!
Mr. Obama must also heed Mr. McCain’s directive that he visit Iraq — as long as he avoids Baghdad markets and hits other foreign capitals on route. When the world gets a firsthand look at the new America Mr. Obama offers as an alternative to Mr. McCain’s truculent stay-the-course, the public pandemonium may make J.F.K.’s “Ich bin ein Berliner” visit to the Berlin Wall look like a warm-up act.
Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company
Good points - agreed.
Completely agree OD. Everything else aside, Archuleta sang his buns off. Perfect pitch, modulation. Would I buy his CD's over Cooks? Probably not, but he is a pure singer.
About time...Guy always gave me the creeps as well. Your feelings were spot on.
I remember seeing that "special" about what a genius he was. Do you think he was a good business man at one time, or just lucky, and then went bad when he could not sign any new talent that kept him at the level he achieved with N sync?
Well said!
Yikes. My company owns a building on the plaza with the Pergola Pioneer Square.
http://travel.webshots.com/photo/1048135026038588459Wvcugf
Blind too. They all have great voices, but she is an Idol hottie as well.... ; )
Wow - no posts on the John Edwards endorsement? A long time coming, but very important IMO.
When Edwards and Obama first took the stage in the debates, I was thinking dream ticket. Edwards brings the support of a segment that has been voting Hillary. Let's put the two together -an unbeatable choice in November, again IMO.
Sorry to rain on your West Virginia parade Hillary! ; )
My wife and I are off to the Hawaii state convention at the end of the month. Will report any news when we return.
Best to all - Aloha!
OK then. I'm not "a believer", but agree its gonna take a miracle of some kind OR divine intervention to get my money back here.
; )
Best to all,
Could be, but that last 9999 was just me messin around. Quick fill fwiw.
I found this to be a balanced outlook on the whole Wright / Obama "controversy". Interestingly, written by a Catholic Priest.
No need for us to choose between Obama, Wright
May 4, 2008
Recommend (8)
BY THE REV. MICHAEL L. PFLEGER
This has been a sad week for me. I have watched two friends whom I respect, admire and have a deep love for torn apart by pundits and editorialists, talking heads and political strategists!
It has been sad because both men, Sen. Barack Obama and the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, love America, are passionate about its future and desire at their very core the best for this country and for each and every one of its citizens. I must also say that I find it quite hypocritical that conservative preachers and commentators who have identified themselves as the protectors and respecters of life are consistently silent on the issues of gun violence, poverty, lack of health care, poor education and the effects of racism and classism that are continually killing life in our inner cities. Yet when other voices identify these issues, they're called angry and unpatriotic.
There has been a strong desire and demand to make people take a side, draw a line in the sand and make a choice between Wright and Obama. I personally believe this is evil and unfair.
First of all, I don't understand why Obama and Wright are suddenly being held accountable and responsible for whatever the other says. This is not being done in either of the campaigns of Sen. Hillary Clinton and Sen. John McCain. So the question must be asked: What's the hidden strategy as to why this is being done to Obama and Wright?
Second, why are they seemingly being forced to not only be held accountable for each other, but to speak for and sound like each other? They are different persons, different personalities and have different purposes.
Finally, I understand, appreciate and believe we need both!
Obama has spent the past two years and years earlier in his political life presenting America a vision of hope. Hope as to who we can be, how we can be inclusive and different, how we can do politics differently, and how we can build a new and better America. This vision of hope has set a fire of enthusiasm, excitement and involvement across this country.
Wright, as a gifted preacher in the prophetic tradition, has spent his ministry identifying the sins, problems and stumbling blocks of racism, sexism, classism, poverty, inequality and the downright lies that must be acknowledged and eradicated if we are to build a new and better America. He has given hope to masses of people who have come to feel invisible in America.
We need a voice of hope that points us to a vision, and we need a prophetic voice that makes us uncomfortable and forces us to acknowledge our sins. Obama and Wright are, I believe, seeking the same thing, what the scriptures may call "a new heaven and a new Earth." Why are we trying to force them to drive down the same street in order to get there rather than being more preoccupied with arriving to the place of new beginnings and grateful to all the different voices that take us there? The true audacity of hope comes when it seems everything looks hopeless. Both Obama and Wright are calling us to hope -- but from their different vantage points.
I challenge us all not to get caught up in the trick to choose one or the other. Rather, let us be committed to the new day and the new beginning for America. And let us be appreciative and thankful for all the different and necessary voices who call us to get there! The truth is, we need Obama, and we need Wright, and if we are serious about wanting a new America, we cannot afford to throw either one of them under the bus!
The Rev. Michael Pfleger, a Catholic priest, is pastor of the Faith Community of St. Sabina in Chicago.
http://www.suntimes.com/news/otherviews/931164,CST-EDT-open04.article