Monthly Archives: February 2008

Termites Swarming (Issue 18)

Yesterday I received an advertisement in the mail, reminding me of termite season, and that it was time to protect my home before disaster. The ad boldly stated, “SWARM WARNING,” it’s termite season in your area. The ad stated the cost was $399 with guaranteed protection against termites.
 
I couldn’t help but identify the politicians and political government with the descriptive termite ad. The ad listed 4 things to consider to protect my property. One—more than 500 swarms are reported daily during swarm season. Two—swarm season is the most visible time for termites. Three—termites swarm to pair off, leave their colonies, and establish new ones. Four—you don’t have to see a swarm to have an infestation. The article went on to explain how termites could enter your property through the smallest spaces, undetected, until they had caused a great deal of damage, like crawling in and around concrete slabs.
 
The article stated, “no matter how your home is built, termites will find a way inside,”  Further estimating this year, termites will cause $5 billion in damage to homes. All this from these very tiny insects that sustain themselves by feeding off your property. Through the proliferation of numbers, they can destroy large homes and the destructive process can be well underway before the occupant knows anything is gnawing away.
 
If I inserted the word politician, or political government, in place of ‘termite’ in the above ad, there would be an uncanny analogy and accuracy to the description.
 
I have heard political government described in many ways as “cancer,” but never compared to termites. Yet the above advertisement seemed an appropriate analogy. The political process is also particular similar to cancer, in the way cells divide, subdivide and proliferate, causing pain and destruction. It’s also grossly related in how both frequently sneak up on an individual, many times in the advanced stage before individuals become aware they have a destructive enemy in their bodies.
 
The power to destroy, and control one’s property by the political government, has been a process over a lengthy period of time. Like an inch worm, little by little in the beginning, until a time like today when we are far down the road of socialism. And socialism is a system of government, with anti-private property ownership. Called by any name—Fascism, Communism, or Democracy—it’s the control and take over of individual freedom and private ownership by a centralized government, operated by the thousands of bureaucratic departments and agencies.
 
It was probably over 30 years ago when I read a great book by John T. Flynn titled, While You Slept. Like termites, the destruction has been a takeover of individual freedom and private properties, all while we slept. And for the strangest reason, it seems most citizens think we can vote our way backwards. This election year, with the ranting of politicians, reminds me of swarming. I wonder if there’s any similarity to others…
 
Let Freedom Ring!
 
JUST ME,
AC

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Driver’s License Debacle (Issue 17)

The Republicans can out-democrat the Democrats. One area in which this is so evident is the passing of the Patriot Act. This law has affected many of our lives, in ways we never dreamed possible, when we first heard all the hype about it, when elected officials were trying to ramrod through for passage.
 
For me personally, the biggest adverse impact has been over my driver’s license cancellation. Because the Georgia Department of Motor Vehicles made an error in their records—putting down the wrong birth date—my driver’s license was cancelled as a result. Now, almost two years later, they still refuse to reinstate my license, despite all my efforts to try to reason with them.

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Clewiston, Florida Airport & Plane Flights (Issue 16)

Recently I woke up, turned on the news, and there was a feature story about the little town of Clewiston, Florida. A national news anchor, stood in the middle of the little airport, covering a story about a man practicing jumping out of an airplane as a precursor to jumping without a chute.
 
Seeing the little airport on the news was so déjà vu for me because I recalled learning to drive on that very same airport. There was very little traffic on it back then, so I would drive around changing gears, backing up, parking and teaching myself how to drive. When I thought I knew how, I drove up to the hangar and asked the A&E mechanic to get in the car with me and check me out.
 
Back in those days, my husband owned a little airplane, and we would frequently take trips over the Everglades, flying low and scaring the alligators out of their holes. Seeing that little airport reminded me of the  many times we would fly in and out of it.
 
Clewiston is a lovely little town located at the edge of the Everglades and the Lake Okeechobee Dam. One of the few cities, as I understand it, designed originally by an architect. Home of the United States Sugar Corporation, and a great little tourist town located half way between Fort Meyers and West Palm beach, I lived there for 5 years. I enjoyed living there, but never wanted to return to live there.
 
Despite the beauty of the Royal Palm lined streets, I longed for a return to my home of origin in the hills of North Georgia—the red clay rolling terrain at the foot hills of the Blue Ridge Mountains.
 
I recall one incident when my husband decided to take off on Christmas Eve, flying into the swamp of the Everglades to deer hunt. It was one of those unusually cold rainy days. He came home before the trip, and in a hurry walked in the door and pitched a 45 pistol across the room toward a couch. I was not home. The gun struck the edge of a table and fired into the wall. Because I fussed about having guns around, he tried to conceal the shot by sticking a white candle on the bullet entry in the living room wall, then covered it with spray paint. On the bullet exit in the bedroom, he hung a picture. Of course the first thing I noticed when I walked in was the fresh paint, then walked into the bedroom and lifted the picture. But he was long gone to the Everglades by then.
 
When he landed to kill a deer, he crashed the plane, and was lost in the Everglades all during Christmas. Searchers found the wrecked plane, but not him. He had decided to walk out and after  3 days emerged on a highway about 10 miles west of Clewiston. The weather was so rainy and foggy he did not know the direction he was going, but survived and came out alive. I asked him why he did not remove the compass from the plane for direction, and he said that never occurred to him. I was so glad to see him I laughed about the gun accident firing in the living room.
 
Years later, he crashed a helicopter off the coast of Japan. The plane rolled when he hit the water and he had about 2 minutes to pull his crew out before it sank. When rescued by Japanese fishermen off the coast of Yokohama, the locals on shore presented him with a bottle of Old Ocean Whiskey. He and his crew were unhurt, but the plane was scrap when pulled out of the ocean.
  
Just some of my memories of Clewiston and life married to a pilot. Perhaps some of you out there were married to pilots during the war and have stories to share. I’d love to hear them.
 
Let Freedom Ring!
 
JUST ME,
AC

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One-Room School House (Issue 15)

In this day and age of trips to the moon, instant communication with anyone on the planet via computers, and all the modern inventions and accomplishments, it might seem unreal to know there is someone like me still living…who once attended a one-room school house in a horse and buggy. It’s tantamount to shock and awe when receiving an e-mail or call from my son flying thousands of feet in the air.
 
There have been many other advanced civilizations, like Atlantis and the Incas. One of my great pleasures is all the programs on the history channel. Entertaining and educational, we can travel back in time with the vivid reenactments of events. To be ignorant of what occurred before we were born leaves a hole in our souls as to what is happening today.
 
I graduated from high school when I was 17 years old and attended a large county country school most of those years. However, for one season I attended a one-room school house. I had a slew of aunts and uncles, some older and a couple of them younger than me. Some were school teachers.

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