
I'm hiding in the Islands for the next few days, non-blogismentis.
Hope to come ablogging again Saturday or Sunday.
Be well.
Eat a peach.
Wear your pantlegs rolled...
"WITHOUT PUBLIC DISCOURSE, DEMOCRACY IS BUT A WHISPER" David Berner
They're looking at whether speed was a factor.
You think?
Mr. Yellow Racer has sped away into the ether.
The police are questioning Mr. Black Racer.
Community football associations are the latest group to complain about funding cutbacks from the British Columbia government.
Several teams have come forward to say their gaming grants were thousands of dollars less than they expected.
The province has already announced cuts to education, arts, literacy and health care as it tries to deal with a $2.8-billion deficit.
The Vancouver Trojans, an East Vancouver community football team, say they're getting significantly less than the $83,000 they were promised in July.
"I can imagine cutbacks … times are lean, it's a recession, you gotta cut back," said Trojans president Kerry Mann. "But do you gotta cut back from $83,000 to $15,000? That's $70,000. Well, where's that gonna come from?"
Mann said the news means the team's future is uncertain: "The first thought that comes to mind is, we can't even finish the season. We can't even afford to rent another bus."
Bob Watson, the Trojans' coach, said the province should have let teams know months ago they would be getting much less money than in previous years.
"It's right up there with the HST [harmonized sales tax]. They threw it in there, nobody anticipated it. When I voted for Gordon Campbell and the Liberals in the last election, they didn't mention any of these things. It's a little bit underhanded, I believe," Watson said.
The B.C. Community Football Association told CBC News it knows of several other football clubs complaining about cuts to their grants.
No one from the Ministry of Housing and Social Development was available for comment on the weekend.
* * *
When I sked my son if that meant the end of the season which just began, his answer was this:
Hi Dad,
I think we will finish our season. Some of the volunteer executives paid for new equipment and uniforms on their credit cards because they had to be ordered in time for the start of the season, and the Govt had already promised the funds to our organization. A couple of them are in for $15,000.00 or so, each.
OK. Rich Coleman.
Explain this to those boys and their families.
And let's get Education Minister Margaret MacDiarmid over to the park to show the tight ends and wide receivers and inside tackles how to shift their joyful energies to dancing in the streets.
"I come to that conclusion as I am satisfied that his age on release together with the options available under the long-term offender provisions are sufficient to reduce the risk that Mr. Neale poses to the community to an acceptable level," the judge concluded.
The good and learned judge's reluctance to declare this thorough miscreant a dangerous offender demonstrates the judge's total disconnect from reality.
What medications is he on?
Read the story and ask yourself what further proof does the judge need that this sorry excuse for a human being is in fact the poster boy for dangerous offenders.
I caught about a half hour of a concert video of Michael Jackson in Bucharest last night.
My goodness, whatever else Jackson may or may not have been, he was for sure one helluva freaked out insanely sublimely talented performer.
My all-time Show Biz Hero is Fred Astaire, bar none and that includes Marlon.
BUT…
Jackson could dance like nobody’s business.
So precise, so demanding of himself, so exact.
Thrilling in every breath and every step, and every break and pause and freeze.
Wow!
Way too much has been made about his death and dying.
But I tell you, his Life and his Art were truly something else.