Help Huckabee reach 5,000

Help Mike Huckabee become the fastest growing candidate on Myspace.
As of 8:30 p.m., Sunday evening, Mike Huckabee has 4,920 friends on Myspace – only 80 away from hitting the 5,000 mark.
The campaign wants to hit 5,000 as soon as possible and is offering a copy of Huckabee’s book to friend #5,000.

From the campaign:
According to TechPresident.com, a website that tracks the growth of the major presidential candidate MySpace pages, we are the second fastest growing page of ALL the candidates– just behind Fred Thompson. So let’s not only help Mike get 5,000 friends, but let’s make his page the fastest growing page on MySpace!

Visit:
myspace.com/mikehuckabeeforpresident to join the campaign for 2008.

Huckabee campaign

From the Huckabee campaign:

Momentum and message are the key words coming out of today’s Republican presidential debate on ABC News at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa. Governor Huckabee clearly has it; other candidates whose campaigns are stagnant or failing only wish they did.

1. The debate opened with the network revealing details of the latest ABC News-Washington Post poll results in Iowa. Governor Huckabee has surged to a tie for third place among declared candidates at 8 percent. It’s no surprise that former Governor Mitt Romney leads because of the extraordinary amount of money he has poured into the race, including millions of his personal fortune. Former New York Mayor Rudy Guiliani, who has chosen to ignore the Republican Party of Iowa Straw Poll in Ames this coming Saturday, is in second place as he continues to ride a wave of name identification. What has! surprised the mainstream media is Governor Huckabee’s continued strong showing, which can only be attributed to the strength of his message and the hard work of dedicated friends and volunteers like you.

2. Pollster Frank Luntz, who measured debate watchers’ reactions in real time, said afterward that Governor Huckabee is the clear winner. As in past debates, the public has responded favorably to his command of the facts, his control of his emotions and his ability as an outstanding communicator. That’s what leadership is all about, folks. As the Governor often says, he’s a conservative, but he’s not mad at anybody. That came through again in today’s debate, and that creates a real connection with the American public. Whenever people see Mike Huckabee, they come away with a favorable impression. Luntz’s tracking proves that fact.

3. The American public got another opportunity today to see that Governor Huckabee’s message is on target. On Iraq, health care, national infrastructure and other issues, Governor Huckabee of fered the most effective, balanced, reasoned and comprehensive solutions. The bottom line is that Mike Huckabee defined himself again today as a candidate with executive experience and a message focused on a strong, safe, economically vibrant America. He has what it takes to restore America’s greatness.

Silly corn subsidies

I can’t help but think about The West Wing’s King Corn. “Did you take the ethanol pledge?”

Treehugger reports on Jeff Goodell‘s article in Rolling Stone:

He starts strongly: “The great danger of confronting peak oil and global warming isn’t that we will sit on our collective asses and do nothing while civilization collapses, but that we will plunge after “solutions” that will make our problems even worse. Like believing we can replace gasoline with ethanol, the much-hyped biofuel that we make from corn.” and explains the political pressures that lead so many politicians like Obama, Clinton, McCain, and Edwards, who should know better, to support it.
Before the “corn is just the first step” people jump in, Jeff covers that, quoting Vinod Kholsa, but explaining how cellulosic ethanol, if it can be scaled up to production, is still no answer. “replacing fifty percent of our current gasoline consumption with cellulosic ethanol would consume thirteen percent of the land in the United States – about seven times the land currently utilized for corn production. ”
The facts are straightforward: Filling the tank of 1 SUV with pure ethanol consumes more than 450 pounds of corn, enough calories to feed a person for a year. “if we rely on ethanol to save the day, we could soon find ourselves forced to make a choice between feeding our SUVs and feeding children in the Third World. And we all know how that decision will go.”

Sustainable infrastructure

Working for the County Commissioner in Ellis County Pct. 3, I’ve seen my share of bridge damage and road damage with all the rains we’ve had this summer.
whitten-rd2jpg.JPG
(Yes that’s a five foot culvert that used to run under Whitten Rd – it buckled and snapped in half with all the rain water).
Granted our roads and bridges are nothing like the I-35 bridge outside Minneapolis, and granted, we haven’t had any fatalities on our damaged roadways — but as reported on Treehugger, “Governments do not want to pay for maintenance because it is not sexy,” said John Ochsendorf, a structural engineer and an associate professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
There’s this really odd way of thinking (especially of some elected officials in Ellis County) that if we don’t maintain our infrastructure (i.e. facilities, roads, bridges, etc.) we can keep our tax rate low and get re-elected and pass the maintenance off to the people who come behind us.

What might have cost a lot less if things had been taken care of originally are now costing more to rebuild or completely replace.
Where’s the logic in that?
More from Treehugger:

As Congress approves 55 billion dollars in corn subsidies and pays 12 billion dollars a month for the Iraq war, the infrastructure in America continues to crumble: Bridges in Minneapolis, steam pipes in Manhattan, highway collapses in Montreal and of course levee breaches in New Orleans.
The New York Times says “Transportation officials know many of the nation’s 600,000 bridges are in need of repair or replacement. About one in eight has been deemed “structurally deficient,” a term that typically means a component of the bridge’s structure has been rated poor or worse, but does not necessarily warn of imminent collapse. Most deficient bridges, which included the span of Interstate 35W over the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, remain open to traffic.”
Geoff Manaugh of BLDGBLOG does the math and notes “13.6 percent of U.S. bridges – i.e. more than 81,000 bridges – are “functionally obsolete.” He continues: “the Federal Highway Administration’s annual budget appears to be hovering around $35-40 billion a year….and annual government subsidies for Amtrak come in at slightly more than $1 billion. That’s $1 billion every year to help commuter train lines run.”

Let’s wake up and take care of what we have now – or end up paying a much higher price later on.

Geoff says “Perhaps the best way to be “pro-American” these days is to lobby for modern, safe, and trustworthy infrastructure – and the economic efficiencies to which that domestic investment would lead.”

The origins of Christian Rock

Slate has an interesting piece on the history of Christian Rock.
I didn’t see any mention of Larry Norman though – who many consider the father of Contemporary Christian Music.
If you’re a dcTalk fan, you may recognize Norman’s name as the author of the dcT cover, I Wish We’d All Been Ready.

Local columnist on the I-35W bridge collapse

A local columnist, Nathalie Guyol, had this to say about the I-35W bridge collapse.:

This week President Bush offered his condolences and prayers to victims of the I-35W bridge collapse in Minneapolis. He assured the citizens of that city that the federal government would see that the bridge is rebuilt as soon as possible.
“We in the federal government must respond, and respond robustly, to help the people there not only recover, but to make sure that lifeline of activity — that bridge — gets rebuilt as quickly as possible,” he said.

Meanwhile, back in New Orleans . . .