Since it is almost noon here in Texas, maybe I should title this, Monday Afternoon Musings. Sorry I’m late. Life keeps interfering.
One nice thing to interfere has been ongoing enthusiasm for the Winnsboro history book that I wrote with our local historian. Here I am with Bill Jones at a recent signing event. I was so thrilled to get this book done for Bill. Everybody in town kept saying we needed to get a book published with all the historical facts that he has stored in his memory banks, and then Arcadia Publishing contacted me wanting an Images of America – Winnsboro book. Talk about something that was meant to be.
Today I am a guest on Yolanda Renee’s blog, Defending the Pen. If you have a moment to hop over, you can find out which of my kids I love the most. ๐ This is a terrific blog and Yolanda is generous in supporting her fellow authors.
On another note, deliberations for sentencing Nidal Hasan began today, and yesterday a Dallas morning news columnist posed an interesting question on the issue, “What’s worse than death?” The columnist suggests that maybe life in solitary confinement in prison would be a worse punishment for a man who welcomes death because he would be a martyr and a hero to fellow jihadists overseas. Not to mention depriving him of the 70 virgins that are supposed to be part of his eternal reward.
Proponents of the death penalty say Hasan deserves to die for his crimes, but I agree with the columnist. Hasan, who was wounded in the shoot-out at Fort Hood, is paralyzed from the chest down, and a greater punishment would be for him to spend many more long years suffering.
In an article in The Dallas Morning News, Dave Lieberman reported about a Texas resident who recently noted a Medicare over-payment that was double what the actual bill was. When she reported that she was told by a medicate representative that it is now standard payment for some services, and the system automatically pays that amount, no matter what the billing amount is. When the woman asked why each bill is not paid according to the billing amount, she was told that this is the system that is in place and it all balances out in the long run. Some submitted bills are higher than the standard payment amount, so that cancels the over-payments.
Oh, really? And we wonder why Medicare is in trouble.A charter school in Houston is a little more than red-faced after it was revealed that administrators misused $5.3 million in federal funds for trips to Las Vegas and New York and cruises. The two top administrators also received salaries of $440,000 while enjoying all those trips and the perks that came with the trips.
This type of misappropriation is too common in school districts across our country, and the trickle-down effect is always a direct negative impact on students and teachers. We can’t pay teachers a decent wage for the work they do. Parents are having to purchase more and more supplies for their children, as schools can no longer provide them. Just the other day I was asked at the grocery store if I would like to buy a box of tissues to be donated to the local school.
Now to end on a lighter note, here are a couple of jokes I found on Jokes and Humor for Kids. I thought they would tickle the childish funny bone in all of us.
Question: Why are ghosts bad liars?
Answer: Because you can see right through them
Question: What dog can jump higher than a building?
Answer: Any dog, buildings can’t jump!
Love the jokes, made me smile!
Thanks for doing the interview and for keeping up with the comments, your blog generated a lot of traffic.
I too think life in prison has to punishment enough. Death is a release they should anticipate as judgement truly come then!
Thanks for your comment, Yolanda. Lots of people I have talked to think that life in prison is a better punishment. I need to check the news to see if a verdict has been reached regarding sentencing.