4 O.C. Congress members skip final votes (OC Reg; Total Buzz)
Christmas break seems to have started a little earlier for four of Orange County’s six congressional representatives, who missed today’s voting on bills for continuing funding for the federal government and for a food safety bill.
Among the more than 70 House members listed as not voting on those bills are O.C. Reps. Ken Calvert, R-Corona; John Campbell, R-Irvine; Gary Miller, R-Diamond Bar; and Loretta Sanchez, D-Santa Ana.
Sticking around for final votes on those two bills were Reps. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Huntington Beach and Ed Royce, R-Fullerton. The two opposed both measures, although both passed.
Have you noticed? The list of OC Congresspeople and the list of "biggest OC jackasses" is almost identical. (I say "almost" cuz Tom Fuentes doesn't appear on the first.)
On the bright side: I did find this cool flask at Urban Outfitters the other day. What could be better than a flask? For my pop, maybe.
The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT — "[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Time passes slowly up here in the mountains
We lost electricity last night. So, this morning, I boiled some water (I've got propane), brought it down to the folks' house (a few hundred yards down the road), and we made coffee.
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Pa was out with his tractor clearing away the mud in front of a neighbors house, which was piling up at an alarming rate. You've got to keep on top of it.
When he made it back, we thawed out some bagels and had breakfast.
When it rains this hard and steady, everywhere, there are creeks, cutting through the middle of everything and anything. Mostly, you just let it happen.
This is the creek now running down from my place. It was touch and go, but mostly we avoided flooding of anything important. Had to get out the shovels though.
This is along my driveway. Not too bad. Fun to drive through. You kinda aim your car and go. Don't be all prissy about it.
This is the creek crossing on Lambrose Canyon Road. Doesn't look like much (click on it), but it's been mostly impassable since Monday night. It seems to be pretty settled down right now, but, unless your car has good clearance, you're bound to hit and grind nasty rocks as you cross. That happened to me Monday night. I went through there, and there was plenty of scraping and noise, but I did make it across, as usual. But, then, there was a terrible rumble coming from the right side of my big ol' Chrysler 300. I drove up to Hamilton Trail and had a look. It was rainin' cats and dogs! No flat tires or nothin'. The noise didn't seem too bad after a while, so on I went to the store in town. I knew I'd be holed up for a while, so I got plenty of provisions. The creek was getting bad.
My dad and I just jacked up the Chrysler and found a big old branch under it, toward the front. That's all it was.
Sure is quiet otherwise.
And seriously green.
And ain't the rain supposed to quit right about now? Sheesh.
But now the power's back on! Whoopee!
Ain't life good?
Always loved Collins' version of this Dylan song.
You Ain't Goin' Nowhere
Shelter in Place

Rebel Girl woke this morning to this announcement:
This is the County EOC with Important Road Closure Information
Canyon Residents
Modjeska Canyon is impassible due to flooding and debris throughout the roadway
Santiago Canyon is shut down in both directions between 241/261 Interchange and Cooks Corner due to flooding and debris throughout the roadway
Harding Canyon Bridge is impassible
Please shelter in place and do NOT go on the road. Barricades have been established.
People will NOT be allowed to pass due to safety until further notice.
You will updated once conditions improve and roadways are re-opened.
She likes the county even if they use inconsistent punctuation.
She tried calling her comrade-in-arms, B. Von Traven, but the phone just rang and rang which is unusual. She suspects the lines are out there over in Trabuco and might soon be here as well in Modjeska.
The Register reports that evacuations are ongoing. Sirens just now, down the hill.
As long as Santa can do his job, she doesn't mind. Too much.

(Rebel Girl includes a couple pics from yesterday's afternoon walk when she and the little guy escaped the house for a brisk walk in between the storms. That's Modjeska Canyon creek in the first (looking toward the Tucker) and the little guy with some toyon berry branches in the next.)
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9:22:Somehow it is raining harder. Lights flickering. The water just went out. We've got our 10 gallon earthquake supply though.
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Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Meet the Flintstones, the modern stone age family
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(Click on graphic) |
A new poll by Gallup has found that 40 percent of Americans (a smaller share than at times in the past) holds a strict creationist view, believing that God created humans in their present form, 10,000 years ago. There is a link between educational attainment and such beliefs: 47 percent of those with a high school diploma or less are creationists, followed by 44 percent of those with some college education, 37 percent of college graduates, and 22 percent of those with graduate education. A majority of Republicans (52 percent) believe in creationism, while 34 percent of Democrats and independents do so.
When you're with the Flintstones
you'll have a yabba dabba doo time.
A dabba doo time.
You'll have a gay old time.
Solstice: Remembering the Pan Am 103 Bombing and Liz Marek (Rebel Girl)

Two years ago Rebel Girl and Red stayed home for Christmas instead of venturing as they usually do south of the border for their annual Mexican navidad. This year finds them stateside again (alas!) and so Rebel Girl looked up what she wrote two years ago and found this remembrance — it bears reposting and so she has.
In it, Reb remembers Liz Marek who died in the bombing of Pan Am 103. Liz was a peace activist, a musician, a lesbian, a feminist of the 1980s variety. Rebel Girl doesn't know what Liz would make of today's political landscape though she imagines Liz would support marriage equality and perhaps would have a critique of Don't Ask, Don't Tell that would align with Reb's own: Don't enlist in the first place. Abolish the military, don't integrate it. No doubt the current politicking over the START treaty would have diappointed but not suprised Liz.
Last time, the post inspired a few comments from other friends of Liz who found it via the web:
Anonymous said...from December 22, 2008
I was on the great peace march and searched out Liz's name today in memory of her great funny human self. I think [her] band was the Diet Cherry Cokes.
Anonymous said...
I knew Liz on the GPM and deeply appreciated her intelligence, wit and humanity. Thanks for your remembrance of her.
Dear Rebel,
I was at the memorial for Liz at Ocean Park and I visited the Pan Am Memorial in Arlington National Cemetery every year until I left DC in late 1999.
Her family was very kind to me at a time when they were grieving and I'll never forget how gracious they were/are. Especially when I told them about the couple of times I'd be so darned frustrated with knocking on the porta pottie doors and hoping folks would knock back so I could feel the vibration and not accidentally open the door and expose them. When Liz was around and saw me she'd grab my hand and pull me down the line of porta potties and would knock and knock until she found an empty porta potty for me. Her actions saved me a lot of time and she needn't've done it but did because she "got it" that I'm deaf and sometimes a helping hand helps just that much to make one's day a bit brighter. Just for this not so little kindness she's aces in my book.
Just so you know, I was shown kindness by every Marcher while I was on the 9-month walk. This made a huge impact on me. Huge. It still does to this day.
Jules
Peace Marcher
It was 20 Years Ago Today:

They usually leave on Solstice, the shortest day of the year. Rebel Girl can't remember if that was true for that first trip twenty years ago. She expects it might be. All she knows is that when they left, they knew about the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.

So they left on or shortly after December 21, 1988 and returned sometime after the new year, covered in dust and sunburnt. They hadn't followed the news very much, hadn't thought about the bombing except in the way that you do about such events, a distant awareness of someone else's heartbreak. So when they returned and found out that Liz Marek, fellow activist and friend had been on board the flight, there was shock. Liz was an activist of some standing in the LA area, a veteran of the so-called Great Peace March across that country and of many Nevada Test Site actions, a charismatic lead singer in a lesbian rock band and general all-round good person. Liz, working for a non-profit housing agency, had been instrumental in helping Red and Reb and their roommates obtain an apartment after their eviction from their home (long story).
Liz had once complimented Rebel Girl on her design of a banner for a Test Site demonstration even though Rebel Girl now understands that Liz was only being kind. Rebel Girl was on her knees painting it in the sanctuary of the Church in Ocean Park (some church!). Liz had stopped by on her way to a meeting. The banner was wincingly raw and earnest and the memory of it still possesses the power to embarrass Rebel Girl: "The Patriarchy Stops Here," it read, with an angry pregnant woman, her womb filled with a mushroom cloud, pushing back at the lettering.
Rebel Girl still remembers how Liz could belt out her band's version of "Devil in a Blue Dress" (she sang it as "Big Dyke in a Blue Dress"). Back then, she admired the courage, humor and vision of activists like Liz – they had fun at the same time they did good works. She wanted to be like them: gutsy, justice-loving good people.
Liz had been sitting in seat 36 C of the Pan Am flight, traveling with a friend, having got cheap seats for a holiday trip to England. She was 30 years old. The obituaries all identified her as an actress and peace activist.

Later, when Liz's memorial was held at the Church in Ocean Park, Rebel Girl couldn't look into the faces of Liz's family, of her mother; their grief was too stark. She concentrated instead on repairing the cake which had suffered some damage in transit. It was white frosting with blue cursive lettering spelling out Liz's name and some other message Rebel Girl can no longer remember, just as she can no longer remember the witty name of Liz's band.

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Monday, December 20, 2010
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