Friday, April 30, 2010

Austin Scott to Challenge Marshall

I will be on News/Talk 940 WMAC 6-9am again this morning.  You can also listen online at www.wmac-am.com.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

Austin Scott made it official yesterday.  He will be challenging Jim Marshall.  Now the other candidates need to get out of the way.

 

A man was attacked with a baseball bat at his home Wednesday night.  Another man was shot in the thigh on his own front porch early yesterday morning.  Police have also arrested somebody for arson after the home of a murder suspect caught fire down last week.  In Warner Robins, shots were fired at the same home on Suzanne Drive for the second time in a week.

 

The contract for the G-RAMP environmental assessment should be ready soon.  Middle Georgia taxpayers should hope that they find an endangered worm or something.

 

The legislature passed two bills to ban texting while driving.  California's experience has been that not only is a ban nearly impossible to enforce, it also does not keep people from doing it.

 

The legislature passed a lot of bills yesterday, including a ballot referendum on an increased car tag fee for trauma funding.

 

The state budget includes funding for the arts, for the College Football Hall of Fame, and to fund the Sports and Music Halls of Fame for another year.

 

Poor people are losing their welfare check disguised as a tax credit.

 

The legislature did pass a bill to fix the zero tolerance discipline policies in the state's government schools.

 

Drivers will be allowed to keep road kill under a bill that passed the legislature yesterday.

 

While school districts prepare to cut their budgets even further, the Macon Telegraph's Charles Richardson is upset that school superintendents didn't throw public temper tantrums like the starving artists to encourage the state to raise taxes for education.

 

States' rights Republican candidate for Governor Ray McBerry had sex with a 16-year-old girl in 2002.  That's reason enough for me to be finished with him.

 

The companies doing work at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson Airport don't have a problem with hiring criminal aliens to do work funded with tax dollars.

 

Al Gore now has an ocean-view villa in which to enjoy the money he has made scaring everybody about rising sea levels from global warming.  Do you need any more proof that he's full of it?

 

Here's another one of those stories showing how much more the people whose paychecks you're forced to fund make more money than you do.

 

The Mistake thinks that there should be a maximum wage that people are allowed to earn.  I just wonder whether he would apply this standard to athletes, musicians, and authors like himself.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

No Consolidation Vote This Year

I will be on News/Talk 940 WMAC 6-9am again this morning.  You can also listen online at www.wmac-am.com.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

The Georgia State Fair starts today in Central City Park.

 

State Senator Robert Brown has killed the idea of a consolidation vote happening this year, and he doesn't care what the public thinks about it.  He wants to see a restructuring plan that would be designed for racial tension.

 

Mayor Robert Reichert has included a pay scale for city employees in his fiscal year 2011 budget.  This is a step in the right direction for fighting the crime problem.

 

The woman arrested last month for giving oral sex to a Macon police officer before he arrested her is planning to sue the city over the incident.  It doesn't help that the police officer is still at work.

 

A man was stabbed in a fight Sunday night after going to a bootleg house to buy beer.  That's another criminal act that could have been avoided without prohibition.

 

A man was robbed and carjacked at gunpoint Monday night and yet again 13 WMAZ refused to give a description of the thugs who did it.  There were also two armed robberies Tuesday evening at the Eisenhower Crossing shopping center, but no description of those suspects either.

 

Macon is getting a pilot program meant to stop criminals from turning back to crime after getting out of prison.

 

Bibb County Sheriff's Deputies have issued a warrant for the arrest of a woman for leaving her children in a car while she went shopping.

 

The Houston County Board of Education voted to make more budget cuts yesterday, but they couldn't bring themselves to cut retired part-time employees.

 

The state budget is finished.  No word yet on what they have done with regards to funding for the Sports and Music Halls of Fame.

 

The legislature will now allow government schools to accept private donations for field trips.

 

The attempt to ban texting while driving could prove to be a lawyer's best friend.

 

How screwy is this whole debate over carrying guns in a bar?  Pretty screwy considering the attitudes towards alcohol in the General Assembly.

 

Austin Scott may drop out of the race for Governor to challenge Jim Marshall instead.  This would be a very wise move.

 

A third of married women say that their pet listens better than their husband.

 

A woman bit a man for calling her fat.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

What, No Descriptions?

I will be on News/Talk 940 WMAC 6-9am again this morning.  You can also listen online at www.wmac-am.com.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

The cancer that is crime in Macon/Bibb County continues to run rampant.  The Mr. Pizza on Hartley Bridge Road was robbed by three thugs yesterday morning, and this time the Macon Telegraph decided to give us a description of the suspects.  Shots were fired at a vehicle entering an apartment complex yesterday morning, and a woman robbed a couple who were watching TV in their own apartment.  No descriptions of the perps in these.

 

While the streets of Macon are rotting, the Gang of Fifteen is busy considering spending the money for a new marquee for the Centreplex and trying to have affirmative action for city contracts.

 

The principal at Rutland High School is leaving at the end of the school year.  She says it's unrelated to the investigation into student misconduct on a field trip in February.

 

New-age shop owner Courtney Bibb has settled her lawsuit with the City of Centerville, and she will be allowed to do business.  Good for her.

 

The legislature was busy yesterday.  Travis Fain has a rundown of just a few of the bills that passed, including the bill to crack down on massage parlors.  I especially love the quote from Rep. Tony Sellier in this AJC piece.

 

At least now we'll be able to identify felons on their driver's licenses.

 

The state legislature was not able to agree on a bill to require student performance be included as part of teachers' job evaluations.

 

The state House passed a bill to eliminate the seat belt exemption for pickup trucks.

 

Watch your wallets.  There may be another "fee" increase coming tomorrow from the General Assembly.

 

Georgia's roads rank as the best in the country.  Why, again, do we need a new tax for more roads?

 

The state House voted unanimously last night to sell the property of the Georgia Golf Hall of Fame that never was.  How long before they're doing the same thing with some properties in Macon?

 

Nathan Deal says he would support implementing the same style immigration law they have in Arizona if he is the next Governor.

 

Over 70% of Americans are opposed to the censoring of Muhammad in South Park by Comedy Central.

 

Will C-SPAN face fines from the FCC for airing the Goldman Sachs lynch mob yesterday?

 

Two women attacked a man for not holding a door for them.  The women's names are included in the story as a public service announcement.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Victory for Warner Robins

I will be on News/Talk 940 WMAC 6-9am again this morning.  You can also listen online at www.wmac-am.com.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

In a victory for the city, the Warner Robins City Council voted down the proposed FoodMax location for the Law Enforcement Center, instead deciding to start over.  Chuckie is pretending that he's not very upset about it yet.

 

The Macon Thugs were out in force on Sunday, with an attempted carjacking at a stoplight and a robbery in the parking lot of the Macon Mall.

 

There were 394 complaints filed against Macon Police last year, two-thirds of them being internal complaints.

 

Samples from the burned house of that old murderer are being sent to the GBI.  All signs point to arson.

 

The Houston County School System is detailing how they are going to make staff cuts in response to budget shortfalls.  Have they even considered not opening the new Veterans High School to save money?

 

The child who died after being left in a car seat in Forsyth had been left all day while his mother was working at Samuel E. Hubbard Elementary School.

 

There appears to be a new youth movement developing within the Republican Party.

 

Ray Boyd, who appears to be certifiably nuts, will run for Governor as an independent if he can get the necessary 50,000 signatures after refusing to sign the oath of allegiance to the Republican Party.

 

The state House is going to vote today on a proposal to include student performance as part of a teacher's evaluation.

 

A DUI chase in Gwinnett County led police directly to the driver's marijuana grow house.

 

The Obama Administration knew that health insurance premiums would go up under ObamaCare before the House voted on the bill, but hid that information so as not to influence the vote.

 

The Mistake doesn't want white men to turn out to vote this year.

 

More Americans living overseas are giving up their citizenship over taxes and banking regulations.

 

Economists say that the stimulus didn't work.

 

What happens when a bunch of Stanford education professors create a model school to show everybody else how education is properly done?  It becomes one of the lowest-achieving schools in the state.

 

If you don't see a problem with this, please for the love of God do not vote.

 

The Boobquake yesterday didn't seem to have any effect on the Earth.  Science 1, Radical Muslims 0.

 

Apparently people who are depressed eat more chocolate than people who are not.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Saxby Didn't Learn His Lesson

I will be on News/Talk 940 WMAC 6-9am again this morning.  You can also listen online at www.wmac-am.com.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

Experts told the Macon Telegraph that there is human trafficking going on in Macon.  It needs to be stopped, but the current attempts to regulate massage parlors will do nothing to stop it or prostitution.

 

A Macon murder suspect's home caught fire Saturday, shortly after his victim died.

 

Warner Robins City Attorney Jim Elliott didn't even follow city rules when he destroyed those "secret files" found in the office of former Mayor Donald Walker.  Why is this guy still City Attorney?

 

The Warner Robins City Council is going to meet today about the Law Enforcement Center.  They couldn't meet Friday because they couldn't get enough members of Council to show up.

 

An 18-month-old child is dead in Monroe County after being left in a car seat for too long.

 

Jackson is going to get a distillery.  Too bad Jackson is in a dry county.

 

The AJC shines some light on what happened the night Ben Roethlisberger was accused of rape in Milledgeville.  The accuser's story looks fishy.

 

Over a quarter of the funds raised by John "The Walking Ethics Complaint" Oxendine come from the people in industries that his office regulates.  Can you say "shakedown artist?"

 

Some members of the state legislature are retiring due to low pay, the long sessions, and the bad economy.  Good riddance.

 

In a new poll Johnny Isakson leads Michael Thurmond 51%-35%.

 

Travis Fain has the details on that transportation funding bill that passed last week.  Here's the process for any of the taxes or funding to actually occur.

 

Georgia Right To Life wants Georgia to be the state to get sucked into an abortion lawsuit to challenge Roe v. Wade.

 

A man was stabbed and a woman was shot over an argument about a parking space.

 

Florida's Charlie Crist is considering dropping out of the Republican Primary to run for the United States Senate as an independent.  Former Vice President Dick Cheney criticized Crist and urged him to either stay in the Republican primary or drop out of the race.  Georgia Senator Saxby Chambliss says that Cheney's comments were "probably not" helpful for the GOP.  A certain Sen. Chambliss didn't learn his lesson in 2008.

 

The 2010 Ford Mustang emits less pollution while driving than the 1970 Mustang did while sitting still.

 

In response to the intimidation of "South Park," May 20 is going to be "Everybody Draw Mohammad Day!"

 

Since a radical Muslim cleric has decreed that cleavage causes earthquakes, today is "Boobquake," in which over 150,000 women have already agreed to show their cleavage for science to test the theory.

 

A Muslim cleric wants to gather 1,000,000 signatures to stop a law meant to ban child brides.  The religion of the pedophile prophet is living up to its founding.

 

Left-wing nutcase "intellectual" Noam Chomsky says that the Tea Parties persecute Latinos and blacks the same way the Nazis did to the Jews.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Anything Goes Friday On WMAC!

I will be on News/Talk 940 WMAC 6-9am again this morning.  You can also listen online at www.wmac-am.com.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

There will be a special Warner Robins City Council meeting at 2:00 this afternoon to discuss the law enforcement complex.  Just as a reminder of why the building is needed on the north side of Warner Robins, a man robbed a Citgo at gunpoint and about eight gunshots were fired at a house yesterday in north Warner Robins.  The law enforcement presence is needed where the crimes are being committed.

 

Courtney Bibb, that hippie who owns the new-age shop that Centerville has been trying to shut down, will have her day in court on Tuesday.

 

Unemployment dropped last month in both Macon and Warner Robins.

 

The state legislature has agreed to allow bigger class sizes, but only for the next three years.  Governor Perdue is also pushing for a statewide teacher evaluation system in an attempt to get more federal money.

 

Attorney General Thurbert Baker will not file a lawsuit against the Justice Department over their refusal to accept the state's voter ID law.  Baker is really just using his position as AG as a political football for his campaign for Governor.

 

A watered-down version of the gun bill passed a House committee yesterday.

 

While the state is still paying $10 million for the College Football Hall of Fame, plus operating expenses for the Sports and Music Halls and money for the Georgia Arts Council and a new $6.5 million health and human sciences building at Georgia Southwestern University, the court system is seeing a growing backlog of cases due to budget cuts.

 

The Republicans are upset over the fact that SEC staffers surfed porn on government computers.  I say that beats having them actually "working" and coming up with phony lawsuits meant to create support for Obama's new desired financial regulations.

 

Comedy Central censored even the mention of Muhammad's name in this week's episode of "South Park."

Thursday, April 22, 2010

No Macon-Bibb Consolidation Vote

I will be on News/Talk 940 WMAC 6-9am for the rest of the week.  You can also listen online at www.wmac-am.com.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

The Macon Transit Authority has begun phasing in new, smaller buses for its fleet.  These will still probably be mostly empty, but it won't be quite as obvious.

 

An Ingram-Pye Elementary student was suspended for bringing a toy gun to school.

 

It looks more and more like there will not be a vote on consolidation in Macon and Bibb County.

 

The Houston County Board of Education made some budget cuts yesterday.  They whined about how horrible it was, but finally they did it.  I still think they will increase taxes this year.

 

Ben Roethlisberger will be suspended for 6 games this season by the NFL for his personal conduct.

 

The General Assembly passed a watered-down joke of an ethics bill yesterday, but now they can say that they did something.

 

Out of nowhere yesterday, both houses of the General Assembly passed a transportation bill that would allow for regional sales taxes to be imposed to pay for transportation projects.

 

Attorney General Thurbert Baker questions the legality of the package of tax breaks and increases that the legislature passed last week.

 

The state Senate passed the budget yesterday.  It does include funding for the Halls of Fame in Macon and for the Georgia Arts Council.  It does not include one welfare check that the state has been sending low-income residents, which really bothers the redistributionists at the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute.

                                                           

Here's a list of some of the other stuff that passed the House or the Senate yesterday.

 

State Rep. Mark Hatfield (R-Waycross) has gone legislative birther, introducing a bill that would require any candidate running for President in Georgia to show documentation of their eligibility to serve as President.  Meanwhile, Hawaii is about to pass a bill telling birthers to leave them alone.

 

Will Austin Scott drop out of the race for Governor and run for Lieutenant Governor instead?

 

Some Henry County parents are not happy about rapper T.I. making a visit to their child's middle school as part of his community service.

 

Environmentalists are already trying to scare people about the new nuclear reactors set to be built outside Augusta.

 

The group of closeted homosexuals who call themselves the Westboro Baptist Church are coming to Atlanta next month.

 

Those Hitler parodies are being pulled off of YouTube.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

General Assembly Proves Me Right

I will be on News/Talk 940 WMAC 6-9am for the rest of the week.  You can also listen online at www.wmac-am.com.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

The Macon City Council is warning that the city's swimming pools may not open this year.  Horror of horrors!

 

Macon and Bibb County can't even agree on who is going to pay for a study on double taxation on service delivery.  They might as well just save us a lot of time and money and go on Judge Judy.

 

The funding for the Georgia Music and Sports Halls of Fame was restored in the Senate's budget yesterday.

 

Two teenagers led Macon police on a mo-ped chase yesterday.

 

The bill in the state legislature designed to crack down on the massage parlors passed a House committee yesterday, as the Macon City Council on Monday had a public hearing on an ordinance designed to do the same thing.  The problem is that these measures will not work, and even Charles Richardson says so.

 

GCSU went on lockdown yesterday and two men were arrested over a knife incident on campus.  Remember, college campuses are victim zones, and they are kept that way by the administrators.  That could change if a concealed-carry bill passes the state legislature.

 

The parasites are complaining about the Milledgeville Housing Authority cutting down a few trees.  The story also provides a bonus look into the quality of bureaucrats in Milledgeville!

 

Warner Robins Mayor Chuck "C. Jack" Shaheen has drawn up a Nixonian enemies list.  He even told one member of City Council that he needs to "support your mayor."  E-mails are also showing that Shaheen is publicly lying to harm his political enemies.

 

The Warner Robins City Council also delayed any action on the Law Enforcement Center, but that didn't keep it from coming up in Monday night's meeting.

 

Everybody is trying to make sure that their favored spending is not cut by the state legislature:

 

The Senate Appropriations Committee restored the funding (which I told you they would do last week) for the Georgia Council for the Arts after protests on Monday against cutting the funding.

 

Supporters of MARTA and MARTA itself got involved in publicly lobbying and marching for more money.  Of course, that might be a harder sell after a MARTA driver was caught urinating in the middle of a public street.

 

Lobbying is intense as the session winds down and every lobbyist tries to make sure that their funding is not cut.  Of course, that is made easier by the fact that there has been little movement on an ethics package until now.

 

The Georgia Voter ID law has been upheld again by a Fulton County Judge.

 

Fundamentalist Muslims have threatened the creators of South Park over their depiction of Mohammed, Muslims' pedophile prophet.  This is the same religion that came up with the theory that promiscuous women cause earthquakes.

 

A surgeon in Britain cut off a man's testicle by mistake because he was taking the same medicine that he had used to sedate the patient.

 

Face cream made from breast milk could cure teenage acne.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Bibb BOE To Take Out Loan, Cut Teachers

Listen live in Middle Georgia 6-9am on News/Talk 940 WMAC or online at www.wmac-am.com.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

The Macon City Council will have a public hearing on Monday regarding the massage parlors and prostitution.  The Macon Telegraph has an op-ed piece today supporting the ordinance to crack down on the parlors.

 

The Bibb County Board of Education approved taking out a $25 million loan to cover their bills while they wait on property tax revenue to come in.  The Telegraph's Charles Richardson already seems to be asking for a tax hike as he complains about cuts to education.  Of course, the federal government is already considering another education bailout.

 

At last night's Warner Robins City Council special meeting the members of council who are stuck on stupid (and the Mayor, for whom that is a permanent condition) patted themselves on the backs for trying to save taxpayer dollars by building the LEC on Russell Parkway.  The City's Chief Financial Officer also exaggerated the cost of building the originally planned building.  As for the question as to whether or not city residents will be allowed to vote on the matter, don't count on it.

 

Warner Robins and Houston County are getting nearly $900,000 in federal "stimulus" funds to renovate government housing.

 

There appears to have been a good turnout for the Dublin Tea Party yesterday.

 

According to the GBI report, Ben Roethlisberger forced a Milledgeville woman to have sex with him.  If this is true, why are they not pressing charges against him?

 

The State Board of Regents is going to delay setting tuition rates until May because they have to wait for the budget to know how much students will actually have to pay for their own education.

 

The last member of the former Glenn Richardson Republican leadership team will not be running for re-election this year.

 

The state could lose nearly $900,000 in funding from the National Endowment for the Arts if they eliminate the Georgia Council for the Arts.  Knowing the Republican leadership in Atlanta, they will probably change their minds about this now.

 

Best wishes to Travis Fain, who will be leaving the Macon Telegraph and getting married.

 

Weekly jobless claims were up last week.  In Georgia, the unemployment rate is at a record high.  The foreclosure rate also jumped 16 percent in the first quarter.

 

Global warming alarmist scientists are worried because they can't find all of the heat that they think exists in the oceans.  Maybe that's because it doesn't exist.

 

CNN anchor Rick Sanchez thought that Iceland would be too cold to have a volcano.

 

Fixing a problem that didn't really exist, President Obama ordered hospital visitation rights for gays and lesbians.

 

Obama's new strategy for space is to aim for asteroids.  Apparently he's seen that crappy "Armageddon" movie too many times.

 

Iran could build a nuclear weapon in a year.  Do you feel safer with the Messiah yet?

 

The Supreme Court wants more money for security.

 

An assisted-living community in New Jersey is using Big Brother to keep an eye on residents.  In addition to watching for falls, the sensors can even tell if somebody's diabetes is changing or diagnose a urinary tract infection.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Tax Day

Listen live in Middle Georgia 6-9am on News/Talk 940 WMAC or online at www.wmac-am.com.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

Today is, of course, Tax Day.  I'll have some information for you on who is paying taxes and who is not, plus some of the things your tax dollars are being spent on.  Mark Steyn has some of the tax details.  Note that nearly half of Americans pay no federal income tax and that nearly half of Americans think that their income taxes are about right.  The Associated Press is spinning it to make it look like Americans are paying less in taxes due to Glorious Leader Obama, even though ultimately the middle class is going to get hit with new taxes from ObamaCare.

 

Here are a few rules that the government can follow in their accounting, but you will get audited and thrown in jail if you try the same thing on your tax return.

 

In honor of Tax Day, 1040FU wine!

 

Citizens Against Government Waste has issued their Pig Book for 2010, listing the pork projects brought home by each member of Congress.  You can search it here.  The Cato Institute also points out that earmarks crowd out private investment, ultimately hurting the local economy.

 

The Warner Robins City Council will be meeting at 5:30 tonight to discuss the location for the new LEC at their desired location at the old FoodMax building on Russell Parkway.  Opposition to the location is strong among Warner Robins residents, but right now it looks like members of City Council don't care.  The newly-formed Recreation Advisory Board is getting in on the demagoguery of the LEC location too.  Businesses are continuing to move in to Warner Robins' Commercial Circle area, so why are Mayor C. Jack Shaheen and members of City Council trying to knee-cap the development?

 

The state legislature yesterday approved the bill to raise the hotel-motel tax for the Halls of Fame.  As Rep. Mark Burkhalter put it, "if they choose to lose money, that's up to them."

 

The Bibb County school system will have to take out a loan to make payroll next month.  The finances should be the least of the concerns of Bibb County parents.

 

Macon City Council is still looking for a way to increase the severance package for laid-off city employees.  Those employees are votes, you see.

 

The Macon-Bibb Urban Development Authority voted yesterday to create a "community development entity" that would use federal tax dollars to encourage investment in low-income communities.

 

The Houston County School Board says that class sizes will increase as a result of layoffs next school year.  What they're really trying to do is grease the skids for a tax hike.

 

The city of Centerville is preventing a woman from performing her new-age hippie fortune telling and meditation.  She may be kooky, but why should the city or county stop her from doing business?

 

The last day of the Georgia General Assembly will be April 29.  Good riddance.

 

Georgia could become the first state without a state arts agency.  Why should any state have an arts agency?

 

The state legislature passed a bunch of tax and fee increases that take effect immediately along with a few targeted tax cuts that will be phased in over the next few years and will create a new tax-free class.  Overall it is still a bad bill.

 

Eric Johnson is trying to solidify his support in the state legislature.  This won't do well for him if he is trying to paint himself as anything but an establishment candidate.

 

Washington Democrats are trying to quickly spend $23 billion to keep government schools from having to lay off teachers.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Bibb SPLOST Vote Coming in July

Remember you can listen at 940AM in Middle Georgia, www.wmac-am.com anywhere in the world.  The phone number is (478) 742-0940.

 

Even though Bibb County Commissioners have agreed to mediation with the city for service delivery negotiations, they still plan to have the SPLOST vote in July.  Bibb County Commission Chairman Sam Hart is trying to meet individually with members of the Gang of Fifteen to convince them to support the July SPLOST vote.

 

Even though there is no money in the state budget for the Sports and Music Halls of Fame, even though there is money for the College Football Hall of Fame, the local Senate delegation is trying to get hotel-motel tax money to fund the Halls.

 

Robin Hines has been named the new Superintendent of Houston County Schools, and will be paid a whopping $175,000 per year.  The Houston County School Board has finally figured out how to lay some people off, as they plan to eliminate 80 positions and maybe up to 99 others later.  After whining about the economic situation, somebody pointed out that 89% of the school system's budget is tied to personnel.

 

Some members of the Warner Robins City Council want to use the old Food Max building on Russell Parkway for the Law Enforcement Center despite the fact that about 90% of all calls to the police are from the north side of town.  Add in the planned downtown redevelopment considerations, and the Russell Parkway location does not make sense.

 

It looks like the state will avoid massive layoffs this year thanks to the increased taxes and fees that the Republicans have passed.

 

The state spent nearly $3.6 million in per diem payments in the last 15 months.

 

Dear Crawford County:  I hope you enjoy your faster Internet that will cost about $1,000 for each person who will benefit from it.

 

For those of you who spend your time wearing tinfoil hats, the bill to ban microchip implantation is one step closer to becoming law.

 

A t-shirt that can stop a speeding bullet will come in handy in some places in Macon, assuming the thug trying to shoot you can even hit you.

 

Republicans lead the generic Congressional ballot 45-36%.  Remember, it's all about what happens in your district, not what some national poll says.

 

Over one out of five Americans still have not filed their income taxes.  If you're one of them then you'd better hurry up.

 

Would you eat KFC's new "Double Down" sandwich?

Thursday, April 08, 2010

More LEC Shenanigans

Houston County Commission Chairman Ned Sanders announced that he will not be running for re-election this year.  Somebody needs to get in this race to stop Kelly Burke from being the next Commission Chairman.  Director of County Operations Tommy Stalnaker will make an announcement tomorrow, so maybe he will be running.

 

Members of the Warner Robins City Council and Mayor C. Jack Shaheen are still trying to move the location of the LEC away from where it is actually needed.

 

Race pimps are trying to use a disciplinary case from Houston County High School to their benefit.  If the incident involved a white student it wouldn't even make the news.

 

Robins Air Force Base and Warner Robins are working on ways to improve the traffic situation in town.  They are looking at public transportation, which would be a huge waste of money.

 

There is going to be a rally in Macon to support the gay Bleckley County student who is going to be able to take his boyfriend to the prom.  The kid got what he wanted; why is a rally necessary?

 

Dear state legislators:  This is why the budget looks so bad.  Adjust accordingly.

 

Some minority groups are not happy with the idea of requiring driving tests to only be given in English.  They say it's racist, which once again proves how utterly meaningless that word now is.

 

Valerie Meyers is no longer in the race to challenge Jim Marshall.

 

Americans for Tax Reform's Grover Norquist wrote a letter slamming Governor Perdue for calling ATR a "Washington, DC special-interest group."

 

House Speaker David Ralston raised $137,750 in just three and a half weeks after being selected as Speaker.

 

Nearly half of all American households pay no federal income taxes.

 

The ignorant parasites (sorry for the redundancy) have been calling health insurance companies and care providers asking for the free ObamaCare.  Speaking of ObamaCare, Massachusetts shows us how the road to single-payer will work.

 

The Obama Administration is going to try to ban unpaid internships at for-profit companies.

 

The Obama national security strategy will no longer include terms like "Islamic radicalism" because they're afraid it might offend somebody.