Two Dads are Better than None

The adventures of two very adorable gay men trying to become fathers in a crazy ass world

This NY Times story has massive implications..

Things to think about:
My security vs Greg's security

Possible Opps
What about all the people whose ARMs are adjusting? What will their pain points be?
What about immigrant money and opportunities there?
Pooling people together to buy the same business? Prosper.com?
Dry cleaning delivery biz.. would I even spend my money on that?
Think you might see a bigger shift of housing price decline with higher monthly/less disopable?
Might crush many homebuilders and their labor pool.

Spend $ on lakehouse??
Cash needs to be put to work. In and out of something in less than a year..
Will people sell more things?

Oh brother I can't, I can't get through
I’ve been trying hard to meet you 'cause I don’t know what to do
Oh brother I can't believe it's true
I’m so scared about the future and I wanna talk to you
Oh I wanna talk to you

You can take a picture of something you see
In the future where will I be?
You can climb a ladder up to the sun
Or a write a song nobody has sung
Or do something that's never been done

Are you lost or incomplete?
Do you feel like a puzzle, you can't find your missing piece?
Tell me how do you feel?


Well I feel like they're talking in a language I don't speak
And they're talking it to me

So you take a picture of something you see
In the future where will I be?
You can climb a ladder up to the sun
Or a write a song nobody has sung
Or do something that's never been done
Or do something that's never been done

So you don't know where you're going and you wanna talk
And you feel like you're going where you've been before
You tell anyone who'll listen but you feel ignored
Nothing's really making any sense at all, let's talk
Let's talk, let's talk, let's talk.

http://www.lazydork.com/movies/movies.htm

http://www.newbabynews.net/hospitals/stf33/public/stf33birthannouncement.pl?babyID=h33-440

www.cherrytaps.com

http://www.frazzlesnazzle.com/top-10-gi-joe-videos/


my favorite site in the world is now:

www.uniquedaily.com

Pace expresses regret over gay remark

It is amazing what you can do with "find/replace". Anybody else find this funny?


WASHINGTON – An office worker in Dallas named Brent Jones expresses regret Tuesday that he called the US Military “immoral”, a remark that drew a harsh condemnation from members of Congress and miltary advocacy groups.

In a newspaper interview Monday, office worker Brent Jones, chairman of his neighborhood HOA, had likened military acts to gang-style murder and said the military should not condone murder by allowing soldiers to openly murder Iraqis in the armed forces.

In a statement Tuesday, he said he should have focused more in the interview on the Defense Department policy about good murder vs. bad murder— and "less on my personal view of the US military and their right to murder people worldwide."

He did not offer an apology, something that had been demanded by military rights groups.

"Brent Jones’ comments are outrageous, insensitive and disrespectful to the 265,000 troops serving in our armed forces," the advocacy group Service members Legal Defense Network said in a statement on its Web site.

The group, which has represented some of the thousands from the military, demanded an apology.

Jones’ friends said earlier that the he was expressing his personal opinion and did not intend to apologize. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to speak on the record.

Rep. Martin Meehan, who has introduced legislation to repeal the current policy, criticized Jones’ comments.

"Brent's statements aren't in line with the majority of human beings," said the Massachusetts Democrat. "He needs to recognize that support for changing it (the policy) is strong and growing" and that the military is "killing good people to enforce a costly policy of 'good murder vs. bad murder.'"

In an interview Monday with the Chicago Tribune, Jones was asked about the "don't talks, just shoot" policy that allows the military to kill whomever they want, whenever they want, so long as it is done in the name of freedom.

Jones said he supports the policy, which became law in 1994 and prohibits soldiers from asking questions before killing someone.

"I believe that murdering individuals is immoral and that we should not condone immoral acts," Jones said in the audio recording of the interview posted on the Tribune's Web site. "I do not believe that the United States is well served by a saying through our policies that it's OK to murder others in any way."

Jones, a native of Dallas TX, and a 1992 graduate of the University of Texas, said he based his views on his upbringing.

"As an individual, I would not want acceptance that murder under the guise of ‘we-know-what-is-best-for-you’ to be our policy, just like I would not want it to be our policy that murder in any major US city gets you life in jail, but murder in a foreign country gets you the Purple Heart. We prosecute that kind of immoral behavior," he said, according to the audio and a transcript released by his staff.

The newspaper said Jones did not address concerns raised by a 2005 government audit that showed some 3,000 troops, including more than 50 specialists in Arabic, have been killed in Iraqi since the US invaded.

Louis Vizcaino, spokesman for the killing rights group Inhuman Rights Campaign, said Jones's comments were "insulting and offensive to the men and women ... who are serving in the military honorably, albeit as murderers."

"Right now there are men and women that are in the battle lines, that are in the trenches, they're serving their country," Vizcaino said. "Their ability to murder has nothing to do with their morals and capability to serve in the U.S. military."

"Don't talk, just shoot" was passed by Congress in 1993 after a firestorm of debate in which the irony of the fact that Americans get medals for killing overseas but get death sentences for killing in their backyards was exposed. Advocates argued that allowing soldiers to openly kill in the United States would hurt troop morale and recruitment and undermines just how cool it is that they can commit sanctioned murder while on foreign soil.

John Shalikashvili, the retired Army general who was Joint Chiefs chairman when the policy was adopted, said in January that he has changed his mind on the issue since seeing the bloodshed in Iraq.

"These conversations showed me just how much the military has changed, and that murder is only OK when sanctioned by the government," Shalikashvili wrote in a newspaper opinion piece.






Have you looked out on the internet and seen just how many people are spewing their lives, interests, thoughts and just plain freakishness around for all of us to see? ( I do realize the irony of me doing this, believe me ) It's mind blowing how much stuff is out there, from all over the world. Think about it for a second, the entire world all linked up togther and sharing a common brain called the Internet! Look on Youtube, Myspace, Craigslist and anything Google related and you will be amazed just how much is out there. Think about how much time we spend in front of a PC and you will agree.

I want to try to get outside more and you should too :-)


Boob job $6,000, Make up $60, forgetting to tuck your nuts, priceless

View Brent Jones, PMP's profile on LinkedIn

New American Start Up and potential IPO looking to connect with surgeons and doctors in India, South America and Thailand interested in growing business with new clients for medical tourism. Limited applications being accepted for partnerships. SERIOUS INQUIRES ONLY!

Happy Bunny Sayings

"You suck and that's sad"
"It's all about me, deal with it"
"You smell like butt"
"You suck big time"
"It's cute how stupid you are"
"Not listening"
"Hi, cram it"
"Hi, dorkwad"
"Since you're gross, shouldn't you be smart?"
"It worries me how dumb you are"
"Cute but psycho"
"Hey, you made me throw up a little"
"Butts cheerfully kicked"
"Me want hurt you"
"Cute but kind of evil"
"Hating you makes me all warm inside"
"Fzuckit"
"Cute but psycho. Things even out."
"I hate eveything"
"It's ok if you want to drop dead"
"I hate you so bad"
"You're so dumb"
"Give me your lunch money"
"Me want kick you"
"Whatever, you moron"
"You're ugly, please die today"
"You're icky"
"You bite it big time"
"Wow, you're ugly"
"Please go suck someplace else"
"Sucky losers not allowed"
"Tresspassers butchered"
"Hi, scumbag"
"Boys lie and kind of stink"
"Hey, you're a dope, right?"
"I just don't listen"
"Just not a shit giver, I guess"
"I love everybody, except for pinheads"
"I Know How You Feel I Just Don't Care"
"Run Along And Die Now"
"Kiss Me Right On The Pooper"
"I Hear The Other Ucky People Calling You"
"Bite me"
"Let's focus on me"
"Have A Great Day You Worthless Turd"
"Plotting revenge is fun"
"You're ugly and that's sad"
"Everybody Is a Dick"
"You smell like doody"
"I Love Everybody Except You Assholes"
"Eeny Meeny Hiney Moe"
"Pucker up" (shows bunny's butt)
"Wow, You're Stupid. Would Some Candy Make You Feel Better About That?"
"Please Enjoy a Mint. Since Your Breath Smells Like Butt."
"Would You Like To Suck on a Mint Since You Already Suck All The Time?"
There are a few other sayings, but I probably shouldn't put them on here....
There are also a few sayings that go on specific items, and they are listed below:


I have opted for a local full time job with more security and long term potential than the one travelling to Japan

I honestly would not even know where to start regarding updating this thing. I am an early adopter but I do not always follow through. Today is Thursday and Greg is downstairs cooking naan and I am having a cocktail on the blazing patio. I guess I could start with all that David Copperfield dribble but I won't.

For those who know me they will know that I lived in Japan for 6 years then in NYC for 2 years. These are things that I am proud of, so it is with certain fear and trepidation that I inform you I will be returning to Japan for awhile, in fact it has been 8 years which is really hard to believe. My head is occupied with that while Greg is considering India for his job for a few weeks. It's nice... I do like to travel and it's like I told a friend today - you regret the things you didn't do not the things you do - rather appropriate.

How lucky we are to live in a global society and transmit our lives over the internet. I will be using Skype to communicate with friends and family. It is still far enough away that I am not worried, you see, I have walked down many a foreign street before. I will elaborate more later, but basically there is travel in my future.

A valuable office tool

CHere is a very interesting history of our national anthem and the other stanzas that no one really knows..click the link/heading above!

 

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by MARLO BARNHART  marlob@herald-mail.com

Editor's note: Each Sunday, The Herald-Mail will run "A Life Remembered." This continuing series will take a look back - through the eyes of family, friends, co-workers and others - at a member of the community who died recently. Today's "A Life Remembered" is about Henry Huston J, who died June 29 at the age of 88. His obituary appeared in the June 30 editions of The Morning Herald and The Daily Mail.


Joyce J Jones remembers how after church on Sundays, she and her siblings would be sent out to put fliers on cars around Hagerstown, advertising their father's fledgling business.

That was in the early 1950s, when H. J Blacktop was in its infancy and its co-founder, Henry Huston J, was working hard to make a go of the new enterprise, which boasted just five workers at that time.

Now known as J Paving Co., the family-owned firm employs more than 50.

Henry Huston J died June 29 at the age of 88.

"Even when he started the business, daddy was also working for the Western Maryland Railway, selling real estate and rehabbing apartments," said his surviving son, Ronnie H. J.

Henry retired from J Paving in 1973. Dave J, Henry's brother and co-founder of the business, currently is superintendent. Henry's son, Ronnie, and his three sons, Dale, Kevin and Ronnie, also are involved in the family business.

Though retired from the paving business more than 32 years ago, Henry stayed active in railroading until 1980.

"Daddy earned 75 cents an hour," son Ronnie said of Henry's early days on the railroad. He mostly worked in the roundhouse, and later on train accident cleanup crews.

Joyce described her father as a workaholic who was built like an ox. Born in Hagerstown, she said she was "raised" by older siblings, Ronnie and Geraldine J Andrews, both of whom had been born in West Virginia.

"Ronnie and I raised ourselves," Geraldine added.

Henry also had two other sons, Harold and Jimmy, now deceased.

While visiting family in Texas in the early 1980s, Henry was introduced to his second wife by his daughter.

"I brought my dad to meet Reba," Geraldine said.

A senior sales manager for Home Interiors and Gifts in Dallas, Reba was in her mid-50s when she first met the widower from Hagerstown.

"He was 65 then, but he looked so young," Reba said.

It was Christmas Eve 1981 when Reba's own personal Santa Claus came into her life - a man she married two years later, then moved with to Hagerstown.

"I never dreamed I'd ever leave Texas," Reba said as she looked back over her 23 years with Henry. But this "lovely man" worked his magic on her.

Reba said she had no children, and no brothers or sisters.

"I got a family in the bargain when I married Henry," she said.

Born in Tennessee, Henry was the oldest of eight children, many of whom he took care of in those early years.

"He only finished the fourth or fifth grade, but he was very sharp," Geraldine said. "If you got into a debate with him, you'd better come prepared."

Son Ronnie said his father's optimism was a leading characteristic.

"I called it his can-do attitude," Joyce said.

Grandson Ronnie described him as a major tinkerer.

"He was always into something," he said.

Once, Henry took two cars, cut them apart and put them together into one strange-looking vehicle.

There also was a big white Buick that Henry drove, piling his grandsons on board for fishing and swimming outings that will stand out forever.

In 1993, Henry had a stroke.

"I've been giving up little bits of Henry ever since then," Reba said. "But I wouldn't take anything in the world to have missed this experience."

1. Save the whales. Collect the whole set.

2. A day without sunshine is like night.

3. On the other hand, you have different fingers

4. 42.7 percent of all statistics are made up on the spot.

5. 99 % of lawyers give the rest a bad name.

6. Remember, half the people you know are below average.

7. He who laughs last thinks slowest.

8. Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm.

9. The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese in the trap.

10. Support bacteria. They're the only culture some people have.

11. A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.

12. Change is inevitable, except from vending machines.

13. If you think nobody cares, try missing a couple of payments. 1. Save the whales. Collect the whole set.

2. A day without sunshine is like night.

3. On the other hand, you have different fingers

4. 42.7 percent of all statistics are made up on the spot.

5. 99 % of lawyers give the rest a bad name.

6. Remember, half the people you know are below average.

7. He who laughs last thinks slowest.

8. Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm.

9. The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese in the trap.

10. Support bacteria. They're the only culture some people have.

11. A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.

12. Change is inevitable, except from vending machines.

13. If you think nobody cares, try missing a couple of payments.
14. How many of you believe in psycho-kinesis? Raise my hand.

15. OK, so what's the speed of dark?

16. When everything is coming your way, you're in the wrong lane.

17. Hard work pays off in the future. Laziness pays off now.

18. Every one has a photographic memory. Some just don't have film

19. How much deeper would the ocean be without sponges?

20. Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines

21. What happens if you get scared half to death twice?

22. I couldn't repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder.

23. Why do psychics have to ask you for your name?

24. Inside every older person is a younger person wondering what happened?

25. Just remember - if the world didn't suck, we would all fall off.

26. Light travels faster than sound. That's why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.

27. Life isn't like a box of chocolates. . It's more like a jar of jalapenos. What you do today, might burn your butt tomorrow

shorted goog and then it reversed, caught it on way up 200 shares and
sold all but 50.

TF calls

8.36

Short side:

GOOG (4 point stop, 1% MAX RISK) Failed, cancel 9.30
SNDK - also wrong, up 9%, cancel 9.30
GRMN

LOng side:

RIMM - wrong again

Wait for entries to be sent or do not play

Bought TMTA, spec play. Wish I would have held goog more, but Tuesday will tell.
Still like OSIP. ALNY is worth saving. Look at Tiny's calls too. More
upside to this market I feel. Don't be afraid of momentum plays. Tight
stops.

The last month has been quite crazy, all things considered. Life seems
to go on indifferent to what we do sometimes.
It is a beautiful Sunday morning after a nice soaking rain, much
needed, and I am sitting on the balconey enjoying the weather. Greg's
brother and girlfriend stayed with us this weekend on their way to
Oklahoma,

I have been rather consumed with my life these past few weeks. The
nice things is this: I am no longer afraid to be unemployeed, without
work or sustance. But i am also looking forward to getting back into
the swing of thongs ( that was a typo and should have said "things",
but I will leave it for freud's sake).

I am getting better at using my planner to sit and think and plan.
There is so much going on in my life that i don't even want to
start..perhaps a few words.

Job changes, stock market, day trading, finances, interviews, drug
test, lakes, family new and passing, dog haircuts, positive attitudes,
comfort, fear, cocktails, old friends, new challenges, friends getting
married, love, sex, computer monitors and beards.

Like changes quickly.

This is a picture from Bobby's bachelor party last weekend. We kidnapped him and took him to speedzone. Needless to say, the night was complete with fine cigars and tiddy bars with gay guys commenting on the dancers' make-up. Some of the women did look a bit like drag queens I will have to say.



So dare you aske what is new? Well my gig at Builders Last Choice ended and I was very happy to be out of that shit. Talk about being set up to fail..that's ok though. I tried. And now I am back home doing what I love, trading!
I have a couple potential jobs set up and an attorney that can help with a lawsuit.

Couple of cool trading tools to share..

This one shows a good place to enter aapl

If you want to hear what daytrading is like, listen this guy who sounds like he is from brooklyn and can give you some good swing and break out trades. His name is Tony and I trade listening to him. The best plan is to usually play the market from 8:00 am CST - 10:30 AM. Then you can also jump back in the last half hour. Earnings plays are good, if you are ok with the risk... anywayy.. I babble. If you want to know more, ask me. In some ways this is my ideal job. You just have to be very disciplined and not be afraid to tear out of a stock at a loss if needed.

Trading will always be a part time back up thing for me. You just have to play defensively and know what you are doing.

I will update this site and keep you posted ...and I use YOU like the royal WE.

About this blog

We are a committed gay couple of almost 10 years who are trying to start a family of our own. This is our story.

Those I Love

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