Jason Lee and Bob Barker 2


The new world order is basically trying to have us set up to get killed by a lion. By some way. And then they could ask for some new teammate to replace you. “Hey can we have someone to replace the guy that got eaten by lions.”
Bob Massi talking about flood insurance on people able to function again. This on 9/9/2017. People don’t function. A mammoth, says John Berman. btw. Kasich is a NWO lapdog. HAARP vs. Mollusks? What do you think chewingonmushrooms.
Remember your beet juice, says David Blume.
We are all Godlike, says Douglass Axe
The Trump Baja project, says Donte Stallworth
Oh whine. Bostonman do you feel like you are one of the lost boys here in this world. Bostonman did you ever used to wonder why your team would always go to Red Lobster after games? Do you think that the world is so evil ruled now by the Aliens and UFOs?
I don’t have a driftwood want in my collection, says Dustin Shultz.

Do you want to listen to Laurie Schact the toy insider?

Why does Tim Kaine have a vase in the background?

The Wall of Heroes…

Honoring Heroes
NY memorial remembers firefighters’ sacrifice on 9/11

By Gary Gately
Special Contributor
Dallas Morning News – September 10, 2006

Wall of Heroes


N
ew York — Joseph reaches up to touch the fireman’s helmet, and I tell him about heroes who have gone to heaven.
    We’re standing together in front of the new 56-foot-long bronze memorial to firefighters who died in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. Here, across from the 16-acre pit at Ground Zero, I wonder what to tell my 4-year-old son, and what not to tell this boy who loves firefighters and would like to become one someday.
     We use pencil and paper to make a rubbing of the name and one of the 343 fallen New York firefighters inscribed in the wall beneath the three panels. (Later, we’ll say a prayer for John K. McAvoy, Ladder Company 3 fireman, Staten Island hockey coach extraordinaire, and those he left: his wife, Paula, and children, Kate and Kevin.)
     On the side of the wall of the “Ten House,” home to Engine Company 10 and Ladder Company 10, the bronze memorial, the first large-scale monument at Ground Zero, captures an instant of horror, heartbreak and heroism.
     Like ancient memorials, this wall tells a simple story, one that is at once visceral and horrific and timeless. In the center panel, flames shoot skyward from each of the towers, and firefighters tug at hoses, shout commands, point to the blazing skyscrapers and rush forward clutching bars used to pry open doors. Two firefighters kneel before a hydrant to splash water on their faces.
     Under a brilliant blue sky that recalls that morning five years ago, a cluster of firefighters from other station houses amble about and talk firefighter talk. Joseph beams when one of them reaches out to shake his hand. He’s awed by the bas-relief scenes of firemen in boots and helmets and the ladder truck like the one he got for Christmas and never tires of.
     But then he asks the inevitable question: Why did they all go to heaven?
     Something terrible happened here, before you were born, I tell him. But good triumphed over evil, hope over despair, light over darkness, love over hatred. Continue reading “The Wall of Heroes…”