Red letter days at our household … we’ve gotten TWO letters from our Marine grandson currently going through bootcamp in San Diego, California. He seems to be adjusting very well to military life as a recruit. His paternal grandfather and his father both served in the Air Force. His grandfather retired from the Air Force and his dad is still in the reserve. His father also spent some time (before becoming an Air Force Officer) as an enlisted man in the Army. I did my six years in the Air Force during the Vietnam years. I’m very proud of my grandson and his willingness to serve our country! The military tradition keeps going. Hang in there grandson … when you graduate in December you’ll find that it’ll all be worth it! Semper Fi!
Category Archives: General
Gary E. Johnson??
My second and last political post of this campaign.
Several people have asked for my personal thoughts about the Libertarian Candidate Gary Earl Johnson. In the last post I alluded to those thoughts and want to be a bit clearer. I don’t think Mr. Johnson is “crazy” … other than the fact that he’s trying to run against a very partisan establishment … and doing it for something like the third time.
Mr. Johnson was a fairly effective governor of New Mexico. He was ruthless regarding spending and quite successfully turned a deficit-spending state into a budget surplus state. He wielded the veto stamp during his two terms as governor more times than every other governor in the United States combined during the same period, or pretty close to that. In addition, New Mexico gives the governor “line item veto” authority and he liberally applied his red pen to all spending bills.
The unfortunate part, in my very humble opinion, is that he ignored the opportunity to do much of any kind of strategic investment for New Mexico’s future. Some of the money would have been much better spent looking forward than just savagely axing it. Surpluses are fleeting, but strategic investments pay dividends for the long term. He’s running his campaign on the same idea … simply don’t spend money. The better approach, again in my opinion, is a more balanced approach to whacking several government agencies that have no business doing the business they are in, but at the same time doing something about our fragile infrastructure and our lagging technological innovation.
Third party candidates historically have only been spoilers, throwing the election to the person that the majority of voters didn’t want. Recent examples are Ross Perot and George Wallace. I’ve seen the damage that both of them inflicted on the country and that’s another reason I can’t support Mr. Johnson.
The RNC leadership, tragically, just declared that they will continue to ride The Donald horse, regardless. The only alternative is for thinking Republicans to get behind a write-in campaign for someone who can garner enough votes to throw the election to the House of Representatives. Forty-eight of the fifty states have a “winner take all” situation in that whichever candidate gets at least majority + one of the vote gets the entire electoral collage for that state. A candidate needs 270 electoral college votes to win the presidency. It doesn’t take very many states where the majority vote for one specific person rather than the two “annointed” candidates to prevent any one candidate from garnering the 270 votes needed. It needs to be someone that both the female and male voters can support. I can think of several people who fit this bill, including men and women. But, there is hardly any time left. I’m going to write in a candidate. I haven’t decided who that will be and even when I do, I won’t be talking about it. I’ve now written all I’m going to write on this subject.
This Sordid ElectionÂ
I will not and cannot support nor vote for the current Republican candidate for president of the United States. He is demonstrably unfit to be the President. I also cannot support nor vote for the candidate from the Democratic Party. She should be in prison, has little to no regard for our hard-won constitution, plays very loosely with the truth, and is equally guilty of condoning sexual assault as Mr. Trump is of perpetrating it. The Libertarian candidate is also unsupportable. Not only can he not prevail (even in today’s political morass), he’s just plain loony-tunes.
Will someone in the Republican Party leadership finally stand up and say, “Enough is enough!” and bring forth a candidate with a modicome of integrity. PLEASE!
The Signs Are Beginning To Appear!
The list we got last Tuesday has our names on it as departing on February 9th, 2017. Seeing our names in print with an actual date is starting to make this “being completed with this mission” seem real. The 9th of February will be here way too soon. We’ve still got a few items on our “Hawaii Bucket List”, but most of them have been crossed off. Today we put together a short list of places we want to have dinner at least once more before we leave … food is a subject near and dear to my heart!
The last half mile is relatively flat. I keep thinking that the climb at the beginning will get easier. So far, not so. I’m panting heavily as I near the top. On the way back I take a picture looking eastward out to the ocean (today’s picture at the top of this post). It’s a vigorous and pleasant walk. I’ll be doing it again tomorrow!
“For Me, It All Started Here…”
Well, that definitely piqued my interest, so I invited him to tell me the story.
Thirty-five years ago, in 1981 about this time of the year, he and a buddy had come to Hawaii and were driving around Oahu. They saw the Temple from the highway, wondered what it was, and stopped. “The Visitors’ Center was a whole lot different then than it looks today,” he said.
They took a tour conducted by an older man who was a missionary at the Center. In the back corner where we now have the FamilySearch exhibit at that time was a talking mannequin … a kind of an automatron. After the mannequin give its spiel, the senior missionary bore his testimony about the Book of Mormon. “That really spoke to me,” he said. He bought two copies of the Book of Mormon (in those days people had to buy the book in the belief that if someone paid money for the book, they would think it had more value) for fifty cents each, one for him and one for his friend. He started to read it a few days later, quickly became bored with the book, but took it with him when returned home to California the following week. Then two young men missionaries knocked on his door. He recognized the name tags as similar to the one the senior missionary at the Visitors’ Center had worn and invited them in. “Two and a half weeks later,” he said, “I was baptized.”
This was his first time back to Hawaii since then. He had done a session at the Laie Temple earlier that morning and walked through the Visitors’ Center to see what it looked like now. “I’m sure that missionary never had an inkling that I had any interest in Mormanism. I don’t even remember his name. I just remember how I felt when he bore his testimony.”
Every day people tell me how beautiful and peaceful it is on the Temple grounds and in the Center. “There is a special feeling here…” I hear very often. It certainly is sacred ground and when people just stop and listen with their heart for a few seconds, the spirit of the place manifests itself. Through the Church’s computer systems we learn each week that some five to ten people that the sister missionaries have referred to local missionaries have been baptized. We will all be shocked in the next period of our lives when we meet the hundreds of people who were touched by our testimonies of the Book of Mormon or just by the spirit they feel when they are on the Temple grounds and later acted on that feeling and come to say, “For me, it all started when I stopped by the Laie Hawaii Temple Visitors’ Center … and you never knew.”
It’s been a good week! Ta ta for now!
Visitors’ Center, Trams, Rinse and Repeat
One fellow came in and in talking with one of the sister missionaries, said that he sang opera. He was enticed to sing something (“It’ll be very loud,” he said. “We like loud!” replied Nina). He then sang The Lord’s Prayer. It was just delightful! He was able to fill the Christus room with his beautiful voice singing the traditional setting of that hymn. His visit was a real treat.
We’re having issues with the air conditioning at the Center. As a result we’re keeping the temple engineers busy coming down to reset the system and cool the building off again. Eventually they’ll be rather fed up with the issues and will get the contractor to fix the system!
We also had another outstanding experience this week on Monday and Tuesday. The managing director for the Church’s visitors’ centers was here for two days and gave us six hours of very beneficial training. He had a number of other meetings and other obligations, but spent some very quality time with us. He was there as the mainland Chinese tour buses made their daily appearances where the Center fills up with Chinese tourists very interested in learning a bit more about this Church. Although he knew about this phenomenon before coming, there’s nothing like seeing it first hand. One take away he had is that we need more exhibit information written in Chinese characters … a lot more! We have none at present. Everything is in English.
Time is flying by! Ta ta for now….
A Week With Nina’s Sister
Meanwhile, ta ta for now!
Some Random Pictures
Marriage proposals happen fairly often at the Visitors’ Center, but usually around the end of a term at school. The fall term is only a few weeks underway and this is the first proposal of this school term. The other event that occurs fairly regularly is students opening their mission calls.