Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Paris Needs To Go To Jail



I may have had thoughts on "Celebs" being in trouble before, but I've never felt more adamant than in the fact that Paris Hilton needs to go to jail. 

For awhile.

She was busted with cocaine the other night on a street in Las Vegas.  The reason her car was pulled over was because a motorcycle cop smelled marijuana coming from her vehicle.  She asked to "take it inside" a casino because a crowd was gathering on the street.  The cops saw the coke in her purse and she was busted.

Since she "took it inside" a Wynn property and was busted there, she's now been permanently banned from all Wynn properties.  Anyone who has been involved with one knows that casino's take their bans VERY seriously.  But that's not enough.  Taking away the hottest party spots on the Vegas strip isn't enough.  Paris needs to go to jail.  For awhile.

Two problems with celebs punishment in the past...

First of all, their "sentence" is usually measured in hours instead of days...and was usually supposed to be measured in months.  Paris needs to be given two years.

Second, they're given special treatment...solitary confinement, special visiting privilages, etc. and kept out of general population for protection.  Hell, Lindsay Lohan was even allowed to keep her hair extensions in while doing her "time", and had endorsement deals out the wazoo for what she would be wearing and drinking when she finally walked out of jail (nice job RockStar Energy Drink)!

These people need to realize that there are real world consequences for their actions. 

I hope and pray that my daughters don't look up to Paris Hilton...I don't think they do, but I really hope they don't.  Even if they dont look up to Paris, what kind of message are we sending our kids?  These people thumb their nose at our laws and completely give the finger to our entire judicial system.  Why???  Because they're RICH?

It's time for this type of pussyfooting around the famous to come to an end.  Paris Hilton needs to go to jail. 


Will she get the sentence she deserves?  Probably not, but if I hadn't said something, I was afraid my head was going to explode. 

I feel much better now.

Thanks for your time. 

Pray for the troops.

Eddie

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

The Missed Shot

It was sunny and hot Sunday morning as my wife Gail and I put our American Flags in the car and headed for Merle Hay Road. There was a deployment ceremony at Camp Dodge this morning,…

Cindy had posted on Facebook that the buses carrying the troops would be headed down Merle Hay Road at about 11:30.

We parked at the car dealership and tried to get other people to come and join us…“Come join us and SEND’EM OFF PROUDLY” was the status update….

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We waited and waited til about noon, and thought we must’ve missed them. Gail said, “Let’s get a picture of us waiting”.

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We stood in the sun along Merle Hay Road holding our flags. Just the two of us. We got some strange looks as we stood on the sidewalk. Hot, and waiting.

Gail made note that here we were in shorts and t-shirts and we were uncomfortable in the heat.
Yet the soldiers we were waiting for were about to spend a year in the heat. And about 30 degrees hotter….wearing a helmet and 80 pounds of gear.

We figured we could wait for as long as it took....


Then we heard the sirens.

First it was the Sherriff’s cruisers…lights flashing and sirens blaring. In my excitement of finally seeing what we had been waiting for, I snap the first picture of the procession on my iPhone.

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Then another.

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The Patriot Guard was next. The loud motorcycles ridden by scary lookin’ dudes- all who had served this country proudly.

They also stood solemnly at the church last year while my Father-In-Law, John Cruse, was laid to rest. He was a WWII veteran.

The Patriot Guard attends countless funerals for any veteran’s family who requests them. Today they were riding escort..

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Here come the buses.

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There were only two.


I thought there would be more buses.

But quickly, the times I had ridden in a motor coach came back to me, and I was reminded that they can hold anywhere from 45 to 65 people depending on the size.

These were big ones… and they were holding 94.

It happened too fast. The lights, the sirens, the motorcycles….then the buses. The soldiers all leaned over to the right side of their bus. Waving. Smiling. Heading into the great unknown.

Gail and I held our flags high above our heads and waved to the brothers, sisters, husbands, wives and Moms & Dads. They waved, they smiled.....

and they were gone.

I don’t know that I had ever been so proud to be an American in my whole life.

I stood there for a moment as the wail of the sirens drifted further and further away. My eyes began to fill with tears. I looked at Gail and she was crying too. The emotion of those brief few seconds will last me and my wife for the rest of our lives.

It was then that I realized, that in my excitement,...

I had forgotten to take a picture.


Not one.

And I didn’t even care.

The memory of seeing those buses escorted down Merle Hay Road will forever be burned into my memory.

I’m so glad we were there.

When I reached down to turn the camera off on my iPhone, I accidentally touched the screen and took one last picture that kind of sums up the whole morning.

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God bless the troops. God bless their families.



God Bless America,



Love to you all,



Eddie & Gail