Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Hillary Clinton's Cash Cow Lives in this Small Green House in San Francisco?






















DALY CITY, Calif. -- One of the biggest sources of
political donations to Hillary Rodham Clinton is a
tiny, lime-green bungalow that lies under the flight
path from San Francisco International Airport. Six
members of the Paw family, each listing the house
at 41 Shelbourne Ave. as their residence, have donat-
ed a combined $45,000 to the Democratic senator
from New York since 2005, for her presidential
campaign,

You know this is just the proverbial tip of the iceberg.
Just the tip. If this was fleshed out, you know there is
a huge network out there dedicated to this type of
operation. Someone posted this was chump change.
Yep, it is. But, it is undoubtedly tied to a huge opera-
tion, which probably translates into millions of
dollars laundered. These people(Clintons) are pro-
fessional gangsters and are no different than the
mafioso, except the players are different. They all
know how to break the law without attracting too
much attention and of course they have the comm-
mie media to cover for them, which makes life in
Hitlery Land much, much easier. We just can
not allow the Clintons back into the White House.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

HILLARY'S BLIND SPOT THAT EVERYBODY CAN SEE BUT HER?














"If you are a working family with no health-
care you're invisible to this President. If
you are a single Mom you're invisible to
this President. If you are a U.S. Soldier
you're indivisible to this President!

Of course we all have our BLIND SPOTS!"

Over 53% of all Americans do not want
these two back in our White House! And
that includes both Democrats and Repub-
licans! Keep working hard to help people
see these two for what they really are!
Two of the most corrupt criminals that
have stained the pages of American
History for all time.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Everybody Has to Live Someplace--Just Not in Williamson County!

Views on moderately priced housing were
appalling!
To the Tennessean Editor:

I was surprised and appalled to read recent
letters to "Your Voices" concerning moderately
priced homes in Williamson County.

Respondents seemed united in their opinion
that housing was a market-driven matter and
not a moral concern "except for a few do-
gooders" who want to get involved in politics.
The fact that the people who clean our houses,
manicure our lawns, do our laundry and cook
our meals cannot afford to live nearby is of no
concern to those who have found their little bit
of heaven on Earth. I beg to disagree.

In the first place, history stands on the side of
multiple-value housing. While I am certainly
not advocating a return to slavery, at the least
the slave owners, who lived here before us, pro-
vided a place for their slaves to live nearby.
When this land was farmland, tenant houses
dotted the landscape as surely as homesteads.

Now that executives, entertainers and entre-
preneurs have seized the space, working-class
people are being forced to live elsewhere.
Does that make us a better community?
I don't think so.

To assume, as your letters indicate, that
inhabitants of moderately priced homes are
all "drug dealing pimps" is a prejudiced
statement to say the least. Obviously, some
drug dealers already live among us in quite
expensive housing as reported in the news
from time to time.

Concluding that housing has no moral
implications can only come from persons
who conveniently compartmentalize and
privatize their religious beliefs. Perhaps
persons of faith who reach such conclu-
sions would benefit from reading all parts
of the Bible. Certainly believers are promised
a place in heaven.

But the same Jesus who assured his disciples
that he would "prepare a place for them" also
told disturbing parables. One was about the
foolish farmer who could never quite get enough,
until he eventually kills himself in his pursuit
of "more." The other is about the rich man who
is called to accountability in heaven for ignoring
the poor man named Lazarus in this life.
Religious faith always has social implications.

Perhaps it's time for churches, governments,
business leaders and concerned citizens to
address the moral concerns related to housing
in Williamson County.

Brentwood United Methodist Church has built
more Habitat houses in Williamson County
than any other agency. We have just made a
commitment to build four more Habitat houses.
Finding places to build these houses in
Williamson County remains a major obstacle.
I believe we can work together to solve this
problem. The result will be an even better
Williamson County.
J. Howard Olds, Senior Pastor, Brentwood
United Methodist Church
Brentwood 37027

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

NOLENSVILLE & FRANKLIN HAVE A LOT OF COMMON PROBLEMS!

Continued Lack of Infrastructure and
Horrific Planning Bites Franklin in the Ass!

Well Jay Johnson and Tom Miller ... are you
two still praying for rain as your big solution
for hot weather in the summer time?

Veterans of the blog may remember: Mayor
Fiddles; Taxpayers Burned
, where in July of
last year, Franklin declared another water
shortage emergency.This is not a new problem.
Remember Franklin needs more water before
growth taps it out
from July 23, 2006?That's
right - before "growth" taps it out. Now:
Franklin to disconnect water to irrigation
meters
August 21, 2007.And what are Jay
Johnson and the City doing? They're wast-
ing their time shutting down email accounts,
settling discrimination lawsuits, and annexing
and rezoning every piece of land they can get
their hands on.What did Robert Kriebel,
Ernie Bacon, Pam Lewis, and Tom Miller do
over the last four years to address a recurring
infrastructure problem -- not a damn thing.
These people have taken this city down a mind-
numbing path of blowing badly-needed tax-
payer money on their pet project wish list for
their friends.

The most basic of needs for any sustainable
community - WATER - and they've refused to
address this need
and instead, keep pissing
away millions of dollars and screwing around
with a fake battlefield. You people?
(Franklin Kool Aid Blog)

Franklin turns off water to Homeowners!!!!!!
http://franklinkoolaid.blogspot.com/ updates
how Franklin punishes homeowners!

FINAL QUESTION: HOW IS NOLENSVILLE
PLANNING AHEAD TO ANTICIPATE THE
SAME KIND OF PROBLEMS? WHY NOT
ASK OUR MAYOR & BOARD TO SHARE
THEIR IMMEDIATE & FUTURE PLANS?

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Hillabeast Wants It Both Ways?

Hildabeast has
waddled thru one
scandal after another
and thumbed her nose
at the laws and sub-
ponaes more flagrantly,
than any living individ-
ual in American history!


Two years to turn over the Rose Law Firm
billing records. Craig Livingstone just walks
in and orders 1,100 Secret FBI files?

If this clown steals the Oval Office, and with
the Patriot Act in her back pocket, I can
already hear Joe Stalin laughing, along with
Krushcev. Oh yes, wasn't her Masters thesis
on ~Marxist Socialist Overthrow of the
U.S. Govt~?

Wanting It Both Ways?
This story illustrates why Hillary Clinton
annoys so many Americans.Even though
Senator Clinton is running on the basis of
her "experience" -- most notably her tenure
as First Lady -- archivists at the Clinton
Library are refusing to release relevant
records that would enable scrutiny of those
years.Obviously, it's an example of wanting
it both ways, a sense of entitlement that has
marked Clinton's entire career in public life.

It's of a piece with her refusal to sit down for
questioning on any of the Sunday morning
shows during her 2000 run for the Senate
and her willingness to use her Secret Service
detail to keep reporters at bay.

It's even similar to the conflicting impulses
America saw on display during her husband's
White House years, when half the time she
claimed the mantle of policy expert but then
hid behind traditional First Lady trappings
when the going got tough.

Her own ambivalence and shape-shifting,
coupled with her prominent sense of entitle-
ment when it comes time for difficult ques-
tions and accountability explain why so
many Americans simply distrust Hillary.
by Carol Platt Liebau.

Monday, August 06, 2007

WHEN YOU COME TO A ROCKY FORK IN THE ROAD--TAKE IT! TAKE THE LOWEST BIDDER, SO SAYS NOLENSVILLE BOARD?









Rocky Fork Realignment set to begin
with project awarded to lowest bidder
despite some aldermen's reservations!
Board members wondered if the lowest
bidder by $30,000 could do the job by
in just 90-days or by November 2007?

"Cheaper is not always the best," Vice-
Mayor Dugger said. "Who do we feel
comfortable with and who have we heard
good stories about?"

Question? How come board couldn't find
a local in-state contractor to bid on the job?

Notice! new blogger research reveals
Mountain States the contractor who was
the lowest
bidder is located in Mt. Juliet, TN.

They are well known in Tennessee and
have a good record. The 90-day deadline
still seems a very short amount of time
when there are many unknowns i.e.--sink-
holes, buried
major water mains and an
endangered species of crayfish in the creek?


Could it be that local experienced road
builders and "bridge builders" know that
the job cannot be done in 90-days so they
didn't bid on the project?

Question? What member of the board and
or the Mayor and town's legal counsel are
experienced in writing a binding contract
to build a new road and bridge in 90 days
for almost one and a half million dollars?
NONE YOU SAY? YOU DECIDE?

Question? Who ever heard of Mountain
States Contractors? Vice-Mayor Dugger
said they didn't know much about them.
NO HOMEWORK DONE HERE?

Question? When Mountain States Con-
tractors called in and asked asked if the
town was "serious" about the 90-day
completion date after they submited
their bid?" NO SIRENS..NO RED FLAGS?
NO BODY REALLY WORRIED?

Question? What happens when this
contractor fails to build the road
and bridge in 90 days? What are the fines
for missing the deadline? What happens
if the contractor packs up his tools and
leaves the project half done? Well the
consultants the Mayor has hired should
be held responsible since they studied all
of the bids and recommended Mountain
States.

Question? What happens to the already
overloaded traffic? What will be the route
around the construction? Will Rocky
Fork be open to traffic at all during the
construction? How do 900 new students
at the new school on Rocky Fork get
back and forth to school?

Question? The $30,000 savings may very
well be spent anyway in missed deadlines,
construction delays due to circumstances
above and beyond the contractors control.

Bottom Line--Nolensville "still" needs a full-
time 24/7 town executive manager qualified
to write contracts, hire/fire people, deal with
attorneys for developers and elected board
members and Mayor. This kind of qualified
person will save Nolensville thousands of
dollars. There is still time to hire one!





Saturday, August 04, 2007

Nolensville Mayor Plans New Economic Development Committee to See if Highest Impact Fees in State Stop Commercial Development?









What is wrong with this picture? Mayor says,
"They (new committee) will look at the adequate
facilities tax and impact fees to make sure we're
in line with other communities and not deterring
commercial development."

DUH? Come again? Really? Kinda late isn't it?
Who needs another committee? Mayor must
have forgotten that she passed and put into
immediate enforcement the highest impact
fees in the our State and compared to most
other States?

Yes..Mayor, you are so right when you say..
"We're obviously shooting ourselves in the foot."

$25,000 worth of fees before one can build
a new 3,000 sq. ft. home in Nolensville is the
very highest!

Don'tcha think someone on the board would
have thought about this prior to passing the
highest impact fees in the state?

Now that the fees are the law and in place
suddenly the Mayor and the Board are worried
about the effect on future commercial develop-
ment?

To answer the Mayor's questions..."How
business-friendly are we? (Not very...when
you bump up against the 2 codes enforcers?).

"What can we do to support our businesses?"
(If the Mayor and Board cannot answer this
question today we are in trouble?). Another
committee won't help at all!

"What types of businesses would like to come?"
Probably NONE! Now that the impact fees
are the highest in the state?

Finally, appointing another "committee" is
what happens when the current leadership
doesn't know what to do? So to avoid any
kind of negative report about their lack of
responsibility dump it on a committee.
If nothing happens it is the committee's
fault.

Yes...indeed for ten years or more the board
failed to charge any impact fees at all! So the
current Mayor decides to "leaf-frog" all the
fees overnight to make up for the lack of fees
over the past ten years? And then she thinks
outloud whether they are too high and if the
town will suffer for the highest fees in the
state?
The answer is YES! No new committee
is needed. More responsible leadership is

what is needed. No need to push off the re-
sponsiblity to a committee
. Hello! Mayor!
Hello! Board just do what you were elected
to do...lead!

Click Here for Tennessean Article.