“I consistently believe that when it comes to whether it's Native Americans or African-American issues or reparations,
the most important thing for the U.S. government to do is not just offer words, but offer deeds.”— Barack Obama, July 27, 2008 (emphasis added)
“Barack Obama is an arrogant, racist, Marxist ass!”
— Perri Nelson, July 30, 2008
Wednesday Hero - Lt. Michael P. Murphy
Published Tue, Oct 23 2007 11:13 PM
This Week's Hero Was Suggested By Cindy

Lt. Michael P. Murphy
29 years old from Patchogue, New York
SEAL Delivery Vehicle Team 1
June 28, 2005

On Monday, Lt. Michael P. Murphy was posthumously awarded the Medal Of Honor. His father was the one who accepted the award. Lt. Murphy will receive the award for his extraordinary, selfless heroism and steadfast courage while leading a four-man, special reconnaissance mission deep behind enemy lines east of Asadabad in the Hindu Kush of Afghanistan June 27 to 28, 2005
"We are thrilled by the President's announcement today, especially because there is now a public recognition of what we knew all along about Michael's loyalty, devotion and sacrifice to his friends, family, country, and especially his SEAL teammates," the Murphy family said in a statement released earlier in the month. "The honor is not just about Michael, it is about his teammates and those who lost their lives that same day."
Murphy was the officer-in-charge of the SEAL element, which was tasked with locating a high- level Taliban militia leader to provide intelligence for a follow-on mission to capture or destroy the local leadership and disrupt enemy activity. Taliban sympathizers discovered the SEAL unit and immediately revealed their position to Taliban fighters. The element was besieged on a mountaintop by scores of enemy fighters. The firefight that ensued pushed the element farther into enemy territory and left all four SEALs wounded. The SEALs fought with everything they had. despite being at a tactical disadvantage and outnumbered more than four to one. Understanding the gravity of the situation and his responsibility to his men, Murphy, already wounded, deliberately and unhesitatingly moved from cover into the open where he took and returned fire while transmitting a call for help for his beleaguered teammates. Shot through the back while radioing for help, Murphy completed his transmission while returning fire. The call ultimately led to the rescue of one severely wounded team member, Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class Marcus Luttrell, and the recovery of the remains of Murphy and Gunner’s Mate 2nd Class (SEAL) Danny Dietz and Sonar Technician 2nd Class (SEAL) Matthew Axelson.
Eight more SEALs and eight Army "Nightstalker" special operations personnel comprising the initial reinforcement also lost their lives when their helicopter was shot down before they could engage the enemy.
Murphy was also inducted into the Hall of Heroes at the Pentagon during a ceremony yesterday. His name was engraved beside the names of some 3,400 other service members who have also been awarded the nation’s highest honor.
These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero. We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived
This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your blog, you can go here.
Comments (0) | Trackbacks (0)
A mysterious orange blur
Published Tue, Oct 23 2007 11:01 PM
Technorati Tags: Entertainment, Food and Drink
Not too long ago, I posted about a song written by David at third world county called "O Blessed, Holy, Caffeine Tree". I thought the song was pretty cool, because after all, I'm a caffeine addict.
Some time before that, I posted an article about "The caffeine curve", a cool cartoon by Tom Edwards. In that posting, I also described what has to be my favorite episode of Futurama, Three Hundred Big Boys.
That episode was on Adult Swim this evening, and I captured my favorite scene, the one I described when I declared my drug addiction (to caffeine) to the world. I present it here.
Butch, at 123beta commented on that post and said he wanted to be an orange blur. So do I Butch, so do I.
This linkfest is for the 24th of October, 2007.
If you have something interesting you'd like to share, feel free to link it here and leave a trackback.
Just remember the trackback policy.
For the best exposure, go to the blogger's oasis and use the linkfest chooser to choose the posts you'd like to hook up with.
Comments (2) | Trackbacks (18)
Leaning Straight Up trackbacked with "Looking at Islamofascist Awareness Week. Do the protesters protest too much?"
Pirate's Cove trackbacked with "WTW: Freidman Engages The Future Machine"
The Florida Masochist trackbacked with "The Knuckleheads of the Day award"
Stuck On Stupid trackbacked with "The Dream Act: A Nightmare For America"
Right Truth trackbacked with "Genetic Weapons For Use Against Iran, and Special Forces in Iran?"
Right Voices trackbacked with "Bush To Ask For International Aid To Cuba…To Be Given After Fidel Is Dead"
123beta trackbacked with "Hacky Sack"
universityupdate.com trackbacked with "A mysterious orange blur"
Blog @ MoreWhat.com trackbacked with "Forum @ MoreWhat.com"
Planck's Constant trackbacked with "Leftist Intolerance"
The Amboy Times trackbacked with "Arson, arson, and more arson"
Diary of the Mad Pigeon trackbacked with "The Jena 6: The Pigeon's Response"
The World According To Carl trackbacked with "Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal"
The World According To Carl trackbacked with "Godly Wisdom — October 25, 2007"
A Few Shiny Pebbles trackbacked with "Gemstone: An Amazing Video"
Leaning Straight Up trackbacked with "Gay Dumbledore Derangement - Outing could a stunt, but who cares?"
Shadowscope trackbacked with "Thursday Open Track-Backs"
Stuck On Stupid trackbacked with "Hill's Chops Emote Slick Willy's Love and Admiration With A Gift Watch?"
When am I going to learn?
Published Tue, Oct 23 2007 7:18 PM
Technorati Tags: Blogging
It started with the blog rolls. We all use them. They're supposed to help drive traffic to our sites, and for all I know they actually work, but not nearly as much as all that based on my perusal of my site traffic records and referring links. I actually get more traffic through search engine hits.
Anyway, for some bloggers, the blog rolls have another purpose. The more blog rolls you are on the more inbound links to your site there are. That improves your technorati ranking, and other rankings, including your pagerank. I guess if you're into "keeping score" that can be important.
Having lots of inbound links also improves your placement in search engine results too. So I guess it's important that way if you want to drive traffic to your site.
I recently participated in the "SEO Tag" meme. In retrospect I wonder if that was such a good idea. Rosemary and I had an email discussion about some of the links in that post, and a large number of them were to SEO sites or to sites that either had little in the way of quality content.
Of course "quality" is in the mind of the reader, but I'm not really interested in advice for the lovelorn or what someone's cat did yesterday. I doubt that someone looking for political content will either.
Participating in blog rolls is a lot like SEO Tag. It gives you lots of inbound links and lots of outbound links. The more blog rolls you participate in the longer it takes to load your page, because each blog roll has to be loaded separately and rendered individually by the browser.
I tried doing server side retrieval of the blog rolls and caching the content. As long as the blogrolling.com servers were running smoothly this worked quite well. The first person hitting a page would have a slight delay while the blog rolls were retrieved. Everyone in the next ten minutes that hit a page would get the cached version of the blog rolls and the page load time would be shorter by as much as half a minute.
Some time back, Blogrolling.com's service degraded horribly, so I moved all of the blogrolling.com blog rolls on my site to a separate page, off of the main page. I did this because when blogrolling.com has problems trying to retrieve the blog rolls can take a while, especially when each request times out. The more blog rolls you participate in the worse the problem gets.
Blogrolling.com's service has been good at times and horribly slow at other times. Their servers have had problems and they've fixed them and new problems have occurred. Lately, when I try to ping their server to let it know that I've updated the ping fails with an HTTP 404 error. I guess they've moved the RPC interface.
I've railed and raged against this and said that third party services are a terrible thing to rely upon. You'd think by now that I would have learned.
I don't know what it is about bloggers, but we seem to love to put all sorts of technological wizbang gadgets on our sites. It's cool to be able to drop a line or two of script into our page templates and have blog rolls "magically" appear. A lot of people like to use the Snap Preview Anywhere code to turn all of the outbound links into popup balloons with images of the target sites.
It's just more script after all. But of course if the server provided by Snap is down page load times get longer. And then, sometimes those popup balloons pop up when you don't want them to. I know that the preview service has gotten better, and that there are more options to make it less intrusive, but it's still not for my site.
Some time back, julia974 introduced herself in the comments on one of my posts. I spent a bit of time remarking on it and wishing that we had a better way of ranking websites that might drive traffic to them, traffic that was interested in the content.
Along comes Spotback. Spotback's widgets are pretty cool. They work together on your site to produce a list of "recommended" posts. Recommended by your site readers that is.
If you set things up right, you can include a little rating widget at the bottom of each post (I've done that) that allows the reader of a post to rate it from 1 to 5. The more ratings it gets the closer it reflects what your site readers really think.
The other widget can go in your sidebar or where ever, and as people rate your posts it lists the ones that have been rated. That way people can see what other people recommend on your site. This doesn't quite get to the level of the rating system I'd like to see for all blogs, but it's nice for a single blog.
That is, it's nice until the Spotback servers become unresponsive. Then most of a page will load, until it get's to the Spotback code, and the page load will hang. Just like when Blogrolling.com gets hosed. Or technorati.
So, sadly it's time to say good-bye to the spotback ratings widget. I'll be removing it from the site sometime later tonight.
So what about other third party services? Well, I'm still going to use technorati. Strangely enough I get a lot of hits through them.
I'm also going to keep using AKismet to filter spam, even though I have to filter through a lot of e-mail to find the false positives and accept the trackbacks or comments. I don't even mind when AKismet takes its time figuring out if a trackback or comment is spam. After all, that doesn't affect a page load.
I gave up on Haloscan for comments and trackbacks on my site as soon as I managed to implement my own version. I never had a problem with their widgets, but I got lucky. I had my own version of trackbacks and comments implemented before a bunch of people noticed that they had server problems. Haloscan has since fixed their problems, but I still can't use my own trackback pinger to trackback to sites that rely on Haloscan so I still have my account with them to send trackbacks to people that use their services.
Probably the best third party service I've seen is from Ferdinand T Cat's blogging empire. The blogger's oasis and linkfest haven deluxe are awesomely cool and don't interfere with my site in any way.
Comments (0) | Trackbacks (1)
Blue Star Chronicles trackbacked with "Wear Red on Friday Linkage"


