Wednesday, December 28, 2005

FW: Here's Wishing You a Very??????

For My Democratic Friends:

Please accept with no obligation, implied or implicit, my best wishes for an environmentally conscious, socially responsible, low-stress, non-addictive, gender-neutral celebration of the winter solstice holiday, practiced within the most enjoyable traditions of the religious persuasion of your choice, or secular practices of your choice, with respect for the religious/secular persuasion and/or traditions of others, or their choice not to practice religious or secular traditions at all. I also wish you a fiscally successful, personally fulfilling and medically uncomplicated recognition of the onset of the generally accepted calendar year 2006, but not without due respect for the calendars of choice of other cultures whose contributions to society have helped make America great. Not to imply that America is necessarily greater than any other country nor the only America in the Western Hemisphere, and without regard to the race, creed, color, age, physical ability, religious faith or sexual preference of the wishee. By accepting these greetings you are accepting these terms. This greeting is subject to clarification or withdrawal. It is freely transferable with no alteration to the original greeting. It implies no promise by the wisher to actually implement any of the wishes for herself or himself or others, and is void where prohibited by law and is revocable at the sole discretion of the wisher. This wish is warranted to perform as expected within the usual application of good tidings for a period of one year or until the issuance of a subsequent holiday greeting, whichever comes first, and warranty is limited to replacement of this wish or issuance of a new wish at the sole discretion of the wisher.

For My Republican Friends:

Here's wishing all of you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!!!

Thursday, December 15, 2005

FW: Prisoner

My nephew Josh sent the email below. I thought you might find it interesting.

Keep in Touch,

John & Sue

563 Autumnwind Drive
Lebanon, OH 45036

(513) 228-0153
JohnHNye@hotmail.com or Snye14@hotmail.com

Check out my eBlog at: http://topooceans.blogspot.com/

Quote: "I value you enough to give my most precious asset--my time." - Rick Warren



From: Joshua Morton [mailto:josh@joshuamorton.com]
Sent: Monday, December 12, 2005 2:43 PM
To: Amber Morton; Amy Lee; Arell Chapman; Chad Hutchinson; Darik Chapman; Dashaunn Woolard; Dee & Larry; DJ Wyrick; Eric Einhorn; Evie Morton; Grandma Chapman; Jennifer Broyles; Jerricca Hawkins; Joanna Johnson; Jody Posten; John Nye; Joy Nye; Justin Morton; Karina Pitchford; Kellie Chapman; Matt Morton; mccale; Peter Heydinger; Robyn; RT; Scott Holcombe; Stephen Harris; Stoner, Kristina; Tom Nye; Wade & Brenda Morton; Wayne Morton
Subject: Prisoner



You never know what your going to see at my job. I X-rayed a prisoner on Friday, December 9th. It's not unusual to X-ray a prisoner, we get them from the local prison frequently, but this one had an unusual story of how he hurt his leg 2 hours earlier. He was a real nice guy who I had talked with for about 25 minutes. He had this elaborate story of how he jumped out of a second story window into the back of a garbage truck. I thought he was joking at first, but the 4 corrections officers and 2 state troopers with him assured me this was no joke. His name was Lyle Harvey Curtis... here is his story.

-----------------------------------

News

40 minutes on the loose


Friday, December 9, 2005 11:34 PM EST

Police officers from several agencies surround escaped prisoner Lyle Harvey Curtis, on ground, Friday in Blissfield after capturing him and his accomplice, William Dean Michels. - Telegram photo by Lad Strayer

- Prisoners escaped hiding under tarp in garbage truck.

By Andy Rogers

Daily Telegram Staff Writer

ADRIAN - The garbage truck that a convicted murderer and a rapist rode out of the Gus Harrison Correction Facility Friday was properly inspected by prison staff, a Michigan Department of Corrections spokesperson says.

The men found a way to enter the garbage truck and hid underneath a tarp, Leo Lalonde, MDOC public information officer, told The Daily Telegram. Both men were arrested 40 minutes later in Blissfield after abducting a man and commandeering his car.

“Garbage trucks are inspected, but not the inside where the garbage is,” Lalonde explained. “They look in the cab and under the cab and that did happen (Friday).” Saying he was not familiar with other procedures, Lalonde could not explain how the two men might have had access to the garbage truck.

Both of the men who tried to escape were serving long prison sentences. Lyle Harvey Curtis, 37, has been at Gus Harrison since July 2003. He was convicted of murdering his wife in St. Clair County in 1993. William Dean Michels, 47, came to Gus Harrison in January. He was convicted of rape in Eaton County in 1997.

Lalonde said the two men rode the garbage truck out of the prison, then fled on foot once it reached the Adrian Landfill, 1983 N. Ogden Hwy.

The men worked their way out of the landfill and came across Robert Vanvalkenburg, 75, who was shoveling snow at his home on Deerfield Road. They tried to steal his car, but instead convinced Vanvalkenburg to drive them out of town.

Several people, including Vanvalkenburg's wife, witnessed the abduction and called 9-1-1, Lalonde said. A detailed description of the car and its registration information was broadcast over police radios and at about 8:10 a.m., Blissfield Police Sgt. James Novak stopped the car in Blissfield and arrested the fugitives.

Curtis, who broke his leg during the escape, is described as a “bad man” by Jean Sturtridge, the former St. Clair County prosecutor who handled his homicide case in 1993. Curtis was convicted by a jury of killing his wife, Shannon O'Boyle Curtis, on July 4, 1992 in the couple's home.

Curtis stabbed Shannon to death with her 2-year-old son in the home. The case was “fairly significant,” Sturtridge said. She described Curtis as having a checkered past with a history of violence. He was sentenced to 40 to 70 years in prison in May 1993. His earliest release date is set at July 2032. Curtis previously served one year and four months after agreeing to plea bargain for attempted larceny in a building.

Michels was sentenced to 34 to 60 years in prison in July 1997 after being convicted of two counts of criminal sexual conduct involving a weapon. MDOC records show he also plead to another criminal sexual conduct charge for a previous incident. His earliest release date is set at April 2031.

Both men were classified as “level 2” prisoners, which Lalonde described as medium security. The medium security portion of Gus Harrison is protected by double perimeter fences with razor wire and electronic detection systems. Access to the area is controlled with an armed alert response vehicle staffed by corrections officers authorized to use lethal force to prevent escapes.

The Gus Harrison facility also houses lower-security level 1 and higher-security level 4 prisoners. The maximum security classification is level 5, Lalonde said.

Lalonde said an MDOC investigation into the prison break is under way.

“We'll look at what happened and see if we need to change anything (with the garbage inspection procedure),” Lalonde said.

Curtis and Michels will be transferred to different correctional facilities and housed in higher-security quarters, Lalonde said. Local prosecutors will determine if the men will face additional charges for their attempted escape.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Mission Trips

BEGIN:VCARD
VERSION:2.1
N:Nye;John;H.
FN:John H. Nye (JohnHNye@hotmail.com)
ORG:NETS
TITLE:Owner/President/General Manager
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TEL;CELL;VOICE:(513) 317-2942
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REV:20050701T222424Z
END:VCARD

Kasey

 

I was just talking to your mom and heard you are going on a mission trip to Mexico and want to go on more mission trips.  That is really cool!

 

I have copied this message to my son Luke, because he went on a mission trip to Mexico, Africa, England, France and Mongolia and could give you some great ideas to think about.  He went with “Youth with a Mission”.  What group are you going on your mission with?

 

Please tell Luke and me a little about the fellowship you are attending?  Is it called The Gathering?

 

Do they have good worship services?  Luke likes the Christian worship groups called Delirious and The Violet Burning.  I have been listening to them and like them too.  The Newsboys have a great worship CD too.

 

I know your busy, but please email Luke at followingthecall@hotmail.com.  He is living in Connecticut with friends.  It’s never too late to develop your relationship with cousins.

 

We love you!!!

Keep in Touch,

John & Sue

563 Autumnwind Drive
Lebanon, OH 45036

(513) 228-0153
JohnHNye@hotmail.com or Snye14@hotmail.com

Check out my eBlog at: http://topooceans.blogspot.com/

Quote:  "I value you enough to give my most precious asset--my time." - Rick Warren

 

Thursday, December 01, 2005

Journal Entry on Righeousness

Thursday, December 01, 2005

Righteousness is a word describing a state of mind given by God.  We cannot understand many words and experiences of this life without God’s intervention.  Science cannot define or even begin to imagine what a word like this means.  How would you measure a word like this scientifically?  What would you measure, so you could compare the idea, image or belief among various people?  What brain waves could you measure to tell the difference between levels of righteousness between people?

 

So many Bible terms are hard to define.  Take this one for example.  If a person follows the Ten Commandments of the Old Testament perfectly then he/she would be declared righteous.  Righteousness is a trait of God, not of the gods.  An attribute of God that was bestowed on men who failed to obey the commandments, but whom God declared because of a relationship with Him.  According to the New Testament, only one man in the whole universe was bestowed with this character of righteousness.

 

Romans 8:1-4 states that God can provide this godly trait in man through the one man that was truly righteous.  No tests and x-rays in the world can detect the transformation in the brain of a gift of righteousness from God, but what is evident is the change in the actions of a human being who realizes they have now no condemnation in a relationship with God.

 

Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Hey got your call

BEGIN:VCARD
VERSION:2.1
N:Nye;John;H.
FN:John H. Nye (JohnHNye@hotmail.com)
ORG:NETS
TITLE:Owner/President/General Manager
TEL;HOME;VOICE:(513) 228-0153
TEL;CELL;VOICE:(513) 317-2942
ADR;WORK:;;563 Autumnwind Drive;Lebanon;OH;45036;United States of America
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EMAIL;PREF;INTERNET:JohnHNye@hotmail.com
REV:20050701T222424Z
END:VCARD

Luke

 

You should have called my cell phone on Thanksgiving.  We were in MI.  Ate lunch at Kathy’s with the Stegg’s then went over to Darik’s and had lunch with Grandma.  We ate too much.  Then we went to Joanna’s for dessert.  We are planning on going back up for Christmas this year too.

 

Have you looked for air tickets to Cincinnati yet?  Are you really going to have enough money to pay half?  I can only pay $150 at the most, because my business is still not making enough to live on.  I got a job at Business College to teach evening classes in January.  I am teaching speech and office management.

 

We just got done watching War of Worlds.  Quite the movie!  Have you seen Polar Express?  I thought it was good and I want to go see it in 3-D.

 

Keep in Touch,

Dad

563 Autumnwind Drive
Lebanon, OH 45036

(513) 228-0153
JohnHNye@hotmail.com or Snye14@hotmail.com

Check out my eBlog at: http://topooceans.blogspot.com/

Quote:  "I value you enough to give my most precious asset--my time." - Rick Warren

 

Friday, November 25, 2005

Tom I put it in prose, so its easier to read - good job!

 

The Farm

 

On a hill in Eastern Iowa,

there stands a stucco house with stucco out buildings. 

Massive pines border the west and north as protection

from the cold winter winds. 

An ancient Ash stands guard

on the east with a huge trunk

rising high into the sky,

it used to shade a large barn

that was the hub of farm activity years ago. 

All that remains of that once important place

is a lone broken up concrete walk

that now leads to nowhere.

           

To a casual passer by,

this is just another farmstead

on another country road

in the vast prairie of Iowa

each one unique with history,

yet very similar in many ways. 

To us this is home. 

In fact to John and Katie Kinsinger

this was once their future. 

I can only imagine how excited they were

when they finally got the paperwork completed

and prepared to move onto their new farm. 

There were hopes, plans and dreams. 

They set out the first garden

and planted some fruit trees. 

John plowed the ground first with teams of horses

then came tractors and rubber wheels. 

Cows were milked and chickens laid eggs,

hogs were slopped and calves were bottle fed. 

I can only wonder how many farm dogs

stood watch on this piece of land

all risking life daily to protect their masters domain.  

What were all their names? 

Multitudes of farm cats

have raised generations of kittens

in every color and style. 

Then came the children, a son, four daughters. 

There were many busy school days and quite Sundays.

 

How many years has spring come bursting with new life. 

How many falls have gone by, each transforming this spot into a picture

with bright gold and red leaves falling from the trees

until the last is covered in a blanket of snow. 

The glistening ice and snowdrifts decking the farm and house

in it's Christmas best. 

I can imagine the sounds of children laughing

as they sled down the hill this house stands on. 

Their father finishing the chores as evening falls

and Katie calls them all in for supper. 

Oh the smell that welcomed them into a warm house

with homemade noodles and farm fresh chicken.

The house nestled on a hill with golden light streaming

out of the kitchen window,

the hands on the clock go around,

always moving steadily forward.

 

Just when winter began to feel long

and cold the first signs of spring would begin to appear. 

A warm day and the bright green grass

would show though the places where the snow melted first.  

Soon the first calf would be born

and Pops would have to go out in the cold night

to make sure the newborn was in the warm straw of the big barn. 

Then a new crop of  kittens were born

and the birds returned from the south to sing again. 

Chickens hurry around the barnyard finding bugs and stray kernels of corn.

Year after year the same things happened on this piece of farmland,

yet every year when the birds return from their winter homes

they find a few small changes. 

Maybe a new garage or the fence line changed,

then another building is torn down. 

There are new cars in the driveway

and bigger tractors and the old ones are left out in the pasture to rust.

The sound of the children's voices change too as they grow older. 

The years go round and round and some hard times come too,

the family faces death and the pain it brings.

             

 The weeks cycle around and each Sunday the same familiar hymns are sung.

For generations fathers wait in the drive upset

because the family is late for church again. 

School days come and go with homework and tests, plays and choir concerts. 

Again the seasons change, calendar pages are turned over,

holiday tables laden with every kind of food, 

cooked to perfection steaming hot and set out with love. 

Followed by the best pies and cookies and pastries

that can be tasted anywhere in the world. 

Three generations of great cooks have adorned this kitchen. 

The first was Katie and she was followed by her daughter

Ruby and then by her grand-daughter Shari.

            

John and Katie arranged for Alva and Ruby to move onto the farm

and they shared the work.

Canning together and working the land together,

milking together and eating together. 

This is the place Ruby took her first breath,

her first steps, learned about life,

was picked up for her first date,

now she is the young housewife. 

A few years later the time came

for John and Katie to move to town. 

Soon there were sounds of little children in the yard again,

a daughter, a son, two more daughters and another son. 

More farm dogs and new kittens the old ones are only memories. 

How many planting seasons,

how many harvest moons

have looked down from above

illuminating the fields. 

Long days of work the Gingerich family plastered houses

for miles around and then had chores to do

when they came back here to the farm.  

You could  hear the sound of laughter as they stop for breaks. 

Year by year the birds return from the south in the spring

and every year they see little things change. 

One going by on the road wouldn't see much change

but the world is changing and so is life on this farm.  

Haymaking days seem as if they will never end,

the cousins, aunts and uncles come around to help

and even Grandma returns to the farm to help with the meals. 

             

Even now if you look out the kitchen window

you can almost see the hay wagon pull in the drive

and smell the  green bales as they are drawn up into the mow. 

The whole family putting up the hay, everyone helping,

working together, talking and laughing together.  

A gentle breeze in the curtains and you look out the window

again and the barn is gone,

all that can be seen is a lone tire-swing spinning round

and around in the wind. 

The sounds of their voices fade into an echo.

            

At one point the farm is almost completely quite when only

Alva and Ruby are here, the livestock, gone,

there are no dogs or cats except a stray or two.

           

Alva and Ruby arrange for Tom and Shari to move onto the farm. 

This is the home Shari first knew, where she learned to walk,

learned about life and had her first date pick her up. 

Now she is the young mother and there are young voices here again. 

Four daughters and son.  Around and around the seasons go

and the birds return to hear new sounds and see new additions

made to the place.  A new spotted farm dog guards the territory

and new kittens are born each year.  Horses and ponies use the barn

and pasture and even chickens make a comeback. 

The places in the yard where the little girls used to play with kittens

and dolls are now where they lay out on blankets to sunbathe. 

The sound of laughter in the front yard as a boy and his dad play

catch or shoot hoops by the barn.  New cars line the drive,

young men appear at the door wanting to take these young women on dates,

which ones will be part of our future

and which ones will fade into the memories of the past.

           

The old windmill still stands towering over the farm like a watchman,

it's face turning in the wind surveying the land. 

Working hard it keeps turning round and around as if it believes

it is still pumping water but a new electric pump is taking care of that. 

          

Now Katie's great grand-daughters live here learning the same recipes she used. 

Ruby's grand-daughters try their hand at the same dishes she once cooked 

Shari's daughters dress up the house at Christmas time 

with the same enthusiasm she used. 

Will another generation live here and fill this house with their own memories. 

Time changes everything and when the calendar pages are turned 

again what will become of this house on the hill. 

So many good times on this place, many hard times too. 

Kind words spoken and harsh words, sometimes no words

when there should have been something said. 

Other times too much was said and there is no way to turn back the hands

on the clock and change any of what has happened here. 

The face of the clock watching all that happens as it's hands turn round and round,

ticking, ticking, always moving forward.  

            

To someone passing by on the road this is just another old farm house

but to our family this place is a historic monument. 

To everyone else this is just a hill in the middle of nowhere,

to us it is the middle of everywhere. 

This is the center of our universe. 

This is our home.

 

 

 By Tom Nye

 

Journal Entry - Friday, November 25, 2005

I continue to be amazed and consider my own thoughts in light of the movie I watched the other day. The only stability I find is in knowing God, because he created the way we think. God gave us our minds and designed how they work. He gave us the basic skills of interacting with this world he designed, but then he developed a complex system of thinking that created self, emotions and our perceptions of the world around us. Then to add the most complex level to our existence he added a soul that interacts with our conscious and the spirit world. Whoa!

All religions that I know of teach men to relate to the spirit realm in some semblance of prayer or thoughtfulness on the unknown, eternal or void of the universe. Though there are a whole world of humans that just live in the physical realm and ignore anything spiritual, at least they convince themselves of this.

I continue to follow the path of Christian prayer, because I believe that the gap between man and the unknown is so large and only spanned through the name of a God we know as Jesus Christ. This one God came to this earth in the form of a man. Man has always dreamed of gods in the form of man and attempts to raise many men and women to this status. I have studied many of the world’s religions, but none of them show a compassionate God that rules with a heavenly trait we comprehend as love. Man in many ancient religions understood the power of shed blood in rectifying relationships and appeasing the Gods. Jesus Christ fulfilled the long last obligation of man and restored not only our relationship with God the Father, the Universal Almighty, but with each other. Jesus, born of a woman, lived and shed his blood as the one and final sacrifice to appease the one and only true God. This is powerful in the minds of human beings, because the ego of self crumbles away with memories of sin and we are now find our minds regenerated in a new way of thinking the world can never successfully teach us. Forgiveness of others is not possible on the human level, because we never forget an offense and attempt to rectify injustices in our world against us.

I Peter 3:12 For the eyes of the Lord are over the righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers: but the face of the Lord is against them that do evil.

An open relationship with God is a phenomenal experience. For our complex minds to behold and comprehend that, our lives are in the vision of God the Almighty is quite a blessing. Unfortunately, the human mind attempts to take this recognition by God as an excuse to believe we are more blessed, protected and better than other human beings are. Evangelical Christians even believe they are better than other Christians in other churches are. Those who call themselves Christians are often people with inflated egos operating their lives as though they are a god of some sort. Somehow, people take this position of “righteousness” and thwart it to mean they are better than others are which is not at the heart of any teaching in the New Testament. I love the relationship outlined in this scripture, which expresses the two-way communication between God and man.

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Wednesday, November 23, 2005 Journal Entry

Last night I watched the movie, What the Bleep We Know. This movie really makes you think about what is reality and how we as humans interact with our environment. The movie strengthened my faith, because they showed the power of prayer and loving thoughts on the health of all the cells in the body. They explained that mental blocks, addictions and emotions affect every cell in our body transforming the way they receive input, thus blocking nutrients in the future and increasing aging, obesity and other health problems. The mind only deals with possibilities we understand, so a paradigm shift toward spiritual understanding is a gift of God and not normal to human beings.

It so interesting the complexity of our minds and the patterns in which we think. We can remember the past, but we feel helpless to change the past. We believe we can affect the future with our emotions, such as anger could change a situation. What is amazing is that God can change our past, at least our accountability for eternal penalty of a poor past. By remembering how God has dealt with our past, we start to feel free to make better decisions for the future. The apostle Paul encourages us to remember our past without ceasing. In Thessalonians 1:3, he says good things to remember are our works of faith that caused us to turn to God from idols. When we can see that trusting God and living like we believe in his eternal plan for our life, then we start to value the Holy and the things of this earth lose their value and anxiety to keep them. Amazingly, we gain the ability to leave addictions, habits, old thought life and sin behind, so we are able to press on in wonderful successful memories. He also encourages us to remember our labor of love, which reveals a new ability to serve a living God. We were able to get leading from the Holy Spirit and make decisions based on faith versus the feelings we experience in this short life. We now understand that with God, nothing is impossible and we are so thankful for his forgiveness of our past we have a new and wonderful love for our God and Father. Finally, Paul recommends we remember our patience with hope, so that we will continue to wait for his son from heaven. This task is more difficult than the others are, so we see many Christians losing the faith and living for today with all the pleasures and treasures of this life. But, Paul says that if we will remember the hope God planted in our hearts by the Holy Spirit and the promise of his word, then we will have a blessing of hope that will transform our thinking, thus moving us into a new realm of possibility and insight into the second coming of Jesus Christ.

FW: What a great blessing for Thanksgiving

From: Kellie Chapman [mailto:kelliechapman@comcast.net]
Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2005 6:27 AM
To: Amber Morton; Aunt Jane; Aunt Mare; Cherie/Peggy; Darik@silicones.net; Dave; David Harris; Debi; Jen Harris; Joanna; John Nye; Josh; Justin; Laura Harris; Richard Harris; Sheila Harris; Tom; Tracy; Twila Chapman; Twila Lou; Wendy
Subject: What a great blessing for Thanksgiving

Just wanted all of you to know that Noah came through his Orthopedic U of M appt with great news. Noah

Was slated to have extensive spinal surgery this coming winter. We had a doctor that recommended this back

In July for some congential problems with his spine. After fighting with our insurance company for months I was

Able to get a referral to University of Michigan Pediatric Orthopedics dept. The doctor we saw is the head

Of this dept and his feeling was that Noah’s back looked good right now. No surgery was needed in the near future, and

We would follow up with him every six months for checkups.

All Arell and I could do was hug Noah and rejoice in the great blessings that we as a family have received lately.

Thank you for all of your thoughtful prayers for him over the months, God does hear these and has been so

Generous with his miracles for us. We love you all and Have a Happy Thanksgiving.

Love the Chapmans

Tuesday, November 22, 2005

What the Bleep

Mike

I just finished watching the movie you suggested – What the Bleep Do We Know. It was good and it really twisted my brain. Makes a lot of sense though, because I know my biggest limitation is my own thinking patterns. I love the way Christianity works on changing our thought life so we expect miracles and the impossible, so we can accept events that know one else would believe or even recognize.

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Hope in the Future

You know, it is important to have hope as a human being. There is something innate in our brains that requires hope for us to be healthy. Hope in the tangible things always ends up a disappointment, so even if religion is contrived it is to our benefit to believe. I am impressed with the hope God gives us in the Christian faith, though I am not aware of hope addressed in other religions. God inspires us to believe in the second coming of the Messiah who will make eternal changes to our lives if we are dead or alive. Lately, I have "pooh-poohed" this belief and paid the price with bitterness and depression. I realize now that God has given me this hope and it is up to me to accept it and believe in order to reap the benefits.

"Remembering without ceasing your...patience of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ, in the sight of God and our Father." I Thessalonians 1:3.

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Microsoft PowerToys for Windows XP

You will find some great power toys for free at this website. The SyncToy is great when you have two computers and you want your music files synced.

http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/downloads/powertoys/xppowertoys.mspx">Microsoft PowerToys for Windows XP

Sunday, October 09, 2005


Told you my cat was fat!!! Posted by Picasa

I took this picture in France at the top of Mount Saint Michelle, which is one of the coolest places in the world! Posted by Picasa

Saturday, October 08, 2005

FW: Cajuns

Man Bites Hurricane

By Michael Graham

They were poor. They lived in New Orleans in homes that, to some Americans,

would appear no more than shacks. They've suffered discrimination at the hands of their fellow Americans. And when the hurricane came, it seemed to veer out of its way, just to hit them.

So why didn't hundreds of Cajuns from western Louisiana appear on my TV screen this week, complaining that George W. Bush doesn't like them, demanding

$200 billion of my tax dollars or blaming the bad weather on Halliburton?

Hurricane Rita may have hit western Louisiana harder than Katrina hit New Orleans, but Rita across folks made of sterner stuff then you'll find in the Ninth Ward. Here's how one Washington Post story described the scene

just hours after Rita made landfall near Intracoastal City, a "city" that in many senses barely exists:

"The only people who can get here are the sturdiest of sorts, a small armada of Cajuns with pretty French names and sunburned skin and don't-mess-with-me bravado. The bayous were full of them Saturday, gliding high and quick in airboats, and so was the Vermilion River, where they were spinning steering wheels on fast Boston Whalers and kicking up wakes in flat-bottomed, aluminum boats. They did not wait for the president or FEMA or anyone else to tell them that there were people out there - out there and desperate, on rooftops...

'I got out of the sheriff's office in about 20 seconds,' said Steve Artee, as his son, Chris, made a hard, boat-tilting turn on the swollen Vermilion. 'They just took my cell phone number, and I was gone. That's because Kathleen Blanco wasn't involved.'"

Now, anyone who hates Blanco and bureaucrats can't be all bad. But I don't agree with Mr. Artee that the people of Vermilion Parish behaved more responsibly or showed more strength of character because Gov. Blanco didn't have their parish on her speed dial. I believe the people of western Louisiana behaved better because they are, in fact, better people.

The failure revealed by Hurricane Katrina was not a failure of government, atleast, not any more than government always fails. The failure in New Orleans was a failure of character. Corrupt people electing corrupt politicians who gave millions in tax dollars to corrupt cronies to either mis-construct vital levees or to spend the money on entirely useless port projects. Then, when disaster struck, these same people-living a Faustian deal of votes for tax-funded handouts- were utterly lost when those corrupt government officials headed for high ground without them.

As John Fund of the Wall Street Journal wrote: "In just the past generation, the

Pelican State has had a governor, an attorney general, three successive insurance commissioners, a congressman, a federal judge, a state Senate president and a swarm of local officials convicted. Last year, three top officials at Louisiana's Office of Emergency Preparedness were

indicted....Just this summer, associates of former [New Orleans] mayor Marc Morial were indicted for alleged kickbacks involving public contracts. Last month the FBI raided the home and car of Rep. William Jefferson as part of a probe into allegations he had misused his office."

Not to mention the widespread looting by the citizens of New Orleans themselves, which included televised looting by police officers, too. The chief administrative officer for Kenner, LA, was just busted for pilfering food, drinks, chainsaws and roof tarps from New Orleans and stashing them in

his suburban home.

Hey-stay classy, New Orleans!

Then came Hurricane Rita, Katrina's ugly sister, to wreak similar havoc just a few hundred miles to the west. The communities affected were, on the surface, similar as well: Abbeville or Cameron, LA were "low income" communities.The education levels were similar to the Ninth Ward, too. And you won't find many branches of the Aryan Nations meeting among the dark-skinned natives of Cajun country, whose heritage is a genetic gumbo of Europe, Africa, the Caribbean and American Indians.

But while the people of New Orleans were panicking and complaining (not to mention stealing, shooting and stabbing) days after the storm, the Cajuns of western Louisiana were out in their boats, looking for lost neighbors and rescuing strangers off rooftops.

It wasn't just because Gov. Blanco wasn't involved-it was because almost NO government is involved in these folks' daily lives. The people of rural

Louisiana grow up with the assumption that their survival in this world of woe

is their responsibility. Unlike far too many people in New Orleans, "low income"

isn't an excuse to the working families in rural Louisiana. It's just a condition to be dealt with. They live their lives as though they own hem, unlike those government-dependent "victims" who live as though life is something the state provides for them and is responsible to maintain.

Randy Gary, a fisherman from Cameron, LA, was asked about his future after his boats were destroyed and flooding poisoned the oyster beds he fished.

He didn't blame FEMA or accuse President Bush of stealing his lunch money. He

wasn't spotted kicking in the door of the local Wal-Mart to snag a plasma-screen

TV "for survival purposes." He has yet to join the Cajun Action ommittee to

investigate why so many of Rita's victims spoke French.

Instead, as the AP reports, he smiled.

"What else we gonna do?" he said, pledging to rebuild his shattered home and work. It's my life. It's what I do."

Hurricane Rita, you've met your match.