
Tebow has no skill. His Broncos are crap. He still can’t throw like an adult. The team should kick his proselytizing, fakey religious ass to the curb. Just you wait. It’ll turn out that he had seven girlfriends with AIDS, did heroin, shot three people in the parking lot with a stolen gun (the club kept it out of the news) last Wednesday, drinks gin like a fish, had sex with his sister, slaps puppies with sap gloves and farts at firemen.
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Stick Men: Indiscipline
Stick Men are a trio of performers whose many-branched roots have, at one time or another, crossed with King Crimson. Here, they cover a Crimso song, “Indiscipline.”
This power trio consists of Pat Mastelotto on drums, Tony Levin on Chapman Stick and Michael Bernier on second Chapman Stick — hence, “Stick Men.”
The Chapman Stick is a 10 or 12-stringed polyphonic musical instrument which is completely electric and possesses no hollow box as does an acoustic guitar. The term “polyphonic” indicates that the Chapman Stick can be used to play bass, melody, textures or chords, sometimes simultaneously if desired and the player possesses advanced dexterity.
You’ll notice that the Chapman Stick, invented by Emmett Chapman in the early 70s (releasing it in 1974), is meant to be tapped or fretted, rather than plucked or picked. The wide neck is very flat, the frets a little more elevated with very low string action — meaning the strings are lower to the necessary frets and therefore conducive to fretting and tapping.
Here, Michael Bernier provides a close-up view of Chapman Stick fretwork, and illustrates the extremely-wide range of play available on the instrument, from guitar-like highs to bass guitar lows.
Below, Tony Levin explains the Chapman Stick:
Greg Howard illustrates the multiple advantages of the Chapman Stick:
The very top video, Indiscipline, was performed by Stick Men in Montreal on May 11th of 2010.
If you care, I ask you to stay with me for a few Saturdays, ladies and gentlemen. Your musical horizons will expand.
BZ
Sheriff Joe: “Prove It”

Sheriff Joe Arpaio of Maricopa County, Arizona, doesn’t mind, apparently, taking on anyone. This time he’s taking on the federal government — an entity with a marked larger whip in its hand than anything or anyone else. From WND Politics:
Maverick Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio is challenging the Obama administration’s Department of Justice to present evidence to back its charge that his office is discriminating against Hispanics.
“Prove it,” Arpaio said in remarks directed at Holder in an interview with WND.
“If Eric Holder has evidence that the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office has engaged in systematic violations of the civil rights of Hispanic, then show me the evidence,” Arpaio said.
Arpaio contends that the 22-page complaint the Department of Justice released Dec. 15 against his office was nothing more than anecdotal and didn’t prove there are systematic sheriff’s department policies aimed at depriving Hispanics in Maricopa County of their civil rights.
Nor was Arpaio concerned that the DOJ might take him and his sheriff’s department to federal court.
“If the Justice Department wants to take me to court, I’m ready,” Arpaio said.
Obama: A Problem In Georgia?

From InfoWars.com:
Deputy Chief Judge Michael Malihi in the Office of State Administrative Hearings denied a motion by Obama asking to dismiss the complaint that seeks to keep his name off the state ballot during the March presidential primary. The judge’s decision now sets the stage for a Jan. 26 hearing on the issue in Fulton County,” reports the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer.
Little known, little recorded.
Whilst Mitt Romney crows about his Iowa win, there are machinations within machinations.
Another two:
- – Romney potentially securing McCain as VP?
- – Obama potentially securing Hillary Clinton as VP?
Game changers?
BZ
Obama: A Problem In Georgia?
From InfoWars.com:
“Deputy Chief Judge Michael Malihi in the Office of State Administrative Hearings denied a motion by Obama asking to dismiss the complaint that seeks to keep his name off the state ballot during the March presidential primary. The judge’s decision now sets the stage for a Jan. 26 hearing on the issue in Fulton County,” reports the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer.
Little known, little recorded.
Whilst Mitt Romney