LOTTOMIKE's Blog

the eagles,van halen,police and rage against the machine 2007 reunions

the eagles,van halen,the police and rage against the machine are some of the groups touring and reuniting in 2007.the eagles first new studio album since the long run in 1979 will be released soon.david lee roth is back with van halen.sting is back with the police and audioslave has split and rage has already got one date confirmed at this time.journey has changed lead singers for the third time also.

Entry #870

it really is a shame

no matter what i do there is one thing that just refuses to leave my thoughts.even though i eventually got over the taking away of our beloved online gambling i am starting to think maybe i haven't.the thing that has me mad is the very thought that the government starts sticking their noses in every little thing and changing peoples lives as they see fit.your not allowed to smoke in public no more.restaurants can't serve certain yummy trans fatty foods.you can't spank lil junior in the store anymore.whats the difference between 1987 and 2007 or 1967 and 2007.they say things evolve or does it??  don't you think a lot of things are going backwards.remember vegas and the mob?  that was a lot more dangerous than me playing quarter lottery.one year ago on this VERY day february 8,2006 i started playing with betslips and life was good.i won thousands within a couple months and life was good.i had money,days off and time with my kids.life was good.i was wagering and winning and life was good.THEN the fallout hit.i heard a bill was coming to stop online gambling and thought can this be real? i panicked and it ended up being a good reason to.when i read about people putting themselves through college or feeding their family through this i felt good about it.we are a backward place.ever went to other countries where they are not so hung up on nudity or gambling.but its a sin? i figure as long as i'm not hurting anyone whats the big deal?  we all had a good thing going and it got snatched from us.what happened to freedom of choice??

Entry #867

Rowling 'heartbroken,' 'euphoric' at 'Potter's' end

NEW YORK (AP) -- How does J.K. Rowling feel now that she has finished the seventh and final Harry Potter book? As the author herself confided Tuesday on her Web site, "Charles Dickens put it better than I ever could":

"It would concern the reader little, perhaps, to know how sorrowfully the pen is laid down at the close of a two-years' imaginative task; or how an Author feels as if he were dismissing some portion of himself into the shadowy world, when a crowd of the creatures of his brain are going from him for ever," reads the passage from Dickens' preface to "David Copperfield."

Adds Rowling: "To which I can only sigh, try seventeen years, Charles."

Rowling announced February 1 to an end one of the great phenomena of literary history. More than 325 million copies of the first six books have sold.

So, how does she feel? Having quoted Dickens, Rowling has a go at it on her own.

"I always knew that Harry's story would end with the seventh book, but saying goodbye has been just as hard as I always knew it would be," she writes.

"Even while I'm mourning, though, I feel an incredible sense of achievement. I can hardly believe that I've finally written the ending I've been planning for so many years. I've never felt such a mixture of extreme emotions in my life, never dreamed I could feel simultaneously heartbroken and euphoric."

She continues.

"If it comes as any consolation I think that there will be plenty to continue arguing and speculating about, even after 'Deathly Hallows' comes out. So if you're not yet ready to quit the message boards, do not despair," she writes.

"I'm almost scared to admit this, but one thing has stopped me collapsing in a puddle of misery on the floor. While each of the previous Potter books has strong claims on my affections, 'Deathly Hallows' is my favorite, and that is the most wonderful way to finish the series."

 

 

Entry #866

good halftime show by prince

prince did a pretty good halftime show.it was about the only thing that was good about the whole affair....

Entry #862

not hung anymore

after posting that last blog entry and carefully weighing my decision i have decided to go the check route as the best option.i was hung up on the choices but i'm not hung anymore and its all figured out.be careful at tax time and make your choices carefully....

Entry #860

i'm hung

i'm hung on if i should get a check or one of those debit cards that H and R Block gives to its clients at tax time.the debit cards are nice but i wonder if i should just take a check and put it in the bank...

Entry #859

Super Bowl Winners is the Bears

the bears are gonna crush the indianapolis colts.that D will crush peyton manning and there is nothing his forrest gump self can do about it!!

Entry #858

hells angels vs. NYPD

(Feb. 1) - By the time a search warrant was issued late Monday, dozens of heavily armed police officers had spent hours in the biting cold outside a fortresslike East Village tenement that has served for decades as the New York headquarters of the Hells Angels. As sharpshooters looked on from rooftops and a police helicopter circled overhead, the standoff lasted all afternoon.

Officers were first dispatched to the building Monday morning, after the brutal beating of a woman who was found at its front door on Sunday night. They were especially cautious before entering because past confrontations with the motorcycle club have proved both embarrassing and expensive for the city.

Since 1999, the city has paid more than $800,000 to settle two lawsuits by the Hells Angels claiming that the police illegally raided their headquarters. And after Monday’s police action, the Hells Angels promised to be back in court after complaining about excessive force and what they said was the illegal detention of one of their members by the police.

Perhaps the biggest victory for the local Hells Angels came in the early 1990s, when they fended off a long effort by the city to seize their building because the police said it was being used for drug deals. In 1994, a Federal District Court jury in Manhattan found that the city had failed to make its case, and the Angels have remained in place at 77 East Third Street, their Harleys parked in rows outside.

“These men are remarkably sophisticated consumers of legal talent,” said Ronald L. Kuby, one of several lawyers who have represented the club over the years. Whatever the outcome of the group’s latest dispute with the police, the search has again highlighted an unlikely and sometimes volatile relationship between the secretive, mostly middle-aged Angels and their East Village neighbors.

The club owns the building and has occupied it since 1969.

“They feel like they own the block, and everybody else is just sort of here,” said one resident of the block, between First and Second Avenues, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of a violent reprisal. “They can be nice, but just don’t cross them.”

The police said the assault on Sunday left the woman, who is 52, in a coma. After an argument in a nearby bar, witnesses said, the woman attempted to push her way into the clubhouse, and shouted insults from the sidewalk before she was beaten.

When the first officers arrived on Monday morning to investigate, the Angels refused to let them inside, the police said.

“Based on the seriousness of the victim’s injury, the history of the location and the refusal of those present to cooperate with the police, local commanders used appropriate resources to complete the initial investigation and entry,” said Chief Michael Collins, a police spokesman. Over the course of the day, a police canine unit, hostage negotiators and an armored police vehicle arrived at the scene, and a full block of Third Street was closed off.

The next day, in a rare public appearance outside the clubhouse, several club members and Mr. Kuby held a news conference to condemn the police tactics and deny any involvement in the beating.

“We don’t bully people” or beat up women, said one member, Bartlet Dowling. “You treat us with respect, and you get respect back.”

The officers who conducted the search on Monday took one club member, Richard West, into custody, but he was released hours later without being charged. There have been no other arrests in the case. Mr. Kuby said Mr. West planned to file suit in federal court charging the police with false arrest.

He said the club might also sue over the search itself if it finds that the warrant issued Monday was obtained by the police using misleading information. Mr. Kuby said yesterday that he had requested but had not yet received documents that had been submitted in application for the warrant.

The clubhouse is owned by the Hells Angels through the Church of Angels, a nonprofit religious organization formed by the club under state law. From the outside, the building is an anomaly on a block where several others have been transformed from decaying rentals to stylish condominiums, and where recent developments include a sleek New York Law School residence next door. The building’s interior is a mystery since almost no one besides club members are admitted.

The clubhouse is easily distinguished by two signs that read “Hells Angels New York City,” security cameras aimed at the sidewalk, and something that resembles an official city parking sign that reads, “No Parking Except Authorized Hells Angels.”

Some neighbors point out that there is one advantage to having a Hells Angels clubhouse nearby: Their reputation helps keep crime to a minimum. Instead of intimidating residents, they say, the Angels normally keep to themselves.

But one resident recalled making the mistake recently of parking a small motorcycle in a space that the club members had designated as their own. To make matters worse, the resident argued when a club member explained the rules.

A few days later, two Angels “approached me on the street,” said the person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “They weren’t really threatening, but I think that’s because I said I was sorry, which they thought was cool.”

The club’s relations with the police have been rocky.

The biggest police action was a 1985 raid on the Manhattan clubhouse, resulting in 15 arrests on drug trafficking and racketeering charges. That provided evidence used by the city in its unsuccessful attempt to seize the building under a federal law that enables the government to take possession of real estate, cars or other property used for drug dealing.

The more recent lawsuits by the Angels against the city both charged that the police had searched the clubhouse illegally, once in 1999 with a warrant that authorized officers to search only the first floor, and again in 2000 with no warrant.

The damages paid by the city, which were provided by Mr. Kuby and confirmed by the office of the corporation counsel, included $565,000 for the 1999 search and $247,000 for the one in 2000.

Kate Hammer contributed reporting for the New York Times.
Entry #857

U.S.-Iran Tensions Could Trigger War

BAGHDAD (Jan. 31) - Citing Iranian involvement with Iraqi militias and Tehran's nuclear ambitions, the Bush administration has shifted to offense in its confrontation with Iran  - building up the U.S. military in the Persian Gulf and promising more aggressive moves against Iranian operatives in Iraq and Lebanon.

The behind-the-scenes struggle between the two nations could explode into open warfare over a single misstep, analysts and U.S. military officials warn.

Iraq has become a proxy battleground between Washington and Tehran, which is challenging - at least rhetorically - America's dominance of the Gulf. That has worried even Iraq's U.S.-backed Shiite prime minister, who - in a reflection of Iraq's complexity - also has close ties to Iran.

Iran and the United States are already sparring on the ground.

On Jan. 20, militants kidnapped and killed four American soldiers in a raid in Karbala, and a fifth was killed in the firefight. A U.S. defense official said one possibility under study is that Iranian agents either executed or masterminded the attack, a suspicion based on the sophisticated and unusual methods used in the attack, including weapons and uniforms that may have been American.
He spoke on condition of anonymity because the probe is ongoing.

There has been speculation that the Karbala assault may have been in retaliation for the arrest of five Iranians by U.S. troops in northern Iraq.

Those five Iranians, who were arrested in the northern city of Irbil, included two members of an Iranian Revolutionary Guard force that provides weapons, training and other support to Shiite militants in the Middle East, U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said last week. Iraqi and Iranian officials maintain the five were diplomats.

Since the Karbala raid, U.S. saber-rattling has intensified.Bush said this week that U.S. forces in Iraq would take action against Iranian operatives in the country, while insisting he had no intention of attacking Iran.
If Iran escalates its military action in Iraq to the detriment of our troops and/or innocent Iraqi people, we will respond firmly," Bush told National Public Radio.

Although little evidence has been made public, U.S. officials have long insisted that Iran was supplying weapons and training to Shiite militias in Iraq, including some that have killed American troops.

The No. 2 U.S. general in Iraq told USA Today in an interview published Tuesday that Iran was supplying Iraqi Shiite militias with a variety of powerful weapons, including Katyusha rockets and armor-piercing rocket-propelled grenades.

"We have weapons that we know through serial numbers ... trace back to Iran," Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno said.

The Air Force is considering more forceful patrols on the Iraqi side of the border with Iran to counter the smuggling of weapons and bomb supplies, the Los Angeles Times reported, citing senior Pentagon officials.

The U.S. is also building up its military presence in the Gulf in what it says is a show of strength directed at Iran. A second aircraft carrier is heading for the region, and Patriot missile batteries are being deployed.

Since Bush announced his new Iraq strategy in early January, Iranian officials have raised the alarm repeatedly that the U.S. intends to attack. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Iran is "ready for anything" in its confrontation with the United States.
A newspaper close to Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei last week threatened retaliation for any U.S. military action _ including stopping oil traffic through the Gulf's strategic Hormuz Straits and attacks on U.S. interests. The top editor of the Kayhan daily warned that Iran will turn the Middle East into "hell" for the United States and Israel if America attacks.

Iran expert Ray Takeyh said the risks are all the greater because Tehran has an "unhealthy" disregard for American power, which "enhances the prospect of a miscalculation."

Prof. Gary Sick, a leading authority on Iran, believes the U.S. is seeking to divert world attention from the crisis in Iraq and organize a coalition of Israel and conservative Sunni Arab states to confront Iran.

"I see this as a very dangerous long-term policy because it promotes the idea that Sunnis and Shiites should be distrustful of each other, and I think that could come back and bite us later on," he said.

Iran and the U.S. also are in dispute over Tehran's nuclear program. The United States accuses Iran of secretly developing atomic weapons - an allegation Tehran denies. Iran's defiant refusal to suspend uranium enrichment prompted the U.N. Security Council to impose limited economic sanctions.

The U.S. has also beefed up support for Lebanon's government in its power struggle with Hezbollah , the Shiite militia that Washington accuses of acting in Iran's interests.

But Lee Feinstein of the Council on Foreign Relations said the U.S. was finding it hard "to calibrate its message" to distinguish "between a stern message and a warning of attack."

The war of words has raised fears among both Democrats and Republicans in Congess that the United States and Iran are drifting toward armed conflict at a time when America is struggling against determined foes in Iraq and Afghanistan .

It has also unnerved the Iraqi government, many of whose members have close ties to Iran.

"We have told the Iranians and the Americans, `We know that you have a problem with each other but we're asking you, please, solve your problems outside of Iraq,'" Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shiite, told CNN on Wednesday. "We do not want the American forces to take Iraq as a base to attack Iran ... we will not accept Iran using Iraq to attack American forces. But does this exist? It exists and I assure you it exists."

As the rhetoric grows more strident, a U.S. military official in the Gulf likened the U.S.-Iran standoff to the buildup in hostility in Europe before World War I, when the assassination of the heir to the Austrian throne triggered a tragic war that engulfed a continent.

"A mistake could be made and you could end up in something that neither side ever really wanted, and suddenly it's August 1914 all over again," the U.S. officer said on condition of anonymity, because of the sensitivity of the issue. "I really believe neither side wants a fight."

Iranian coast guard vessels recently veered into territorial waters on the Arab side of the Gulf, an event that could have been viewed as either a mistake or a provocation, the officer said. Both sides are on tenterhooks. "A boat crosses a line ... but what does it mean? You've got to be very careful about overreacting," the officer said.

Even if Iran pulled back from Iraq's conflict, it might not end the country's violence, said Kenneth M. Pollack, research director at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy.

"The truth is that Iraq is a mess. It is in a state of low-level civil war. And all of these groups are largely self-motivated," he said on the Council on Foreign Relations Web site. "But its much easier to blame it on the Iranians."

In Tehran, political analyst Hermidas Bavand said U.S. force increases were leading many Iranians to believe Washington is looking to pick a fight.

"It's an extremely dangerous situation," Bavand said. "I don't think Tehran wants war under any circumstances. But there might be an accidental event that could escalate into a large confrontation."

AP writer Jim Krane reported from Doha, Qatar. AP writer Tracee Herbaugh in New York contributed to this report.


Entry #856