Friday, October 31, 2008

Happy Halloween!!


IMG_1734, originally uploaded by d_jazmine.



This was one of my more recent costumes. I was "DIZZY". (Thus, the stars and birdies circling around my head.)

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Olan is GROWING!


Here's my cute nephew, in a little onsie from Auntie Donna. I loved the polka dots, and Kjersti and Alex have dubbed it "Olan's Wonder Bread Onsie"

Monday, October 27, 2008

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

What the Pfuck???



And just for fun, a look at "Real Wasilla"

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

The Happy Family


Atlanta Baby 033, originally uploaded by d_jazmine.

Kjersti, Alex and Olan Duval.

Seriously...


IMG_2960, originally uploaded by d_jazmine.

...have you ever seen a cuter face? I mean, come ON! :-) Proud Auntie Donna, holding Olan in her lap - what a treat that was!!

IMHO

John McCain, for all of his "tough guy" talk, is just a tired old wimp, MY FRIENDS. He had 90 minutes last night, to go after Obama (our next President) the same way he and his partners in crime have the past few days, and he said NOTHING. Gee, I wonder why that is? He had all that time to question Obama's PATRIOTISM, to question his BACKGROUND, to suggest that he DOESN'T SUPPORT THE TROOPS...and he refused to do it. Why didn't he look him in the eyes and call him Senator Hussein, like his cronies are doing? Wait...maybe that's just supposed to be in the background, to make Obama "look suspect". But, like every punk and schoolyard bully, he can't own up to it himself.

Obama, on the other hand, landed every punch above board. All of them were fair, legitimate, and issue based - things he'd mentioned before, publicly; things he is man enough to put in his commercials, and repeat right in (down to) John McCain's face.

What a sad, pathetic small excuse for a man John McCain has turned in to as we all watched.

Oh, and incidentally, for someone who is so self-conscious about his height and physical limitations, the format last night was really not helpful for McCain either. While Obama gracefully and easily covered ground all over the stage, McCain hobbled around like a penguin, chuckling awkwardly to himself at his (completely ignored) attempts at wit and banter. Next time: Stick to the milk crate behind the podium. Just don't fall off and break a hip.


If you want to cut through the debate hodge podge, and just learn a little more about John on your own, here's the place to go:

http://www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/make_believe_maverick_the_real_john_mccain

Unleashed, Palin Makes a Pit Bull Look Tame

By Dana Milbank
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
; A03



FORT MYERS, Fla., Oct. 6 John McCain is collapsing in the polls in Florida and other swing states, but Sarah Palin, God bless her, has a solution.

"For me, the heels are on, the gloves are off," she announced at high noon Monday to a group of Republican donors at the Naples Beach Club.

You betcha.

As the donors sipped their bloody marys and mimosas, she added, in a conspiratorial stage whisper, "I'm sending the message back to John McCain also: Tomorrow night in his debate, might as well take the gloves off."

Darn right.

Of course, it's not only gloves and heels; headgear has a role, too. "Okay, so, Florida, you know that you're going to have to hang on to your hats," she said at a morning rally in Clearwater, "because from now until Election Day, it may get kind of rough."

Say it ain't so, Sarah!

Sen. Lindsey Graham, a McCain confidant, told The Post's David Broder that the campaign would "go down in history as stupid if they don't unleash" Palin. Well, the self-identified pit bull has been unleashed -- if not unhinged.

Barack Obama, she told 8,000 fans at a rally here Monday afternoon, "launched his political career in the living room of a domestic terrorist!" This followed her earlier accusation that the Democrat pals around with terrorists. "This is not a man who sees America the way you and I see America," she told the Clearwater crowd. "I'm afraid this is someone who sees America as imperfect enough to work with a former domestic terrorist who had targeted his own country." The crowd replied with boos.

McCain had said that racially explosive attacks related to Obama's former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, are off limits. But Palin told New York Times columnist Bill Kristol in an interview published Monday: "I don't know why that association isn't discussed more."

Worse, Palin's routine attacks on the media have begun to spill into ugliness. In Clearwater, arriving reporters were greeted with shouts and taunts by the crowd of about 3,000. Palin then went on to blame Katie Couric's questions for her "less-than-successful interview with kinda mainstream media." At that, Palin supporters turned on reporters in the press area, waving thunder sticks and shouting abuse. Others hurled obscenities at a camera crew. One Palin supporter shouted a racial epithet at an African American sound man for a network and told him, "Sit down, boy."

McCain's swoon is largely out of his control, the result of an economic collapse that ignited new fears Monday when the Dow Jones industrial average closed below 10,000 for the first time in four years. That's why his lead in Florida polls, which once reached as high as 15 points, has turned into a three-point deficit.

But the campaign has reacted with recriminations (the St. Petersburg Times reported that the Florida Republican Party chairman, after questioning Palin's aptitude, was told that he couldn't fly on her plane) and now Palin's rage.

The angry GOP vice presidential nominee even found a way to blame the market decline on the yet-to-be-enacted tax policies of the yet-to-be-elected Obama.

"If you turn on the news tonight when you get home, you're gonna see that, yah, this is another woeful day in the market, and the other side just doesn't understand -- no!" she said at an afternoon fundraiser at the home of mutual fund giant Jack Donahue. "Especially in a time like this, you don't propose to increase taxes. The phoniest claim in a campaign that's full of them is that Barack Obama is going to cut your taxes."

Of course, Obama never promised to cut taxes for people at $10,000-a-plate lunches in air-conditioned tents on waterfront compounds. And the crowd -- among them New York Jets owner Woody Johnson -- reacted without applause to Palin's Joe Six-Pack lines. After they didn't strike up the usual "Drill, baby, drill" or "USA" chants, Palin, rattled, read hurriedly through the rest of her speech.

The reception had been better in Clearwater, where Palin, speaking to a sea of "Palin Power" and "Sarahcuda" T-shirts, tried to link Obama to the 1960s Weather Underground. "One of his earliest supporters is a man named Bill Ayers," she said. ("Boooo!" said the crowd.) "And, according to the New York Times, he was a domestic terrorist and part of a group that, quote, 'launched a campaign of bombings that would target the Pentagon and our U.S. Capitol,' " she continued. ("Boooo!" the crowd repeated.)

"Kill him!" proposed one man in the audience.


Palin also told those gathered that Obama doesn't like American soldiers. "He said that our troops in Afghanistan are just, quote, 'air-raiding villages and killing civilians,' " she said, drawing boos from a crowd that had not been told Obama was actually appealing for more troops in Afghanistan.

"See, John McCain is a different kind of man: He believes in our troops," she said.

At times, Palin hinted at the GOP campaign's troubles. "It's going to be a hard-fought contest, especially in these swing states, some maybe we would not have expected," she admitted to donors. She allowed that "John McCain and I need to do a better job" of talking about the economy.

At other times, she had troubles of her own, as when she spoke over the weekend of "our neighboring country of Afghanistan" or when she got choked up at the Clearwater rally, saying, "Some of your signs just make me wanna cry," without explaining which ones or why.

But then the gloves came off, the heels came out, and Palin was once again talking about her opponent hanging out in a terrorist's living room.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Auntie Donna and Olan


I just returned from a week in Atlanta with Kjersti, Alex and their son, Olan Bertrand Duval-Arnould (and Grandma Karen, too!) Olan is so very precious. He's incredibly alert and focused for his age. He had his first doctor's appointment since returning home, and had gained almost a pound since leaving the hospital, so he's got that eating thing down! He's sleeping well (most of the time) and both Kjersti and Alex have adapted to having him home. Mom and I tried to help however we could; but it was hard to tear ourselves away from the baby. I'm already counting down to the next visit, whenever that might be. I know he will be a totally different little person, even if I can see him within the next few months. That part is hard. All of us are so far away, on both sides of the family. But, in a stunning development, Alex has created a blog for Olan. So, now all of us will have a place to watch his progress, and send comments to proud Mommy and Daddy. You'll find his blog at www.olanduval.blogspot.com