Interesting Week

Yep, a very interesting week. Starting with a meet up with the Eagle Riders touring group, we met with about30 people from all over the world. We received a chapter patch from South Africa. There were people from Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, and other countries. It was a fun dinner.

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Sunday, we did a police escorted rode to Taos for suicide prevention with a total of 40 riders.

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Monday had me riding with Dave Kleyweg and Tom Kovar. Don’s brother and his friend from high school. We put on some serious miles and had a great time. They loved the area and enjoyed the rides.

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Other Shit

  • This month has seen me riding more than ever. I’m currently at around 3600 miles for the month.
  • I also rolled over the 10,000 mile mark on the CVO. I bought the new bike on June 18th and in 3 months and 11 days, placed that milage on it. It’s an amazing ride!
  • Erin is in some pageant tomorrow. They use the pageant to raise money for some shit down in Dilia. I’m not a fan of kid pageants!
  • This weekend the dealership is having a swap meet and chili cook off. And Sunday there’s a meeting and then a ride to Lamy for the Octoberfest.
  • Nina and I are thinking of doing Christmas in London this year. I have enough air miles for a couple of business class seats and Nina has discovered that hotel rates are pretty cheap around the holiday for some reason.
  • I’ve noticed that I’ve left a lot of dates in September without any postings, it’s because I was out having fun. Sorry.

Yesterday I rode, and rode, and rode . . .

  • I was up before dawn and on the road minutes before the sun poked its nose over the horizon. It was COLD.
  • Was at Harley by 7:30 after stopping to buy gas. I forgot to fill up at my pumps. Dumb ass.
  • Yesterday’s ride was about suicide and suicide awareness. We left Harley with 20 riders and 8 state police motorcycle escorts. It was very cool riding with them.
  • We drove all the way without stopping. Red lights were ignored and we made great time.
  • We had a pit stop at the Pilar visitor center and picked up another 12 riders from the Arch Angels Motorcycle Club, retired military who’ve lost friends and loved ones to suicide. 40 strong, we rode into Taos and made our way to the bridge outside of Taos, the site of more suicides that any other location in the U.S.
  • Very moving event.

Read to the end (from Mom)

“He’s nothing but a B-List TV personality. He has no business being in politics.”

“He’s been divorced and remarried. He can’t commit to anything.”

“He’s dangerously ignorant about international affairs. The Russian leaders will walk all over him.”

“He has no filter – doesn’t think before he speaks.”

“Until recently, he was a Democrat. He’s not a real Republican. He hasn’t paid his GOP dues.”

“He used to be Pro Choice. Now, suddenly he’s Pro Life?”

“That can’t be his real hair!”

“He’s a loose cannon. No one wants HIS finger on the nuclear button.”

“His opponent has the experience and political savvy to be president. He does not.”

“He’s just not presidential.”

“His temperament disqualifies him from ever being Commander-In-Chief.”

“He’s proven himself to be mentally unstable.”

“The military will never accept him as Commander-In-Chief. He’s not smart enough.”

“The GOP doesn’t want him to be the head of the party. He could never reach across the aisle to get anything done.”

“Most Republican voters will just stay home rather than go out and vote for him.”

“He’s almost 70. Much too old to be president.”

“Evangelicals will never support him.”

“He says ‘(Let’s) Make America Great Again’. How dare he say we aren’t still great?!?!”

“His intellect is thinner than spit on a slate rock.”

“90 percent of Republican state chairmen judge him guilty of ‘simplistic approaches,’ with ‘no depth in federal government administration’ and ‘no experience in foreign affairs.'”

“His spontaneity with reporters and voters plays well but also gives him plenty of space to disgorge fantasies and factual errors so prolific and often outrageous that he single-handedly makes the word gaffe a permanent fixture in America’s political vernacular. He confuses Pakistan with Afghanistan. He claimed once that trees contributed 93 percent of the atmosphere’s nitrous oxide…”

“After all his gaffs, he doubles down on them instead of admitting he made a mistake.”

“He’s threatening to upend our treaties and relationships with our allies by demanding that they pay for their own defense!”

“Because of his gross factual errors he might take rash action and needlessly lead this country into open warfare!”

“He’s racist, xenophobic, and fuels the fires of hatred!”

“You shouldn’t take him seriously. He has a penchant for offering simplistic solutions to hideously complex problems and a stubborn insistence that he is always right in every argument.”

“The rising turnout of his voters are not loyal Republicans or Democrats and are alienated from both parties because neither takes a sympathetic view toward their issues.”

“He wears the disdain he draws from the GOP elites as a badge of honor.
Henry Kissinger’s championing the other GOP candidate and attacking him are actually helping him!”

“The fact that he could be deemed a serious candidate for president is a shame and embarrassment for the country.”

The New Yorker observed that his appeal “has to do not with competence at governing but with the emotion he evokes… [He] lets people get out their anger and frustration, their feeling of being misunderstood and mishandled by those who have run our government, their impatience with taxes and with the poor and the weak, their impulse to deal with the world’s troublemakers by employing the stratagem of a punch in the nose.”

“His unpopular opponent presided over the current Iranian crisis… and a reeling economy, yet surely the Democrat will prevail over him.”

“Is he Safe? …he shoots from the hip … he’s over his head … What are his solutions?”

“Voters want to follow some authority figure, — a leader who can take charge with authority; return a sense of discipline to our government; and, manifest the willpower needed to get this country back on track — Or at least a leader from outside Washington,”

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Sound familiar? You’ve heard this all about Donald Trump, right?

Try Again. All this was said of Ronald Reagan in 1976 and 1980. Most of it was BY OTHER REPUBLICANS, and Reagan turned out to be arguably one of the greatest presidents of the 20th Century, if not of all time (excluding possibly George Washington.)

PLEASE FEEL FREE TO SHARE!

From Mom.

My life has been getting more complicated, and I want to thank those of you who are brave enough to still associate with me regardless of what I have become.

The following is a recap of my current identity. Please help me come to terms with this, because I‘m not sure who I am anymore!

I was born white, which makes me a racist.

I am a fiscal and moral conservative, which makes me a fascist.

I am heterosexual, which makes me a homophobe.

I am non-union, which makes me a traitor to the working class and an ally of big business.

I am a Christian, which makes me an infidel.

I’m an American Patriot that believes in the Constitution, and I own a gun which makes me a radical right wing nut job.

I think and I reason; therefore I doubt much that the main stream media tells me, which makes me a reactionary.

I am proud of my heritage and our inclusive American culture, which makes me a xenophobe.

I value my safety and that of my family; therefore I appreciate the police and the legal system, which makes me a right-wing extremist.

I believe in hard work, fair play, and fair compensation according to each individual’s merits, which makes me
anti-social.

I, and my friends, acquired a good education without student loans and no debt at graduation, which makes me some kind of odd underachiever.

I believe in the defense and protection of the homeland by all citizens, which makes me a militarist.

And now my newest problem – I’m not sure which bathroom I should use.