I came home to hear the sounds of the season...
Kids crying, Mom yelling,must be time
for the Christmas Card photo shoot.
Each photo is worth a thousand words.
We are so proud of these kids,
though sometimes,
well,
not as much.
Merry Christmas.
Here's a keeper- 3 of them I'd say.
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Wednesday, November 07, 2007
Vive la France!
"For me, failure is not an option. Terrorism will not win becauseHallelulah.
democracies are not weak, because we are not afraid of this barbarism. America
can count on France."
Other than the obligatory global warming drivel, there is little to quibble with and much to praise here.
"I want to tell you that whenever an American soldier fallsHe expresses a better understanding of America than most Congressmen do.
somewhere in the world, I think of what the American army did for France. I think of them and I am sad, as one is sad to lose a member of one's family."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"America did not tell the millions of men and women who came
Beautiful.
from every country in the world and who — with their hands, their
intelligence and their heart — built the greatest nation in the world:
"Come, and everything will be given to you." She said: "Come, and the only
limits to what you'll be able to achieve will be your own courage and your
own talent." America embodies this extraordinary ability to grant each and
every person a second chance."
Vive Sarkozy!
Dieu BĂ©nissent La France!!
(Thanks to http://babelfish.altavista.com/tr for the hasty French translation)
From http://www.ibdeditorials.com/
Check out the site and the 2 week trial subscription to IBD.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Verbatim: 'America Can
Count On France'
By NICOLAS SARKOZY Posted Wednesday, November 07, 2007 4:30
PM PT
Following is the speech that French President Nicolas Sarkozy
delivered Wednesday in a rare address by a foreign dignitary to a joint session
of the Senate and House of Representatives. U.S. lawmakers gave the French
leader a three-minute standing ovation and his address was met bursts of warm
applause.
Madam Speaker, Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen of the
United States Congress, Ladies and Gentlemen, the state of our friendship and
our alliance is strong.
Friendship, first and foremost, means being true
to one's friends. Since the United States first appeared on the world scene, the
loyalty between the French and American people has never failed. And far from
being weakened by the vicissitudes of history, it has never ceased growing
stronger.
Friends may have differences; they may have disagreements;
they may have disputes. But in times of difficulty, in times of hardship,
friends stand together, side by side; they support each other; and help one
another. In times of difficulty, in times of hardship, America and France have
always stood side by side, supported one another, helped one another, fought for
each other's freedom.
The United States and France remain true to the
memory of their common history, true to the blood spilled by their children in
common battles. But they are not true merely to the memory of what they
accomplished together in the past. They remain true, first and foremost, to the
same ideal, the same principles, the same values that have always united them.
The deliberations of your Congress are conducted under the double gaze
of Washington and Lafayette. Lafayette, whose 250th birthday we are celebrating
this year and who was the first foreign dignitary, in 1824, to address a joint
session of Congress. What was it that brought these two men — so far apart in
age and background — together, if not their faith in common values, the heritage
of the Enlightenment, the same love for freedom and justice?
Upon first
meeting Washington, Lafayette told him: "I have come here to learn, not to
teach." It was this new spirit and youth of the Old World seeking out the wisdom
of the New World that opened a new era for all of humanity.
From the
very beginning, the American dream meant putting into practice the dreams of the
Old World. From the very beginning, the American dream meant proving to all
mankind that freedom, justice, human rights and democracy were no utopia but
were rather the most realistic policy there is and the most likely to improve
the fate of each and every person.
America did not tell the millions of
men and women who came from every country in the world and who — with their
hands, their intelligence and their heart — built the greatest nation in the
world: "Come, and everything will be given to you." She said: "Come, and the
only limits to what you'll be able to achieve will be your own courage and your
own talent." America embodies this extraordinary ability to grant each and every
person a second chance.
Here, both the humblest and most illustrious
citizens alike know that nothing is owed to them and that everything has to be
earned. That's what constitutes the moral value of America. America did not
teach men the idea of freedom; she taught them how to practice it. And she
fought for this freedom whenever she felt it to be threatened somewhere in the
world. It was by watching America grow that men and women understood that
freedom was possible.
What made America great was her ability to
transform her own dream into hope for all mankind.
Ladies and gentlemen,
the men and women of my generation heard their grandparents talk about how in
1917, America saved France at a time when it had reached the final limits of its
strength, which it had exhausted in the most absurd and bloodiest of wars. The
men and women of my generation heard their parents talk about how in 1944,
America returned to free Europe from the horrifying tyranny that threatened to
enslave it.
Fathers took their sons to see the vast cemeteries where,
under thousands of white crosses so far from home, thousands of young American
soldiers lay who had fallen not to defend their own freedom but the freedom of
all others, not to defend their own families, their own homeland, but to defend
humanity as a whole.
Fathers took their sons to the beaches where the
young men of America had so heroically landed. They read them the admirable
letters of farewell that those 20-year-old soldiers had written to their
families before the battle to tell them: "We don't consider ourselves heroes. We
want this war to be over. But however much dread we may feel, you can count on
us."
Before they landed, Eisenhower told them: "The eyes of the world
are upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march
with you."
And as they listened to their fathers, watched movies, read
history books and the letters of soldiers who died on the beaches of Normandy
and Provence, as they visited the cemeteries where the star-spangled banner
flies, the children of my generation understood that these young Americans, 20
years old, were true heroes to whom they owed the fact that they were free
people and not slaves. France will never forget the sacrifice of your children.
To those 20-year-old heroes who gave us everything, to the families of
those who never returned, to the children who mourned fathers they barely got a
chance to know, I want to express France's eternal gratitude.
On behalf
of my generation, which did not experience war but knows how much it owes to
their courage and their sacrifice; on behalf of our children, who must never
forget; to all the veterans who are here today and, notably the seven I had the
honor to decorate yesterday evening, one of whom, Senator Inouye, belongs to
your Congress, I want to express the deep, sincere gratitude of the French
people.
I want to tell you that whenever an American soldier falls
somewhere in the world, I think of what the American army did for France. I
think of them and I am sad, as one is sad to lose a member of one's family.
Ladies and gentlemen, the men and women of my generation remember the
Marshall Plan that allowed their fathers to rebuild a devastated Europe. They
remember the Cold War, during which America again stood as the bulwark of the
Free World against the threat of new tyranny.
I remember the Berlin
crisis and Kennedy who unhesitatingly risked engaging the United States in the
most destructive of wars so that Europe could preserve the freedom for which the
American people had already sacrificed so much. No one has the right to forget.
Forgetting, for a person of my generation, would be tantamount to self-denial.
But my generation did not love America only because she had defended
freedom. We also loved her because for us, she embodied what was most audacious
about the human adventure; for us, she embodied the spirit of conquest. We loved
America because for us, America was a new frontier that was continuously pushed
back — a constantly renewed challenge to the inventiveness of the human spirit.
My generation shared all the American dreams. Our imaginations were
fueled by the winning of the West and Hollywood. By Elvis Presley, Duke
Ellington, Hemingway. By John Wayne, Charlton Heston, Marilyn Monroe, Rita
Hayworth. And by Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins, fulfilling mankind's oldest
dream.
What was so extraordinary for us was that through her literature,
her cinema and her music, America always seemed to emerge from adversity even
greater and stronger; that instead of causing America to doubt herself, such
ordeals only strengthened her belief in her values.
What makes America
strong is the strength of this ideal that is shared by all Americans and by all
those who love her because they love freedom.
America's strength is not
only a material strength, it is first and foremost a spiritual and moral
strength. No one expressed this better than a black pastor who asked just one
thing of America: that she be true to the ideal in whose name he — the grandson
of a slave — felt so deeply American. His name was Martin Luther King. He made
America a universal role model.
The world still remembers his words —
words of love, dignity and justice. America heard those words and America
changed. And the men and women who had doubted America because they no longer
recognized her began loving her again.
Fundamentally, what are those who
love America asking of her, if not to remain forever true to her founding
values?
Ladies and gentlemen, today as in the past, as we stand at the
beginning of the 21st century, it is together that we must fight to defend and
promote the values and ideals of freedom and democracy that men such as
Washington and Lafayette invented together.
Together we must fight
against terrorism. On September 11, 2001, all of France — petrified with horror
— rallied to the side of the American people. The front-page headline of one of
our major dailies read: "We are all American." And on that day, when you were
mourning for so many dead, never had America appeared to us as so great, so
dignified, so strong.
The terrorists had thought they would weaken you.
They made you greater. The entire world felt admiration for the courage of the
American people. And from day one, France decided to participate shoulder to
shoulder with you in the war in Afghanistan. Let me tell you solemnly today:
France will remain engaged in Afghanistan as long as it takes, because what's at
stake in that country is the future of our values and that of the Atlantic
Alliance.
For me, failure is not an option. Terrorism will not win
because democracies are not weak, because we are not afraid of this barbarism.
America can count on France.
Together we must fight against
proliferation. Success in Libya and progress under way in North Korea shows that
nuclear proliferation is not inevitable. Let me say it here before all of you:
The prospect of an Iran armed with nuclear weapons is unacceptable. The Iranian
people are a great people. (Iran) deserves better than the increased sanctions
and growing isolation to which its leaders condemn it. Iran must be convinced to
choose cooperation, dialogue and openness. No one must doubt our determination.
Together we must help the people of the Middle East find the path of
peace and security. To the Israeli and Palestinian leaders I say this: Don't
hesitate! Risk peace! And do it now!
The status quo hides even greater
dangers: that of delivering Palestinian society as a whole to the extremists
that contest Israel's existence; that of playing into the hands of radical
regimes that are exploiting the deadlock in the conflict to destabilize the
region; that of fueling the propaganda of terrorists who want to set Islam
against the West. France wants security for Israel and a state for the
Palestinians.
Together we must help the Lebanese people affirm their
independence, their sovereignty, their freedom, their democracy. What Lebanon
needs today is a broad-based president elected according to the established
schedule and in strict respect of the Constitution. France stands engaged
alongside all the Lebanese. It will not accept attempts to subjugate the
Lebanese people.
Ladies and gentlemen, America feels it has the vocation
to inspire the world. Because she is the most powerful country in the world.
Because, for more than two centuries, she has striven to uphold the ideals of
democracy and freedom. But this stated responsibility comes with duties, the
first of which is setting an example.
Those who love this nation which,
more than any other, has demonstrated the virtues of free enterprise expect
America to be the first to denounce the abuses and excesses of a financial
capitalism that sets too great a store on speculation. They expect her to commit
fully to the establishment of the necessary rules and safeguards. The America I
love is the one that encourages entrepreneurs, not speculators.
Those
who admire the nation that has built the world's greatest economy and has never
ceased trying to persuade the world of the advantages of free trade expect her
to be the first to promote fair exchange rates. The yuan is already everyone's
problem. The dollar cannot remain solely the problem of others. If we're not
careful, monetary disarray could morph into economic war. We would all be its
victims.
Those who love the country of wide-open spaces, national parks
and nature reserves expect America to stand alongside Europe in leading the
fight against global warming that threatens the destruction of our planet. I
know that each day, in their cities and states, the American people are more
aware of the stakes and determined to act. This essential fight for the future
of humanity must be all of America's fight.
Those who have not forgotten
that it was the United States that, at the end of the Second World War, raised
hopes for a new world order are asking America to take the lead in the necessary
reforms of the U.N., the IMF, the World Bank and the G8. Our globalized world
must be organized for the 21st century, not for the last century. The emerging
countries we need for global equilibrium must be given their rightful place.
Ladies and gentlemen, Allow me to express one last conviction: Trust
Europe.
In this unstable, dangerous world, the United States of America
needs a strong, determined Europe. With the simplified treaty I proposed to our
partners, the European Union is about to emerge from 10 years of discussions on
its institutions and 10 years of paralysis. Soon it will have a stable president
and a more powerful High Representative for foreign and security policy, and it
must now reactivate the construction of its military capacities.
The
ambition I am proposing to our partners is based on a simple observation: There
are more crises than there are capacities to face them. NATO cannot be
everywhere. The EU must be able to act, as it did in the Balkans and in the
Congo, and as it will tomorrow on the border of Sudan and Chad. For that the
Europeans must step up their efforts.
My approach is purely pragmatic.
Having learned from history, I want the Europeans, in the years to come, to have
the means to shoulder a growing share of their defense. Who could blame the
United States for ensuring its own security? No one. Who could blame me for
wanting Europe to ensure more of its own security? No one. All of our allies,
beginning with the United States, with whom we most often share the same
interests and the same adversaries, have a strategic interest in a Europe that
can assert itself as a strong, credible security partner.
At the same
time, I want to affirm my attachment to NATO. I say it here before this
Congress: The more successful we are in the establishment of a European Defense,
the more France will be resolved to resume its full role in NATO.
I
would like France, a founding member of our alliance and already one of its
largest contributors, to assume its full role in the effort to renew NATO's
instruments and means of action and, in this context, to allow its relations
with the Alliance to evolve.
This is no time for theological quarrels but
for pragmatic responses to make our security tools more effective and
operational in the face of crises. The EU and NATO must march hand in hand.
Ladies and gentlemen, I want to be your friend, your ally and your
partner. But a friend who stands on his own two feet. An independent ally. A
free partner.
France must be stronger. I am determined to carry through with
the reforms that my country has put off for all too long. I will not turn back,
because France has turned back for all too long. My country has enormous assets.
While respecting its unique identity, I want to put it into a position to win
all the battles of globalization. I passionately love France. I am lucid about
the work that remains to be accomplished.
It is this ambitious France
that I have come to present to you today. A France that comes out to meet
America to renew the pact of friendship and the alliance that Washington and
Lafayette sealed in Yorktown.
Together let us be worthy of their
example, let us be equal to their ambition, let us be true to their memories!
Long live the United States of America!
Vive la France!
Long live French-American friendship!
Tuesday, November 06, 2007
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