Monday, December 16, 2013

Staying firm in hope is not always as easy as changing your own conversation in heaven

Staying free in hope is a special event in times hope.  Normally it means closing the door on libelous considerations.  Always it means hoping for a good walking stick and a true facet of conversational blessing. 

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Pretense with a spoon sums up Cleveland's Sports Experience

We pay for a bigger arena of hope but so far, just a few chapters of somewhat eloquent but better applied dreams.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Pound for pound, the apple tastes better than the cinnamon

Rehash the wisdom if we are to understand the axiom of do no harm and withdraw from all evil. Trust in Hashem.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Could it be a change

I think that ultimately they may have indeed made their argument to remove Chief Wahoo and who knows... maybe even change the name of the Indians?  I am not ready myself, but if they marketing people can market a new icon and new team stature well, who knows what will become of it.  My Fraternity teaches Truth Temperance and Tolerance.  I have to ask myself Am I being Tolerant or Temperant in my zeal for an icon that is preferable for all of its years and fame?  Either or, we change the icon or we live with a yearly and more discussion on the item. 

Batter Up!

Keep the Chief of Baseball

10 reasons why Chief Wahoo is not a racist icon and is indeed a good measure of a Cleveland Hope.

1. Icon is not a smiling face for nothing.
2. Icon does not look for rampant hatred in the eyes of children.
3. Icon is not an angry method of disgracement of unhappiness.
4. Icon does not fasten itself on any racist banners that are known.
5. Icon is not angry at the future.
6. Icon is welcoming and advances Culture and good measure.
7. Icon is wealth induced with private dignification of a team for generations.
8. Icon does not say anything about the people who have a claim that it is an offensive situation other than it does have a remarkably red face.
9. Icon truly represents baseball in all ways.
10. Icon is internationally known.

I realize this is a tough issue and I admit I even myself once threw away things with Chief Wahoo on them (c2001) because I thought at the time it was racist. That is not so today. I am aggrieved to see articles on the front page of the Beacon today suggesting we ditch the icon and making fun of its "toothy grin and beady eyes". -Chagrined in America.

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Friday, March 29, 2013