Grudgefest

Jason Carroll Moss apparently couldn’t let go.  Memories of high school bullying gripped him like sand grips a desert and wouldn’t just dissipate.  So, he planned to exact revenge upon his tormentors – even though it all happened more than 20 years ago.  That’s what police in San Antonio, Texas claim, when they arrested Moss July 6.  Moss supposedly threatened retaliation on the web site for John Marshall High School’s 20th high school reunion.  Moss bonded out of jail on Saturday, just hours before the reunion.  Police patrolled the area nearby, but Moss never showed up.

“I stayed away from graduation at the time because I would have started the Columbine shootings early,” Moss purportedly wrote on the reunion’s social network page.  “I was picked on and bullied by a bunch of you when I went to school and I wanted to kill everyone that hurt me.”

It probably would have been a good thing if he at least did arrive at the country club venue where the reunion was held and stood off in a corner somewhere; making other attendees feel squeamish about his presence.  I’m only saying that because I can relate to Moss’ angst.  I grew up shy and introverted and endured bullying throughout grade and high schools.  My parents, oblivious to my plight, just didn’t understand why I couldn’t make friends.  I wasn’t outgoing like they were.  I didn’t grow up mean like they did.  They came from a different environment, and it felt – back then – that we occupied two completely different universes.

My mother once told me how they worried about me every morning they dropped me off at the parochial grade school in Dallas I attended for eight miserable years.

“Well, why didn’t you just pull me the hell out of there?!” I retorted.  Even after that length of time, I remained angry.

I can still recall incidents of torment dating back to the early 1970’s.  That Moss couldn’t forget the brutal antics of his classmates isn’t so much a sign that he’s mentally unstable.  It’s proof that bullying can have an impact on people for a lifetime.

It’s only been in recent years that bullying has taken on some significance.  Like animal abuse, authorities no longer consider it cases of “kids will be kids.”  Bullying is a symptom of more serious problems within the social structure of a school, and the adults around those kids shouldn’t ignore it, much less downplay it.  Excessive harassment can lead to suicide and even murder.  In every incident where a kid shot up his own school, authorities later find out the youth had been the target of bullies.  And, since the parents and school administrators either didn’t believe him, or were too busy with their own lives, that young person felt they had only one recourse: death.  They simply wanted to end the torment and could think of no other way out.  Their young minds couldn’t fathom a peaceful solution to the crisis.

I don’t know what will become of Jason Carroll Moss now.  He may be in serious legal trouble.  Surely he was the subject of conversation that night at the reunion.  I’m certain he was mocked – just the way he was mocked twenty-plus years ago.  And, I’m certain some other self-righteous fool will begin crooning about forgiveness and just letting go.

Spare me such pathetic psychology.  You can’t just let go of the past like a cold or a bad day at work.  And, forgiveness means nothing if someone didn’t ask to be forgiven.  Did the people who bullied Moss in high school feel bad as they matured?  I don’t know.  Some bullies don’t.  Many reach adulthood and allow their tactics to metamorphose once they enter the workplace.  I’ve dealt with bully bosses and managers before.  Punks usually don’t grow up.  They develop a false sense of self-esteem and carry on with such cruel behavior as if nothing was wrong.  Eventually, though, all bullies meet their proverbial match.  They encounter someone who isn’t scared of them, or won’t just tolerate it.  They get it shoved back in their face, which usually hurts their feelings.  That’s the only consolation I have for my own memories; that many of those goons got bitch-slapped by someone who just wouldn’t take their crap.

But, until then, they leave people like Moss in their wake.  I personally don’t see him as a threat to society.  The police should just forget about it.  After all, there are real criminals that deserve more scrutiny.  If I could meet Jason Carroll Moss, I’d probably want to treat him to dinner and drinks, just to offer him some empathy; an ‘I know what it feels like’ kind of sentiment.  He deserves that much.

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Painting Women of Song

Barbara Lynn, from Beaumont, Texas. Her song “You’ll Lose a Good Thing” topped the charts in 1962, and the Rolling Stones covered her song, “We’ve Got A Good Thing Goin’ On” in 1964.

Cathey Miller is a Dallas-based artist who creates custom paintings, backdrops and murals for both residential and commercial clients.  But, her personal work, which emphasizes portraiture and the female form in various imaginary settings, is also starting to gain recognition.  Today, Miller’s exhibition of female songstresses, “Texas Lady Singers,” opens at the Kessler Theatre in Dallas’ Oak Cliff area.

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July 11 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

Author – literary critic Harold Bloom (The Western Canon, The Visionary Company: A Reading of English Romantic Poetry, Omens of Millennium: The Gnosis of Angels, Dreams, & Resurrection) is 82.

Actor – singer Tab Hunter (Arthur Gelien; Battle Cry, Damn Yankees, Island of Desire, Judge Roy Bean, Ride the Wild Surf) is 81.

Fashion designer Giorgio Armani is 78.

Actress – writer – producer Beverly Todd (Class of ’61, Clara’s Heart, Baby Boom, Brother John, Roots, The Redd Foxx Show, Having Babies) is 66.

Guitarist – singer Jeff Hanna (Nitty Gritty Dirt Band) is 65.

Singer Bonnie Pointer (Pointer Sisters) is 62.

Actor Stephen Lang (Tombstone, Last Exit to Brooklyn, Death of a Salesman, Crime Story) is 60.

Boxer Leon Spinks, 1981 and 1983 world heavyweight champion, is 59.

Actress Sela Ward (Sisters, The Fugitive, Child of Darkness, Child of Light) is 56.

Actor Mark Lester (Oliver, The Prince and the Pauper, Fahrenheit 451) is 54.

Actress – model Lisa Rinna (Days of Our Lives, Melrose Place, Nick Fury: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D.) is 49.

Actress Debbe Dunning (Home Improvement) is 46.

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On July 11…

1767 – John Quincy Adams, 6th U.S. President, was born in Braintree (now Quincy), MA.

1804 – Vice-President Aaron Burr shot Alexander Hamilton to death in a duel over a long-standing personal and political argument.

1899 – Author E.B. White (Stuart Little, Charlotte’s Web, Is Sex Necessary?, The Elements of Style) was born in Mount Vernon, NY.

1914 – Babe Ruth debuted in the major leagues with the Boston Red Sox.

1920 – Actor Yul Brynner (Taidje Khan; The King and I, The Ten Commandments, The Magnificent Seven, Anastasia, The Brothers Karamazov, Futureworld, Westworld) was born in Vladivostok, Russia.

1934 – President Franklin Roosevelt appointed the first commissioners to the newly created Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

1979 – Parts of Skylab, America’s first space station, crashed into Australia and the Indian Ocean, five years after its last mission ended.

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Cartoon of the Day

Of course, a smart ass is always better than a dumb ass.

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Dog Found With Mouth Taped Shut, Tongue Out

In yet extraordinary case of animal cruelty in the Dallas – Forth Worth area, a woman found a dog with its mouth taped and its tongue protruding severely from between its teeth.  Melanie Labrake spotted the animal, a young pug mix, along a rural road in Parker County, west of Fort Worth.  She stopped to try to help it, but the animal darted into a grassy field through a barbed wire fence.  She contacted local authorities who spent several hours searching for the dog.  They finally found it and turned it over to local animal control.

The dog, now named Hope, was taken to Bowie Drive Animal Hospital where she is undergoing treatment thanks to Dr. Kevin Buchanan.

Vets at the clinic said it took more than 100 internal and external stitches to close five open wounds that were one- to five-inches in length, through the muscle tissue.  Doctors said that Hope’s mouth was taped shut for more than 24 hours and that she will likely lose a portion of her tongue.

Originally unable to eat or drink, Hope underwent surgery and was given pain killers an IV and antibiotics.  Fears that she may not be able to eat or drink on her own have subsided as doctors at the animal hospital said Wednesday morning that Hope has been eating and appears to be getting better.

Several local businesses have established a reward fund for information leading to the suspect or suspects in Hope’s abuse.  In total, the fund now stands at $35,000.

Anyone with information about Hope is asked to call the Parker County Sheriff’s Department at (817) 596-8845 or the Parker County Crime Stoppers Hotline at (817) 599-5555.

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Church Unveils Wooden Carving More than 20 Years in the Making

Russ Aikins stands with his carving of Jesus delivering his Sermon on the Mount. Photo by Kelsey Kruzich / Plano Star-Courier News.

Like most artists, Russ Aikins doesn’t consider his work a mere hobby; it’s a passion.  That’s why it took him more than 20 years to create a wooden relief carving of Jesus’ “Sermon on the Mount.”  Aikins unveiled his piece on July 1 at First United Methodist Church in Plano, TX.

“I don’t know how many thousands of hours it has taken,” Aikins said, adding he had no idea what he was in for when he began working on the carving.  “I quit counting at 1,000 hours when I finally just said enough is enough. In the last four years I have been working out of a violin shop in downtown Plano because I was having a hard time focusing and freeing up time to work when I was at home.  Since then, I have spent about four hours each afternoon when I have been in town.”

Now 70, Aikins began his wood work in 1988.  For the complicated, specialized carving, he used about 170 carving tools, including some he made by hand when store-bought tools wouldn’t allow him to complete a necessary step in the process.  The carving features 54 individual figures, which are carved out of 4-inch thick basswood.  Aikins said the first step was drawing the outline of the people onto the wood, and then clearing away large amounts of wood to get a rough outline of the subjects.  Then, it was countless hours of detail work using progressively finer carving tools to get to the finished project.  He said all of the work was done by hand, and no sanding was involved in getting the people to have a smooth finish.

The result is simply spectacular.  Also check out this video about Aikins’ project.

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Matthew Sakiestewa Gilbert's avatarBEYOND THE MESAS, LLC

Angela Gonzales (Hopi), Associate Professor of Development Sociology and American Indian Studies at Cornell University, has started a new blog to chronicle her goal of raising $10,000 for the Hopi Cancer Assistance Fund (HCAF).

To promote interest in her quest, Angela will bike 1,539 miles from Bellingham, WA, to Ventura, CA, beginning September 25, 2012.

Learn more about Angela’s motivation to raise support for the HCAF by visiting her blog, Angela Bikes 4 Hopi. Also, please consider giving financially to this worthy cause.

Thanks for spreading the word!

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July 10 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

Earl Hamner Jr. (writer: Palm Springs Weekend, Spencer’s Mountain, The Homecoming: A Christmas Story; executive producer, narrator: The Waltons) is 89.

Composer – lyricist Jerry Herman (Hello, Dolly!, La Cage aux Folles, Mame, Dear World, Mack and Mabel) is 81.

Actor Lawrence Pressman (The Late Shift, Fire and Rain, The Hanoi Hilton, On Wings of Eagles, For Love or Money, The Winds of War, The Gathering series, Rich Man, Poor Man, The Man in the Glass Booth) is 73.

Actor Ron Glass (Barney Miller, Deep Space, Houseguest) is 67.

Singer – songwriter Arlo Guthrie (The City of New Orleans, Alice’s Restaurant) is 65.

Singer Neil Tennant (Pet Shop Boys) is 58.

Actress – model Sofía Vergara (Acapulco, Cuerpo y Alma, Big Trouble) is 40.

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On July 10…

1890 – Wyoming entered the Union as the 44th state.

 

1900 – One of the most famous trademarks in the world, ‘His Master’s Voice,’ was registered with the U.S. Patent Office.  The logo of the Victor Talking Machine Company, and later, RCA Victor, shows the dog, Nipper, looking into the horn of a gramophone machine.

1913 – The highest temperature ever recorded in the continental United States was 134 degrees in Death Valley, CA.

1925 – In Dayton, TN, the “Monkey Trial” began with John Thomas Scopes, a high school science teacher, accused of teaching evolution in violation of Tennessee state law.

1929 – The U.S. government began issuing paper money in the small size we currently carry.

1949 – The first practical rectangular television picture tube came onto the market.

1962 – The Telstar communications satellite was successfully launched from Cape Canaveral, FL, ushering in a new age of communication via telephone and TV.

1985 – The Coca-Cola Company announced that the former (regular) Coke was coming back to share shelf space with the New Coke, after a consumer furor.  The original formula was renamed Coca-Cola Classic.

1991 – After 1,000 years, the Russian people finally elected a president.  Boris Yeltsin took the oath of office this day, after he had resoundingly defeated the Communist Party candidate.

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