- Mood:
accomplished - Music:none
( I know a cat who can really do the Cool Jerk... )
- Location:Partying like it's 1966
- Mood:
content - Music:Ain't Too Proud to Beg -- Temptations
July 21, 2008
NEW YORK - Radio talk show host Michael Savage, who described 99 percent of children with autism as brats, said Monday he was trying to "boldly awaken" parents to his view that many people are being wrongly diagnosed.
Some parents of autistic children have called for Savage's firing after he described autism as a racket last week. "In 99 percent of the cases, it's a brat who hasn't been told to cut the act out," Savage said on his radio program last Wednesday.
Savage offered no apology in a message posted Monday on his Web site. He said greedy doctors and drug companies were creating a "national panic" by overdiagnosing autism, a mental disorder that inhibits a person's ability to communicate.
On his radio show last week, he said: "What do you mean they scream and they're silent? They don't have a father around to tell them, `Don't act like a moron. You'll get nowhere in life. Stop acting like a putz. Straighten up. Act like a man. Don't sit there crying and screaming, you idiot.'"
The government estimates about 1 in 150 children have some form of autism. But many experts believe these unsociable behaviors were just about as common 30 or 40 years ago and that the increase is mostly caused by a surge in special education services and a corresponding shift in diagnoses.
Wendy Fournier of the National Autism Association, a parents' advocacy group, said she was invited to speak Monday on Savage's three-hour program by Savage's boss, Mark Masters of Talk Radio Network, which syndicates the show across the country. A spokeswoman from Talk Radio Network did not immediately return a call for comment.
Fournier called Savage's comments "way, way, way over the line and cruel."
"I'm hoping to make him see the reality of what these kids are facing," she said. "You can't fix it by telling a kid to shut up. It's like telling a kid with cancer to stop being sick."
Evelyn Ain, whose 8-year-old son has been diagnosed with autism, said she had never heard of Savage and couldn't believe what she had heard when she first listened to the remarks. She organized a demonstration Monday outside New York's WOR-AM, which broadcasts Savage.
"That isn't just freedom of speech, it is hateful speech when you say 99 percent of children with autism are brats," she said. "I'll tell you, I wish I had a brat."
Savage, with more than 8 million listeners a week, is talk radio's third most popular personality behind Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity, according to Talkers magazine. He's made a living off bold, outrageous statements: His brief MSNBC show was canceled after he told a caller he should "get AIDS and die, you pig."
Peter Bell, executive vice president of national advocacy group Autism Speaks, said he isn't aware of any big controversy about overdiagnosis of autism. He said Savage's remarks, effectively blaming parents, reflect an outdated point of view.
"He's an entertainer, he does these things for attention," Bell said. "I think we should, to the best we can, ignore it."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080721/ap_e
Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr........
Life for the Goose is not so good. : /
- Mood:
tired - Music:none
"Subject: DIRECTIONS
Hello I am planing a trip from Chicago this month and was shown your site by a friend, I would like to stop and look at this place could you give me the address to I can input it in the GPS
THANK YOU"
OK? We had just recently made the trip from Chicago to L.A. So are they looking for something along Route 66 that I referred to in my Route 66 LJ blog? Actually, they were referring to something along old Route 66 (I 40) although I think they were looking at my "Cross of the Plains" article and not the Route 66 blog. I've done this myself and many others do. They find a web page through Google and don't notice that there may be many other pages posted by the same person. I've learned include the identity of the item I'm referring to in my emails and I often check for a "Home Page" link or just back up to the main web site address to see what else is there.
So this was my reply:
"Hi!
You must have had a specific location in mind, but you didn't include one.
Let me know what you're trying to do and I'll try to help.
Jim Skipper"
They explained in a reply:
"Oh I'M SORRY I WANTED TO STOP BY THE The Stations of the Cross or it might be called The Cross of the Plains In Groom texas"
This one is basically a straight forward request:
"Hello Jim,
Wow, I was just cleaning out my mailbox and ran across our old emails from this past spring. I was asking for any good information you could share on your Route 66 trip. Do you know the name of trip plan you had mentioned? I'll keep your email address and contact you again closer to our trip.
Thanks again!
Lynn -----"
I haven't found the good trip plan, but I did give her several good links and promised to keep looking. Her mother will be 66 in 2010 and she wants to take her on a Route 66 trip.
This is an odd one:
"I recently bought the land where the old girls camp used to be in
Monte Ne cove and would like a copy of all the information, photos,
etc. you have on Monte Ne. Look forward to hearing from you.
Sent from my iPhone"
Did she want to buy the photo CD that I made? The little tourist pamphlet? I asked her if she had looked at all my Monte Ne pages and told her she could copy the photos and text for personal use and that she should buy the excellent book on the history of Monte Ne written by the director of the museum up there. I even sent her some copies of old girls camp photos. I haven't heard from her again.
I'm going to pick some others from people who assumed that I know which article they read. I guess because they didn't look at anything else.
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All
Skipper Family Magazine Live Journal readership poll. How much of Skipper Family Magzine have you read?
I haven't looked at it yet, but I'm going to read it right now?![]()
![]()
2 (28.6%)
I've read one or two articles and looked at some of the photos.![]()
![]()
3 (42.9%)
I've looked at maybe half of what's there.![]()
![]()
0 (0.0%)
I've read most of the articles.![]()
![]()
2 (28.6%)
I've read it all! Please add more!![]()
![]()
0 (0.0%)
- Mood:
tired - Music:Kunal Ganjawala - Pehle Se
Back by popular demand, Basic Accounts will be available to all users again by the end of the (northern hemisphere) summer. More information on the decision-making process and proposals relating to the future of Basic Accounts are in
New Themes
Two attractive and all-new Flexible Squares themes, "Circular" and "Circular Brown" are now available.
L to R: Circular and Brown
New V-Gifts
Give someone you care about the gift of enticement. With the new Chocolate Ice Cream, Vanilla Ice Cream, Tea, Coffee, Curry and Sushi v-gifts, all the significant people in your life will be able to share in the longing for the tasty edibles below. Plus, it reminds loved ones you think they're really sweet, really savory or just plain satisfying.
L to R: Chocolate Ice Cream, Vanilla Ice Cream, Tea, Coffee, Curry and Sushi
Ж-Men...but not the ones you might expect!
This week LJ Russia launched Ж-Men, a new comedy series about superheroes, inspired by the LJ communities dedicated to superheros, comics and cartoons. The title's "Ж" comes from ЖЖ, the nickname for LiveJournal in Russia.
Ж-Men's script is written by a group of LJ enthusiasts who also happen to be television professionals. Who knew? Following the premiere, five more episodes will be broadcast over the next two weeks. We hope you find the series fresh and enjoyable.
This is, of course, an experiment for LiveJournal. As always, we'd love to hear what you think!
- Mood:awake
"When we were kids you were always reminding me that you were older." "Now I'm just returning the favor"

The pink "Snowballs" were arranged as a birthday cake.
( Two more. )
Becky's birthday party photos tomorrow.


