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Name calling, distrust, mud-slinging, etc accomplishes nothing. This much I have learned, guys. Am I wrong? Perhaps, but it’s how I’ve decided to live my life now. I grow weary of hateful discussions, anger, distrust, non-intellectual conversation and generally anything that promotes division. -Conservative blogger meeciteewurkor
Maybe there is some hope yet... maybe
New for 2008 the origins of the Easter Bunny ... the true story of what happens when a bunny goes wrong. Happy Easter everyone!
After traveling almost 5,000 miles this month I'm tired but I wanted to wish all of you a Happy Easter 2008! Enjoy this repost in high quality video of what the Easter bunny is doing the other 364 days a year with "The Easter Bunny Hates You", if crucifixion was not violent enough! I'm going back to bed folks... enjoy the video and hands off the Peeps and chocolate bunnies.

Graphics at WishAFriend.com
Last Friday the Air National Guard mistook Tulsa for Kansas and dropped a 22 lb practice bomb about 3 miles from my house! The drop occurred at night which begs the question how can one mistake a lit up mid-sized city, in this case Tulsa for Kansas, a huge flat square dark empty expanse. The bomb hit Canyon Creek Apartments and buried itself in the buildings concrete foundation, lucky no one was hurt and the bomb was not armed.
On a positive note this weekend the City of Tulsa is finally shutting down its makeshift mulch factory behind my house. Imagine living right next to a lumber mill going 24/7 and trying to keep a pool clean much less endure the smell and dust penetrating your clothing and home. The city has ground enough trees limbs to make 120,000 cubic yards of mulch … in my back yard and it's gross. The mulch has been pretty much removed now but we are left with a huge city park that looks like a tilled empty pasture with a big concrete parking lot. I think the persons whose bright idea it was to setup a mulch factory in a city park should have to replant the entire park by themselves. My heart goes out to the residents living around the airport and across the Arkansas River in the Turkey Mountain area as mulching is most likely going to be ramped up in these areas. Fun!
Tuesday Oklahomans for Equality and Oklahoma PFLAG will be hosting two rallies in Oklahoma both at the Tulsa Equality Center and at the State Capitol building as Oklahoma citizens call for Rep. Sally Kern to either apologize or step down due to hate speech and her expressed bigotry towards the LGBT community and Oklahoma Muslims. Everyone is encouraged to attend and express your support of equal rights for all Oklahomans.
Finally on a personal note I will be leaving for Texas after the rally on Tuesday to check on my Father who is scheduled to leave soon from the physical rehabilitation center he has been in for the last few months. Most of my time will be consumed taking care of his affairs but I hope to snap some photos of Spring 08 in East Texas. It's very pretty this time of year in Texas and will make for a wonderful drive south. Have a great week everyone and I hope to see many of you at the Tulsa rally Tuesday.
Special thanks to My Tulsa World for Image
Photo by Jack C. High
It's been a great break from the real world but I'm back in Oklahoma after a whirl wind ten days in Seattle and Vancouver B.C. Time to ramble on back with the business of living now. My travel back took about two hours longer than it was suppose to but customs had to clear the plane coming from Dallas to Tulsa before I was allowed to come home in a nasty thunderstorm. Turns out spring break started a bit sooner for some travelers going to Cancun Mexico and they trashed the 757 airplane coming back to Texas. The flight made for a bumpy ride and a few green faces but I was more than happy to be back in my own bed. I want to thank my host during my stay up north, Allen, Nicola, little S and little V.
I did a few things I couldn't manage to squeeze into my post such as attend a charity auction for a local Washington youth group, touring Paul Allen's Science Fiction Museum, and browsing the shops and street vendors in downtown Seattle. I suppose I truly am a creature of the big city still and feel more at home blending into the masses on the city streets going about their business of the day. Seattle is a great city for fish and chips from some old school cooks, yet another thing you can't get fresh living in the middle of the country.
I will be writing more about Representative Kern and the fallout from her hateful bigoted diatribe later today but I wanted to let everyone know that I am back at the helm for what is sure to be a drawn out fight to get her removed from office, despite the praises heaped on her by Oklahoma Republicans.
Until then enjoy your Sunday everyone!
A week has passed on my trips to Canada and Washington State! My stay in Vancouver B.C. was everything I thought it would be to my pleasant surprise. Vancouver itself and its surrounding communities combine to make for a huge city with a population over 2.2 million with over half its residents not having English as their primary language. I would have been in culture shock had I not grown up in a major metropolitan city "not Tulsa" and am somewhat use to hearing Japanese, Chinese, French and a multitude of other various languages walking around the malls and down the crowded city streets. It was a welcome change from just hearing Spanish and English in Oklahoma.
I now understand why Vancouver is called the Emerald City with all the conifers and green area parks, the buildings look like they were all built by the same company with the green glass and drab concrete. Vancouver in 2010 is hosting the Olympics and many areas are being torn up with new mass transit trams and venues being hurriedly built. It should be interesting to see how all the heavy construction effects it's ranking as one of the top three livable cities in the world. Overall it was a great trip, I don't know if I would want to live in Vancouver but traveling over 2,000 miles to visit was worth it. Check out over twenty photos from my trip on the T Town Tommy flickr site.
On the Fritz! Observations of Modern Life has posted a hilarious satire of Sally Kern's bigoted theories about her Oklahoma LGBT constituents. One of the most powerful options when in the ugly face of hate is laughter.
Enjoy!
Show Representative Sally Kern your exercising your other options and demand action on the part of your local Oklahoma state leaders to have her removed from office. Hate and bigotry is not the kind of family values we support in 21st Century Oklahoma.
Thanks to the internet and the global media the eyes and judgment of the world is now upon us as one people, Oklahomans. We will be judged as a state in how our leaders tackle the issues of hate and bigotry in light of this recent event and upcoming legislation to protect Oklahoma's LGBT citizens from hate crimes and unequality in everyday living.
At the end of the video is contact information to file your complaints or follow this link to the Oklahoma House of Representatives to find out how to contact your state leaders today. Phone calls and letters are much more powerful than an email. Let your voice be heard!
Day six is now over on my trip to Northern Washington State and Canada. I spent yesterday traveling east, deeper into the Cascade Mountain Range. It was amazing driving on the sides of the mountains at altitudes up to 3,600 feet. This is the skiing area for most Seattle residents and the lodges where bristling with residents getting in the last of decent powder before spring hits. Growing up on the US Gulf Coast and then moving to Oklahoma I am pretty much a flat-lander and couldn't ski down a hill if my very life depended on it.
Fortunately there is a little Bavarian alpine village called Leavenworth nestled in the beautiful Cascades that offers tons of shopping and the best in German food and of course BEER. Far be it for me to pass up a good stout pint! I never really considered Washington State as being a skiing state but the mountain views made me dizzy and my palms where sweating the entire drive.
Tomorrow I am off to Vancouver B.C. after having my birth certificate sent to me via FedEx so I can get across the border. I had wrongfully assumed a driver license would be enough to get into Canada. Turns out you need to have a passport now or at the very least a U.S. government ID and a birth certificate or you're not getting into Canada. It crossed my mind to perform a Mexican style crossing but the rivers up north are a bit colder than the Rio Grande.
Although anti-gay speech is a depressingly common element of U.S. political discourse, rarely does one hear the pure poison recently spewed by Oklahoma State Representative Sally Kern in a YouTube video now circulating on the Internet with astonishing speed.
Unaware that her remarks to 50 supporters were being taped, Rep. Kern offers a shocking anti-gay tirade in which she asserts that homosexuality is "the biggest threat that our nation has, even more so than terrorism or Islam." She adds, "No society that has totally embraced homosexuality has lasted more than, you know, a few decades."
While Rep. Kern rants, fellow members of the Oklahoma state legislature seem unwilling to protect lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender citizens. Oklahoma is one of 17 states whose hate crimes laws do not encompass sexual orientation and gender identity & expression. Despite last fall's senseless murder of Steven Domer, a 62 year-old gay man killed by Aryan supremacists in Oklahoma City, it is highly likely that the legislature will kill four bills that propose to amend the state hate crimes statute.
Let Rep. Kern and her colleagues know that hate speech is dangerous, that such words create a climate where physical assaults and killings are more likely, that it is abhorrent for a public official to use her authority to discriminate and defame law-abiding, contributing citizens.
Call or write your legislator (remember phone calls and handwritten letters are far more effective than email) and share your outrage at Rep. Kern's remarks. Urge them to demand that revision of Oklahoma's hate crimes law be considered by the full legislature.
To find your legislator, search here.
Contact Rep. Kern:
Capitol Address
2300 N. Lincoln Blvd. Room 332
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
Phone: (405) 557-7348
Email: sallykern@okhouse.gov
A new YouTube video has been released of State Representative Sally Kern bashing Gay Oklahomans during a recent speech. Below is the video of her bigoted ignorant hate filled speech in it's entirety including the claim that gays are a bigger threat to the US than terrorism and that LGBT Oklahoma citizens are after 2 year olds. The Oklahoma City lawmaker goes on to say that gays have a shorter lifespan than the rest of Oklahomans.
Other bigoted and disgusting claims made by Rep. Kern that I care not to repeat are heard on the video and displays the horrible ignorance and a total lack of respect for basic human rights on the lawmakers part. I strongly urge everyone to contact their local lawmakers demanding the censure and removal of Rep. Sally Kern from the Oklahoma House of Representatives and make crystal clear the message that in the 21st century hate and bigotry will no longer will be tolerated from our elected Oklahoma leaders.
More on the story with KOTV tulsa
Anyone up for a hike? Keeping to my word on this vacation I decided today to take in nature and accomplish a big challenge for me. For those of you new to the site I went through two major surgeries a few months ago and I have been taking it easy for a bit too long now. So I decided to embark on a seven mile mountain hike up and along the river and falls in Wallace Falls State Park, Washington. I took the more difficult but much more scenic hike right along the water and up the mountain for 3.5 miles up and 3.5 miles back down following the waters edge and switchbacks. I'm certainly sore tonight but the pictures, physical challenge and knowing I am now healed from three months worth of surgeries was worth every step I took.
Enjoy the photos both here and more mind blowing scenes on the T Town Tommy flickr page.
Overlook of water fall
After dragging my butt out of bed at 4 am and six hours of air travel I am finally back in Seattle. Everything is still where I left it and the view of Mt. Rainer from the airplane is spectacular. I sent several emails to random gay people in the LGBT Northwest Washington area hoping to get a feel for its gay society or lack of society, especially in the rural areas of Washington State. I have never visited with any gay people up here and have no clue what the community offers its residents.
Unfortunately I have only received one response from a man in Everett Washington a small town north of Seattle. He responded “if you want to meet a guy then go to a bar! (i am trying to be polite)”. So much for some post about the LGBT community here! If this kind of rudeness is the standard of the greater LGBT Seattle community I think I will stick to enjoying the restaurants, natural beauty of the area and visiting family. How sad indeed.
Valentine's Day is finally behind me and my staff at the flower shop for another year and now is the best time for me to escape Oklahoma for a bit before the start of spring weddings. As usual I am making my annual pilgrimage to Seattle, Washington and northwest Canada starting tomorrow. I will be flying out of Tulsa at 6:00 a.m. and hopefully there will be no delays with SNOW. Yes snow, I was wearing shorts this weekend with weather flirting around springtime temps and now we have a 90% possibly of snow tonight and Tuesday morning. At least in Seattle I know what to expect, rain, rain and more rain however the outlook is good for a few sunny days during my visit.
As always I will be taking lots of photos during my stay and on the agenda this trip is hiking on Orcas island off the Washington coast and a road trip from Seattle to Vancouver B.C. for some sightseeing. I know my postings where a little light nonexistent last week but trying to get everything caught up so I can leave have taken up much of my time.
T Town Tommy will be back to a normal schedule upon my return on March 14th. Till then stay tuned for some amazing photos and my ad hoc travel journal on what will most likely be my only trip out of Oklahoma/Texas this spring and summer. Let the adventure begin…
Here is some drag queen logic applied to the 2008 Presidential Election
A lesbian research team lead by Dawn Szymanski, Ph.D. is conducting a study on lesbian or bisexual women's experiences related to gender and sexual orientation. The online survey asks about experiences related to being a woman and a lesbian/bisexual person, connections to the LGB and feminist communities, ways of dealing with stressful events, and psychological well-being. All participants will be given the chance to win a $75 online gift certificate to Amazon. If you are a woman who is at least 18 years old and has experienced same-sex attraction, please click here to participate in this anonymous, 30-minute research study.

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