Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Freedom Beacons

Prison.

Two years and four months and a day – the clock is agonizingly still ticking.

NEH? My 6’x6’ cell.

My sentence? I have placed upon my head

My inmates? Friends I cannot stomach

The warden? Someone you want to be stabbed in the yard

 

Trap.

Like some rat I was.

I saw the cheese begging to be eaten. A bite of nirvana was everything I got.

The price I paid? SANITY

 

 

Sewage.

It smelled like one. Crap and rubbish, decaying flesh of a road kill, mold, cold and eternal darkness.

 

After some time, I was institutionalized.

After a while, the steel jaws trapping my foot became comfortable.

After few moments, the sewage felt like home.

 

Then the parole.

Then the escape.

Then the manhole opens.

 

Blinding light.

FREEDOM BEACONS.

I SURRENDER


I SURRENDER


Logic says, "Move On"
Emotion wants to Linger
Mind promises to forget
Heart vows to remember

For Sanity's sake,
Your freedom bestowed
With falling tears,
My shackles removed


Curse the agony of unrequited love!!

Monday, October 13, 2008

KUBICA INTENT ON DOING A 'KIMI'

source: http://planet-f1.com/story/0,18954,3213_4306433,00.html

Monday 13th October 2008

Robert Kubica reckons he could yet pull off a 'Kimi Raikkonen' by coming from behind to win this year's World title.

With two races remaining the Polish driver is 12 points behind Championship leader Lewis Hamilton, having closed the gap by eight points in Sunday's Japanese GP.

His situation is very similar to that of Raikkonen, who last season came back from a 17-point deficit ahead of the final two races to beat Hamilton to the title by one point.

"There's nothing to lose," said Kubica, who like Raikkonen last year finds himself third in the standings with two races remaining.

"Kimi showed last year that anything is possible. It's a good boost - we're still in the fight.

"If you've led the Championship after seven races you should be fighting for the title.

"I have two guys in front of me and at normal pace it's no secret that we are not as fast as (Felipe) Massa and Hamilton, so life is a bit more difficult but it could still happen."

YOUR COMMENTS

johnbt

"The Dark Horse in the Untrodden Path. Bobby, go for it man! I'm with ya. Quietly, sneak behind and shock them!"

Shannas

"F1 WC for 2008 is KUBICA, KIMI is 2nd ALONSO 3rd MASSA 4th LEWIS HAMILTON 24th"

zohebnrn

"Kubica is far a matured driver in the track, when we were looking at the clashes of the so called Titans, the BMW driver has managed to close down the gap to a minimum 12 points and comparing to the overall spendings he and Alonso are undoubtedlty the best drivers."


WAY TO GO, ROBERT! You will win the championship THIS YEAR and Kapil will be impressed of my fortune telling abilities. LOL... 

ALONSO: IF I CAN HELP MASSA I WILL

source: http://planet-f1.com/story/0,18954,3213_4310575,00.html

Monday 13th October 2008

Fernando Alonso has vowed to help Felipe Massa beat his former McLaren team-mate Lewis Hamilton to this year's World title.

Last season Alonso, then driving for McLaren, was the one involved in a title battle with Hamilton, which led to a great deal of rivalry and animosity within the team and Alonso's subsequent departure after just one year.

This year, though, it's Massa whose locked in the title race with Hamilton, with Alonso vowing to do all he can to help the Ferrari driver beat his former team-mate.

"Yes, no doubt, if I can help, I will help Massa," Alonso told AS newspaper.

As for this year's Championship battle the Renault driver concedes that either driver has reign supreme as both Massa and Hamilton have lost points to each other as well as others during the course of the season.

"They have lost a lot of points," Alonso said of the title rivals. "After 16 races the leader has 84 points. In 2006 I had 82 in nine races.

"In this Championship the drivers who are up there have scored few points. But in the end the one who makes the least errors will win. We'll see."

With a total of 20 points still to play for Hamilton holds a five-point advantage over Massa.

YOUR COMMENTS

drakonid_hart

"Hamilton is a snot nosed idiot who has not paid his dues. He have a tinist margin of talent over the other rookies, but the huge margin of luck that he got picked by McLaren is what made him into the most successful 'beginner' of F1. So hamilton, it isnt you. its anybody, but you."

Sunday, October 12, 2008

KIMI: I'M STILL HUNGRY FOR SUCCESS

Kimi Raikkonen has again insisted he's lost none of his motivation after his commitment was called into question following his fourth successive point-less finish.

The reigning F1 Champion has struggled throughout this year's campaign, failing to win a single race since April's Spanish GP.

A run of point-less finishes have also marred his attempts at getting back on form, raising some questions about his motivation.

Raikkonen, though, insists he's as determined to win as ever.

"I haven't lost anything," the Finn said. "We had a good start to the season but of course we made a few mistakes, a few bad choices, and we never recovered.

"We should have won more races but we didn't for many reasons. It hasn't changed my way of driving, or my hunger, or my racing because I want to still win. I am the World Champion and hopefully we can get some good results and get back in.

"I have made mistakes, Ferrari have made mistakes - everyone makes mistakes. We need to learn from them.

"But I have all the confidence in the team, just as they have in me and both drivers. We win and lose as a team."

YOUR COMMENTS

dezbo1960

"omg..all us maclaren fans supporting kimi..whatever next..lets face it the mans a gem of a driver and if he hadn't of had the season he has i think the leader board would be reading much differently"

dezbo1960

"thats what kimi does, but who would ever write him off"

globs99

"I hate ferrari.Mclaren and lewis are my vice. But truth be told, we prefer to see kimi making mistakes and looking unintrested. Lets not make to much noise boys, coz we dont want to wake a sleeping giant now do we. One thing about that vodka lover though, when he is in the mood, he has no equal in a car. I remember when he was with us at mclaren. Unreal speed!! He made us look much better than we really were. Now we have a car. Go Lewis. "


Lewis will not be a good champion though.


Wednesday, October 8, 2008

My Eyes have seen Glory --by McBarnes

McBarnes from Red All Over the Land pens this poem called My eyes have seen the Glory, inspired by the Liverpool banner in Istanbul of the same name.

An army amassed just like centuries before, in a city made famous by sieges of yore. 
  
Where Constantinople and Byzantium once stood, 
A new army now did descend like a flood. 
  
An army of thousands in livery of red, Liverbirds on their chests and a dream in their heads. 
  
With smiles on their faces and songs in their hearts, 
of hope a new era was waiting to start. 
  
Stood on the North Tribune I looked all around, a sea of red swamping three sides of the ground. 
  
Flags, scarves and banners that covered the crowd, a show of red strength to make Chairman Mao proud. 
  
I surveyed the scene in awe and in bliss, How could we fail on a stage such as this? 
  
I reckoned without an AC Milan team, with the class to make nightmares out of our dreams. 
  
And so it transpired in a half straight from hell, a Maldini sucker punch straight from the bell. 
  
With two blows from Crespo five minutes apart, Milan drove a dagger through Liverpool's heart. 
  
We staggered and reached the refuge of half time, our worst fears were realised, 3-0 behind. 
  
Ashen-faced Reds with their heads in their hands, slumped in despair on the steps of the stand. 
  
An anger rose in me, but not with the team, where was the 12th man? Was Chelsea a dream? 
  
We had to show pride, try to lift them somehow, we'd come much too far to give up on them now. 
  
Somebody somewhere had shared the same thought, my faith was restored in our famous support. 
  
YNWA grew in strength, as did I, and I sang, as if it was for the last time. 
  
Looking back now I can't honestly say, that as I sang, I thought we would find a way to come back, but I wanted the whole world to see, 
We still had pride, we were still Liverpool FC. 
  
That chorus will live on in legend and lore, Cruyff said he had heard nothing like it before. 
  
Maradona said it made him convert to a Red, Luis said it spurred them to rise from the dead. 
  
Then came the reverse of our first half ordeal, six minutes of mayhem that didn't seem real.Six glorious minutes that none will forget, when Stevie and Xabi and Vlad found the net. 
  
Milan came again but at each turn were foiled, once more a siege played out on Istanbul soil. 
  
As the seconds ticked down, the Redmen stood tall, though their muscles screamed 'stop' they ploughed on through it all. 
  
Then came the moment God's will became known, The ball fell to Shevchenko with Dudek left prone. With the goal at his mercy, our Pole somehow saved, someone from above must have smiled on the brave. 
  
It was then that it suddenly all became clear, Milan realised that this wasn't their year. Alongside the Reds stood an ally too great, 
There was no resisting the power of fate. 
  
So when the game entered its final test then, they bore the demeanour of half-beaten men. 
  
Defeat after so much no player deserved, but while Milan's men wilted the Reds kept their nerve. 
  
And when Andrei's nemesis foiled him once more, the night air was pierced by a deafening roar. 
  
Destiny fulfilled all that was prophesised, and I hugged all around me with tears in my eyes. 
  
The Redmen all met us, celebrations they led, Carra The Lionheart, Gerrard The Red. Sami The Mighty, the sturdy Hamann, Dudek and all, heroes to a man. 
  
And Rafa, our Moses, by his guiding hand, he led us all back here to this Promised Land. When the road became hard no excuse did he use, 
and when all seemed lost here his genius shone through. 
  
Emotion flowed down from the stands like a shower, as we watched Stevie lift that old trophy of ours. You'll Never Walk Alone once again we did sing, as we all heralded the return of the Kings. 
  
Now on the bus back to Taksim I went, my voice was in tatters, all energy spent. Utterly drained but smiling ear to ear, I thought back to the road that had led me to here. 
  
As a boy I had watched all the legends parade, as they conquered all Europe and history was made. As the years passed, now no longer watching a screen, I thought I'd never see what my elders had seen. 
  
I wondered if my eyes would yet see the glory, and whether in years to come I could tell stories. Of great Anfield nights and of crusades abroad, when the Mighty Reds put Europe's best to the sword. 
  
2004 then turned into 05, and finally all of my hopes came to life, 
It seemed fate was there with us right from the start, it happened as if it was written in the stars. 
  
I watched from the Kop on that December night, the pivotal moment when dark turned to light. Four minutes from failure, then hope was restored, we all dared to dream, when Stevie G scored. 
  
Echoes of the past rang as clear as a bell, the late Kop end goal, the same scoreline as well. My generation loved tales about way back when, but we now had our very own St Etienne. 
  
I was there against Juve when ghosts of the past, 20 years in the waiting confronted at last. The Kop spelled out friendship in red and in white, and in silence we remembered the fallen that night. 
  
The whistle it blew and the silence gave way, to a whirlwind of noise that blew Juve away. I saw a red tide almost swallow them whole, 
And I saw Luis Garcia's 30 yard goal. 
  
I saw Chelsea get their come-uppence at last, on a night at Anfield that might not be surpassed. The primeval force of The Kop in full cry, for 96 minutes the noise wouldn't die. 
  
96 minutes for 96 souls, they surely were watching the drama unfold. For something divine intervened on our side, 'Cos I can't explain how Gudjohnsen shot wide. 
  
The Kop danced long after the players had gone, the glory of years passed remembered in song. And when we were thrown out we danced on outside, around Shankly's statue long into the night. 
  
And now I had witnessed a moment so rare, it's drama and splendour were beyond compare. A moment in sport we may not see again, a moment I'd waited so long to attain. 
  
Istanbul was for one night, Heaven on Earth, so special you can't put a price on its worth. I give thanks I was one of the privileged few, 
I was there and I saw all of our dreams come true. 
  
A banner I'd seen and there saw it again, 'My Eyes Have Seen The Glory,' it proudly proclaimed. Four symbolic stars were emblazoned thereon, I could now say 'me too' when the 5th one was won. 
  
I've seen the Kop's legacy upheld and enhanced, and seen us win when no one gave us a chance. I've seen us rise up and be crowned Europe's best, if it's the last match I see I'd still think myself blessed.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

everything but nothing

from Lovers in Paris: 
"He is a man with everything but has nothing. He has done great things but no great memories."

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

A whole new Me!

I have decided to recreate my blogs.

I have made a different blog for news and for money making schemes.

I will be making whilyn.blogspot.com personal again. I hope to anyone who gets to read this. You can check out my other blogs too.


http://findloot.blogspot.com

http://katikaran.blogspot.com

Have a nice day!

Monday, September 1, 2008

Gustav only sideswipes New Orleans as levees hold

By ROBERT TANNER and VICKI SMITH, Associated Press Writers 13 minutes ago

NEW ORLEANS - A weaker-than-expected Gustav swirled into the fishing villages and oil-and-gas towns of Louisiana's Cajun country Monday, delivering only a glancing blow to New Orleans that did little more than send water sloshing harmlessly over its rebuilt floodwalls.


It was the first test of New Orleans' new and improved levees, which are still being rebuilt three years after Hurricane Katrina. And it was a powerful demonstration of how federal, state and local officials learned some of the painful lessons of the catastrophic 2005 storm that killed 1,600 people.

The storm that crashed ashore as a Category 1 hurricane had by late Monday been downgraded to a tropical storm with maximum sustained winds of 60 mph.

"They made a much bigger deal out of it, bigger than it needed to be," 31-year-old security worker Gabriel Knight said in New Orleans' nearly empty French Quarter. "I was here with Katrina. That was a nightmare. This was nothing."

There was growing optimism that New Orleans would soon reopen for business. Mayor Ray Nagin cautioned that Tuesday would be too early for residents to return to a city largely in the dark, but their homecoming was "only days away, not weeks."

"I was hoping that this would happen, that we would be able to stand before America, before everyone, and say that we had some success with the levee system. I feel really good about it," Nagin said.

A mandatory evacuation order and curfew remained in effect, and nearly 80,000 remained without power after the storm damaged transmission lines that snapped like rubber bands in the wind and knocked 35 substations out of service.

The city's sewer system is damaged, and hospitals were working with skeleton crews on backup power. Drinking water continued to flow in the city and the pumps that keep it dry never shut down — two critical service failings that contributed to Katrina's toll.

Crews will comb the city Tuesday to fully review the damage, Nagin said, with the goal of having residents return later in the week. Buses are in place and ready to bring people back, he said.

"I would not do a thing differently," Nagin said. "I'd probably call Gustav, instead of the mother of all storms, maybe the mother-in-law or the ugly sister of all storms."

The sense of relief did not mean the state came through the storm unscathed. A levee in the southeastern part of Louisiana was in danger of collapse, and officials scrambled to fortify it. Roofs were torn from homes, trees toppled and roads flooded. A ferry sunk. More than 1 million homes were without power. And the extent of any damage to the oil and gas industry was unclear.

But the biggest fear — that the levees surrounding the saucer-shaped city of New Orleans would break — hadn't been realized.

Wind-driven water sloshed over the top of the Industrial Canal's floodwall — the same structure that broke with disastrous consequences during Katrina — and several Ninth Ward streets close by were flooded with ankle- to knee-deep water. Still, city officials and the Army Corps of Engineers expressed confidence the levees were holding.

Gustav blew ashore around 9:30 a.m. near Cocodrie (pronounced ko-ko-DREE), a low-lying community 72 miles southwest of New Orleans.

Forecasters had feared a catastrophic Category 4 storm on the 1-to-5 scale, but Gustav weakened as it drew close to land, coming ashore with 110 mph winds. It quickly dropped to a Category 1 as it steamed inland toward Texas.

Late Monday, Gustav's center was located about 20 miles southwest of Alexandria, lumbering northwest at about 13 mph. Forecasters expect the storm to weaken further to a tropical depression on Tuesday as it moves toward northeastern Texas. Storm surge flooding was expected to continue to subside overnight.

Authorities reported eight deaths related to the storm. All but one were traffic deaths, including four people killed in Georgia when their car struck a tree as they attempted to flee the storm. A 27-year-old Lafayette, La., man was killed when a tree fell on his house as the storm whipped through. Before arriving in the U.S., Gustav was blamed for at least 94 deaths in the Caribbean.

In the days before the storm struck, nearly 2 million people fled coastal Louisiana under a mandatory evacuation order — a stark contrast from Katrina. Those evacuated included tens of thousands of poor, elderly and sick people who were put on buses and trains and taken to shelters and hotel rooms in several surrounding states.

It could be days until the full extent of the damage is known, especially in the fishing villages and oil-and-gas towns of bayou country, where rapid erosion in recent decades has destroyed swamps and robbed the area of a natural buffer against storms.

Keith Cologne of Chauvin, not far from Cocodrie, looked dejected after talking by telephone to a friend who didn't evacuate. "They said it's bad, real bad. There are roofs lying all over. It's all gone," said Cologne, staying at a hotel in Orange Beach, Ala.

In St. Mary Parish, to the west, Deputy Sheriff Troy Brown cleared roads with a chain saw as he went out to assess damage. He found uprooted trees, houses without some shingles, but few signs of monster hit. "Even the mobile homes are sitting there in one piece," Brown said.

Jude Duplantis, 52, who lives near Bayou Terrebonne, was outside with a push broom trying to clear leaves out of a gutter to keep runoff from backing up. Duplantis had spent part of the day driving around, surveying damage and dodging debris.

"Everything's like playing Nintendo when you're driving 'cause there's all this stuff in the road," he said, holding up his hands as if turning a steering wheel back and forth.

One community in southeastern Louisiana feared its levee wouldn't hold. The parish president called a local TV station to plea with any residents still there to flee, and crews moved sandbags and moving equipment into place to reinforce the levee and its metal floodgate. Though it was stressed, it didn't break.

It could be a day or more before oil and natural gas companies can assess the damage to their drilling and refining installations. Gov. Bobby Jindal said as much as 20 percent of oil and gas production that was stopped because of Gustav could be restored by this weekend, stressing that it was a rough estimate.

To the east of the city, state officials were unable to reach anyone at Port Fourchon, a vital energy industry hub where huge amounts of oil and gas are piped inland to refineries.

The Gulf of Mexico accounts for about 25 percent of domestic oil production and 15 percent of natural gas output. Damage to those installations could cause gasoline prices at the pump to spike, although oil prices declined Monday.

While Katrina smashed the Gulf Coast with an epic storm surge that topped 27 feet, the surge this time in New Orleans reached 12 feet, near the top of the Industrial Canal, on the eastern side of the city.

Officials expressed confidence all day long that the flood defenses in the eastern part of the city would hold. They were more concerned about the West Bank of the Mississippi River, where the $15 billion in levee improvements begun after Katrina have yet to be completed. But those floodwalls appeared to be holding, too.

Gustav was quickly marching inland, reducing the prospect of heavy rain in southern Louisiana. But the storm is expected to slow down as it heads into Texas and possibly into Arkansas, and could bring 20 inches of rain to those areas.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency stood ready to distribute enough cartons of food, water, blankets and other supplies to sustain 1 million people for three days — another contrast to Katrina, when thousands waited for rescue in the sweltering Superdome.

President Bush skipped the opening day of a scaled-back Republican National Convention to monitor the storm's progress, and both Republicans and Democrats asked supporters to text-message donations to the Red Cross to help victims of the hurricane.

Fights broke out at an overcrowded shelter in Shreveport. People who had slept, eaten and lived on cots for days struggled to get news about home from the lone television in the entire center. Doctors worried about medications running out and seven people were hospitalized, all in stable condition.

"People are desperate. They don't know if they are going to have a place to go home to," said Emma McClure, 37, who was at the shelter with her three children, three sisters and some 20 nephews. "They had three years to plan this and now I wish I had stayed in the city like I did during Katrina."

In Mississippi, at least three people had to be rescued from the floodwaters. An abandoned building in Gulfport collapsed, a few homes in Biloxi were flooded, and the ground floor of the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino on Biloxi's casino row was swamped with 2 1/2 feet of water. Katrina smashed the casino three years ago shortly before it was to open.

As Gustav passed, authorities turned their attention to Hurricane Hanna, which could come ashore in Georgia and South Carolina late in the week.

In New Orleans, many trees, light poles, traffic lights and signs had been blown down, and debris was strewn across the streets. But there was no flooding or major damage, and the storm brought only 3 inches of rain or less to the city. Police reported just two arrests.

Nagin echoed the cautious grade many were giving to the levees' performance Monday.

"It proved that the city can handle a Category 3 storm," Nagin said. "Is that good enough? No."

___

Associated Press writers Becky Bohrer, Cain Burdeau, Allen G. Breed contributed to this report from New Orleans. Janet McConnaughey and Alan Sayre contributed from Hammond. Doug Simpson in Baton Rouge, Michael Kunzelman in Lafayette, La., and Holbrook Mohr in Gulfport, Miss., also contributed.

source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/gustav

REACTION:
If there is something very similar between the Americans and the Brits, it is their inclination to exaggerate things. Their love for build-up, over-rating and scaring and disappointing all of us.

For the people of New Orleans, of course it is a relief that Gustav is not a Katrina.

I just hate the fact that the media scared the people to flee and open up their homes to possible looters. I even heard their mayor say THIS IS THE HURRICANE OF THE CENTURY. Goodness me! I thought only the Philippines have the worst weather forecasters.

Nonetheless, good thing that no one was hurt in the little hurricane.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

McCain orders convention curtailed for Gustav

IMMEDIATE REACTION TO THE NEWS: even the weather doesn't want him to campaign.. LOL

By DAVID ESPO, AP Special Correspondent Sun Aug 31, 6:44 PM ET

ST. PAUL, Minn. - John McCain tore up the script for his Republican National Convention on Sunday, canceling most opening-day activities and positioning himself as above mere politics as Hurricane Gustav churned toward New Orleans.
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"This is a time when we have to do away with our party politics and we have to act as Americans," he said as fellow Republicans converged on their convention city to nominate him for the White House.

On the eve of his convention, McCain took on the role of a concerned potential president determined to avoid the errors made by President Bush three years ago. "I have every expectation that we will not see the mistakes of Katrina repeated," he said.

Bush and Vice President Cheney scrapped plans to address the convention on Monday, and McCain's aides chartered a jet to fly delegates back to their hurricane-threatened states along the Gulf Coast. Campaign manager Rick Davis said the first-night program was being cut from seven hours to two and one half.

McCain said in an interview with NBC that it was possible he would make his acceptance speech not from the convention podium but via satellite from the Gulf Coast region.

The formal business of the convention includes nominating McCain for president and Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his vice presidential running mate on Wednesday. McCain's acceptance speech, set for prime time on Thursday evening, is among the most critical events of the campaign for his chances of winning the White House.

The hasty reordering of an event months in the planning was unprecedented, affecting not only the program on the podium but the accompanying fundraising, partying and other political activity that unfolds around the edges of a national political convention.

McCain said he was looking forward to being at the convention but did not say when he would arrive. He spoke from St. Louis after he and Palin received a briefing on hurricane preparations on a quick visit to Jackson, Miss.

Democratic rival Barack Obama got a briefing, too, by telephone from Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff. Obama heard about the status of the storm, the evacuation effort and coordination between federal, state and local authorities, according to Democratic campaign adviser Robert Gibbs.

McCain campaign manager Davis told reporters inside the convention hall that the opening program on Monday would be "business only and will refrain from political rhetoric."

To help those in need, he said, "We are working with the delegations, financial people, finance committees, many other concerned individuals to do what we can to raise money for various charities that operate in the Gulf Coast region."

As for the convention schedule, he added that further adjustments would be made on a day-to-day basis.

McCain said of his briefing in Mississippi: "I'm happy to report to you that the coordination and the work that's being done at all levels appears to be excellent." He cited remaining challenges in communications and search and rescue operations, but emphasized that the response seemed to be going more smoothly than the one three years ago.

The Bush administration's handling of that storm contributed to a plunge in the president's approval ratings that helped the Democrats win control of Congress in 2006.

The uncertainty contrasted with a state of readiness inside the Xcel Center, a hockey arena transformed into a made-for-televison red-carpeted convention hall. Thousands of red, white and blue balloons nestled in netting high above the floor — to be released during final-night festivities if the Republicans decide to go ahead with them.

Outside, police took nine people into custody for crossing a security barrier in an anti-war march. The nine, including two women in their 70s, were charged with trespassing, according to Doug Holtz, a St. Paul police commander.

Emphasizing their concern about the hurricane, McCain and his newly named running mate traveled to Mississippi for a tour of the state's emergency management center.

"I pledge that tomorrow night, and if necessary throughout our convention, we will act as Americans, not as Republicans," McCain told reporters moments later.

The events temporarily overshadowed a more traditionally political pre-convention debate over McCain's decision to name Palin to his ticket. She was mayor of small-town Wasilla, Alaska, for six years before she became governor in December 2006.

Responding to a question after his hurricane-related remarks, McCain made a ringing defense of Palin, who Democrats argue has less experience than their presidential candidate, Obama.

"I thin Sen. Obama, if they want to do down that route, in all candor, she has far, far more experience than Sen. Obama does," McCain said.

He cited Palin's stint as governor of a "state that produces 20 percent of America's energy" as well as her previous membership in the PTA and her time spent on the city council and in the mayor's office in Wasilla,a town of fewer than 7,000 people outside Anchorage.

By contrast, he said Obama "was a community organizer when she was in elected office. He was in the state Senate and voted 130 times present. He never took on his party on anything. She took on a party and the old bulls and the old boy network and she succeeded."

Palin has frequently clashed with fellow Republicans in her state, and won office after denying an incumbent GOP governor renomination to a new term in office.

But Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut said McCain's selection was merely designed to appease the hard-right conservatives in the Republican Party. "His knees buckled" when it came time to picking a running mate, Dodd said of McCain in an appearance on CNN.

Democrats, too, decided to tone down their convention-week efforts.

Party spokesman Brad Woodhouse said the Democrats had canceled a "More of the Same" rally that had been slated for Monday.

Obama said he was ready to encourage his supporters to assist any victims of the hurricane.

"I think we can activate an e-mail list of a couple of million people who want to give back," he said.

With millions of Gulf Coast residents fleeing the approaching storm, Chadwick Melder, a delegate from Baton Rouge, said he was taking advantage of an offer from the campaign to fly his family out of harm's way.

"I'm trying to get my family out of there and stay here for the week," said Melder, although he added, "I have responsibilities here as well."

___

Associated Press writers Liz Sidoti and Sara Kugler in St. Paul, Charles Babington in Lima, Ohio, and Beth Fouhy in Jackson, Miss., contributed to this report.

source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080831/ap_on_el_pr/cvn_convention_rdp