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Wednesday, November 15, 2006

"Who's side are you on?"

Now, a different kind of humor from this past political season. There was a really tense race for District Attorney here between incumbent Belinda Foster and challenger Phil Berger Jr. I may weigh in on more about this further down the line but for now, all I'll say is that Berger deeply impressed me very early on.

Bit of background for this: since this past summer Marvel Comics has been running a massive crossover story titled Civil War. The plot involves compulsory registration of the superhero community by the federal government. Some heroes - like Iron Man and Spider-Man - came out in favor of registration (Peter Parker even revealed his secret identity before an international press conference) while others led by Captain America are against it. Suffice it to say this has led into one massive super-powered fisticuffs involving conflicting allegiances and rising bodycounts. The tagline of the series has been "Who's side are you on?" Well, when the series was just getting started Marvel Comics released some banner graphics saying "I'm with Iron Man" and "I'm with Captain America". Very rapidly, this became ripe for all kinds of parody.

I'd thought of posting this on the blog awhile back, but instead opted for neutrality until after the election. Now I wish that I had put it up here. But here it is now for your enjoyment...

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

An open letter about - and to - Ron Price

RELEVANT BACKGROUND: On the evening of Monday, November 6th 2006, Rockingham County Board of Education at-large candidate Ron Price turned himself into the Reidsville Police Department and admitted having illegally taken campaign signs belonging to incumbent U.S. House candidate Brad Miller. The police found several Miller signs in the trunk of Price's car (OFFICIAL REPORT: Page #1, Page #2). Price claimed that he had seen several signs that had been knocked down that belonged to Vernon Robinson, the Republican challenger for Miller's seat and the candidate that Price had been campaigning for. Price then said that he took down several Miller signs because they were illegally placed along the road and was going to take them to the DOT. Curiously, Price replaced the Miller signs he had taken down with Robinson signs... in the same "illegal" locations.

And then the following night, Ron Price came in fifth place in the election for Board of Education. He is now set to be sworn into office on December 11th... in spite of committing this multiple misdemeanor.

You can read newspaper accounts of the incident: News & Record from Nov. 8th and the Eden Daily News from Nov. 8th. You can also read Mr. Price's own statement on his personal blog.

In the past week, I have been very much bothered by this situation that Mr. Price has put himself in. I do not believe that he is now fit to serve a term on the school board, and several other people have told me likewise.

I finished writing this letter yesterday afternoon. The first real thing I did with it was e-mail it to Ron Price. I tried calling him to tell him that this was coming but I could only get his answering machine. I told him that he had an e-mail from me, that in keeping with Matthew 18 I was taking this to him as a private matter first before taking it to "the full assembly". That if he wasn't convinced to step down by this morning that I would have to go ahead and publish it. And that I was very, very regretful that this had to be done.

He hasn't responded at all. So he's left me no choice: this now goes before "the church"...


Dear friends and neighbors throughout Rockingham County,

In the second commercial from my school board campaign, I told you that "most of all I'm just a guy who's trying to do what's right". I also said that I cannot be someone who would do nothing when he knows something is wrong. And that whether I won this election or not, I would do my best to point out what is going on around us. With this letter, I am regretfully now having to live up to those words.

In choosing to step forward to offer our services as possible members of the Rockingham County Board of Education, the sixteen of us who were candidates on the ballot effectively took a vow that we were going to look after the best interests of the students of Rockingham County. That vow did not become null and void effective November 8th, 2006, regardless of whether or not we won a seat on the school board. Indeed, each of us has now made a lifetime commitment to serve the children, whether by volunteer action or the simple virtue of our character.

I believe that the situation before us now is a test of that character, by which our children will rightfully come to judge us.

Over the course of the past several days I have been deeply troubled by the situation regarding school board member-elect Ron Price. At first I believed the better course would be to hold my peace. But considering that I gave a strong recommendation about Ron to many of my friends and family members, his actions have put me in the predicament of being faced with having to explain myself to these people... many of whom did cast a vote for Ron at my urging. In remaining silent, I am being perceived as complicit and approving of what Ron did. I cannot allow that. And thus, it falls to me to offer nothing but the strictest condemnation of Ron Price.

On the evening of November 6th, Ron Price decided in his mind and of his own free will that the good of his political party took priority over doing what is morally – and legally – right. He stole signs belonging to a political candidate that he was working to campaign against. And once caught in the act, he apparently concocted a story that to the best of my knowledge has convinced no one. Indeed, I found Ron's story to be petty and insulting.

Quite simply, here is the problem: if Ron Price is allowed to take a seat on the Rockingham County Board of Education, the message that is effectively being sent to all the children of Rockingham County is that it is okay to lie and cheat and steal and run roughshod over other people, so long as you are doing it in the name of your political party or some other group. In other words, we would be teaching them the antithesis of everything that America is supposed to stand for.

It seems like such a small thing. And yet as a historian I cannot help but recollect that most of the atrocities of Nazi Germany were committed because otherwise normal and conscientious and even God-fearing individuals voluntarily yielded their free will to that of the state. In the name of "the party" or "the state" it is all too easy for good men to excuse their slouching toward wickedness.

All of us know that this goes on all the time in this country. It's so routine that we are now inured to it. But it has to stop, if this country is to have any future worth passing on to our posterity.

But if it doesn't stop here and now, then where does it stop at all? And if not stopped by us... then by whom will it be?

Is gaining a personal political victory more important that simply doing the right thing and respecting others as you would have them respect you?

And I have to wonder: if Ron Price cannot be trusted to respect the property of others even if it is something so minor as a three-dollar sign, how is it reasonable that we should be expected to trust him with a $110 million budget?

The best thing that Ron Price could now do to serve the children of Rockingham County is to demonstrate first-hand that we are a nation of laws and not men... by voluntarily relinquishing his claim to having won a seat on the Rockingham County Board of Education.

Ron Price's actions have hopelessly polluted his credibility as a member of the school board. And if he continues to insist that he is going to take a seat, he will be doing irreparable damage to the moral education of the children of this county... a moral education that he has by the way promised to uphold in his capacity as a candidate with a Judeo-Christian ethic.

Ron, I'm directing this to you as your fellow candidate, as someone who has come to know you over the past few months, and as a fellow servant in Christ: you cannot take this seat. For the foreseeable future, your actions have tainted your elected position without the possibility of redemption. In our faith there is such a thing as forgiveness... but there also must be accountability for what we have done.

If you insist on taking this seat, you will be demonstrating to the students you will be swearing to serve that America is no longer a country where one's actions have consequences. This is supposed to be one of the virtues of the conservative philosophy, and throughout this campaign you have touted yourself as the "conservative candidate". Now its time for you to prove whether you are a man of your word.

But if you surrender your claim to the school board seat, you will be setting an example to the students of this county that will last far, far longer than anything you might do if you do take the oath of office. I don't believe that it would be something limited to Rockingham County either: you would be setting an example for young people all across the country for many years to come.

It's all in your hands now, Ron: you can either jealously hold onto something that is now no longer morally or ethically yours... or you can surrender, and let it fall to the ground so that God might let something even more wonderful than anything you can imagine grow from it.

Sir, I very strongly and sincerely urge you to graciously step down from the elected position you are apparently insisting on taking. You will be doing far more harm than any good you could possibly do if you take the oath of office and become a member of this school board.

The measure of a real statesman is how much he's willing to sacrifice personal gain for the good of his countrymen.

What about you, Ron: how much of a statesman are you willing to be?

And Ron, I mean this with every bit of sincerity: if you feel a calling to run for the school board again in two years or four and you believe it is indeed God laying that on your heart, then you should do so. I would definitely support your decision if you did.

But there is no way that I could support you on the school board now as I can with every other member who is either there now or about to take office. And I'm far from alone in that regard: a lot of people have confided in me during this past week that they simply can't trust you right now. At this point you are too self-blemished to hold public office… especially in one charged with carrying out the preparation of our youth to be the next generation of America's leaders.

Ron, step down. You may have the legal claim to the seat, but there's no way you could ever regain the moral authority to wield it with any sense of integrity.

Sincerely,
Chris Knight

November 13, 2006


Monday, November 13, 2006

"I'll do it!"

The original suggestion comes about 35 minutes or so into the June 7th 2006 edition of Political Soup (Windows Media format). But if you want to hear the real declaration, start watching around 21 minutes into this one from July 19th.

Following instructions

"If your brother sins against you, go and show him his fault, just between the two of you. If he listens to you, you have won your brother over. But if he will not listen, take one or two others along, so that 'every matter may be established by the testimony of two or three witnesses.' If he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church; and if he refuses to listen even to the church, treat him as you would a pagan or a tax collector."

-- Matthew 18:15-17

This may not be an assembly of fellow believers that we're dealing with, but I just wanted to let it be known before I unloaded this thing that I'm making a serious effort to adhere to what Jesus taught us to do in Matthew 18.

Very special thanks to my best friend Chad, who wisely counseled me to take this passage of scripture into consideration before going any further.

"People should not be afraid of their governments..."

And yet there were some who thought that what I did with my first commercial was outrageous. Check this guy out...
A volunteer with the We The People Foundation dressed up like "V" - complete with plastic daggers - from the movie V for Vendetta and attempted to deliver petitions of grievance to the White House, the Justice Department and a few other places around Washington, D.C. It's pretty scary how this guy was confronted by the law enforcement types: in so many ways, they're shown in the video of the incident acting exactly like the jack-booted thugs in both the V for Vendetta graphic novel and movie. The issue of the petition has to do with whether the income tax is actually legal or not... and there's substantial evidence indicating that it wasn't even legally ratified like an amendment to the Constitution is supposed to be. Anyway, this appearance by "V" is being considered a "dry run" for November 14th, when supposedly a hundred "V"s will descend on Washington, much like what all those people did in one of the final scenes of the movie (which wasn't in the book by the way).

I think stuff like this is great! This is the same kind of thing that drove me to make my first commercial something of a "stunt": if it gets people thinking and in a good way, then there's no shame in doing it. Go read the Bible sometime: the prophet Jeremiah spent his entire life doing stuff like this to get people's attention to what God was trying to tell them. I think Jeremiah would heartily approve of using "V" like this, if it's addressing a real wrong. If you want to be part of We The People's mass "V" protest here's a page with info including where to find a complete "V" costume. This is all supposed to go down tomorrow: can't wait to see what happens.

In Memoriam

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Behold... VENOM! Effects-unfinished SPIDER-MAN 3 trailer hits YouTube

"I'm here to ask you for one thing... I want you to kill Peter Parker."
So I guess Sam Raimi really doesn't like Venom, huh?

This should have been in the real official trailer for Spider-Man 3 that was released this past week.

There's no telling how long this effects-unfinished trailer is going to remain on YouTube. I'd give it another 3-5 hours if that long. If you want to hold on to it, remember: KeepVid is your friend!

EDIT 12:09 AM EST 11-14-2006: It lasted well over a day but I just checked and YouTube has since yanked the video at Sony's request. Which makes NO sense from a marketing point of view because... well, because people want Venom! If they had included that one very fleeting shot of him from this in the official trailer they put out last week, they would have jacked up the "wanna see" factor a dozen-fold. It's not like we don't know at this point whether Venom is in this... so why not tease us a bit with him?

Oh well... never underestimate the marketing genius that is Sony. Remember: this is the same outfit that took Star Wars Galaxies - which should have been a reliable moneymaker from now 'til the end of time - and thoroughly thrashed and gutted it into a pathetic shell of its former self. I'll trust Sam Raimi to do right by Spider-Man: Sony, not so much.

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Back to The Virginia Creeper

A little over a year ago in October 2006 I wrote about biking the Virginia Creeper trail. Well, today we did it again, once more with friends from our church. They had arrived yesterday afternoon and camped overnight last night not far from the bike rental place in Damascus, Virginia (in southwestern Virginia next to the North Carolina and Tennessee state lines). Lisa, her friend Tanya and her husband Jamie, and myself couldn't leave until this morning. So just after six Tanya and Jamie arrived in their minivan and we took off on the 3-some hour drive to Damascus.

About 20 minutes after we got there around 10 the group from church pulled into the driveway in the church van. After everyone got a bike, we shuttled to the top of Whitetop Mountain and started enjoying the steady ride downhill back to JC's Outdoors, the outfit that had provided the bikes. It took us about 3 hours this time to cover the 17 miles from mountaintop back to the "Ole Barn" where JC's is located at: a bit longer than it did last year. But this time Lisa and I really were enjoying the scenery a bit more, given the better weather than last time.

But anyway, we took a lot of pictures along the route. Here are just a few. I can't wait to see the ones that Lisa took after they get developed: there's some really beautiful stuff in there.

Okay, here's the pics from my digital camera...

Lisa and me from early on the trail.

Tanya and Jamie, also from early along the Virginia Creeper trail.

Lisa at the first waterfalls we came to.

The intersection of the Virginia Creeper and the Appalachian Trail. The Appalachian trail runs all the way from northeast Georgia in the south, to the mountains of Maine way to the north. We know some girls from church who actually hiked the entire Appalachian Trail a while back.

A pic tha Lisa took of me at the second waterfalls we came to. Those things in my ears are the earbud speakers attached to my MP3 player.

Scott Baxley, the associate and youth pastor of our church, at yet another waterfall.

On the way down I started off listening to Straight Outta Lynwood by "Weird Al" Yankovic. After that had played completely I used my MP3 player to listen to the soundtrack from Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, and then some modern classical stuff during the final leg of the journey. The very last thing that was playing on it was the soundtrack for Peter Jackson's King Kong: no matter what the movie is that Jackson makes, the music for his movies are always excellent for listening to while being part of the landsape (last year I listened to most of the soundtrack from The Lord of the Rings during the trip).

Anyway, that's my report on where we were today. If/when Lisa gets her pics back I'll try to remember to post those here, too :-)

Campaign website updated

The official campaign website just got an update, and probably the last one. It's a letter I've written to my supporters and to those who cast their ballot for me. I really hope that I didn't forget anyone in this: there were so many people who helped in one way or another. If I committed the grievous error of omitting anyone, I will add them to the "thank you" section of the letter as soon as possible.

The official theme song of the Knight for School Board 2006 campaign

Now that the campaign is over, I can finally let my hair down about some of the things during the past three months that were for the most part shared solely among "the staff".

F'rinstance, it was decided in mid-September that we had found the perfect theme song for the Knight for School Board 2006 campaign.

So here it is, courtesy of YouTube: the music video of "White and Nerdy" from the Straight Outta Lynwood album by "Weird Al" Yankovic...

Friday, November 10, 2006

Home again: My campaign yard signs

I've been busy the past few days going around the county and picking up my campaign's yard signs. It's been a lot of work but I feel compelled to do it for two reasons: one, as an Eagle Scout I hold to the Boy Scout camping maxim of "leave it as you found it". Secondly, and most important to me personally: I love my yard sign! It's my first ever political sign so there's that "firstborn" thing going for it. A lot of people - including me - thought the little knight chesspiece logo was really cute: I might just have to "adopt" it as my personal lil' emblem. And call me crazy, but I'm really proud of my signs: they stood in pouring rain and blazing sunlight for weeks on end and faithfully served their purpose. I feel like I owe them a debt of gratitude. And who knows: a couple years from now I might be recalling them back into service.

Well anyway, it's important to me that I try and collect every one that was deployed out there. Most of them are now back in my possession and accounted for. I'm going to be headed out later this weekend to get some more. Sadly, more than a few have disappeared: I might get lucky and find some at the county DOT headquarters. But I fear that most of the missing have vanished like so many Argentinian dissidents. I found one poor sign shredded to bits along the side of Highway 14 near the Caswell County line. Very curiously, a lot of my signs - especially in the Eden area - were nowhere to be found when I went for them, even though the signs of several other candidates were still in the nearby vicinity. Because of that and some other things, I'm now reasonably sure that many of the signs were deliberately stolen... and not for sake of having them for souvenirs either.

I'm going to give it a few more days and see how many more turn up. And then, I've something special planned in memory of those missing in action. Tune in Monday or so to see what it is :-)

Jack Palance dies at age 87

Darn. First Basil Poledouris, then Ed Bradley. Now this. Guess bad news really does come in threes. Jack Palance definitely lived a full life: who'll ever forget his doing those push-ups at the 1992 Academy Awards?

"Believe it... or not."

Godspeed Mr. Palance: you were one of the greats.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

SPIDER-MAN 3 trailer is here!

'Nuff said...

This movie is gonna ROCK!!!

I have an idea

That's all I can really say for now. It hit me about 10 this morning. I've talked it over with one other person, and the response was pretty enthusiastic about it.

This election may have yielded something truly remarkable. It would definitely be worth trying, at least...

Basil Poledouris has died

Basil Poledouris - one of the greatest composers of this generation, especially of scores for film and television - has died of cancer. He was 61: way too young if you ask me.

Two things that this man did stand out in my mind right now: the score that he did for the mini-series Lonesome Dove, which was nothing short of magnificent. And the music for Conan the Barbarian: without question one of the greatest movie soundtracks of all time. I think my favorite tracks from Lonesome Dove were the theme, and that one you hear when Gus and Lippy are riding away from the saloon with the two pigs following after the wagon... I loved that track! And as for Conan the Barbarian, well, everything about that score resonates on some kind of primal level. "Prologue/Anvil of Crom" is something that I've told Dad he needs to have playing in his knife shop whenever he's using the forge to heat up his blades. "Riders of Doom" and "Battle of the Mounds" I like for similar reasons, but that quieter part from "Battle..." when Conan is praying is especially good. Whenever I find myself locked in some kind of torturously slow task the "Wheel of Pain" track always winds up playing in my head. But my absolute favorite track from Conan the Barbarian has got to be "Atlantean Sword": the one that plays when Conan falls into the tomb of the ancient Atlantean general and finds the sword that he uses for the rest of the movie. The music in that scene evokes dreams of antiquity beyond reckoning. It's the kind of music that almost makes historians and archaeologists weak in the knees. Poledouris did the music for quite a few other films, including The Hunt for Red October and Robocop. And if Paul Verhoeven had ever been able to make Crusade with Ah-nuldt Schwarzenegger, I always thought that Poledouris would be the one to score that, too.

Well, it's sad that he's left us. I might have to put Conan the Barbarian in the DVD player sometime this weekend, and raise a toast to his memory.

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

ELECTION - THE DAY AFTER: 11:11 PM EST

This is probably the last post I do with the "ELECTION..." format that's been used since early yesterday morning. There'll still be some thoughts posted here in the next couple of days, but now's a good time to wrap-up the "live commentary" that I've had going for the past almost-48 hours now. In the next little while I'm probably going to finally unwrap the Police Squad! DVD that I got today and watch it a little, before going to bed.

I still can't believe how good I'm feeling tonight. The news came a little over 24 hours ago that I hadn't won a seat... but I've still got the most wonderful sense of euphoria at how good I did do. By the way, I didn't realize it until earlier this evening but I came within 813 votes of landing a seat, and only 117 votes less than Jon Mason, who came in seventh place. Considering the intense voter turnout - despite the rain and cold we had all day yesterday - this was a very close race for the most part. You can view the final election results here.

Okay, time for me to go and unwind a little before hitting the sack. I've got to be at work tomorrow morning at 7, but Thursdays are usually pretty laid-back at the station. I'll have time to compose more thoughts during the day tomorrow.

This is your live Rockingham County Board of Education election day coverage from the perspective of candidate Christopher Knight, signing off... :-)

ELECTION - THE DAY AFTER: 10:04 PM EST

Well, I guess he does have a tumor after all.

WOW!! Now that was a cliffhanger! Excellent episode... even if ABC did break in with that crap about the Virginia U.S. Senate race. Look, so far as I'm concerned Kate's story was a LOT more important than whether Allen or Webb won: they're both more fake than anything Lost has given us. Can't wait 'til February, when we see what happens next.

EDIT 10:13 PM EST: Let me rephrase something I wrote a little while ago: Lost is FAR more believable than ANYTHING regarding either the Democrats or the Republicans.