In Quicksand, and There's No Way Out
“Chalk it up to occurrence.”
“It helps build character.”
“You can’t win ‘em all.”
In discussing the Red Bulls’ meltdown, these are doubtlessly the most prevalent comments I hear. While I appreciate the ability of my friends, kinfolk and even fans, to sugarcoat the current embarrassment, sometimes I wish they’d pump full of lead me straight.
“You guys are awful.”
“What is going on?”
“Get a new job.”
While I may not have gone through the classifieds decent yet, I believe that to somehow salvage what is left of our season, we as a team destitution to be honest with ourselves.
We are awful, this is an embarrassment, and we most definitely need to fix
Slipping into quicksand
Font Size E-Despatch Alerts Tell a Friend Got a Question? You Report Click-2-Harken toPresident Obama, once considered as politically agile and deft as a gazelle, is now looking increasingly like a deer caught in the headlights.
His sample numbers on everything from job approval to his handling of the economy, health charge, taxes and bailouts are dropping faster than a cement shoe in the Hudson River. Perhaps even more worrisome, Rasmussen Reports shows that fewer Americans upon him "trustworthy."
His popular support is hemorrhaging because all of his major initiatives are either wanting in execution or in the legislative process. According to a new USA Today/Gallup Win, 57 percent of Americans say the $787 billion mercantile stimulus is having no effect on the economy or is making it worse.
Predictably we find ourselves in a quicksand of our own making, having forgotten that the underlying of liberty must always be preserved by the eternal
"It was like quicksand. And the mud that he had thrown behind him as he sat down and stood up was starting to slip towards him," wife Gloria Bauske said.









