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1 posted on 11/30/2004 10:49:18 AM PST by new cruelty
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To: new cruelty

Imus's ranch is a house of cards.


2 posted on 11/30/2004 10:50:38 AM PST by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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To: new cruelty

3 posted on 11/30/2004 10:50:52 AM PST by raccoonradio (Raccoon News Channel: Fur and Balanced)
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To: new cruelty

Don Imus is a clown and anyone who has anything to do with him is not all there.


5 posted on 11/30/2004 10:52:19 AM PST by Reagan Man ("America has spoken")
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To: McGruff; leadpenny

I thought he said she had an actual gun, but perhaps I do not recall it correctly.


6 posted on 11/30/2004 10:52:36 AM PST by Bahbah
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To: new cruelty

Imus is a nut. I can't believe that anybody takes him seriously.


7 posted on 11/30/2004 10:52:50 AM PST by Kenton ("Life is tough, and it's really tough when you're stupid" - Damon Runyon)
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To: new cruelty
"according to its mission statement, the "sole purpose" of the so-called Imus Ranch is "to provide the experience of the great American cowboy" to seriously ill boys and girls and children who have lost siblings to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome"

LOL! Right! It's a vacation/retirement place for the I Man!

8 posted on 11/30/2004 10:53:15 AM PST by The G Man (Laura Ingraham: "Where the camera at?")
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To: new cruelty

Imus and co. way over reacted, but... WHY does a 22 year old woman carry around a cap gun?

Hm... Perhaps an anti-mugging device.

Nevermind, epiphany intervention.

APf


11 posted on 11/30/2004 10:54:43 AM PST by APFel (Humanity has a poor track record of predicting its own future.)
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To: new cruelty
I supposed he'd have a meltdown over my little Derringer keychain that has a one-inch long "switchblade" in it.

What a wimp.

12 posted on 11/30/2004 10:54:56 AM PST by Ladysmith (Wisconsin Hunter Shootings: If you want on/off the WI Hunters ping list, please let me know.)
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To: new cruelty

i never understood why people listen to anus.


13 posted on 11/30/2004 10:55:41 AM PST by ken21 (against the democrat plantation.)
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To: new cruelty

He may be an idiot and his wife a clueless fool obsessed with demonizing guns, but they also have the right to fire a nanny who doesn't demonstrate the values they espouse. It is their house, and she works for them and follows their directions.


21 posted on 11/30/2004 10:59:36 AM PST by Diddle E. Squat
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To: new cruelty

I wish I had the Dosh for a four HUNDRED acre ranch, never mind four THOUSAND.


24 posted on 11/30/2004 11:01:44 AM PST by Little Pig (Is it time for "Cowboys and Muslims" yet?)
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To: new cruelty

It's about time the IRS took a look at this guy's scam. It appeared most of the cost of the ranch was taken care of by big business in return for him not bad-mouthing them. He takes a few kids down there during the summer and the rest of the year he marvels at his ranch. He's a phoney.


26 posted on 11/30/2004 11:02:39 AM PST by KenmcG414
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To: new cruelty
Mallette was escorted off the property at 4:15 AM

Like he HAAAD to fire her at 4;15am????WTF?

He could have done that in the light of day!

30 posted on 11/30/2004 11:03:59 AM PST by MadelineZapeezda (If you right click on Keith Olberman's image, the word a$$hole should come up!)
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To: new cruelty

She was at the ranch for approx. ten days around Thanksgiving. I would expect that no children would be at staying at the ranch around the occurence of a holiday that is generally spent with family.


31 posted on 11/30/2004 11:04:44 AM PST by Demian
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To: new cruelty

I recall him remarking on his show once that he fired 21 different nannys in a 12 or 18 month period-even the guys who work with him remarked that he must be the employer from hell.


40 posted on 11/30/2004 11:08:53 AM PST by Larry381 (Wanted: Country willing to import thousands of whining liberals-Will pay freight charges)
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To: new cruelty
Imus's five-year-old son

God, bless that child. Despite his environment, don't let him grow up stupid.

43 posted on 11/30/2004 11:11:27 AM PST by newgeezer (When encryption is outlawed, rwei qtjske ud alsx zkjwejruc.)
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To: new cruelty

I didn't realize that there was anyone left who didn't realize that the Imus Ranch is a boon-doggle to extort money from idiotic rich celebrities.


50 posted on 11/30/2004 11:18:24 AM PST by Antoninus (Santorum in '08)
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To: new cruelty
home

Trailblazers Deirdre & Don Imus

Every summer Deirdre, Wyatt, and Don Imus host groups of kids with cancer and other illnesses at their 4,000-acre Imus Ranch in New Mexico. Doing good works is something Don and Deirdre always had in common: Before they met, Don had hosted an annual radiothon to benefit the Tomorrows Children's Fund and the CJ Foundation for SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome). Deirdre was committed to the environment see Rules for a Healthy Home , a passion that eventually led her to start the Deirdre Imus Environmental Center for Pediatric Oncology—which replaces toxic cleaning products with green ones in hospitals, homes, and businesses across the country.

During June, July, and August groups of 10 kids stay for nine days at a time and spend the time doing chores and learning the basics of handling horses. The young ranchers might gather eggs, groom horses, mend a fence, or move stones. "They have a blast," says Erika Leeuwenburgh, who coordinates the child-life program at the Imus Ranch. "They work, but it's very fulfilling, and there are art projects every night and lots of raiding the refrigerator. It's a community experience in an incredibly beautiful, wide-open space that most of the kids are in awe of."

The roll-up-your-sleeves aspect of the ranch seems to be deeply beneficial. "This is not a place where kids get a pat on the head and are told 'everythings okay,'" says Jurist. "They are responding to the realness of it." Deirdre confirms this and adds: "Don and I run a very tight ship. We're very businesslike with these kids." (But after dinner and chores, Don will play hide-and-go-seek.)

Doing good works is something Don and Deirdre always had in common: Before they met, Don had hosted an annual radiothon to benefit the Tomorrows Childrens Fund and the CJ Foundation for SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome). Deirdre was committed to the environment, a passion that eventually led her to start the Deirdre Imus Environmental Center for Pediatric Oncology—which replaces toxic cleaning products with green ones in hospitals, homes, and businesses across the country.


Clockwise from top left: one of the longhorn cows on the vegetarian ranch; a roping lesson; riding with Charly and Gibson, the ranch's dogs; harvesting veggies in the greenhouse.

The idea for the Imus Ranch began to take shape in early 1998 after Don brought Deirdre out to the ranch in northern Arizona where he had grown up. Deirdre recalls: "My husband says, Those were the best days of my life. We were working hard, and we had all these chores to do every day. We had a tremendous sense of purpose and responsibility.'"

That sense of purpose, they thought, was in marked contrast to what they noticed about the kids they met during the radiothons, many of whom seemed to have low self-esteem and little self-confidence. "I remember the day it came together," Deirdre writes of the ranch in her forthcoming cookbook, The Imus Ranch: Cooking for Kids and Cowboys , which will be in stores next month. "Don was in his office preparing for an interview. I was pregnant with Wyatt and working out on a treadmill. Suddenly, Don burst in, yelling, 'I've got it!' If you know Don, you know he's not the type to get terribly worked up over things."

The couple put up about $1.5 million of their own money for the land, and private and corporate sponsors joined in with $25 million. Listeners who gave $5,000 got their names etched in stone tablets in the foyer of the ranchs adobe hacienda, the jewel in an eco-friendly compound in which a barn, general store, and "saloon" are built of wood that's recycled or salvaged. The main house is insulated with bales of straw. "It's the most efficient way to save energy," notes Deirdre. "It's naturally fire-resistant, it doesn't allow air between the walls, and it's totally nontoxic."

The air in the hacienda is UV-filtered, eliminating 99 percent of germs, and the pool water is purified through solar-powered pods, drastically reducing the amount of chlorine needed. Playful features are as important to the design as technological advances: There's a dance hall with a jukebox and a pool table, for instance, and the general store is where the kids get outfitted in jeans, silver-buckled belts, boots, and cowboy hats. A medical infirmary was designed to look like a saloon; it has a genuine 1860s bar and swinging doors. Hospital rooms were "decorated to look like a bordello," Deirdre says, chuckling.


53 posted on 11/30/2004 11:20:03 AM PST by ppaul
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To: new cruelty
(according to its mission statement, the "sole purpose" of the so-called Imus Ranch is "to provide the experience of the great American cowboy" to seriously ill boys and girls and children who have lost siblings to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.)

I don't think so. It has a fully equipped radio broadcast studio. It houses Imus and his 'family.' Obviously they will remain there. The kids are there some of the time not all of the time, and then only 8 or so children.

I have never understood why the siblings of children who have died from SIDS need this.

You can probably tell by my tone that I view this whole enterprise in a suspicious light. I wonder how the donors were taken in by this fool and his wierd wife, Dierdre?

56 posted on 11/30/2004 11:22:58 AM PST by Banjoguy ("The business of the Church is business"......)
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To: new cruelty
Last I heard, Imus entertains about 100 kids a year at a cost of about $1.5 million. That is $15,000 per kid, or about $2,500 per kid per day for a six day week. It is just a matter of time before contributors get wind of the scam and the so-called ranch goes to auction or whatever happens to charitable property when the suckers wise up.

I think the ranch used to hire Fred Imus and several of the cousins and nephews. Imus doesn't talk about that anymore. Do you think the IRS had anything to say about that?
65 posted on 11/30/2004 11:32:26 AM PST by Final Authority
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