Welcome to ...

The place where the world comes together in honesty and mirth.
Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.


Saturday, September 20, 2008

Cockpit recorder recovered in fatal SC jet crash

Investigators say they've recovered the cockpit voice recorder from a fiery South Carolina jet crash that killed four and critically injured former Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker and celebrity DJ AM.

National Transportation Safety Board member Debbie Hersman said Saturday that the recorder has yet to be analyzed. She says authorities investigating the crash at Columbia Metropolitan Airport have yet to rule anything out for causing the crash, but the plane took off in clear weather.

The Learjet overshot the runway, and hurtled across a five-lane road shortly before midnight Friday.

Barker and DJ AM, whose real name is Adam Goldstein, were in critical but stable condition at a burn center in Georgia. The pilot, co-pilot and two passengers died.

*****

Heard about this as it happened from my son who lives near the airport.

Malaysia frees blogger held for suspected

Malaysian police on Saturday freed a prominent political blogger who was arrested for suspected sedition after he launched an online protest against Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's embattled government.

The case underscores the government's struggle to tackle increasing public dissent amid a threat by the opposition to topple Abdullah's administration through parliamentary defections.

The blogger, Syed Azidi Syed Aziz, drew the government's ire last month when he posted a picture of Malaysia's national flag upside down on his popular blog and urged other Internet bloggers to follow suit to protest the country's political and economic problems.

Authorities arrested Syed Azidi on Wednesday, saying he was being investigated for sedition, which is punishable by up to three years in prison.

Syed Azidi said in a statement posted on his "Kickdefella" blog that he was released Saturday. He said police treated him "well and most of the time, beyond the call of duty."

Police officials familiar with Syed Azidi's case could not immediately be contacted, and it was not clear whether he would face formal charges later.

Ahead of Syed Azidi's arrest, authorities detained another political blogger, an opposition lawmaker and a journalist last week under a separate law that allows detention without trial.

The politician and the journalist have since been freed following a public outcry, including by the law minister, who resigned in protest.

Public pressure on the government mounted Saturday as the Malaysian Bar, the main lawyers' group, held an emergency meeting to denounce the arrests under the Internal Security Act, which is used against suspects deemed to be threats to national security.

The lawyers issued a resolution calling for the Internal Security Act to be abolished and for the government "to immediately and unconditionally release all persons presently detained without trial." Activists estimate there are about 60 such detainees.

___

Syed Azidi's blog: http://kickdefella.wordpress.com/

As the fortune cookie crumbles

Went out for Chinese this evening and got doubly blessed by Buddha!
Two fourtunes in my fortune cookie:

You have the potential and the ability to accomplish great things.
and
You will have a change for a better job or status shortly.

Now, how cool is that ...

Flooding in Thailand kills 14, sickens over 53,000

Floods in Thailand have killed 14 people and sickened more than 53,000 others, including many who contracted waterborne ailments after wading through floodwaters, the government said Saturday.

The 14 people were swept away by flash floods that hit 36 of Thailand's 76 provinces over the past nine days, the Ministry of Public Health said.

It warned residents that floodwaters were full of parasitic leeches, human waste and bacteria that can cause skin infections and fungus.

The ministry said 53,946 people were sickened, with 35 percent suffering from skin funguses and 27 percent from cold and respiratory problems. Others suffered from diarrhea, it said.

"We urge that people travel through flooded areas by boat or wear long pants tied at the feet with plastic bags if they must wade through flood water," Prat Boonyawongwiroj, permanent secretary for public health, said in a statement.

Officials were calculating the damage from the floods, which destroyed farmland and inundated villages, the Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Center said.

Heavy downpours in northern and northeastern Thailand at the height of the rainy season caused rivers to swell, Water Resources Department Director-General Siripong Hungspreuk said.

Damage to collider forces 2-month halt

The European Organization for Nuclear Research says its new particle collider has been damaged worse than previously thought and will be out of commission for at least two months.

On Thursday, the organization said the collider - the world's largest - malfunctioned within hours of its launch to great fanfare, but its operator didn't report the problem for a week.

Spokesman James Gillies says experts have gone into the Large Hadron Collider to examine the damage.

Gillies said Saturday the part that was damaged will have to be warmed up well above absolute zero so that repairs can be made. He said that will require having to shut off the new particle collider do to the repairs.

*****

I guess that means we have two months to wait to see that Black Hole the thing is 'supposed' to create then.

Earthquake sets off buried WWII bomb

Austrian authorities say a small earthquake set off a large World War II-era bomb in the garden of a Vienna home.
No one was injured in the explosion.

Investigators think the bomb weighed up to half a ton. It lay buried for decades in the garden, and no one knew it was there.

But when a minor quake shook parts of the Austrian capital, the bomb exploded.

Officials say the homeowner heard a dull bang Friday evening and went outside to see what happened.

Experts were still on the scene Saturday to examine the crater left by the blast.

All for the love of Labs

Moving pets is a job, let me tell you.
I spent the better part of today taking down and re-erecting a kennel for my Labs and moving them.

I am tired.

Friday, September 19, 2008

Palin Lies - Numbers Don't

Sarah Palin by the Numbers
Sarah Palin may lie, but numbers don't

by Dan Kurtzman

Excerpt:


2007: the year in which Sarah Palin first obtained a passport

312: the number of nights during her first 19 months in office that Palin charged taxpayers
a "per diem" totaling $16,951 for staying in her own home -- an allowance intended to
cover meals and incidental expenses while traveling on state business

$500 to $1,200: the fee that Wasilla charged rape victims to pay for post-sexual assault
medical exams, after the city cut funds during Palin's tenure that had previously covered the exams

$150: the cash payment offered by the Palin administration to hunters
who turn in legs of freshly killed wolves gunned down from airplanes

Obama and the Forty-Year-Old Virgin

Obama and the 40-Year-Old Virgin
by Joe Conason

Excerpt:
Regrettably but predictably, the success of Obama has revived traditional knee-jerk racism
on the American far right – and the latest examples are more blatant than latent.

In Michigan, right-wing operatives are seeking to aggravate white Democrats by linking Obama
to Kwame Kilpatrick, the mayor of Detroit who leaves office today in a deal with prosecutors.
A brief clip of Obama praising Kilpatrick last year, long before his indictment, is the centerpiece
of an inflammatory ad appearing on cable channels in Macomb County outside Detroit, where
white Democratic voters reside who may be susceptible to such appeals to prejudice.

Behind the ad is "Freedom’s Defense Fund", a Washington-based PAC that is actually the
front for a group of Republican consultants affiliated with an outfit called BMW Direct Inc.
They specialize in racial politics, having put together a dubious “Black Republican PAC”
that deploys African-Americans to attack Democrats.

Plants make aspirin-like chemical

When plants are stressed out, they generate aspirin-like chemicals. The aspirin isn't used to reduce headaches, primarily because plants don't have heads. Scientists from the National Center for Atmospheric Research detected significant quantities of methyl salicyate, a chemical form of aspirin, above a forest canopy. The capability of plants to emit the chemical had been known previously but only observed in a laboratory setting. From a press release:
(Lead researcher Thomas) Karl and his colleagues speculate that the methyl salicylate has two functions. One of these is to stimulate plants to begin a process known as systemic acquired resistance, which is analogous to an immune response in an animal. This helps a plant to both resist and recover from disease.

The methyl salicylate also may be a mechanism whereby a stressed plant communicates to neighboring plants, warning them of the threat. Researchers in laboratories have demonstrated that a plant may build up its defenses if it is linked in some way to another plant that is emitting the chemical. Now that the NCAR team has demonstrated that methyl salicylate can build up in the atmosphere above a stressed forest, scientists are speculating that plants may use the chemical to activate an ecosystem-wide immune response...

The discovery raises the possibility that farmers, forest managers, and others may eventually be able to start monitoring plants for early signs of a disease, an insect infestation, or other types of stress. At present, they often do not know if an ecosystem is unhealthy until there are visible indicators, such as dead leaves.

"A chemical signal is a very sensitive way to detect plant stress, and it can be an order of magnitude more effective than using visual inspections," Karl says.

Ike helps uncover mystery vessel on Alabama coast

When the waves from Hurricane Ike receded, they left behind a mystery - a ragged shipwreck that archaeologists say could be a two-masted Civil War schooner that ran aground in 1862 or another ship from some 70 years later.

The wreck, about six miles from Fort Morgan, had already been partially uncovered when Hurricane Camille cleared away sand in 1969.
Researchers at the time identified it as the Monticello, a battleship that partially burned when it crashed trying to get past the U.S. Navy and into Mobile Bay during the Civil War.

After examining photos of the wreck post-Ike, Museum of Mobile marine archaeologist Shea McLean agreed it is likely the Monticello, which ran aground in 1862 after sailing from Havana, according to Navy records.
"Based on what we know of ships lost in that area and what I've seen, the Monticello is by far the most likely candidate," McLean said. "You can never be 100 percent certain unless you find the bell with 'Monticello' on it, but this definitely fits."

Other clues indicate it could be an early 20th century schooner that ran aground on the Alabama coast in 1933.
The wrecked ship is 136.9 feet long and 25 feet wide, according to Mike Bailey, site curator at Fort Morgan, who examined it this week.

The Monticello was listed in shipping records as 136 feet long, McLean told the Press-Register of Mobile.

But Bailey said a 2000 report by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers determined the remains were the schooner Rachel, built at Moss Point, Miss., in 1919 and wrecked near Fort Morgan in 1933.
He said the wreckage appears to have components, such as steel cables, that would point to the Rachel rather than an 1860s schooner.

Glenn Forest, another archaeologist who examined the wreck, said a full identification would require an excavation.
"It's a valuable artifact," he said. "They need to get this thing inside before it falls apart or another storm comes along and sends it through those houses there like a bowling ball."

Meanwhile, curious beach-goers have been drawn to the remains of the wooden hull filled with rusted iron fittings.

Fort Morgan was used by Confederate soldiers as Union forces attacked in 1864 during the Battle of Mobile Bay.

"It's interesting, I can tell you that," said Terri Williams. "I've lived down here most of my life and I've never seen anything like this, and it's been right here."

Carter had a powerful energy idea

Jay Hakes
Sunday, April 22, 2007


Thirty years ago this month, a solemn Jimmy Carter sat behind the historic Resolute desk in the Oval Office to announce to a prime-time national television audience his new comprehensive energy plan. In the most memorable line of the evening, the president declared the challenge of energy "the moral equivalent of war."

The Carter energy strategy was both praised for its ambition (the written version had 113 parts) and derided for its interventionism -- critics tried to brand it with the acronym MEOW.

Contrary to common mythology, Carter was far from a lonely voice calling for strenuous action. After the Arab oil embargo of 1973-74, both of his predecessors, Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, called energy the nation's top priority and set an ambitious goal for "energy independence" (eliminating reliance on foreign oil by 1980, no less).

New Speaker Thomas "Tip" O'Neill, D-Mass., gave energy such high priority that he immediately took the unprecedented step of establishing an omnibus committee headed by Rep. Thomas "Lud" Ashley, D-Ohio, to shepherd the complex Carter plan quickly through the House. Congress scuttled Carter's recommended gasoline tax, and a bitter divide over natural gas deregulation in the Senate stalled the whole energy package for a year and a half. But with considerable support on both sides of the aisle, most of his plan did become law.

Similarly, when the Iranian revolution led to another severe oil shortage in 1979, Carter took the politically dangerous step of starting to decontrol crude oil prices by executive order and produced a flurry of energy bills, many of which also won eventual congressional approval.

Calls for energy independence continue to reverberate through the energy debates of today. On the whole, however, the rhetoric of that earlier era creates considerable dissonance for the modern ear.

In his address of April 18, 1977, Carter used the word "sacrifice" (or "sacrifices") eight times and argued: "Conservation is the quickest, cheapest, most practical source of energy." He repeatedly decried the "waste" of scarce fuels. Moreover, energy plans in the 1970s set bold goals and put meat on the bones to achieve them. Nixon, Ford and Carter called for sharp drops in oil imports and Carter set a goal of obtaining a fifth of America's needs from renewable energy by the turn of the century. Ford and Congress set strict standards for automobile fuel efficiency to offset high-priced foreign oil.

To help displace fossil fuels, Carter and Congress established generous tax incentives for solar energy and gasohol -- now called ethanol. U.S. use of renewables remains at 6 percent, the same as when Carter took office, but the European Union last month raised eyebrows by calling for the same 20 percent goal for renewables by 2020.

Since oil imports have risen from 9 million barrels a day in 1977 to the current level of 12 million, there has been a tendency to view the efforts of Carter and others to cut reliance on oil from unstable sources as quixotic. But a closer look at the data shows otherwise.

By the time Carter left office, imports had dropped to 7 million barrels a day. Within a few years, they fell to 5 million. The plunge was the result of higher oil prices, a weak economy, the Alaska oil pipeline and new federal policies such as the auto efficiency standards. The slide in oil imports defanged the grip of oil-exporting countries on the world market and helped achieve considerable independence from foreign suppliers.

Since then, the trend of oil imports, rather than a straight line upward, has been a hockey stick. Foreign deliveries dropped sharply and then (after earlier supply and conservation efforts were largely abandoned) started a new upward trajectory, allowing OPEC to again seize control of the market early in 2000.

The largely unremembered "victory" in the war on imported oil was temporary. It is still worth noting, however, in an age when many think that making dramatic cuts in the security risks of dependence on Persian Gulf oil or in greenhouse gases resulting from the combustion of fossil fuels is just too difficult.

It remains to be seen whether America has the appetite for a new moral equivalent of war to deal with oil imports and climate change. But the lesson of the successes in the earlier war is that we shouldn't operate under the delusion that efforts to deal with these great challenges -- which are indeed daunting -- have to prove fruitless.

Jay Hakes, head of the Energy Information Administration from 1993 to 2000, is director of the Carter Presidential Library.

Unknown Mozart fragment found in French library

Though I am not the biggest Mozart fan out there this is exciting ...

It's a forgotten melody, sketched in black ink in a swift but sure hand.
The single manuscript page, long hidden in a provincial French library, has been verified as the work of Mozart, the apparent underpinnings for a Mass he never composed.

The previously undocumented music fragment gives insight into Mozart's evolving composition style and provides a clue about the role religion may have played for the composer as his life neared its turbulent end, one prominent Mozart expert says.

A library in Nantes, western France, has had the fragment in its collection since the 19th century, but it had never been authenticated until now, partly because it does not bear Mozart's signature.

Ulrich Leisinger, head of research at the International Mozarteum Foundation in Salzburg, Austria, said Thursday that there is no doubt that the single sheet, the top third of which has been cut off, was written by the composer.
"His handwriting is absolutely clearly identifiable," he added. "There's no doubt that this is an original piece handwritten by Mozart."Leisinger said the work had been "entirely forgotten."

Such a find is rare: The last time unknown music in Mozart's handwriting came to light was in 1996, when a portion of an aria was sold at Christie's, Leisinger said.
The library does not plan to sell, but if it did, the single sheet would likely be worth around $100,000, the expert said.

In all, only about 100 such examples of musical drafts by Mozart are known.
There have been up to 10 Mozart discoveries of such importance over the past 50 years, Leisinger said.
The sheet was bequeathed to Nantes' library by a collector in the 19th century, along with one letter from Mozart as well as one from his father.
Both the letters were published in Mozart's complete correspondence, said Agnes Marcetteau, director of Nantes' municipal library.
In an annotation dated Aug. 18, 1839, Aloys Fuchs, a well-respected autograph hunter who collected works from more than 1,500 musicians, authenticated that the handwriting was that of "W.A. Mozart."
But strangely, the work never attracted much attention, partly because it did not bear Mozart's signature and partly because the catalog notation about it was extremely brief and bland, Leisinger said.

The library contacted Leisinger to authenticate the work last year.

Some of the first part of the fragment is in D minor, while the second is in D major and marked "Credo" - a major clue that the work is a sketch for a Mass, which typically includes such a movement, said Robert D. Levin, a professor at Harvard University who is well-known for completing unfinished works by Mozart.

Circumstantial evidence, including the type of paper, suggests Mozart did not write the material before 1787, said Leisinger.
Mozart died in 1791 at the age of 35.
"What this sketch leaf confirms in a most vivid way is Mozart's true interest in writing church music toward the end of his life," Levin said.
Mozart had planned to become the choir and music director of Vienna's main cathedral, although he died before he could take up the post.
But because Mozart had become a Freemason, some have questioned the sincerity of his interest in religious composition at that period of his life, Leisinger said.
Mozart's famous Requiem, unfinished at his death, was commissioned by a mysterious benefactor.

But the rediscovered fragment likely stemmed from inspiration alone and suggests "to a certain degree that being a Freemason and a Roman Catholic was not a real contradiction" in Mozart's eyes, Leisinger said.

For anyone who wants to try sight-reading the fragment, a bit of detective work is required. Musicians must work out the key signature and clef based on other clues in the music. The tempo is also mysterious.
And there is no orchestration.
"It's a melody sketch, so what's missing is the harmony and the instrumentation, but you can make sense out of it," Leisinger said. "The tune is complete."

Philip Gossett, a music historian and a professor in music at the University of Chicago, urged caution about interpreting the fragment.
"It is certainly not something that can just be scored up and played as Mozart's," he said.
Nonetheless, modern-day composers are going to take a crack at an orchestration.
And in January of next year, the Nantes library says, Mozart's 18th century Mass is expected to have its first performance.

Green Living Guidelines


Defining Green

Good news for you, Kermit: It's not that hard being green anymore. Products claiming green status seem to be popping up all over, and support for the concept has almost become a given. In fact, the only hard part now is pinning down exactly what it means to be green.

Joyce Mason, vice-president of marketing for California's Pardee Homes, has an answer. The company built its first Energy Star home in 1998 and has built 3,000 energy-efficient houses with environmentally friendly materials since 2001. Here's this residential builder's definition of green:

  • Minimizes the use of nonrenewable energy, water, and other natural resources.
  • Provides a house with a healthy indoor environment built in a community with a healthy outdoor environment.
  • Uses products that reduce harmful effects on the environment.
  • Controls house size.
  • Designs appropriately for the climate zone.
  • Treats a house as a system of interrelated components.

The company matches products with these principles in four categories (more to follow on each):

  • Energy smart
  • Earth smart
  • Health smart
  • Water smart

Energy-Smart Products

Many products that reduce harmful effects on the environment are on the market now. Often they are simple and inexpensive, offering green benefits whether you're planning to build or remodel. Others are practical only when the cost can be incorporated into a mortgage; this way the upfront cost can be spread over time and made up for in savings on your monthly utility bill. Here's a short list.

  • Programmable thermostat
  • Compact fluorescent lighting
  • Adequate insulation and home sealing
  • Energy Star appliances
  • Energy-saving home electronics
  • Solar water heater
  • Tankless water heater
  • Energy-efficient windows and doors
  • High-efficiency heating and cooling
  • Photovoltaic solar cells
Earth-Smart Materials

Minimizing the use of nonrenewable resources usually involves the intentional selection of alternative materials in building and remodeling. This is partly behind the upsurge in the popularity of bamboo flooring, for example. Such products have to be attractive, durable, and reasonably priced to attract attention -- and many companies are working to provide these products. Here are some other examples.

  • Engineered structural wood products are manufactured from fast-growing trees and recycled wood chips, thus helping to safeguard old-growth forests.
  • Rapidly renewing wood flooring also protects old-growth forests. Examples include lyptus (a fast-growing eucalyptus that looks like cherry or mahogany), cork, and bamboo.
  • Recycled content carpet, commonly known as "pop bottle carpet," uses plastic and recovered textiles and is more resilient and colorfast than conventional carpet.
  • Cellulose attic insulation is made from recycled newspaper and sprayed in for superior sealing.
Health-Smart Approaches

One common concern for parents in recent years has been the effect of dust and residue from lead in paint. Radon has also been a big issue. Evidence of how important both of these home health issues has become is that disclosures are now typically required as part of any residential real estate transaction.

Creating and maintaining a healthy home environment is obviously important for anyone with allergies or heightened sensitivity to noxious odors or pollutants. But today's consumers are becoming more attuned to these issues regardless of special needs, and that's a good thing for everyone. Consider these highly effective product solutions for a healthy home.

  • Low- or no-VOC (volatile organic compounds) paints
  • Central dehumidification to reduce mold and mildew
  • Central air purification and ventilation systems
  • Central-vacuum system
  • Flooring that doesn't harbor dust
Water-Smart Products and Techniques

The main water issues in the home are purification and conservation. Great strides have been made in both areas in recent years. One of the more interesting advances is permeable pavement, which is especially effective at helping filter chemicals that leak from cars parked in the driveway. Here are more examples.

  • Drought-tolerant plants reduce the amount of time and money you'll spend on irrigation.
  • Xeriscaping challenges the assumption that grass should always be the dominant design element of a yard and lets the climate determine what makes the most sense.
  • Water-efficient appliances such as front-loading washing machines have attracted great consumer interest, and low-flow showerheads and toilets have been mandated by law.
  • Water purification devices that use carbon to remove contaminants and reverse osmosis systems are effective in the home.
  • Permeable pavement lets rainwater seep through, which reduces runoff and allows the soil underneath to act as a natural filter.

All in a day's work ...


Another day, another milestone.

All in a day's work.

Cafferty File



Do you think the repugicans are listening?!

Nah, me either!

Celebrate it today

It's International Talk Like A Pirate Day today, so don't forget to talk like a pirate today!

Some Ike victims may not be allowed to rebuild

Now if this isn't a fine kettle of fish!

Hundreds of people whose beachfront homes were wrecked by Hurricane Ike may be barred from rebuilding under a little-noticed Texas law.
And even those whose houses were spared could end up seeing them condemned by the state.

Now here's the saltwater in the wound: It could be a year before the state tells these homeowners what they may or may not do.
Worse, if these homeowners do lose their beachfront property, they may get nothing in compensation from the state.

The reason: A 1959 law known as the Texas Open Beaches Act. Under the law, the strip of beach between the average high-tide line and the average low-tide line is considered public property, and it is illegal to build anything there.

Over the years, the state has repeatedly invoked the law to seize houses in cases where a storm eroded a beach so badly that a home was suddenly sitting on public property.
The aftermath of Ike could see the biggest such use of the law in Texas history.

FEMA Says No to Ice For Hurricane Survivors

Hurricane survivors are being put at risk in Texas and other hot weather states because the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is no longer providing ice in relief situations, say watchdogs, relief workers and local leaders in Hurricane Alley.

"It's frustrating that the government can deliver $85 billion to bail out AIG, and they can't deliver ice in Texas," said Ben Smilowitz, executive director of the Disaster Accountability Project (DAP), a nonpartisan organization that monitors the nation's disaster response system.

*****

Just remember boys, when any catastrophe strikes (other than a large corporation or financial institution ran into the ground and the Fed rushes in to bailout the uber-wealthy) you're on your own!

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Imagine

4168 Brave men and women are gone ...



Imagine ~ John lennon

And I Quote

If it weren't for electricity we'd all be watching television by candlelight.

~ George Gobal.

Feed your head



Got any?

And I Quote

"Palin doesn't have any foreign policy credentials. You get a passport for the first time
in your life last year? I think it's a stretch to, in any way, to say that she's got the
experience to be president of the United States,"

~ Chuck Hagel, republican senator -
with a conscience?

Question of the Day

Why are the repugicans so full of hate?

McPain Advisor Helped cause Crash


Gramm de-regulated what they now say needs regulating


Excerpt:
As the news broke of the Lehman Brothers meltdown and the rest of the latest financial crisis,
John McCain, speaking at a campaign rally in Florida on Monday, angrily declared,
"We will never
put America in this position again. We will clean up Wall Street. This is a failure."
And in a statement, McCain called for greater "transparency and accountability" on Wall Street.

If McCain wants to hold someone accountable for the failure in transparency and accountability
that led to the current calamity, he should turn to his good friend and adviser, Phil Gramm.

As Mother Jones reported in June, eight years ago, Gramm, then a Republican senator chairing
the Senate banking committee, slipped a 262-page bill into a gargantuan, must-pass spending measure.
Gramm's legislation, written with the help of financial industry lobbyists, essentially removed
newfangled financial products called swaps from any regulation.

Confusing isn't it

"No, I don't. But that's not what she's running for.
Running a corporation is a different set of things."
I don't think John McCain could run a major corporation."

~ former Hewlett-Packard head, now top McPain official Carly Fiorina
when asked if Barbie or Gramps could run a big corporation like she did,

Damn, it is confusing when a repugican tells the truth ... it happens so rarely that Hen's Teeth are more common!

Remember to wear your lapel pin!


Remember all the hoopla and noise about wearing a Flag lapel pin to show you were a 'true' patriot?!

Well, the True patriots do!

Cyber Attack

Carolina Naturally must be getting under the skins of the repugicans because for the last two days this blog has been under cyber-attack by some wing-nut hackers.

They are losing their minds trying to stop the blogging, but I know more tricks than they and every stunt they pull I counter - sometimes before they finish their attempts at disrupting this blog.

This little ol'blog vexing them that are paranoid. Who would have thought?!

Hundreds of new spieces found on Great Barrier Reef

Marine scientists have discovered hundreds of new animal species on reefs in Australian waters, including brilliant soft corals and tiny crustaceans, according to findings released Thursday.

The creatures were found during expeditions run by the Australian chapter of CReefs, a global census of coral reefs that is one of several projects of the Census of Marine Life, an international effort to catalog all life in the oceans.

"People have been working at these places for a long time and still there are literally hundreds and hundreds of new species that no one has ever collected or described," said Julian Caley, a scientist from the Australian Institute of Marine Science who is helping to lead the research.

"So in that sense, it's very significant in that if we don't understand what biodiversity is out there, we don't have much of a chance of protecting it," he said.

Wales eco-village allowed to stay


wales ecovillage

For five happy years they enjoyed simple lives in their straw and mud huts.

Generating their own power and growing their own food, they strived for self-sufficiency and thrived in homes that looked more suited to the hobbits from The Lord of the Rings.

Then a survey plane chanced upon the ‘lost tribe’… and they were plunged into a decade-long battle with officialdom. […]

With green issues now getting a more sympathetic hearing, the commune has been given planning approval for its roundhouses along with lavatories, agricultural buildings and workshops.

Full Story: Daily Mail

Study Finds Possible Biological Basis for Political Positions

People who startle easily in response to threatening images or loud sounds seem to have a biological predisposition to adopt conservative political positions on many hot-button social issues, according to unusual new research being published today.

The finding — certain to stir debate in the middle of a presidential campaign — suggests that people who are particularly sensitive to signals of visual and auditory threats also tend to adopt a more defensive stance on political issues, from immigration and gun control to defense spending and patriotism. People who are less sensitive to potential threats, by contrast, seem predisposed to adopt more liberal positions on those issues.

RIAA wants to fine lawyer who defends file-sharers for blogging about it

From the Danger Room blog:
The Recording Industry Association of America is declaring attorney-blogger Ray Beckerman a "vexatious" litigator and is seeking unspecified monetary sanctions to punish him in his defense of a New York woman accused of making copyrighted music available on the Kazaa file sharing system.

The RIAA said Beckerman, one of the nation's few attorneys who defends accused file sharers, "has maintained an anti-recording industry blog during the course of this case and has consistently posted virtually every one of his baseless motions on his blog seeking to bolster his public relations campaign and embarrass plaintiffs," the RIAA wrote (.pdf) in court briefs. "Such vexatious conduct demeans the integrity of these judicial proceedings and warrants this imposition of sanctions."

Lory Lybeck, a Washington state defense attorney leading a proposed class-action lawsuit accusing the RIAA of allegedly engaging in "sham" litigation tactics, said the RIAA's motion comes from the same organization that has sued about 30,000 people over the last five years for file sharing, some of them falsely. It's the same organization, he said, that has sued dead people, the elderly and even children -- all while using unlicensed investigators.

Congratulations , Ray! First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. Victory is around the corner.

How SEC rule-exemptions led to the Wall Street collapse

Special exemptions from the SEC are in large part responsible for the huge build up in financial sector leverage over the past 4 years -- as well as the massive current unwind

Lee Pickard, former director, SEC trading and markets division, spits out the blunt truth: The current excess leverage now unwinding was the result of a purposeful SEC exemption given to five firms.

The events of the past year are not a mere accident, but are the results of a conscious and willful SEC decision to allow these firms to legally violate existing net capital rules that, in the past 30 years, had limited broker dealers debt-to-net capital ratio to 12-to-1. Instead, the 2004 exemption -- given only to 5 firms -- allowed them to leverage up 30 and even 40 to 1.

Who were the five that received this special exemption? You won't be surprised to learn that they were Goldman, Merrill, Lehman, Bear Stearns, and Morgan Stanley.

As Mr. Pickard points out that "The proof is in the pudding — three of the five broker-dealers have blown up."

Who owns America?

Want to know who owns America? Well, the following chart could give you a few clues!

Foreign owners of US Treasury Securities (April 2008)
Nation billions of dollars
Japan 592.2
China, Mainland 502
United Kingdom 251.4
Oil Exporters 153.9
Brazil 149.5
Carib Bnkng Cntrs 115.4
Luxembourg 84.8
Hong Kong 63.1
Russia 60.2
Norway 45.3
Germany 44
Taiwan 42.6
Switzerland 42.5
Korea 40.5
Mexico 38
Singapore 33.3
Turkey 31.1
Thailand 27.9
Canada 24
Ireland 18.5
Netherlands 15.5
Sweden 13.1
Egypt 12.7
Belgium 12.5
Poland 12.5
Italy 10.6
India 10.5
All Other 154.2
Grand Total 2601.8

Still think we own our own country?

New Interstate 35W bridge in Minneapolis opens

The new Interstate 35W bridge opened for traffic early Thursday, a little more than a year after the last one collapsed into the Mississippi River.

Traffic was heavy as a mix of cars, motorcycles, trucks and buses lined up to cross the new bridge, which reopens a major artery leading in and out of Minneapolis.

Many vehicles honked their horns and a few motorists waved flags as they made the first trip across the span.

The old bridge fell Aug. 1, 2007, killing 13 people and injuring 145 others.

The new $234 million bridge contains hundreds of sensors that will collect data.

The purpose of the "smart bridge" technology isn't to warn of another impending disaster; it's to detect small problems before they become big ones, said Alan Phipps, design manager for the project with Figg Engineering Group Inc. of Tallahassee, Fla.

*****

Let us hope the "smart bridge" thing really works.

Ode To Joy

You knew Beethoven was a rebel and an outsider in the music scene back in the day didn't you?
But did you know he was a Hard Rocker ?!

Check out Odin's Court performing Beethoven's 9th Symphony, 4th Movement, Finale aka Ode To Joy.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

NTSB says the train engineer didn't brake before collision

The engineer of a commuter train ran through a red light and never hit his brakes in the final moments before last week's fatal collision with an oncoming freight train, authorities said.

As they sort through the many possible reasons why, investigators also said Tuesday that engineer Robert Sanchez was working an 11 1/2-hour split shift at the time of the crash.

"Split schedules are something of great concern to us," said Kitty Higgins, a member of the National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating the crash. "But whether that played a role in the accident is much too early to say."

Sanchez, who was killed in the crash, began his shift at 6 a.m. Friday, took a nap during a 3 1/2-hour break and resumed duty at 2 p.m., officials said.

His train crashed about 2 1/2 hours later.

Twenty-five people were killed and more than 135 others injured.

AIG bailout upsets Republican lawmakers

You know it's bad when your own compatriots are questioning your sanity but that is exactly what is happening as republicans are saying 'WHOA, there Buddy!"
Key Republicans on Capitol Hill blasted the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve on Wednesday for orchestrating an $85 billion bailout of insurance giant American International Group, and the White House for not informing them of the plan.

Meanwhile, Democrats blamed the Bush administration for the financial crisis, while the White House pointed a finger at Congress.

The criticism came a day after lawmakers were surprised by the news that taxpayers would again be called on to shore up a member of the struggling financial sector.

"Once again the Fed has put the taxpayers on the hook for billions of dollars to bail out an institution that put greed ahead of responsibility and used their good name to take risky bets that did not pay off," said Sen. Jim Bunning, R-Kentucky, a member of the Senate Banking Committee.

A spokesman for Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama, the top Republican on the committee, said the senator "profoundly disagrees with the decision to use taxpayer dollars to bail out a private company" and is upset the government has sent an inconsistent message to the markets by bailing out AIG after it just refused to save investment bank Lehman Brothers from bankruptcy.

"The American taxpayer should not be asked to unwillingly assume the inordinate risks that financial experts knowingly undertook, particularly when taxpayer exposure is increased by the ad hoc manner in which these bailouts have been engineered," said Shelby's aide, Jonathan Graffeo.

Republican Rep. Roy Blunt of Missouri complained about not getting a heads-up about the bailout and said House Republicans are struggling to "understand a coherent strategy" about which firms get rescued and which ones don't.

*****

Oops, your slip is showing!

Gone but not forgotten

An American Chinook helicopter crashed early Thursday in southern Iraq, killing seven U.S. soldiers, the military said.

A U.S. statement said the CH-47 Chinook was landing after midnight about 60 miles west of Basra when the incident occurred.

A spokesman for the Multi-National Force-Iraq confirmed that the helicopter had crashed.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to provide details.

*****

That makes 4167 Brave men and women gone! Dead because of the cabal's greed!

NJ callers dialing state Democrats get sex chat offer instead

A misprint in a telephone book has led to some callers dialing a phone sex service while trying to reach a New Jersey political organization.

A listing for the Sussex County Democratic Committee in Embarq's white pages sent people to a sultry female voice inviting them to pay for sex chat.

Embarq spokesman Glenn Lewis said that a transposition error caused the last three digits of the Democrats' phone number to be misprinted.

He said the listing has been corrected in Embarq's directory assistance database.

The organization's 800 number listed in the book's yellow pages was correct.

*****

You want to lay odds the person who 'set' the type (OK, formatted the program) for the phone directory was a repugican.

Reality has reasserted itself

In a sign that John McPain's convention bounce has dissipated, Barack Obama has taken a 48 percent to 43 percent lead over his repugican rival among registered voters in the latest CBS News/New York Times poll.

Science News

Crows use causal reasoning

 Data Images Ns Cms Dn14745 Dn14745-1 250 The use of causal reasoning to solve problems was previously thought to be something only humans can do. But new research suggests that crows are capable of it too. University of Auckland cognitive scientist Alex Taylor and his colleagues devised an experiment to test New Caledonian crows' causal reasoning. Turns out, they were able to succeed where even chimps fail. I, for one, welcome our new feathered overlords.

It's the economy, stupid



The repugicans just don't get it.
"Fundamentally sound" my ass.

Hardball

Chris Matthews Lights up Eddie Cantor:



I see where Chris has stopped being a shrub apologist and has returned to being a reporter - good.

As of this moment ...

As of this moment ...

4160 Brave men and women are gone!

Dead because of the cabal's greed.

Support our Troops ... Bring them home now!

Livni: New Israeli Prime Minister

Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni won the Kadima Party's primary election for its leader Wednesday, TV exit polls said, putting her in a good position to become Israel's first female leader in 34 years and sending a message that peace talks with the Palestinians will proceed.

Cheers and applause broke out at party headquarters when Israel's three networks announced their exit polls gave Livni between 47 percent and 49 percent, compared to 37 percent for her closest rival, former defense minister and military chief Shaul Mofaz.

Livni needed 40 percent of the vote to avoid a runoff next week, and her supporters hugged each other and shed tears of joy.

"It's the beginning of a new period in Israeli politics," Moshe Conforti said amid the celebration.

If official results bear out the exit polls, as is likely, the 50-year-old Livni will replace Prime Minister Ehud Olmert as head of Kadima. Olmert, the target of a career-ending corruption probe, promised to step down as soon as a new Kadima leader was chosen.

*****

Who knows this might be the answer to a lot of questions in that part of the world.

Missing plane found - All dead

An intergovernmental agency says all four of those on board a plane that crashed in Mexico after taking off from Texas are dead.

The International Boundary and Water Commission said Wednesday that the dead included the leaders of its U.S. and Mexican branches.

The agency maintains the border between the two countries.

The plane had been missing since Monday, when it took off from El Paso to check out flooding on the Rio Grande.

The U.S. Border Patrol says it found the plane's wreckage Wednesday in a rugged section of the Sierra Madre Mountains in Mexico, about 20 miles northwest of Presidio.

Something's Queer Here

Damn, I must have learned to type a lot faster than I normally do because everything I have posted today I have done so in the same minute?!

That be queer?

Canadian firm reopens plant tied to tainted meat

The company Maple Leaf Foods said Wednesday it has reopened a processing plant that was shut down for nearly a month after it was linked to tainted meat that caused a bacteria outbreak that killed 17 people across Canada.

Maple Leaf Foods CEO Michael McCain said production has resumed under a phasing-in period and tests will be done before any food is released to the public.

All 191 meat products made at the Toronto facility were recalled.

Listeria bacterium was found deep inside slicing equipment used on processed meats such as bologna, turkey and ham.

None of the plant's production will be distributed until the Canadian Food Inspection Agency is confident new safety procedures in the facility are effective, McCain said.

He said the new safety measures include testing processed meats before shipping.

At least 17 deaths in Canada have been attributed to the listeria contamination at the plant.

Six more deaths are under investigation.

In all, 38 cases of listeriosis have been confirmed and 20 more are suspected.

Convictions reinstated against NY 'Mafia cops'

A federal appeals court has reinstated conspiracy convictions against two former New York Police Department detectives accused of moonlighting as hitmen for the mob.

Wednesday's ruling by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturns a lower-court decision to toss out the jury verdicts against Louis Eppolito and Stephen Caracappa.

A jury found that the two led double lives, working for the NYPD and Luchese crime family underboss Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso.

But U.S. District Judge Jack Weinstein in Brooklyn said when he threw out the convictions that the statute of limitations had passed.

The appeals court disagrees.

It restored the convictions and says the men can now be sentenced.

Long Live the New Union of Socialist Republicans

Welcome news comrades! We the People are now We the Owners. The People's Insurance Company, formerly known as AIG, was saved for the time being from the forces of capitalism by the new Union of Republican Socialists, formerly known as the GOP. Somewhere in the great beyond, the ghost of Karl Marx is grinning while the spirit of Adam Smith forks over the one dollar bet with an invisible hand:

Now that the People own a major insurance company, it's fair to ask how the People's Insurance Company, along with the People's Mortgage Companies and the People's Investment Banks, will benefit the People who Own them. Can we expect lower premiums, equity sharing, and corporate perks for our hundreds of billions of dollars? Should we start checking our mailbox for dividend checks? Who gets paid first, claimants, bondholders, stockholders, or we the new taxpayer owners? We the Owners, want to know, and the Union of Socialist Republicans better damn well tell us, fast.

Check Kos for the rest: Long Live the New Union of Socialist Republicans

It's a special birthday today ... did you know it?

Born on this day September 17th, in the year 1787 -
the United States Constitution.

US Constitution
Born 9 - 17 - 1787
Died 1 - 20 -2001
Aged 213 years 244 days 12 hours
R.I.P.

Let us celebrate it's birth 221 years ago and long life of the US Constitution as we lament it's recent passing

What to Kuwait and Idaho have in common?

What do Kuwait and Idaho have in common, you ask?
Sand, I answer.
What is so special about sand, you say?
It's radioactive, I say!

Read here how 6700 tons of radioactive Kuwaiti sand ended up in Idaho.

FDIC's insurance fund slips below mandated level

And the hosing continues ...

Banks are not the only ones struggling in the growing financial crisis. The fund established to insure their deposits is also feeling the pinch, and the taxpayer might be the lender of last resort.

Read the entire Columbus Dispatch article here.

Picklefest

200809170947.jpg Saturday September 20, 2008 is Picklefest 2008!

It isn't the oddest 'festival' I have ever heard of ... There is the 'Okra Strut' in Irmo, SC every year after all ... it did strike me as funny - what with the Gerkin pictured above.

Who knows it might be fun?

Find out more on LA's Picklefest 2008 here.

The Rise and Fall of the Fourth Reich

Now that the Fourth Reich is collapsing around us it might behoove you to read this from What Really Happened

Science News

Fish that glow red
Red Zones Above is a striking photo of a triplefin reef fluorescing red. According to new research, many reef animals glow red but that capacity is usually overlooked scientists because most of that wavelength of sunlight is absorbed out as you go more than 10 meters down into the ocean. As a result, most animals from that zone see blue and green best. But University of Tübingen evolution ecologist Nico Michiels and his colleagues suggest that the red-glowing fish carry an untold biological story about the spectrum of the sea.

From Science News:
Michiels noticed the red fluorescence in 2007 while diving with a mask that filtered out all but red wavelengths for another project. As he descended, the sun’s available red light dwindled quickly, leaving him in virtual darkness. Then he was startled to see the red fluorescent eyes of a fish, the red fin of another …. Since then, he and collaborators have found that 32 reef fishes sampled from 16 genera give off a red fluorescent glow. Substances on their bodies capture light at other wavelengths and release the energy as red light...

Most of the red-fluorescing fish are small and likely to have mates or neighbors close by, so red glows would make good short-range signals for courtship or other local business, Michiels suggests. The idea that seawater has rendered red ineffective “is a kind of dogma we are attacking,” he says. “I would hope that the whole light ecology of reefs is reconsidered.”

House Allows Gulf War POWs to Sue Iraq Over Torture

House Allows Gulf War POWs to Sue Iraq Over Torture
And the shrub and the rest of the cabal is fighting American POWs from his daddy's Gulf War

Former POWs and civilians who were tortured or held hostage during the 1991 Gulf War could pursue lawsuits against Iraq under legislation the House has approved.

The White House, saying the bill would threaten economic and political progress in Iraq, threatened to veto the measure if it reaches the president's desk. It still has to clear the Senate.

The legislation, passed by voice vote late Monday, could affect some 17 prisoners of war — all but one pilots of aircraft downed over Iraq or Kuwait — and more than 200 American civilians working in Iraq and Kuwait and held as "human shields" after then-President Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait.

The legislation, sponsored by Rep. Bruce Braley, D-Iowa, would take away the president's authority to exempt Iraq from lawsuits brought by Americans tortured by state sponsors of terrorism. The president could still grant immunity if he certifies that Iraq has adequately settled, or is making good-faith efforts to settle, claims against it from pending court cases.

Bush in December 2007 vetoed a defense policy bill because it contained a similar provision. He later signed the bill after reaching an agreement with Congress granting him waiver authority, which he exercised in January 2008.

A House Republican, Rep. Darrell Issa of California, was behind the compromise language in the new bill, but the White House said the certification provisions were inadequate to allow the president's waiver rights to continue.

The result, it said, would be "removing Iraq's sovereign immunity and exposing it to potential new liability for billions of dollars in lawsuits seeking compensation for offenses committed by the former Saddam Hussein regime."

The White House also warned that Iraq would take protective measures, including withdrawing its assets from the United States.

The bill limits total recovery for those held hostage to $900,000. Those tortured would be eligible to receive up to $2.5 million plus $6,000 for every day held.

*****
Way to support the troops, there Dingleberry!

Fire, Dead Children - Not Good

Police say two children have died in a duplex fire in the central Wisconsin town of Wausau and a third child has been critically injured.

Police Lieutenant Mark Pankow says the children who died were ages 2 and 8, and an injured 9-year-old was taken to a hospital.

A woman and three other children were able to escape the blaze, which broke out in the first floor of a two-story duplex late Tuesday night.

The state Fire Marshal's office says it is investigating.

Tainted Milk, Sick Babies - Not Good

More than 6,200 babies have been sickened by tainted milk formula and dozens of infants are suffering from acute kidney failure, China's health minister said Wednesday as the death toll rose to three children.

Health Minister Chen Zhu said he expected the numbers of affected babies to increase as "more and more parents take kids to the hospital."

Meanwhile, the head of China's quality control watchdog agency, Li Changjiang, said that 5,000 inspectors will be dispatched nationwide to monitor companies after government testing showed that 20 percent of the companies producing milk powder had dairy products with melamine.

Woman sues city after it orders her to remove a link to the local cops' website

Fascism on the local scale:

A woman in Sheboygan, Wisconsin is suing the city because the city's attorney used legal threats to get her to remove a link to the local police department website -- the city apparently believes you need permission to communicate the URLs of its pages:
Jennifer Reisinger says the Sheboygan city attorney ordered her to remove from her Web site a link to the city’s police department, in what she believes was retaliation for her support of recalling Mayor Juan Perez, according to the suit filed last week.

The city went further, the lawsuit claims, launching a criminal investigation of Reisinger for linking to the department on one of her sites.

Flaming arrows integral to oil pumping: 1960

Amateur flaming-arrow archers kept the fires burning in Alberta's gas towers in 1960:

Waste gas fumes burning off from this flare tower at Nevis. Alberta, sometimes blow out, and the mechanical relighting device doesn’t always work. The oilmen keep a bow and a fire arrow handy and relight the flare by shooting a flame through the fumes. It doesn’t require any skill at archery—note this oiler’s unusual form.

YouTube censors viral video documentary on Palin's churches

Do you find it a bit odd that any video of Palin's 'church' is being 'edited' on YouTube in the past few days to reflect a wholesomeness and conventional mainstream-ness that just is not there? Bruce Wilson does. His mini-documentary suffered the 'editors' knife.

By Bruce Wilson

Sarah Palin was baptized at Wasilla Assembly of God and attended the church for over two and a half decades, and she has been publicly blessed by a number of pastors and religious leaders employed by and associated with that church. Last Sunday our research team released a video, a ten-minute mini-documentary, focusing on the Wasilla Assemblies of God and the video seemed on the verge of a massive "viral" breakthrough when YouTube pulled it down, citing "inappropriate content". At the point the video was censored by YouTube it had been viewed by almost 160,000 people. The short of it is that YouTube has censored a video documentary that appeared to be close to having an effect on a hard fought and contentious American presidential election.

Lucky for us, the entire video as it was released is still available and still documents the 'church' as it really is, not what her handlers want us to believe.

Sarah Palin's Churches and The Third Wave from Bruce Wilson on Vimeo.

Not quite the conventional mainstream 'church' the edited video shows on YouTube now is it?

Awards for 2007 and 2008


























Carolina Naturally received these awards during its first year and they were/are appreciated. Hopefully, I can keep inspiring some and despairing others and just maybe - just maybe, mind you - more awards will follow ... if not, oh, well, it was fun while it lasted.

We now return you to your regularly scheduled programing ...

'Hitting Back'

In response to questions of when he was going to 'hit back' at the lies of McPain, Obama had this to say:

"Here’s what I can guarantee you: that we are going to be hitting back hard – we have been hitting back hard – but we’re hitting back on the issues that matter to families.
I’m not going to start making up lies about John McCain."

He doesn't have to make up lies about McPain like McPain has to make up lies about Obama ... McPain lies about his lies to cover his lies and everybody knows it (especially now) so there is no need to add more - he does a better job of lying about himself than Obama could ever do making do lies about him.

And I Quote

"A woman who now is running to be second in command of the United States, only 4 years ago had aspirations to be a television anchor, which is probably all she is qualified to be."

-- Lindsay Lohan


Thar she 'blow'

A Costa Rican official says U.S. authorities have intercepted a submarine-like vessel packed with tons of cocaine.

Security Minister Janina del Vecchio said in a statement Tuesday that the 70-foot (20-meter) vessel was intercepted by the U.S. Navy in international waters near Costa Rica.

Del Vecchio said the vessel was transporting an estimated 6 metric tons (6.6 U.S. tons) of cocaine.

She said U.S. authorities would tow it to a Costa Rican port and then to Key West, Florida.

Colombian drug cartels have been known to use home-built submarines to smuggle large amounts of cocaine to Central America en route to the United States.

Damn, that's a lot of 'blow'.

CSN at Woodstock

On a hot August night back in 69...

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

This Just In!

This just in -

From the News Desk:

Apparently John McPain invented the Blackberry!

According to his campaign McPain is responsible for the Blackberry - that device that all the 'Yuppies' of today must have to survive.

Who knew?

Yeah, Right and the moon really is made of green cheese!

As of this moment ...

Just in case you've forgotten with all the attempts at diversion the repugicans are pulling

As of this moment ...

4157 Brave men and women are dead!


"... In the morning they return with tears in their eyes.
The stench of death drifts up to the skies.
A young soldier so ill looks at the sky pilot -
Remembers the words ... 'Thou Shalt Not Kill!' ..."

Support our troops ... Bring them home, now!

Sandwich bag has fake mold printed on it to discourage thieves

_independent_work_images_moldy_bag_1.jpg moldwich.jpg
Got any 'lunch thieves' at your work or school?



This little device just might keep your lunch safe from sticky fingers.

Anti-Theft Lunch Bag

That's one way to do it

A New York man reporting for jury duty has been taken into custody after a records check revealed he's wanted in Ohio.

James Geiger, of Sciopo, N.Y., reported Tuesday to the Cayuga County Court for grand jury duty and indicated on jury forms that he had been convicted of a felony in Ohio.

(A felony conviction disqualifies a person from serving on a jury.)

Court officials contacted Ohio authorities, who said Geiger was wanted on larceny and welfare fraud charges.

But Geiger told a judge in New York that he's not the man in the Ohio case.

The judge set cash bail at $500 and adjourned the case until Oct. 21.

Obama's plan is better

The big threat to growth in the next decade is not oil or food prices, but the rising cost of health care. The doubling of health insurance premiums since 2000 makes employers choose between cutting benefits and hiring fewer workers.

Obama's plan is better.

Read the entire WSJ article here.

American Indian Proverb.

Listen or thy tongue will keep thee deaf.

American Indian Proverb.

A good one

The longest word in the English language is the one that follows the phrase, 'And now a word from our sponsor'.
~ Hal Eaton

It's the economy. stupid



Yep, it's all about the economy!

Posterior Unination and Rectal Intrusion

Go ahead piss down their backs and tell'em it's raining - they'll believe you!

I was just reading a series of posts on a economic forum that has seen some Doozies posted by the wing-nuts but today's latest is truly off the charts.

To wit:

Since the avalanche began (which started about 30 years ago and built up to the massive slide we are witnessing now) to show itself to everyone - even the blind, deaf and dumb, or so one would think - there have been several posts made citing non-partisan sources (many from non-US entities) and poofs in the actual numbers as to how bad it really is and it is not going to get better for at least a decade to which the wing-nuts have responded in true ditto-head fashion that everything is hunky dory and it is the Liberals and the Liberal Media just trying to scare everyone into blaming them for the mess that they say doesn't exist.

Talk about denial!

The 'mess' is very real and worse than most could imagine and getting even more worse by the second. And whether they like it or not the wing-nuts are directly responsible for the 'mess' and all their denials of it won't change that.

They are just too numb in the posterior to feel the buttfu_king the rest of us have been feeling for years.

But this past weekend the old adage 'what goes around, comes around' came around to shove itself up the rectal orifices of those that have been doing the buttfu_cking and they were bereft of Vasoline when it happened just as the rest of us have been all these years and that numbness mentioned earlier is beginning to wear off.

Man with 86 wives arrested

Police in northern Nigeria have arrested a Muslim preacher who claims 86 wives and 107 children, charging him with breaking Islamic laws governing marriage.

Authorities detained Mohammed Bello Masaba, 84, on Monday after an order from northern Niger state's Islamic court, according to police spokesman Richard Oguche.

The preacher was charged with "infringing on Islamic laws," Oguche said.

It was unclear when the man would appear before the court, or what the potential punishment could be.

Muslim principles forbid men to take more than four wives.

Around half of Nigeria's 140 million people are Muslim, and Niger was one of twelve majority-Muslim states that adopted the Islamic Sharia criminal code after Nigeria returned to civilian rule in 1999.

The move sparked religious riots throughout the country that left thousands dead.

Home-Brewed Biodiesel Goes Prime-Time

Home-brewed biodiesel may be ready to move from your neighbor’s garage to prime time. No longer is the practice limited to a few mechanically inclined hippies with old converted electric water heaters. Now anyone can order up their own bio-brew kit online.

“We are testing some products now to make sure they work at the level of quality our customers expect,” said Go Green Home Stores spokesman Dennis Healy. “We’re really looking forward to having these products in our store.”

And Go Green’s interest in mass-marketing a processor comes on the heels of a decision earlier this year by Northern Tool, the Sears of professional-grade tools, to put biodiesel processors for home brewers in its catalog, for $3,000 to $13,500.

The Collective Biodiesel Project estimates that home brewers, who filter used vegetable oil from restaurants and then mix it with lye and methanol to create their own biodiesel, produced 450 million gallons of fuel last year. Some brewers say they got tired of waiting for alternatives to petroleum to come from big biz and set out to change their own habits.

Full Story @ Wired