INTERESTING: Prohibition and Drugs

Monday, November 7, 2011

http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/KenBur

Prohibition, Civility, and Political Discourse
Ken Burns
National Press Club | Luncheon Speech

Ken Burns talked about his PBS series, Prohibition, which chronicles the ratification, implementation, and eventual repeal of the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, as well as the era in which the movement took place. He also responded to questions from the audience.

# – # – #

An outstanding discussion of Prohibition and how it relates to our current state with the “(pseudo) War on (some) Drugs”. While I was aware of the relation between the Women’s Rights Movement, I was unaware of of the relation between the Progressives with the Income Tax and the Dry’s who wanted to eviscerate the reliance of the Federal Government on the booze industry taxes. Worth an hour and you can see that past is prologue.

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INTERESTING: Unalienable versus Inalienable

Monday, November 7, 2011

http://dumpdc.wordpress.com/2011/10/30/what-are-unalienable-rights/

What Are Unalienable Rights?

by Russell D. Longcore

Owner and Editor, DumpDC.com

*** begin quote ***

I don’t think I’ve ever seen an expansive article about unalienable rights. We all seem to just refer to the Declaration of Independence and what Jefferson wrote, and then defer to it. But natural law and unalienable rights are where it all starts.

*** and ***

“Unalienable: incapable of being alienated, that is, sold and transferred.” Black’s Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition, page 1523. One cannot sell, transfer or surrender unalienable rights.

*** and ***

Inalienable rights can be transferred, sold or surrendered if you give your consent. Inalienable rights are not bestowed by the Creator or inherent in humans. ”Persons” have inalienable rights, and the word “Person” is a legal term¹. Inalienable rights can be bestowed to persons by government, and can be likewise removed from persons by government. At times, government itself can be considered a “Person” in a legal sense. Most state constitutions recognize only inalienable rights.

*** and ***

* The Right of Life

* Right of Personal Security

* The Right of Labor

* Right to Acquire and Enjoy Property

* Right to Contract

* Right of Free Speech

* Right of Beliefs or Conscience

* Right of Personal Liberty

* Right to the Pursuit of Happiness

*** end quote ***

And, I always thought old Thom was just careless.

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INTERESTING: The American Revolution legal? Oxymoronical questions

Monday, October 31, 2011

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15345511

19 October 2011 Last updated at 13:14 ET
Is the US Declaration of Independence illegal?
COMMENTS (431)
By Matt Danzico and Kate Dailey
BBC News Magazine

# – # – #

Who cares? “Might makes right!” I acquire my “rights” by being able and willing to fight for them.

The only reason, that a society “grants” me my rights, is that it can’t afford the price that I will extract if it doesn’t.

If I’m willing to die on a particular “hill”, cause there are always more of them than me, then I put a stake in the ground.

We have examples in history of one person standing up to the mob.

The American Revolution legal? It’s like “jumbo shrimp”. Makes no sense.

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INTERESTING: Verizon Wireless privacy

Monday, October 17, 2011
Your privacy is an important priority at Verizon Wireless. View Online
Verizon Wireless
| Explore | Shop | My Verizon | Support |
Important notice about how
Verizon Wireless uses information.
Why am I getting this notice?
Your privacy is an important priority at Verizon Wireless. Our Privacy Policy (available at www.vzw.com/myprivacy) informs you about information we collect and how we use it. Today we want to tell you about some important updates relating to two new uses of information. Verizon Wireless will begin using the information described below for (1) certain business and marketing reports and (2) making mobile ads you see more relevant. If you do not want us to use this information for these purposes, you can let us know by using one of the options described in the “Your Choices” section of this notice. This supplements our Privacy Policy.
What information are we talking about?
Under these programs, we willnot share any information that identifies you personally.
Verizon Wireless will use the following categories of information:
Mobile Usage Information:
Addresses of websites you visit when using our wireless service. These data strings (or URLs) may include search terms you have used
Location of your device (“Location Information”)
App and device feature usage
Consumer Information:
Information about your use of Verizon products and services (such as data and calling features, device type, and amount
of use)
Demographic and interest categories provided to us by other companies, such as gender, age range, sports fan, frequent diner, or pet owner (“Demographics”)
Is my information shared?
Under these new programs, we will not share outside of Verizon any information that identifies you personally.
HOW INFORMATION
WILL BE USED
DESCRIPTION
EXAMPLE
To create business and marketing reports.
We will combine Mobile Usage Information and Consumer Information in a way that doesnot personally identify you. We will use this information to prepare business and marketing reports that we may use ourselves or share with others.
A report might state that 10,000 mobile users visited a sports website in a month and 60% were men.
For other companies to create business and marketing reports.
We may also share Location Information with other companies in a way that doesnot personally identify you. We will allow these companies to produce limited business and marketing reports.
The data we provide could be combined with data provided by other wireless carriers to create a report on the number of mobile users who take a particular highway during rush hour.
To make mobile ads you see more relevant.
When you use your wireless device, you often see ads on websites and apps. Using certain Consumer Information (such as your Demographics, device type, and language preference) and the postal address we have for you, we will determine whether you fit within an audience an advertiser is trying to reach. This means ads you see may be more relevant to you. We will not share any information that identifies you personally.
A local restaurant may want to advertise only to people who live within 10 miles, and we might help deliver that ad on a website without sharing information that identifies you personally.
Your choices.
If you do not want us to use your information for any of the purposes described above, please let us know at any time by:
Visiting
www.vzw.com/myprivacy

Or

Calling 1-866-211-0874
You will receive mobile ads whether you participate or not, but under the advertising program, ads may be more relevant to you.
If you have a Family SharePlan® or multi-line account, you must indicate your choice for each line. If you add a line or change a telephone number, you will need to update your
privacy choices.

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Oct-17 @ 17:49


INTERESTING: Ellen’s Tiny Ohio House

Monday, October 17, 2011

http://tinyhouseblog.com/stick-built/ellens-tiny-house/

Ellen’s Tiny House
by Christina Nellemann on October 10th, 2011

*** begin quote ***

Ellen Dawson-Witt was recently featured in her local newspaper because of her tiny house and her downshifted life. Ellen’s 192 square foot house is located on her property in Yellow Springs, Ohio where she grows some of her own food and carries water from a well for washing, uses solar panels for a lamp, CD player and laptop and uses a composting toilet. She does her cooking on a gas range from 1934.

*** end quote ***

Hmmm, the 2011 version of a McMansion?

Clearly the malinvestment of the past decades is in the “overinvestment” in housing. The “Real Estate Market” collapse is a symptom.

Small houses are one alternative. (Homelessness due to high cost.) It would be possible to reasonable afford a “bachelor pad”. There probably needs to be practical “family” housing. Not small for small’s sake, but right-size. (Reminds me of the insource, outsource, rightsource debate in information technology in the late 80’s.)

Multi-generational households are another. (This also solves some of the elder care problem; or at least delays it.)

Plus, there’s a need for housing that adapts over time — the needs of the young morphs into the needs of the old. Housing; not “housing supply” since there are tremendous transaction costs.

One thing’s for sure, the Gooferment isn’t going to deliver that or do anything but delay or prevent it.

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INTERESTING: Greed?

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

http://www.dickmorris.com/blog/republican-party-benefits-from-obama-errors/

REPUBLICAN PARTY BENEFITS FROM OBAMA ERRORS
By Dick Morris

“The weakness of capitalism is greed. The weakness of socialism is corruption.”

# – # – #

Not sure I agree with Dick on this.

I agree with the Gecko character “Greed is good”. It’s the lubricant that induces crotchety humans to cooperate. By following what they see as their own best interests, they are motivated to work harder. Until we figure out how ants coordinate, we need everyone working intelligently. Once each one gets all they are willing to pay for, there’s a complex calculus that shares the “satisfaction” and “dissatisfaction” roughly equally.

The weakness of capitalism is that the calculus is not obvious. There are no guarantees. Not there are any in life under any system. Or anywhere on the planet.

The weakness of socialism is that it makes promises it can’t keep. That “each according to his needs” nonsense ignores the teachings of the dismal science.

Look at the attempts to “legislate” equality. If you look at truly free markets, it’s like a series of elections in real time. That what “prices” in the marketplace communicate more than we realize. How much is an actor willing to pay while balancing supply with demand. That’s a key fact. It’s both the strength and the weakness.

You can be fooled by promises of “free lunch” and fail to see the market as mechanism to induce cooperation.

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INTERESTING: Explaining complex systems failures

Saturday, October 8, 2011

http://www.impactlab.net/2011/10/01/why-industries-collapse/

October 1st, 2011 at 10:25 am
Why Industries Collapse
Futurist Thomas Frey
in: Analysis, Breakthrough Thinking, Business, Historical Perspectives, Latest Trend, Science & Technology News

*** begin quote ***

Complex societies collapse because they are too inflexible to respond. From our vantage point, this can seem rather mystifying. Why didn’t they just re-tool and make things simpler? The answer Tainter gives is a simple one: When societies fail to respond with orderly downsizing, it isn’t because they don’t want to, it’s because they can’t.

*** end quote ***

Minimal size organizations are the answer.

It’s that “small, fast, and agile” meme again.

So maybe it’s the path to “salvation”.

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INTERESTING: Doppelgangers?

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2044014/Celebrity-reincarnations-The-Hollywood-stars-amazing-Civil-War-doubles.html

After Nicolas Cage and John Travolta… here are the OTHER amazing Civil War celebrity doppelgangers
By MIKE O’BRIEN
Last updated at 4:59 AM on 1st October 2011

# – # – # – # – #   


INTERESTING: The Death Penalty … from a foreign pov

Sunday, October 2, 2011

http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Ex-death-row-Irish-worker-calls-for-death-penalty-to-be-abolished-130413918.html

Former Irish death row worker calls for death penalty to be abolished

Having worked for a summer along death row inmates he sees no benefit to the death penalty

ByMOLLY MULDOON,Irish Voice Reporter

Published Friday, September 23, 2011, 8:27 AMUpdated Friday, September 23, 2011, 11:42 AM

*** begin quote ***

A young Irishman who spent the summer working alongside death row inmates in Austin, Texas tells IrishCentral.com why he thinks the death penalty should be abolished.

When most Irish students contemplate a summer internship in the US, they don’t expect to find themselves face to face with convicted serial killers and rapists. But that is exactly where Dannie Hanna, a young man from Ennis Co. Clare ended up this past August while doing pro bono work for death row inmates in Austin, Texas.

*** and ***

“Finally, from a justice perspective, the system in which the death verdict is given is nothing short of disgraceful – from the provision of ineffective legal counsel on behalf of state appointed lawyers, to the pedantic nature of some members of the Texas judiciary,” Dannie said.

*** and ***

“All we are doing is creating another victim from this atrocity. I thus would believe that life without parole is an appropriate sentence,” the Clare man said.

*** end quote ***

I don’t know that there is ALWAYS “reasonable doubt”.

But I do think that the Gooferment killing citizens, guests, or even “illegal aliens” is immoral, ineffective, and inefficient.

We KNOW that there have been many mistakes in death penalty cases (i.e., Project Innocence). So since we can’t raise the dead, I think we should NOT have a “death penalty”.

That being said, “death penalty” inmates are potentially very dangerous — it’d be like keeping a cobra as a pet — so maybe we need a confinement method that would be safe for the guards.

Maybe the “death penalty” is reserved for those convicts who are just too dangerous to keep in confinement. Perhaps the only way to know that is if they cause a second death after being convicted of a first one.

# # # # #

Stephen E. Phelps Jr. That link is broken; think this is the one you meant: http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Irish-are-right-to-slam-US-on-death-penalty-130845643.html?page=3 Good article.

http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Irish-are-right-to-slam-US-on-death-penalty-130845643.html?page=3

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Oct-02 @ 10:39


INTERESTING: Why DOES it have to be a …

Friday, September 30, 2011

http://www.awaionline.com/2011/09/how-many-to-screw-in-a-light-bulb/

How Many … To Screw in a Light Bulb?
By Dan Kennedy

*** begin quote ***

At Disney, the oldest joke about the Imagineers – goes like this:

Q: How many Imagineers does it take to screw in a light bulb?

*** and ***

I call this the Open Architecture Concept. Very, very, very, very few people, in percentage terms, in ratio to population, conduct their businesses or live their lives based on Open Architecture. To the contrary, they approach whatever business they are in by getting a small rule book from somebody or by observing peers, then treat that as a box with cement walls.

Some cultures are still all about closed architecture: caste systems that confine people to the same status in society as their parents, arranged marriages, discriminatory laws that make women chattel and prohibit them from so much as leaving their homes unaccompanied by a husband, father, or brother. Before the interstate highway system, we were a relatively immobile society, so over 70% of the people lived and died and never left whatever town they were born in.

In my business life, narrowly and broadly, I’ve never accepted closed architecture. A narrow example: I never let the client define the assignment. The client says: How much to have you write a sales letter? I say: Why does it have to be a sales letter?

*** end quote ***

Ahhh, yes, getting outside the box. Maybe that’s why I find “Dharma & Greg” or Lucille Ball funny. Always in the extreme.

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INTERESTING: Chelsea Clinton BoD IAC?

Thursday, September 29, 2011

http://biggovernment.com/publius/2011/09/27/the-cheat-sheet-september-27-please-sir-may-i-pay-some-more/

*** begin quote ***

Of course: Barry Diller’s IAC, a global internet and media conglomerate, announced that Chelsea Clinton will join the company’s board of directors. The position pays an annual stipend of $50,000 and comes with stock options (!). A company spokesman explained the rationale:

‘Ms. Clinton is a keenly intelligent, insightful and inspirational young woman with experience in consulting and public policy, whose skills and background complement the existing areas of expertise of other board members.

She’s 31.

*** end quote ***

http://paidcontent.org/article/419-sec-watch-chelsea-clinton-joins-iac-board/

# – # – #

Does anyone understand what she brings to the table? Maybe Mom and Dad!

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INTERESTING: Vanishing cruise passengers and pink elephants

Thursday, September 29, 2011

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2040248/Why-165-people-gone-missing-cruise-ships-recent-years.html

The vanishing passengers: It’s a mystery as bizarre as it is disturbing – why have 165 people gone missing from cruise ships in recent years?

By NATALIE CLARKE

Last updated at 11:06 PM on 21st September 2011

*** begin quote ***

His case is far from unique. Over the past few years, there have been an alarming number of unexplained and unsolved disappearances on board cruise liners.

According to the U.S.-based International Cruise Victims Association, 165 people have gone missing at sea since 1995, with at least 13 this year alone — many of them from vessels popular with British holidaymakers.

*** end quote ***

Good way to: (1) get rid of a significant other with paying them off; OR (2) good way to disappear if things are not going so good — slip into a second identity — with a shill to “check in”; OR (3) easy to suicide.

No?

#2 is most interesting to me. One would assume that, if you were not as infamous as a “Bernie Made-off” or as famous as Angie Harmon, as well as well off to the tune of millions, then you could use this to skip.

We know that to “leave” the USA is very expensive as the IRS keeps tightening controls on wealth crossing borders. Perhaps this phenomena could be the ultimate exit strategy.

Assuming that the cruise ships have “pretty good” physical security — after all they want to get paid for all the passengers, stowaways are not permitted — one way to do #2 is to book two passengers — Identity #1 and Identity #2. The trick would be for one person to get them both “checked in”. Then during the cruise, morph from ONE to TWO. In the post 9/11 world, one would have to know the process in detail or have some inside help.

Wonder how the crew “checks off” the ship. Could a passenger become a crew member?

This is the stuff of a Sherlock Holmes mystery.

But me, and my tin foil hat, doesn’t rule out that it IS possible. Like a Pink Elephant, I can imagine it; so it must be possible.

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INTERESTING: Full Tilt poker; a Ponzi?

Thursday, September 22, 2011

http://www.casinocitytimes.com/news/article/doj-says-full-tilt-was-a-global-ponzi-scheme-198602?contentID=198602

DOJ says Full Tilt was a global Ponzi scheme
20 September 2011
By Dan Igo

*** begin quote ***

“Full Tilt was not a legitimate poker company, but a global Ponzi scheme,” Bharara said in a statement. “Full Tilt insiders lined their own pockets with funds picked from the pockets of their most loyal customers while blithely lying to both players and the public alike about the safety and security of the money deposited.”

Lederer, Ferguson, former CEO Ray Bitar and Rafael “Rafe” Furst, all owners of Full Tilt Poker, are accused of distributing approximately $443 million to themselves and other owners of the company. The amended complaint alleges that Full Tilt mixed player funds with operating funds, despite public claims to the contrary by the site.

The DOJ said that by the end of March, Full Tilt Poker owed approximately $390 million to players worldwide, including $150 million to American players, but had less than $60 million in its bank accounts.

*** end quote ***

I was always suspicious of online poker.

I admit it was more about the risk of the computer programming. I could envision all sorts of compromises. Network, collusion, and malware leap to mind.

I didn’t think about our old friend Ponzi; I will from now on.

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INTERESTING: “Peak Water”

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

http://lewrockwell.com/rep2/water-crisis-coming.html

25 Signs That a Horrific Global Water Crisis Is Coming
Economic Collapse Blog

*** begin quote ***

#3 Since 1998, the level of water in Lake Mead has plunged by more than 50 percent. Lake Mead supplies about 85 percent of the water used in Las Vegas, and at this point the lake has 5.6 trillion gallons less water than it used to have. Lake Mead is falling so fast that some believe that the Hoover dam could actually stop producing electricity in a few years. Needless to say, that would be a total disaster for that entire region of the country. In addition, if things continue at the current pace, it is being estimated that Lake Mead will run completely dry some time around the year 2021.

*** end quote ***

I can attest to the drop in Lake Meade.

When I first visited in the 70’s, it was “full to the brim”. Each visit in subsequent years, you could see more and more of the “bathtub ring”.

Tragedy of the Commons?

If it was privately owned, prices would have been raised to preserve the resource.

Because it’s “publicly owned”, it’ll be drained dry.

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INTERESTING: Contronyms … contranyms

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

http://www.dailywritingtips.com/75-contronyms-words-with-contradictory-meanings/

75 Contronyms (Words with Contradictory Meanings)
by Mark Nichol

*** begin quote ***

The English language includes an interesting category of words and phrases called contronyms (also spelled contranyms, or referred to as autoantonyms) — terms that, depending on context, can have opposite or contradictory meanings.

*** end quote ***

“contronyms”?

Another thing I never knew.

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INTERESTING: a fortiori

Friday, September 9, 2011

http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/a+fortiori

a fortiori (pronounced ah-for-she-ory) prep. Latin for “with even stronger reason,” which applies to a situation in which if one thing is true then it can be inferred that a second thing is even more certainly true. Thus, if Abel is too young to serve as administrator, then his younger brother Cain certainly is too young.

# – # – #

I never heard this one!

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NEWJERSEY: Mark roads, that flood, red for danger

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Upon reflection, and thinking about those Japanese tsunami stones marking the high water mark of the last killer tsunami, perhaps NJDOT should be marking roads where there is a flash flood threat. Cars swept away; fatalities, remember. A good bureaucrat or maybe even a fat old white guy injineer would design a road marking that would alert a driver to “get out of dodge” should the rains start. Or even more wisely not blindly drive into a potential flood zone. I’ve seen such signs in Vegas. Why not here in NJ.

Let’s color the road surface red the next time it’s repaved?

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INTERESTING: Self-plagiarism?

Thursday, September 1, 2011

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/ithenticate-examines-the-ethics-of-self-plagiarism-in-new-white-paper-128586423.html

iThenticate Examines “The Ethics of Self-Plagiarism” in New White Paper

*** begin quote ***

“Self-plagiarism is one of the most potentially dangerous forms of misconduct in scholarly research due to the lack of understanding of the ethics involved in repurposing one’s own work,” said Robert Creutz, general manager of iThenticate, iParadigms’ plagiarism checking software for scholarly publishers and researchers. “This white paper offers a clear definition of self-plagiarism and how authors and publishers can avoid this issue and the costly retractions associated it.”

The pressure to publish, combined with an ever-growing body of scholarly research, makes it difficult for publishers and institutions to investigate and prevent cases of self-plagiarism. The issue continues to be a major source of misconduct and cause for retractions in scholarly research. Most recently, a noted Brazilian entomologist was forced to retract a paper for self-plagiarism.

According to the report, “self-plagiarism is defined as a type of plagiarism in which the writer republishes a work in its entirety or reuses portions of a previously written text while authoring a new work. Writers often maintain that because they are the authors, they can use the work again as they wish; they can’t really plagiarize themselves because they are not taking any words or ideas from someone else. But while the discussion continues on whether self-plagiarism is possible, the ethical issue of self-plagiarism is significant, especially because self-plagiarism can infringe upon a publisher’s copyright. Traditional definitions of plagiarism do not account for self-plagiarism, so writers may be unaware of the ethics and laws involved in reusing or repurposing texts.”

*** end quote ***

This definitely sounds strange to me.

I guess it’s possible if I sold the rights to something and then reused it.

I guess Paterson writing the Alex Cross series is guilty?

Makes no sense, unless in selling, I promised exclusivity?

Yet another concept I really don’t understand.

Good thing no one wants to buy my writing.

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INTERESTING: Mark Steyn argues financial collapse

Sunday, August 28, 2011

http://www.booktv.org/Program/12751/quotAfter+America+Get+Ready+For+Armageddonquot.aspx

“After America: Get Ready For Armageddon”
Mark Steyn

About the Program

Mark Steyn argues that the United States is destined for financial collapse and a decline in its role as a world leader if current political and cultural norms continue. The author contends that American debt has placed the country in a precarious position and that regulation and lack of innovation have become hallmarks of the country’s business climate. Mark Steyn speaks at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics and Political Library at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, New Hampshire.

About the Authors

Mark Steyn is a syndicated columnist, whose writing has appeared in several publications, including the National Review, The Irish Times, and The Wall Street Journal. Mr. Steyn is the author of America Alone: The End of the World As We Know It. For more information, visit steynonline.com.

Future Airings

Sunday, September 4th at 3pm (ET)

Monday, September 5th at 10:45am (ET)

Monday, September 5th at 10:45pm (ET)

# – # – #

In an attempt to escape the non-stop Irene-o-blab-a-thon, I dvr-ed anything that looked interesting. This show was pretty good and assumption challenging. FWIW

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INTERESTING: A driver’s license, a privilege?

Monday, August 22, 2011

http://www.schneier.com/crypto-gram-1108.html

Crypto-Gram Newsletter
August 15, 2011
by Bruce Schneier
Chief Security Technology Officer, BT
schneier@schneier.com
http://www.schneier.com

Developments in Facial Recognition

*** begin quote ***

“A driver’s license is not a matter of civil rights. It’s not a right. It’s a privilege,” she said. “Yes, it is an inconvenience [to have to clear your name], but lots of people have their identities stolen, and that’s an inconvenience, too.”

*** end quote ***

“Privilege”?

In the suburbs, it’s essential to travel.

Is this another form of population control?

When did I decide that the Gooferment has the power to restrict me from going to the grocery store?

How did I agree that the Gooferment has that power of me?

I don’t remember signing that.

Maybe I do need to go on strike against this and all the other Gooferment intrusions.

Oh yeah, I am!

Power to the people.

Note that the Gooferment can’t even do this right!

# # # # #


INTERESTING: Hanks’ Personal Refund

Friday, August 19, 2011

http://www.movies.com/movie-news/tom-hanks-larry-crowne-refund/4090?wssac=164&wssaffid=news

Tom Hanks Personally Refunded Disappointed Couple’s ‘Larry Crowne’ Tickets

By Peter Hall Aug 16, 2011

# – # – #

A novel way to make Customer’s happy. Now what about all the rest of the folks?

Guess not so much!

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INTERESTING: Corporations are just people in disguise

Sunday, August 14, 2011

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_ROMNEY_2012?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2011-08-11-12-34-40

Aug 11, 8:50 PM EDT
Romney: ‘Corporations are people, my friend’
By PHILIP ELLIOTT Associated Press

*** begin quote ***

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, clearly irritated by a handful of hecklers amid supporters at the Iowa State Fair, insisted Thursday that “corporations are people,” a comment Democrats gleefully predicted would be a defining moment of his campaign.

*** end quote ***

I’ve tried to convince folks that the correct rate of corporate tax is zero.

(I think I could make a case for a 1% tax on gross receipts so the Gooferment could collect some un-fudge-able statistics. And, since “corporations” are a creation of the Gooferment, then any Gooferment intervention is just a fee fro their existence.)

Just last night, I was in a heated discussion about Exon Mobil. Taxes paid by them is merely wealth redirected from real people via pension funds to the Gooferment.

Sigh!

There is some validity to the argument that executive compensation is out of control. And corporations engaging in crony capitalism are bribing politicians and bureaucrats to insulate them from competition and secure “franchises”.

Socialists always want to control everything. This is no different. Hitler, Stalin, Mai. They all need control.

We have to be clear in our paradigms and memes.

Corporations are merely a useful fiction for a bunch of people.

Argh!

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INTERESTING: Titanic’s rivets

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

From NATGEOTV

Titanic: How it really sank (2009)

Iron rivets failed.

“The side opens like a zipper.”

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INTERESTING: Is there a baseball rule for this situation?

Thursday, August 4, 2011

FROM LUDDITE

http://www.shoonsports.com/switch-hitter-vs-switch-pitcher-pat-venditte/

So what is the rule?

Wish Frau Reinke was here; she’d probably know!

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INTERESTING: Should College Athletes Be Paid?

Sunday, July 31, 2011

http://www.doughroller.net/personal-finance/should-college-athletes-be-paid/

Should College Athletes Be Paid?
by MICHAEL
in PERSONAL FINANCE

*** begin quote ***

It seems every week, I hear of a new scandal involving a college athlete and the reason is always the same … money. For the past few months, the NCAA has been digging their claws into USC and Ohio State, two of the most storied athletic institutions there are in college sports. The consequences of these schools not playing fair have been the loss of championships and current coaching staff members and many in and out of the sport wonder if the simple solution is to pay college athletes for their performance. I vote a big, fat, NO.

*** end quote ***

I disagree.

The Colleges get rich. The coaches get rich. The “industry” surrounding them get rich.

The players MAY get an education.

(I guess they always get an education. Getting screwed is educational.)

Some of the sports are amateur; not the “big” ones.

And, if the athlete gets a career ending injury, then they are screwed.

Would seem like there needs to be a athlete’s union!

I think they should get a percentage. It’s the American way.

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Jul-24 @ 11:00


Interesting: women’s into softb — balk

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Watching the USA versus Canada. Does anyone else think the Canada pitcher balks in her delivery? She lurches towards the plate, stop, then pitches. You can see the USA batters react and then be unable to get back on pace. What’s the rule?

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