INTERESTING: Democrats have the unilateral power to end the war

Friday, July 13, 2007

http://blog.lewrockwell.com/lewrw/archives/014090.html

July 13, 2007
The Democrats’ Charade
Posted by James Ostrowski at July 13, 2007 10:28 AM

***Begin Quote***

Let’s be clear on this. The Democrats have the unilateral power to end the war. Don’t believe any of the malarkey such as this article in the Washington Post that suggests they need enough votes to override a veto to end the war. That’s what they want us to think.

The Democrats were elected, not because of their sicko domestic polices, but because people thought they would end the war. Now that they can, they won’t because they don’t want to be blamed for “losing” a war that was lost before it began. That’s right, they continue to fund a war that is killing thousands so they will win future elections and stay in power so they can act like monsters in the future too.

All they need to do is stop the funding, by majority vote, in either house.

***End Quote***

Even Dick Morris agrees. And, he throws in that many R’s will join them.

But the D’s want to get a lock on power and so are content to pretend that they are helpless.

Yeah, right. It’s all a shell game between two side of the same coin.

A pox on them all!

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INTERESTING: the question from a certain level

Thursday, July 12, 2007

http://www.meansofinquiry.org/

Means of Inquiry

***Begin Quote***

Means of Inquiry is devoted to effective inquiry of concepts and institutions, for the purpose of identifying and resolving complex contradictions, for the result of advancing knowledge and the effectiveness of beneficial human activity.

***End Quote***

Often the question presupposes the answer. Or, the question once answered spawns a new question. Or, the question from a certain level of understanding can’t be answered without improved understanding (i.e., the Einstein quote).

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INTERESTING: Translating the “silent revolution” to what you see

Thursday, July 12, 2007

http://changethis.com/36.05.Dramatic
http://changethis.com/pdf/36.05.Dramatic.pdf

***Begin Quote***

Dramatic Impact: The Effect of “The Silent Revolution”
By You, our ChangeThis readers

We asked you, our ChangeThis readers, to submit brief manifestos of 250 words to describe the impact of “The Silent Revolution” as defined in Elizabeth Haas Edelsheim’s earlier manifesto on the continuing influence of Peter Drucker on business.

***End Quote***

This is a slap upside the head, harder than any V8 commercial, that the rules are again changing silently. Right under our feet. People rule! The value of intelligent cooperation in the creation of value should be what we are seeking. Objections will consign organizations to the dust bin of progress.

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INTERESTING: Balancing Church and State

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

FROM AN EMAIL IN MY HIGH SCHOOL FORUM

***Begin Quote***

Between their violence (as a generic proxy for all the “violence” in Catholic schools), and the later priestly pedophilia scandals, the Church in the USA is a mere shell of it’s former glory. I also made a similar observation in my blog of how the Church has lost the youth.

And, in a sense, the global Church has fallen away from whatever role it had in balancing the power of the State. The Church versus godless Communism probably freed Poland, and definitely had a lot to do with the fall of the USSR. It created the tipping point. Too bad. We could use and ally in wresting the American Gooferment from the current Socialists (both D’s and R’s) that are destroying Liberty here.

***End Quote***

Yes, the Church offset the power of the Kings of old to oppress the people. One has to wonder. Was it a direct conspiracy of the Socialists to destroy the Church? Anyone who studys history can see the classic role of the Church as the arbiter of good and evil. Was it necessary to destroy the Church, all Churches, as a refuge of oppressed people? So let’s examine what the Social Progressives have done.

  • Catholic Schools, gone, a casualty of gooferment education.
  • Catholic and Christian family solidarity anchored by grandparents in or near the family, gone, a casualty of Social Security checks.
  • Catholic and Christian family solidarity anchored by mothers in the home raising children, gone, a casualty of high gooferment taxes and “women’s liberation”.
  • Catholic Charities, gone, a casualty of gooferment welfare.
  • Catholic Hospitals, gone, a casualty of gooferment health care.
  • Catholic Moral Leadership, gone, a casualty of “Catholic in name only” politicians.
  • Catholic traditional marriage, gone, a casualty of the “free love” “let’s just shack up” trend.
  • Catholic Sanctity of Life, gone, a casualty of “women’s rights”, “reproductive freedom”, and “privacy rights”.
  • Catholic Missions to the Poor, gone, a casualty of the gooferment’s high taxes and “foreign aid”.
  • Catholic doctrine of the “Just War”, gone, a casualty of the “War on Terror”.
  • Catholic & Christian Christmas, gone, a casualty of the gooferment’s “winter solstice holiday”.
  • Catholic & Christian Easter, gone, a casualty of the gooferment’s “spring fling”.
  • Catholic, Christian, and Black Churches with their strong emphasis on Family and community, crippled, another casualty of the gooferment welfare.
  • Catholic protection to “illegal” immigrants, gone, a casualty of the War On Immigration.
  • Catholic Fraternal Orders, gone, a casualty of gooferment regulation on insurance and Social Security.
  • Catholic Churches (the buildings themselves), gone, a casualty of gooferment “social engineering” cause wholesale demographic changes.
  • Catholic financial support of the Church as an institution, gone, a casualty of the gooferment high taxes including inflation.
  • Catholic endowments, shrinking, a casualty of inflation.

To steal Walter Williams formulation, “if the Head Socialist wanted to completely destroy the Church — a generic label for all the moral institutions regardless of denomination Catholic, Christian, Jewish, Pentecostal, or any other intuitions that believes in absolutes like good and evil — as a counterbalance to the power of the oppressive State, then they could not have designed a better system to do it than the out of control gooferment of the USA.”

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INTERESTING: Random sad thoughts

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Reflections upon a death, funeral, and some sad observations

On Independence Day, Frau received word that an aunt had died. That shook her, since she had wanted to visit her, but Frau’s own health problems precluded it. It took the immediate family a little time to get organized, and she waited impatiently anxiously for the arrangements to be published. She was concerned that her own health would preclude her participation in saying good bye, and seeing again people from the good times long past. Eventually the arrangements were announced, and she prepared for the sad days ahead. Today was the last of those days.

As a blogger, I captured a few thoughts and observations. Some silly. Some funny. Some poignant. Some insightful. You’ll sort out which are which.

We attended the wake, the funeral Mass, and the final service.

* The wake has to be one of the more barbaric legacies of the past. The body is displayed and everyone remarks how “good” or “bad” the deceased looks. Duh. They are dead. Often after having undergone some of the most horrendous “medical procedures” of their life. Hard to look “good” in death.

* The deceased is dressed by relatives, who I guess think that the Final Judge will be impressed by a business-like attire as our life’s worth is assessed. I always remember another of Frau’s relatives who dressed the deceased in a “heavy metal” t-shirt so the widow exclaimed, proclaimed, and explained to any who would listen that “he would always be comfortable in the afterlife”. By contrast, it made as much sense. In this case, the attire was traditional.

* I had the inspired idea, probably from reading the “name tag” guy’s blog, that at the wake, the funeral home (now there is a strange appellation to hang on a business) should have color coded name tags for the arriving mourners. (Black for immediate direct family. Red for relatives on the deceased mother’s side. Blue for the father’s side. Green for the co-workers. Purple for real friends. Magenta for acquaintances. Pink for those barely known. White for strangers off the street. You can tell I had too much time on my hands during this session. But it was probably a more acceptable idea than my others — booklets listing all relatives and friends like a baseball program, introductions like at a wedding where the bridal party is announced, or a photo session with each visitor by the casket. Like I said, too much time on my hands.)

* Another relative pointed out to me that there were some people who scan the obits on a daily basis, see people who they “know”, and drop by to the wakes. Now that’s one bizarre concept of a “hobby”. It’s like the criminals that read the obits and go burglarize the homes of the deceased and grieving during the wakes and funerals. I was also told that the police put the addresses on special watch lists for extra attention. (As an anti-statist, I find it had to believe that the gooferment could be that pro-active. I’d more likely believe that they can’t read and if they could they’d be the one’s doing the crime. But then I’m jaded.) I just nodded with interest, thinking I had to get this in my blog!

* The funeral Mass spawned another whole set of musings. The old priest gave a interesting homily about the “church desert lady, who always told people after dinner to save their forks, because the best was yet to come”. A little hokey. If your dessert was so good, wouldn’t you give people clean forks to eat it with? But, he was just trying to make a point, I guess. (Again too much time on my hands. I was always taught to pay attention when some one was speaking since they may have a good idea to share. I did observe some of the old folks nodding and some young folks texting. But, he was interesting.)

* The priest admitted he never met the deceased. But, then later proceeded to say some things as if he knew her. Obviously prepped by someone. Wasn’t too outlandish. Unless you actually listened to what he was saying. But he was trying to be comforting. At least he was concise.

* Had the mandatory use of incense. Makes me sick. And, I guess it has some metaphoric (or maybe meteoric) meaning that escapes me.

* Had three “alter boys”, two of whom were NOT boys. Only the middle girl seemed to know the drill. She kept the other two prompted as the priest patiently waited for them to catch up. The youngest girl’s bejeweled beach flip flops caught my eye, and led to this observation.

* Leaving aside all the feminist observations about the Catholic Church, and the pedophile controversy that has stripped priests and religious of any deference, it’s a far cry from the alter boys of my youth. In those days, there were tests and auditions. And, you — if you were into that sort of thing — had to earn your way onto the “first team”, and you had to be “certified” to assist at Mass, Weddings, or Funerals. And, you could lose your status if you botched it up. There was even the Pastor’s circle, where the premier alter boys were listed. In those days, it was a lucrative hobby, since the alter boys received tips or a cut of the take from an event. Today it just looks lame. Like a dying beached whale.

* In the details of the Funeral Mass, it’s obvious who’s practicing and who’s lapsed. Maybe it’s the advent of the gooferment skoolz teaching secular progressivism. Maybe it’s the feel good generation that thinks that they can do whatever they want. Maybe it’s the a fore mentioned scandals. Maybe it’s the lack of an oral tradition. Maybe it’s “education”. Teaching evolution and that we are just smelly dirty hairless monkeys. But it was clear that it’s the religion of the old and not the youth.

* Every young girl in the deceased’s family had a visible tattoo. (Not a value judgment. Just a stunning observation.) Two of the six had visible piercings. (Ouch, just looking at them, hurt. Reminds me of my now deceased father-in-law who made a rare familial rule “if God had wanted you to have holes in your ears, he’d have provided them”. To which Frau would respond “so we should be going around naked then”. But she never got her ears pierced. On a theological level, it made perfect sense to me with my four years of D’s in theology. If you believe that we are made in the “image and likeness of God” then it’s impertinent to mess with his creation. Don’t the Jews ban from their consecrated cemeteries, any deceased with tattoos? And the Orthodox Jews want spilled blood buried with the deceased. Interesting to us forensic anthropologists.)

* As the funeral procession left the Church for the next stop, I noticed with interest that at one intersection a man tipped his hat. And, along the way an older woman blessed herself as we passed. (Yeah, I know too much time on my hands, but we were going slow. 15 to 20 mphs! I had lots of time to avoid hitting any one.)

* We went to the cemetery. The deceased was to be cremated so it was “interesting” to go to the cemetery. The funeral director led us in the side road that ended with “dead end” sign just in front of the open cemetery gate. I thought that was very funny. But in keeping with the occasion, I didn’t laugh out loud. (But inside I was ROFL!)

* One other observation, in the repast, various people chatted with Frau. One told us that she was never getting married. (I think she had children.) And another proclaimed that the deceased was thrilled when she told of the teller’s wedding plans and that teller wasn’t pregnant. (Again not a value judgment. An interesting perspective on marriage in the modern society?) (I remember that in my youth the Nuns would put special attention on the religious formation of the girls. The young girls got special propaganda sessions on religion and familial values. I never got a straight answer why from any priest, nun, or brother. But a cantor once explained to me that in the religious traditions of the Jews, the woman was the home maker. And, practically, if you had the hearts of the girls, then they would bring the boys into line. Seems logical. If that’s the case based on the evidence I saw today, the Churches have lost the war.)

Maybe I’m just an old fuddy duddy.

So this was the last of two sad days. I thought the deceased was a sharp witted lady who was in her own way very daring. She always “hung” with us at wakes, and kept things lively with her thoughts and chuckles.

I’ll miss her.

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INTERESTING: Good ideas don’t need enforcement; bad ideas can only get compliance by force!

Monday, July 9, 2007

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/column.aspx?
UrlTitle=live_and_let_live&ns=JohnStossel&
dt=07/04/2007&page

http://tinyurl.com/yu8h7r

Live and Let Live
By John Stossel
Wednesday, July 4, 2007

***Begin Quote***

Is it really necessary to explain that government is force? When the Salvation Army asks you for a donation, you are free to say no, and you suffer no consequences. When the U.S. government demands a tax return and a check on April 15, you can’t say no and go about your business. You comply or face fines or imprisonment. Yes, you get to vote for candidates periodically. But having an infinitesimal say in who will coerce you doesn’t change that fact that they are using force.

***End Quote***

YES! It is because people don’t get it.

It doesn’t matter what I think, want, or desire; the gooferment will take its “taxes”. If I, the victim of this robbery, don’t hand over my wallet “voluntarily” meekly with lots of kowtowing, then they will simply take it. If I object or impede their theft, then they will send an armed gang — with badges, uniforms, in brightly colored cars, with flashing lights, and GUNS to hurt me, imprison me, or perhaps kill me.

What is the difference between paying “protection” to the mob and paying “protection” to the gooferment?

The mob would be cheaper!

See the gooferment’s use of force demonstrates how weak their ideas are. If it was a good idea, no force would be required.

Take seat belts. Note, on FreeTlkLive the hosts cited a study that showed Taxachewsits had a 64% compliance with a compulsory law while New Hampshire, the Live Free or Die State, had a 65% seat belt use rate with no law. I would use a seat belt, but I object to being told by the Gooferment that I have to. Besides, if the NJGUV doesn’t have to use one, who is the hypocritical gooferment to tell me what to do!

Good ideas don’t need enforcement; bad ideas can only get compliance by force!

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INTERESTING: Ron Paul Wins Big in First New Hampshire Straw Poll

Sunday, July 8, 2007

***Begin Quote***

Ron Paul Wins Big
Ron Paul Wins Big in First New Hampshire Straw Poll
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 7, 2007

ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA – Presidential candidate Ron Paul today won the Coalition for New Hampshire Taxpayers (CNHT) straw poll at their annual picnic in Hopkinton, New Hampshire. Dr. Paul received 182 of 294 votes cast, or 65 percent. In second place was Rudy Giuliani with 24 votes, or 8 percent.

“Today’s strong victory is further proof that Dr. Paul’s message is resonating throughout New Hampshire,” said campaign manager Lew Moore. “Dr. Paul is the only candidate in this race truly dedicated to smaller government and lower taxes for all Americans.”

CNHT is a statewide, grassroots organization dedicated to reducing the size of government at all levels, stopping judicial activism, providing students and parents with a choice of educational opportunities, expanding job markets, and protecting property rights.

***End Quote***

One can only hope that Ron can energize the majority who don’t participate in elections. This is America’s best hope for a significant change.

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INTERESTING: with the last war’s tactics

Saturday, July 7, 2007

http://www.sandersresearch.com/index.php?
option=com_content&task=view&id=1274

http://tinyurl.com/35zneb

An Insurgency is Not a War
By Carlton Meyer
Jul/05/2007

***Begin Quote***

The U.S. Army failed in Vietnam, but didn’t learn much as an institution as blame was shifted to the media and protesters for ending the war too soon. This tactic of blaming the messenger continues today. Millions of Americans have embraced the mindless pursuit of winning in Iraq at any cost, with no clear idea of what they want to win. If U.S. troops in Iraq were offered the chance to fly home tomorrow, over 90% would go home. They have no desire to leave their children fatherless for “democracy in Iraq ” or whatever the current justification for their unwanted presence. Therefore, Americans who truly “support the troops,” want to bring them home now.

***End Quote***

This is an interesting critique. The Dead Old White Guys didn’t want a standing army. Maybe they were on to something. We see that the “generals” always fight the next war with the last war’s tactics. In this case, they haven’t learned about Fourth and Fifth Generation Warfare. (Fourth Generation is a war with insurgents. Fifth is a war with your own people; that is civil insurrection.) An awful lot of people are getting killed in this blunder.

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INTERESTING: A peek behind the “entertainment” curtain

Saturday, July 7, 2007

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/
news/e3icec89c18d5ef8ec58165dfae65c9791c

http://tinyurl.com/2bse7c

ESPN shut out of All-Star Game
By Paul J. Gough
July 7, 2007

***Begin Quote***

NEW YORK — Major League Baseball has limited ESPN’s access to Tuesday night’s All-Star Game after the network broke an embargo and broadcast news of the players’ selections a few minutes after an exclusive, rain-delayed telecast on TBS.

Baseball executives told ESPN that it must pare its broadcast efforts from AT&T Park in San Francisco, where the All-Star Game is being held. So, most coverage will be done out of ESPN’s headquarters in Bristol, Conn., rather than having “Baseball Tonight” and a portion of “SportsCenter” originate from California as planned.

***End Quote***

This brings up some interesting questions about what we are being spoon fed on the “telly” as “news”.

* Information emargos present an interesting concept. If it is “news”, then does any one every have a right to preclude it being published?

* If it’s “entertainment”, then who cares? But, I’m sure these organizations would like to pretend it’s “news”. “News” people will care about; “entertainment” gets filed behind “Paris Hilton”.

* Orchestration of content into discrete “packages”, like the “home run hitting derby”, are manufactured. That doesn’t make them bad. Just “entertainment”, as opposed to something meaningful.

Since ESPN was acquired by Disney, they have been trying to boost their ratings (I assume) by putting more “soap operas” on. I again assume to attract the fairer sex. But they are missing the essential point. Why is an athletic struggle interesting? We like to see “the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat”. It takes us out of every day struggle, distills it to simple terms, and allows us to to be motivated by it. Why are quiz shows fun? Same reason.

The essence of hairless smell apes is that alone we are weak; in concert, we can accomplish wondrous things. Contests are how we test our limits with a minimum of muss ‘n’ fuss. Some Brit said that the “The victory at Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eaton.” Sports relates to life. It’s a shame that MLB, ESPN, FOX, and all these others have forgotten why sports are appealing. If they’d remember the original reason, they would have to make up “events”, manage the “news”, and get peevish when they are exposed as frauds.

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INTERESTING: another reason why you can’t trust the gooferment

Friday, July 6, 2007

http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8Q6IBU00&show_article=1&catnum=-1

Girl, 4, Called 911 Nearly 300 Times
Jul 5 01:08 PM US/Eastern

***Begin Quote***

CARPENTERSVILLE, Ill. (AP) – Authorities tracked down a 4-year-old girl who called 911 nearly 300 times last month by offering to deliver McDonald’s to her suburban Chicago apartment.

Unbeknownst to her mother, the girl used a deactivated cell phone to call dispatchers 287 times in June—sometimes as often as 20 times a shift.

Dispatchers heard the child’s voice but could only track the phone’s signal to the apartment complex.

So authorities used a ruse to pinpoint her.

“We asked (the caller) what she wanted. She said she wanted McDonald’s,” said Steve Cordes, executive director of QuadCom’s emergency center, which covers Carpentersville.

“We talked with her and we convinced her if she told us where she lives, we would bring her McDonald’s,” he said. “She finally gave us her address. So we sent the police over—with no McDonald’s.”

***End Quote***

Just another reason why you can’t trust the gooferment!

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INTERESTING: Survival Blog because preparation is not just for Y2K

Thursday, July 5, 2007

SurvivalBlog

http://www.survivalblog.com


INTERESTING: The solution to the Iraq predicament

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

http://www.prometheusinstitute.net/opinion/jh103006.htm

The Iraq Solution
The truth that both sides are too afraid to admit
Justin Hartfield, for the editors

***Begin Quote***

The solution to the Iraq predicament

The only viable solution in the opinion of this organization is to install in Iraq a moderate Muslim potentate who can effectively limit, with a strong centralized force (and perhaps decentralized provincial decision-making), sectarian conflict and radical fundamentalism. This example is given by the more “moderate” Islamic states, including Turkey, Egypt, and Kuwait, who subdue terrorists while piously imposing sharia-inspired law and order.

***End Quote***

I’d suggest that we should, we should have, let each town vote for its leader. Those leaders could then align however they want. Leave people alone to decide how they want to organize themselves. Sort of like town halls in NH.

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INTERESTING: Five Intrinsic Problems Facing Islamic Countries

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

http://www.prometheusinstitute.net/opinion/jh71106.htm

Five Intrinsic Problems Facing Islamic Countries
PI [prometheusinstitute.net]
Justin Hartfield

***Begin Quote***

1. A lack of innovation.
2. Inability to form a democratic government.
3. Abhorrence of diversification.
4. Inability to separate church and state.
5. Inability to correct errors.

***End Quote***

I’ve always thought that a society, that doesn’t allow all it’s people to accomplish all they are capable, is “throwing away wealth”. Minority, women, pariahs, or me — all have a unique contribution to make. By discrimination, that society doesn’t maximize its accomplishments.

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INTERESTING: Ron Paul 2008

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

ron paul front version05 2

ron paul back version05 2


INTERESTING: London terrorists: Attempt may show change of tactics

Sunday, July 1, 2007

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/crime/article2725714.ece

The hunt for the London terrorists: Attempt may show change of tactics
Did the attackers simply fail to make a bigger device, or is this al-Qa’ida’s new way of igniting fear on the streets?
Paul Lashmar and Cole Moreton report
Published: 01 July 2007

***Begin Quote***

The London car bombers could not have destroyed the Tiger Tiger club and killed people in it, experts said last night. The huge manhunt for the would-be mass murderers by police and security services was given new urgency by an attack on Glasgow airport yesterday and the fear of further incidents.

***and***

Police think that an explosion here might have been intended to draw panicking revellers out on to the streets, where they would be have been joined by the emergency services. Then another, bigger bomb in a second Mercedes among them could have been triggered, causing hundreds of deaths.

***End Quote***

So one has to change one’s thinking. If caught is a survival situation, then you have to not panic. (Easier said than done.) Use Boyington’s OODA (Observe Orient Decide Act) paradigm. Rushing directly away may NOT be the best tactic to get to safety. Dispersion might be better. That is the mob is going that-a-way, we’ll go this-a-way.

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INTERESTING: Questions for the Ron Paul Campaign

Saturday, June 30, 2007

FROM A POSTED REQUEST FOR INTERVIEW QUESTIONS

***Begin Quote***

>Questions for the Paul Campaign
>Posted by Nick Bradley at June 29, 2007 07:02 PM
>I’ve been informed that we should be able to interview members of the
>Paul Campaign (maybe we’ll get lucky and interview Dr. Paul as well),
>so if there are any questions that you would like to be asked, please
>send them to me.

#1 You’ve said you want to eliminate the Federal Reserve and bring back a real dollar. How will you do that and how will you get it thru Congress dominated by Big Government Statists on both sides of the aisle?

#2 Ending the welfare dole for both businesses and individuals is going to be traumatic. How are you going to sell it to the country and how are you going to ease it in to minimize pain and allow people time to adapt?

#3 The BATF, IRS, DEA, FDA, and EPA have to be the most hated Federal government agencies. How do you close them down, put a stake thru their hearts, and ensure they don’t resurrect themselves?

***End Quote***

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INTERESTING: Maybe a blog with “fresh” content draws better?

Saturday, June 30, 2007

FROM EMAIL IN LINKEDINBLOGGERS

>Re: Jeff Atwood on Blog Ads
>Posted by: “Jason Alba”
>Tue Jun 26, 2007 9:01 pm (PST)
>That’s a great post.
>secret on my blog about staying on-brand.

My secret is staying on whine! Having no “brand”, I just try to not be too annoying.

On a more serious note, has anyone done any “studying” about the concept of “freshness”? In my monologging career (as opposed to blogging), I noticed that most of my posting is done at night after dinner. I can usually find 5 to 10 things worth commenting on. imho

OK, whine about!

Like the state employee speeding to work, bullying the serfs just trying to go to work, out of the way by tailgating. Or, why yet another POS (piece of software) has let me down.

In looking at the time stamps, it struck me. Perhaps my blog would be “popular” (i.e., read by other than my relatives who I quiz any time I see them — only the offline Luddites are safe.), if I had content posted on a regular basis over the time span. If I have 6 posts, then, instead of dumping them all in between six and eleven pm, I could use the time stamp to have “fresh” content every four hours.

For the RSS types and the email readers, it wouldn’t make any diff.

But the real-time readers, thirsty for new content at 4AM, could find something. Find me. And, be so enamored of my great wit and wizzdumb, become life long fans. (No huh?) I’d get possibly a slug on the the free, and unequaled, wordpressdotcom dashboard overnight? That might get an eye ball. Bleary but it could convert to a reader.

If the blog – o – sphere is an open air market of ideas, does the din die down (I like that alliteration) at certain time? Can a pipsqueak be heard during that time? In the end, we all dead. But in the short run, to attract an audience, does timing matter? I think I have a firm grasp on the eyeballs of six relatives and three friends. Should I just be content with that? Or does fame and fortune await, if I could just be “discovered”? Or, am I doomed to “obscurity” as a blogger? Maybe I should focus on my spelling?

Timing of posting may be of greater import and impact to the “brand”, and other more serious, blogs.

Sigh, just a thought,
fjohn


INTERESTING: Why we don’t want “electronic voting”

Friday, June 29, 2007

SUBMITTED TO RISKS

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0483726/

Man of the Year
with Robin Williams
as President Elect Tom Dobbs

*** begin quote ***

Tom Dobbs, comedic host of a political talk show – a la Bill Maher and Jon Stewart – runs for President of the US as an independent candidate who, after an issues-oriented campaign and an explosive performance in the final debate, gets just enough votes to win. Trouble is he owes his victory to a computer glitch in the national touch-screen voting system marketed by Delacroy, a private company with a rising stock price. To protect their fortune, Delacroy executives want to keep the glitch a secret, but one programmer, Eleanor Green, wants Dobbs to know the truth. Can she get to him? Written by jhailey.

*** end quote ***

Correct me if I am wrong, but did this movie just put a stake thru the heart of the vampire known as “electronic voting”?

Systems provided by Delacroy … err I mean Diebold … could manipulate the results of an election. Based on the movie, I’ve just emailed Ron Paul to change his name to Ron Paaul. (SPOILER: In the movie, the buggy computer program elects the candidate with the “best” double letter.) So if anyone wants to debate about paperless electronic internet voting and tell you how good it will be yada yada yada, just rent them this movie. That should finish up the discussion!

They say many a true word is said in jest.

Some times concepts can get thru via humor. My non-techie spouse said after watching this that it would now never be approved here. Hope she’s right.

This film IMHO says it all about that topic. And, says it in way that comes across to the average person.

fjohn

p.s.: The movie did have one other great line. Tom Dobbs says “Politicians are a lot like diapers. They should be changed frequently, and for the same reasons.” If you gather I’m no fan of politicians, you’re correct. They are like diapers!

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INTERESTING: The Paris Hilton Ad

Friday, June 29, 2007

http://www.bradbensonhyundai.net/contact_form.htm?bhcp=1

Re: The Paris Hilton Ad

Dear Mister Benson,

I know in your ads you go for “yucks”, and I particularly like when you skewer the politicians. Maybe you could offer the Guv a set of free seat belts?

Now about the “Paris Hilton” ad where you asked for appropriate punishments for Ms. Hilton — like cleaning your stable; again I know you are going for yucks, but in this case, I think we should go for a punishment that benefits everyone. So here goes.

Paris was supposedly jailed for basically drunk driving parole violation. I think “drunk driving” is one of the big “sins” for a driver.

(I thought it should have been Number #1 on the Pope’s list. When I go out and hoist even one, I won’t drive for fear of harming my fellow human. Good thing my old lady is a teetotaler!)

Notice I said drunk; not drinking. I think that if you have an accident and have been drinking, then you were drunk. Real simple. No roadside stops. No random checks. Cop sees you swerving or asleep at the traffic light, you go to jail for endangering your fellow drivers and their passengers. You kill someone, we throw away the key.

Anyway Paris is a celebrity. Politicians love celebrities. The media loves celebrities. AND I think the billboards that put a face on drunk driving fatalities are moving. So let’s use the “Paris Hilton” spotlight to some good.

So here’s my suggestion for Paris’ punishment. It’s not cleaning a stable but it might have a better result.

For EVERY county in California, let’s have Paris and the local California “legislators” visit the family home of a drunk driving fatality. Paris has to stand outside and ask for a picture of the victim. If the family wishes to tell the story, she has to listen. Then she has to turn to the camera and show that picture. Every day for THIRTY days.

Maybe, she’ll take away a lesson. Maybe, the “legislators” will take away a lesson. Maybe, the media will report the lesson. Maybe, we can all learn the lesson.

Maybe, the People will put a face on a human tragedy. And everyone will get serious about “drunk driving”.

How’s that for punishment? Now you know why I’ll never be a judge. Thanks for listening.

fjohn

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Correction: I had the wrong URL for the contest so I put the correct one at the top.

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By return email, a sales pitch:

bensonhilton

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INTERESTING: ECONOMICS lab demos gooferment “rationing”

Thursday, June 28, 2007

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6243644.stm

Iran fuel rations spark violence

***Begin Quote***

Iranians set fire to a petrol station in Tehran

There were angry protests as people rushed to buy petrol
At least 12 petrol stations have been torched in the Iranian capital, Tehran, after the government announced fuel rationing for private vehicles.

*** and ***

Iran’s petrol is heavily subsidised, sold at about a fifth of its real cost.

The price of 1,000 rials ($0.11) per litre makes Iran one of the cheapest countries in the world for motorists.

***End Quote***

Sigh, gooferments can’t repeal the Law of Supply and Demand.

Price floors are a hidden tax. Price subsidies are a hidden tax.

Markets are peaceful “elections” where competing needs for the same good are award to the one whose “need” is the greatest. In a complex calculus, the market determines who gets what. It’s truly amazing. Rarely is everyone happy or satisfied, but the market peacefully allows us all to cooperate and get along.

When the heavy hand of gooferment comes along, it mucks stuff up. Causes friction and violence. It reinforces the zero-sum scarcity mentality.

The market on the other hand ensure that there is “plenty for everybody”. Higher prices have several simultaneous effects.

  • Everyone conserves. Three buck a gallon gas is used much more wisely that one buck a gallon.
  • High prices award products to those who “need” them the most (i.e., willing to pay more). Those whose need is less (i.e., won’t pay the high price) wait until the price comes down.
  • Producers ship more of a product to where the return on investment is higher. Plywood in NOLA after Katrina was earning more than in your local home depot.
  • Supply reduced locally encourages conservation and / or delayed gratification.

In short the market is our benefactor. Actually all of those fellow human beings represented in the market are working to satisfy our needs. Not out of self-sacrifice. But, out of a desire to get our “certificate of appreciation” (i.e., money). They can then use those to satisfy their own needs. In a giant calculus designed to make us all live happily together as one big happy family. (Move your elbow!) OK, maybe not happy, but not killing each other either.

Gooferment bad. (Any gooferment!) Markets peaceful and good.

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INTERESTING: Sudoku – deceptively simple game of logic

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

http://www.uclick.com/client/mma/sudoc/

Sudoku Classic

***Begin Quote***

A deceptively simple game of logic, Sudoku is puzzling players all over world. Whether you’re new to this fun and addictive game or you’re already hooked, Sudoku.com has everything you need to get started playing today! Sudoku is easy to learn but a challenge to master.

***End Quote***

Here’s an interesting challenge. What can you learn from Sudoku?

(1) You can learn how to solve them. There is some feeling that, like doing the daily crossword, it can delay old age in your brain.

(2) You can learn how different manual methods are used to solve them. Scanning, Cross-hatching, Counting, “contingencies”, Marking up, Dotting, Anti-dotting, subscripting and finally guessing.

(3) Playing on the AARP site with the cheats turned on demonstrates that dotting, anti-doting, or “erasing” can solve almost any puzzle.

Finally, you’ll learn how to waste some time learning that the computer is a better clerk than you’ll ever be.

:-(

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INTERESTING: REINKE in RISKS again

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

FILED UNDER THE HEADING OF EVERYONE GETS 15 MINUTES?

*** begin quote ***

RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Tuesday 26 June 2007 Volume 24 : Issue 71
ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)
Peter G. Neumann, moderator, chmn ACM Committee on Computers and Public Policy

***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****
This issue is archived at <http://www.risks.org> as <http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/24.71.html>
The current issue can be found at <http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt>

Contents:

{Extraneous Deleted}

A movie torpedoes the concept of electronic voting? (Ferdinand J. Reinke)

{Extraneous Deleted}

***Begin Quote***

I’m not an egg head, nor a ACM-er, nor diligent security researcher. BUT, I do get a charge out of getting into the elite company of getting a post in RISKS.

:-)

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INTERESTING: Move from the free site?

Friday, June 22, 2007

FROM LinkedIn Bloggers forum

***Begin Quote***

>Re: WordPress account has been suspended!
>Posted by: “Kathie M. Thomas”
>Fri Jun 15, 2007 5:29 am (PST)
>It wasn’t me it happened to Martin
>If you use WordPress.com you can’t do adverts.

*** end quote ***

I’m a hobby blogger, a mono logger, whiner, free rider, or whatever you want to call it. The free, and unequaled, wordpressdotcom was a great start. And, I’m not ungrateful. Only a few times did the restrictions chaff.

But, now the unexplained and silent account suspension has made me concerned.

I never wanted the hassles of being off on my own. BUT, if it could happen to her, it could happen to any of us.

I’ve been getting “smarter” so I have my own domain and can move. I have my old posts backed up in various forms.

Argh!

Hate the thought of all the work.

So, I think, and I’m asking for opinions, it might be smart to pick a service provider that others use. Has anyone moved from free to hosted?

(Is there a service provider that will do the migration? That’s worth paying for!)

Anyone published a check list?

If not, maybe we can use my experience as a “guinea pig” and develop one.

Open for suggestions, as I am looking at what appears to be a very big and very dirty stable. :-(

***End Quote***

 

text


INTERESTING: Guidelines for the Pastoral Care of the Road

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

http://212.77.1.245/news_services/
bulletin/news/20451.php?index=20451
&lang=en#Presentation

http://tinyurl.com/2wrxb2

“Guidelines for the Pastoral Care of the Road”

 

***Begin Quote***

In any case, with the request for motorists to exercise virtue, we have drawn up a special ?decalogue? for them, in analogy with the Lord?s Ten Commandments. These are stated here below, as indications, considering that they may also be formulated differently.

I. You shall not kill.

II. The road shall be for you a means of communion between people and not of mortal harm.

III. Courtesy, uprightness and prudence will help you deal with unforeseen events.

IV. Be charitable and help your neighbour in need, especially victims of accidents.

V. Cars shall not be for you an expression of power and domination, and an occasion of sin.

VI. Charitably convince the young and not so young not to drive when they are not in a fitting condition to do so.

VII. Support the families of accident victims.

VIII. Bring guilty motorists and their victims together, at the appropriate time, so that they can undergo the liberating experience of forgiveness.

IX. On the road, protect the more vulnerable party.

X. Feel responsible towards others.

***End Quote***

Sigh!

The secular progressive media is so busy laughing that can NOT even take time to report what they were. Even on the internet, sites were too busy laughing or deriding it to post the text.

It took a few minutes to find a posting of them.

Driving on the roads, I can see why the Papacy might be concerned.

When one gets direction from a good source (i.e., the learned, the wise, the holy), then only a fool laughs imho.

Being a driver with a heavy foot, I’ll take the admonition to heart for what it is. An inexpensive way for me to be a better person. Note, one doesn’t do this for the Pope, the neighbor, the society in general. No, one does it for oneself. To be the best you that you can be.

And, that’s no joke!

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INTERESTING: Iran’s key vulnerability is it … is totally dependent on energy revenues

Saturday, June 16, 2007

PULLING MONEY CAN BREAK IRAN
By DICK MORRIS
Published on TheHill.com on June 13, 2007.

***Begin Quote***

{Extraneous Deleted}

United Nations sanctions are important, but these state pension decisions directly impact the 485 companies that Gaffney’s group, www.disinvestterror.org, has found to invest in the four terror-sponsoring nations identified in the Missouri disinvestment program.

Iran’s key vulnerability is its economy, which is totally dependent on energy revenues. Eighty-five percent of government revenues come from the energy sector, and these revenues are expected to drop from $55 billion in 2006 to only $44 billion this year due to a rise in domestic demand for energy and decreasing energy production. By 2014, it is estimated Iran will export no oil at all unless foreign investment comes to the rescue and helps generate additional production. Iranian oil reserves are the second largest in the world, but are of no use to the ayatollahs unless they can get at them. By cutting off foreign investment in the energy sector, these state government s have gone a long way toward destabilizing the Iranian regime.

{Extraneous Deleted}

***End Quote***

I’m no Dick Morris fan. (I suspect any fellow with “interesting” tastes.) But, I like when he exposes the politician’s “clay feet” and he does have a knack for great ideas. Now, we should NOT have gooferment pensions. And, we should MYOB. But, having said that, this idea seems to be like the concept of Marque and Reprisal. We should get the gooferment out of the energy biz and we’ll have cheap energy from a variety of sources. And, the two bit dictators sitting on oil will be back to square one, wondering where the good life went.

It’s the same principle as legalizing drugs. Don’t get me wrong drug addiction is terrible. But the collateral damage from our phony and immoral so-called “war” on drugs is the equivalent of shooting ourselves in the foot. Eliminate the gooferment from drugs, and we will have the Columbian drug lords wondering where the good life went as WalMart takes the price of drugs to 4$ for a thirty day supply. Oh, and don’t worry about an explosion in addiction, because, at the same time, you will have stripped the “koolness” of drugs being “illegal, dangerous, and hip”.

MYOB, put the gooferment back in it’s Constitutional box, and let the people decide where their money should be invested. If the people see an enemy, then they can decide where to invest their money.

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UPDATE: Some how this horse got out of the barn and on the blog missing one key word and most of the last paragraph. Saw it when it echoed back to me this morning. So I fixed it. Hmmm?


INTERESTING: ‘Mr. Wizard’ taught science to young baby boomers

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-herbert13jun13,0,7656221.story

Don Herbert, 89; TV’s ‘Mr. Wizard’ taught science to young baby boomers
By Dennis McLellan, Times Staff Writer
June 13, 2007

***Begin Quote***

Don Herbert, who explained the wonderful world of science to millions of young baby boomers on television in the 1950s and ’60s as “Mr. Wizard” and did the same for another generation of youngsters on the Nickelodeon cable TV channel in the 1980s, died Tuesday. He was 89.

***End Quote***

I will never forget seeing him collapse a gas can demonstrating air pressure. I just sat there and said “No way”. So I went and did it. From that I concluded there was a lot I didn’t know. (Earth shaking to supposedly bright kid; everyone said so. Just coasting along.) I became fascinate with physics. And, an injineer was born.

Thanks, Mr. Wizard.

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