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The truth shall set you free, but first it's going to piss you off
Bemusements
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Wednesday, December 31, 2003
Posted
12/31/2003 03:27:00 PM
by Douglas
Have a great time, and see you next year!
Posted
12/31/2003 03:22:00 PM
by Douglas
Through the 1990s, the Davises' collection of cats would alienate longtime friends . . .Really? I can't imagine why. . .
Posted
12/31/2003 03:17:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/31/2003 03:12:00 PM
by Douglas
So there you have it. "Auld Lang Syne" is about drinking, friendship, and looking back at times gone by. And more drinking.Of course! Tuesday, December 30, 2003
Posted
12/30/2003 11:46:00 PM
by Douglas
Janet Cesaril, marketing director for The Mall at Short Hills, attributed the decision to the heightened Orange Alert and noted that the walkers are a diverse group, including not just seniors but young mothers and others.That's right, Janet. It's not just the elderly that want to blow up the mall. It's young mothers, too.
Posted
12/30/2003 02:06:00 AM
by Douglas
To the Pentagon, stop-loss orders are a finger in the dike -- a tool to halt the hemorrhage of personnel, and maximize cohesion and experience, for units in the field in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Through a series of stop-loss orders, the Army alone has blocked the possible retirements and departures of more than 40,000 soldiers, about 16,000 of them National Guard and reserve members who were eligible to leave the service this year. Hundreds more in the Air Force, Navy and Marines were briefly blocked from retiring or departing the military at some point this year.Keeping people from leaving the voluntary military when they voluntarily want to. Well, that sounds like. . .who are we fighting again?
Posted
12/30/2003 01:15:00 AM
by Douglas
Posted
12/30/2003 12:44:00 AM
by Douglas
A man who did not carry a knife was a lesser man by most standards.Well, duh. I was once told by a guy at Johnson Space Center that "there are four things a man should never be without: His wallet, a pen, a handkerchief, and a knife." I think that's about right, except for the snot rag. That's just gross. Monday, December 29, 2003
Posted
12/29/2003 02:18:00 PM
by Douglas
Don't ya just love these Christmas stories? Another link from The Altus Times. Sunday, December 28, 2003
Posted
12/28/2003 11:30:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/28/2003 11:24:00 PM
by Douglas
Sunday, December 21, 2003
Posted
12/21/2003 01:24:00 PM
by Douglas
In the cafeteria just after lunch, (well, not *just* after, more like *during* lunch, about 12:28; say 12:30, give or take a few minutes), I leaned back in my chair (it was one of those aluminum chairs, good strength-to-weight, like titanium but not quite; but then of course titanium would be a bit of an overkill). Anyway, I heard one of the girls talking about how boring she thought engineers could be.A bit too true to be funny.
Posted
12/21/2003 02:49:00 AM
by Douglas
If they build a perpetual motion machine, I'll be the first in line to buy one. I just doubt the laws of physics are going to be repealed any time soon. Saturday, December 20, 2003
Posted
12/20/2003 02:17:00 AM
by Douglas
Also, are we to believe that he's dismantling his programs of WMD just because Saddam was caught in a "spider hole" earlier this week? Didn't we bomb the crap out of him back in '86? Isn't that what resulted the bombing of PanAm 103? Why is the United States the only country that can bomb other people without consequence? I also find this very odd: Libya's nuclear effort was more advanced than previously thought, the official said. U.S. and British experts inspected components of a centrifuge program to enrich the uranium, though the system was not operational, the official said, briefing reporters at the White House on condition of anonymity.So there are still Americans fighting and dying in Iraq looking for WMD (with no success), yet here's Libya who hasn't been on the Pentagon threat board since the Reagan administration and they're suddenly giving up stuff they already had cooking? Why is that?
Posted
12/20/2003 01:15:00 AM
by Douglas
But the big picture? Somewhere in this concept, when you consider paying someone else to hang your Christmas lights: We mourn the loss of manufacturing jobs-"real jobs"-and ignore growing aesthetic professions, from installing holiday lights and landscaping lawns to giving manicures and facials, from designing brochures to crafting granite countertops.Uh, I don't want to put too fine a point on this, because if I was going to rant about this country's loss of industrial prowess, I wouldn't start with paying someone else to hang your Christmas lights. It's just a symptom, not a cause. But this is a nice yardstick: You can buy a 100-light string, nearly 50 feet long, for $2.44 at Wal-Mart.I saw a sign at Walgreen's for 2 100-light strands for $3.99. How in the hell can anyone make them that cheap? Even in China? But here is where she falls off the deep end: Just as surely as the horsepower of a car engine or the warmth of a blanket, the pleasure of twinkling Christmas lights offers real value.Real value? From a flashing light? Surely we're not all that stupid yet, are we? Is it important that you have a job? Is it important that your neighbor has one, too? Sure it is. They can't hang cheap, imported Christmas lights all year round. Friday, December 19, 2003
Posted
12/19/2003 07:34:00 PM
by Douglas
"Help. I've fallen and I can't get up. And my cats are eating me"
Posted
12/19/2003 07:27:00 PM
by Douglas
Here's the angle that I can't imagine isn't getting more attention: Privately, however, the administrations of Reagan and George H.W. Bush sold military goods to Iraq, including poisonous chemicals and deadly biological agents, worked to stop the flow of weapons to Iran, and undertook discreet diplomatic initiatives, such as the two Rumsfeld trips to Baghdad, to improve relations with Hussein.Didn't you kinda wonder why Rummy, Bush, and even Powell were just flat out convinced that Saddam had WMD? Well here's why: We freakin' sold it to him! All they had to do is check the receipt, and wait for the check to clear. But it's statements like this one that really makes me want to puke: "Iraqi officials have professed to be at a loss to explain our actions as measured against our stated objectives," he wrote.Yeah, I guess the highly nuanced "wink, wink" was lost in the translation. "Don't use the chemical weapons {wink, wink} against Iran. Thursday, December 18, 2003
Posted
12/18/2003 09:06:00 PM
by Douglas
Wednesday, December 17, 2003
Posted
12/17/2003 08:57:00 PM
by Douglas
"Well, if this were easy, I guess everyone would do it"Maybe not, but there would certainly be a lot fewer stupid people around.
Posted
12/17/2003 08:45:00 PM
by Douglas
Especially when you've been drinking all night at a titty bar.
Posted
12/17/2003 08:26:00 PM
by Douglas
If this is an attempt of the Bush Administration to "spur the economy," look for a new bill every other week Tuesday, December 16, 2003
Posted
12/16/2003 10:06:00 PM
by Douglas
For now, let’s say that while the President’s opponents have made much sport of the idea that God called George Bush to the presidency, it’s becoming increasingy difficult to doubt that God wants President Bush re-elected.What mortal could possibly argue with that divine providence?
Posted
12/16/2003 05:49:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/16/2003 05:27:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/16/2003 05:24:00 PM
by Douglas
One witness told sheriff's officers that Hernandez shot Arrieta and the gun then was passed to other partygoers. Altogether, the witness said, six men fired at Arrieta.You know you've pissed off your buddies when they pass the gun around and all take a shot at you. Monday, December 15, 2003
Posted
12/15/2003 06:52:00 PM
by Douglas
Sunday, December 14, 2003
Posted
12/14/2003 12:58:00 PM
by Douglas
Saturday, December 13, 2003
Posted
12/13/2003 05:21:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/13/2003 05:05:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/13/2003 05:02:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/13/2003 04:57:00 PM
by Douglas
There are numerous theories as to why this resurgence is afoot. "We ran out of cheating songs," Crenshaw quips, adding that the "next hot trend is songs about mama, of course."Keep on the lookout for train songs, pain songs, and blue eyes cryin' in the rain songs. I was drunk, the day my momma got out of prison. . . Friday, December 12, 2003
Posted
12/12/2003 05:48:00 PM
by Douglas
The State decided that voluntarily (and some would say recklessly) taking a human life is OK, and here's a list of all 313 of them and what they did to get there (odd how many of them murdered someone for less than $500. Something to think about). But somehow listing what they wanted for their last meal is "in poor taste?" That's just too ironic to be funny. There's many angles to the question of capital punishment, so why the hell is TDCJ drawing the line on whether or not Leroy got cheese on his burger before they stuck a needle in his arm?
Posted
12/12/2003 05:35:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/12/2003 04:32:00 PM
by Douglas
Thursday, December 11, 2003
Posted
12/11/2003 09:17:00 PM
by Douglas
But it's not the only one. You've got this case of the kid with the asthma inhaler, or better yet, you've got this one, with the kid and the folding pocket knife. But back to the latest round of lunacy. Did the school have to expel her? No. They retain the right to ignore this totally moronic rule, just not the ability: But another school official said earlier Thursday that having medication on campus doesn't automatically lead to a one-year expulsion. "After an investigation and a hearing then, if necessary, punishment is administered. It could be no punishment," said Betty McCauley, Bossier schools student services director.Gee, I can't imagine how a student going to a school like this would have frequent headaches. Could it be from dealing with idiots like Ms. McCauley all the live long day? In all fairness, it's good that this little problem was nipped in the bud. It's a proven fact that Advil is just a gateway drug for black tar heroin.
Posted
12/11/2003 07:16:00 PM
by Douglas
Most surprising to me, is that most of the women, including many Ivy League graduates, either don’t want an income-earning job or will only work part-time in an unusually pleasant job.Pardon me while I snicker about your Ph.D. under my breath, but I think this is only "surprising" to you. Work sucks, buddy, and it didn't take the power of the feminist movement for humanity to realize this. If there is someone else in the house that's going to support you in the lifestyle to which you've become accustom, regardless of their genitalia, more power to you: catch up on your soaps and shut the hell up. The number of "housewives" is increasing? Well who could have foreseen that? As I said earlier, Nobody wants to work, so why in the hell are the feminists (and now crybaby men) making such a big deal about it? High floutin' head shrinkin' not withstanding, why do men die before their wives? Because we want to, dammit. Labels: working women
Posted
12/11/2003 06:27:00 PM
by Douglas
Why does this make me want to watch Drop Dead Gorgeous for the 12th time?
Posted
12/11/2003 06:12:00 PM
by Douglas
What the world of drunk driving has been waiting for: A jingle. Of course. Why didn't we think of this before? On a side note, why is Santa so jolly? He knows where all the naughty girls live.
Posted
12/11/2003 06:03:00 PM
by Douglas
Don't like how CCISD is treating you? A long walk with the lovely Texas Department of Criminal Justice will show you just how bad it really was.
Posted
12/11/2003 05:50:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/11/2003 05:39:00 PM
by Douglas
Thank god The Beetles knew when to hang it up and call it quits. I can't help but think they would have been churning out dreck all through the 70s.
Posted
12/11/2003 04:54:00 PM
by Douglas
OK, I guess they're right on most of these, and I realize it's subjective. But objectively, NO album list would ever put Greenday's Dookie a full 41 spots higher than anything by Patsy Cline. A 45 minute CD of Patsy clearing her throat is easier to listen to than Greenday. Also, why did three Public Enemy albums make the list, but only two by Johnny Cash? The same number of Rage Against the Machine albums, I might add. Further proof we don't live in a just universe. And who the hell are The Kinks, anyway? Wednesday, December 10, 2003
Posted
12/10/2003 10:49:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/10/2003 10:36:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/10/2003 10:30:00 PM
by Douglas
Update: Here's the story from Chronicle about NASA's photo-op yesterday.
Posted
12/10/2003 07:17:00 AM
by Douglas
And here's one from Lubbock. Tuesday, December 09, 2003
Posted
12/09/2003 11:09:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/09/2003 10:59:00 PM
by Douglas
Isn't that like telling a smoker he can't buy a pack of smokies, just because he's an addict? I thought that was the point.
Posted
12/09/2003 10:30:00 PM
by Douglas
At Clear Creek High School, a 47-year-old campus, the roof of the auditorium is covered with water stains. There’s also no access for handicapped people to an upstairs room where costumes and props are stored, and the district is currently renting a dimmer rack for $1,500 a month because the components of the almost 50-year-old lighting unit died.I know I'm a dinosaur, but I came from a public school in Texas that was about 60 years old, and we didn't even have A/C. But that's missing the big picture: isn't public education supposed to be about, oh, I don't know education instead of entertainment? I know CCISD needs new schools to mollycoddle the influx of children in the district, but they're just not tugging at my heart strings by appealing to their lack of equipment for extracurricular activities. Especially when you consider we're already paying the maximum amount in school taxes the State of Texas allowes by law. I can understand money for new schools, but look at some of this other stuff they're asking for:
But I'm in the minority on this one. I'll vote yes for this one when they trim it down to an even $150 Million for new schools and land. Either that, or give each voter a line-item veto.
Posted
12/09/2003 05:44:00 PM
by Douglas
"Condit had married Jan Condit -- his first cousin -- in the early '90s"Whaaa? How do you get to be that powerful if Business Week finds out you married your first cousin? Isn't that illegal? Said one Boeing lawyer to a senior Boeing executive: "We have another Bill Clinton on our hands."That seems a little odd, don't ya think? Also: "Condit hosted elaborate parties that often included poetry readings and evenings of Camelot themes, featuring characters from King Arthur."Uh, does this involve any D&D characters or a 21 sided die? Here's yet another article about the goings on at Boeing. This one had at least a ray of optimism, and no mention of incest: To leapfrog Airbus, Boeing needed to roll the dice. Instead, its new culture of soaking the taxpayers for military goodies while playing it safe on the commercial-aircraft front may have cost Boeing its future and blown a hole in the U.S. economy that never will close. Monday, December 08, 2003
Posted
12/08/2003 05:31:00 PM
by Douglas
Imagine? Drugs given throughout the childhood has a long-term effect on the brain? Yes; this and many more fact filled headlines in this month's copy of Duh!
Posted
12/08/2003 04:55:00 PM
by Douglas
"I am so excited," she said. "It's going to be such a great experience. Just getting out of town and going to a place like San Diego, all because of your dog. It's not something you'd expect."Riding the fame and fortune of your dachshund. Yep, I think you could call that "unexpected."
Posted
12/08/2003 04:42:00 PM
by Douglas
"The A380 programme can't be judged a success without sales to Japanese airlines. It's still possible Airbus could make a return on the A380 without them, but it makes it extremely difficult."It sure would break my heart to see a State-supported socialist collaboration like Airbus have to eat the $12 Billion development cost of this behemoth.
Posted
12/08/2003 12:09:00 AM
by Douglas
How fitting that this is coming up in 2003, the centennial year of heavier than air powered flight. For the last 100 years, aviation has been about higher, faster, farther. Now, with the death of the Concorde, what's Airbus setting their sights for? A giant, uh, bus. In the air. I guess anyone could have seen that one coming. Sunday, December 07, 2003
Posted
12/07/2003 08:59:00 PM
by Douglas
I don't know if they remember or not, but a few years ago some states got together and decided that they didn't want to be a part of the United States anymore. It didn't turn out too well for them. Here's to the triumph of hope over experience.
Posted
12/07/2003 08:58:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/07/2003 08:57:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/07/2003 08:56:00 PM
by Douglas
"The question that remains is, will we have a price war?" Leichtman said. "The challenge is once you start this, it's very hard to extract yourself from it."If any of these ass-hats did what they said they would, they wouldn't need a price war.
Posted
12/07/2003 08:56:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/07/2003 01:53:00 AM
by Douglas
The question is. . .are you pissed off about it? Can your heirs determine your salvation?
Posted
12/07/2003 01:32:00 AM
by Douglas
Bill Orzechowski, an anti-cigarette tax consultant, disputed the efficiency of a cigarette tax to pay for public schools. He argued that revenue would gradually decline as the number of smokers declines, while the "voracious appetite" of education funding increases over time.Gee, I wonder who Bill works for. . . . Oh wait, here's the big finish: Orzechowski, whose research was largely funded by the tobacco industry, also cautioned that Texans would go to the Internet or neighboring states for cheaper cigarettes.Now that's the best program I've ever heard. Sucking off the state taxes of our neighboring states. This plan works well for those of us in Orange, Wellington, and El Paso, but what about those poor unfortunate soles in Brady, Goldwaithe, and Early? There's several hundred miles between you and cheep cigarettes in Oklahoma if you live in Waxahachie.
Posted
12/07/2003 01:17:00 AM
by Douglas
Friday, December 05, 2003
Posted
12/05/2003 01:00:00 AM
by Douglas
"I can't imagine or think of anything more ridiculous than this. It all happened over a hamburger," state District Judge Brock Thomas told Nolan. "I sure hope it was worth it, because you'll have 10 years to think about it."I think the saddest part of this story is overlooked here. A McDondald's manager steps in front of a moving car for the cost of a couple of cheeseburgers? Not that her "chronic digestive problems" or her inability "to fulfill her wifely duties" is any laughing matter, but think about the dollar amount that would provoke you to step in front of a moving car. Is it more or less than $4?
Posted
12/05/2003 12:06:00 AM
by Douglas
Thursday, December 04, 2003
Posted
12/04/2003 11:57:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/04/2003 11:22:00 PM
by Douglas
Less than, say, your average touring funk band.
Posted
12/04/2003 11:04:00 PM
by Douglas
Something we've known in Texas for a long time.
Posted
12/04/2003 07:32:00 AM
by Douglas
"They're hamburger now."What's for lunch? And how's this for your average statement made by a police spokesman: "Cows don't obey hand signals or traffic cones," he said.But they are delicious. Also, be sure and check here for updated info about the euthanization of the injured cattle. The police only shot the cow after it had been tranquilized by animal control. Dinner is served. Wednesday, December 03, 2003
Posted
12/03/2003 11:03:00 PM
by Douglas
Is that a corn cob, or are you just happy to see me? OR: Boy, Britney's really let herself go since the last album. . .
Posted
12/03/2003 10:53:00 PM
by Douglas
"A doctor's advice is often all you need to catch them early," he saidOr a bartender's. "He ordered a double, lock his ass up!" Look, if you run over someone in your car, guess what? It's still illegal, drunk or sober. It shouldn't be more illegal just because you've had a beer or seven. That's just one short step away from the thought police saying it's the beer's fault. It's not. You made a bad call, Bubba. And whether you were changing a CD or you were three sheets to the wind, it's still your fault. How 'bout a little more personal responsibility and a little less governmental intervention?
Posted
12/03/2003 05:13:00 PM
by Douglas
Something tells me Apple and Toyota are going to have something worked out very soon. . .
Posted
12/03/2003 04:59:00 PM
by Douglas
If you use a debit card as a credit card, the credit card company (MasterCard) gets 3% of the transaction. But if you input a PIN, the bank issuing the card charges between 75¢ and $1.50 for the transaction. For using the same card! So by using a PIN as opposed to a signature, you save the retailer (and ultimately, yourself) some money, and for someone like Wal-Mart, that adds up to Billions a year. "Wal-Mart has demonstrated that when they get committed to a program like this, they can hold their breath for a long time," he said. "I think it is likely that MasterCard will end up having to give some concessions to make this work."Too many times this has happened where Wal-Mart has flexed its retail muscle to screw the little guys. It's a good change to see that they're stickin' it to MasterCard, for screwing us all out of our money, while doing almost noting in return.
Posted
12/03/2003 04:47:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/03/2003 04:36:00 PM
by Douglas
Monday, December 01, 2003
Posted
12/01/2003 07:01:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
12/01/2003 06:58:00 PM
by Douglas
"Reports that say something hasn't happened are always interesting to me, because as we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know," Rumsfeld told a news briefing.Yeah, what he said.
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