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Tuesday, November 30, 2004
Posted
11/30/2004 05:51:00 PM
by Douglas
The soft-spoken software engineer Ken Jennings, who is Jeopardy!'s longest-running champ, could finally get beaten and booted off the pre-taped show tonight after a record 75 appearances, according to numerous Web reports.I think he just got tired of playing. He blew both daily doubles earlier in the game, and I don't think there's a chance on earth he didn't know the answer to such an easy question. The show might be watchable again.
Posted
11/30/2004 05:48:00 PM
by Douglas
"I would have dwelt on it if I missed something that I knew or didn't phrase it in the form of a question," said Jennings, a computer software engineer from Salt Lake City. "It was a big relief to me that I lost to someone who played a better game than me."So, just because he did his own taxes, he wouldn't know about H&R Block? I seriously doubt that. The man was a machine, and lucky as hell.
Posted
11/30/2004 05:46:00 PM
by Douglas
A man who placed a lava lamp on a hot stovetop was killed when it exploded and sent a shard of glass into his heart, police said.And he was sober? Somehow I doubt that.
Posted
11/30/2004 05:30:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
11/30/2004 05:25:00 PM
by Douglas
But this guy's site is nuts. Be sure and check out the "How much is inside" section. Hilarious. Monday, November 29, 2004
Posted
11/29/2004 05:46:00 PM
by Douglas
According to a new study, space and dark are eternal, they were not created, and the 'Primordial Fireball' as claimed by the Big Bang theory could not produce them. The dark had existed before anything else since it is the occupant of the space, the master of the space. When there was no light before existence of the Universe, there existed dark, only dark, nothing else but dark and no one can challenge it just think over it.Any questions? I don't know if that's as stupid as it sounds, or incredibly brilliant, so ya know what? Here's a picture of a kitten in a shoe.
Posted
11/29/2004 05:06:00 PM
by Douglas
William A Mitchell never became a household name, but most households you can name have something of his in it – Cool Whip, quick-set Jell-O, egg whites for cake mix… He gave American astronauts the first space-age beverage (Tang) and impressionable adolescents one of the great urban legends (Pop Rocks).Pop Rocks? Cool Whip? Jell-O??? Forget household name, this guy should be up on Mt. Rushmore!! His first big success came with a tapioca substitute developed during World War Two when “tapioca supplies were running low,” as the Associated Press put it. War is hell. In fact, tapioca, a starchy substance in hard grains from cassava, came mainly from the far east, and, with supply lines disrupted, that presented problems for packaged food.War is hell, indeed. Let's not imagine what would happen to morale if the tapioca shortage was fully realized on the American homefront. Bedlam. Pure bedlam. William, bring it home for us: He’s part of the taste of America, the stuff that gets under your skin – from the not entirely “home-made” pies rotating at the diner to the red, white and blue Jell-O salad at the Fourth of July fireworks. That’s how he deserves to be celebrated: take 1 pkg of Jell-O, throw in 1 pkg of Cool Whip, add Tang, mix, lob in a couple of Pop Rocks, and stand well back.Jell-O, Tang and Pop Rocks. How could you go wrong? Only if you mixed them all together. Because I heard about this kid, one time, that mixed pop rocks with cool whip, and he sprouted a third nipple. Sunday, November 28, 2004
Posted
11/28/2004 04:20:00 PM
by Douglas
Relatives say Gracie Jackson's wish was always that she and her husband J.C., the love of her life for seven decades, would go to heaven holding hands.Wow. What a tragically beautiful happy ending.
Posted
11/28/2004 03:02:00 PM
by Douglas
Maybe it's not so bad after all. . . . Saturday, November 27, 2004
Posted
11/27/2004 06:35:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
11/27/2004 06:23:00 PM
by Douglas
"Cheers" alum Shelley Long was back home after being briefly hospitalized because she took a dose of medication to treat back pain and the drug made her ill, her manager said Friday.Unintentional overdose, suicide attempt. . . potato, other pronunciation of potato.
Posted
11/27/2004 06:09:00 PM
by Douglas
An oil tanker leaked about 30,000 gallons of crude into the Delaware River late on Friday, worrying local environmentalists and causing a section of river to be closed to commercial traffic, Coast Guard officials said on Saturday.For me, there's about 30 years of gasoline floating down the Delaware right now. And if my fluid mechanics serves me right, it's all somewhere near the surface. How hard could that be?
Posted
11/27/2004 06:07:00 PM
by Douglas
Sunday, November 21, 2004
Posted
11/21/2004 06:27:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
11/21/2004 06:15:00 PM
by Douglas
Though Congress approved a $1.2 billion subsidy for Amtrak, the money-losing passenger railroad still is careening toward a major disruption in service.How the hell would anyone notice a disruption in AmTrak service? Nobody rides the friggin' things! To save it, the Transportation Department's inspector general says, Congress must do more. Considering current Amtrak policies, says Inspector General Kenneth Mead, it's up to lawmakers to determine what must go and what may stay to restructure Amtrak and stop the hemorrhaging.Would it be a national tragedy if we didn't have a passenger rail system? First off, I'd have to find someone that's ever taken an AmTrak train and ask them if they'd miss it. But for the other 300 million of us that pay for this crap, we know how to get to the airport.
Posted
11/21/2004 06:12:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
11/21/2004 06:06:00 PM
by Douglas
A dispute among deer hunters over a tree stand in northwestern Wisconsin erupted Sunday in a series of shootings that left five people dead and three injured, officials said.I see a new section here at the blog. The hubris section. Frat boys that drink themselves to death, and hunters that shoot each other. It don't get no better than that. Saturday, November 20, 2004
Posted
11/20/2004 04:09:00 PM
by Douglas
A New Mexico State University fraternity member died Friday after his 21st birthday celebration led to alcohol poisoning, according to the university.This is an unemployment solution. If only half these condescending pricks would follow Steve's lead, I wouldn't have to endure their ignorant, arrogant sneers at the office.
Posted
11/20/2004 03:55:00 PM
by Douglas
The problem, as I see it, is that people get in the express lane when they're not in a hurry. Nobody wants to stand in line all day, but just because you have 9 items doesn't mean that you need to slow down the rest of humanity simply because you don't have anywhere you need to be. So here are some suggestions for some new lanes, and the people that will use them:
Posted
11/20/2004 03:54:00 PM
by Douglas
Next week, millions of college students and young professionals will head home for the Thanksgiving holidays. We’ll sit with our families in warm, candle-lit dining rooms eating stuffed turkey, reminiscing over old photographs, preparing holiday shopping lists and … Please. Let’s be frank. We are going home to fix our parents' computers.This would be funny, if my dad hadn't sent it to me. Still funnier if I weren't bringing them a computer.
Posted
11/20/2004 03:51:00 PM
by Douglas
The last fully modernized W87 nuclear warhead has rolled off the Pantex Plant assembly line.Who the hell are the intended recipients of these "fully modernized" weapons? Until 1991, every nuke we made had "To Russia, with love" on the side of it, but since Russians are now given guided tours of PanTex now, I just can't imagine who these things are pointed at. Friday, November 19, 2004
Posted
11/19/2004 05:55:00 PM
by Douglas
A Tennessee woman says she and her husband were washed away in a flash flood because they had relied on a guidebook that directs tourists to remote areas of the island.The Pickels found themselves in quite a pickle. Mainly because they're a bunch of dumbasses. I bet they sue the publisher.
Posted
11/19/2004 05:03:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
11/19/2004 04:38:00 PM
by Douglas
The US House of Representatives voted to raise the debt ceiling by 800 billion dollars, helping Washington avoid running short of operating funds.It didn't increase to $800 Billion, it increased by $800 Billion! Consider that when you get the illusion that Republicans are for 'small government' or maintain a sibilance of fiscal conservatism. Labels: debt ceiling Wednesday, November 17, 2004
Posted
11/17/2004 05:56:00 PM
by Douglas
Police arrested an Amarillo couple on charges of public lewdness Monday morning behind the International House of Pancakes, 2100 S. Western St.They wanted it "scattered, and smothered," but not covered. Who knew?
Posted
11/17/2004 05:31:00 PM
by Douglas
Russian President Vladimir Putin announced Wednesday that his country's armed forces will soon have access to advanced nuclear missile systems unavailable in any other country.That's all well and good, but weigh that soundbite against this one: "The United States has been working with our Russian counterparts for the past 10 years to ensure the security of nuclear-weapons grade materials," Wilkes said. "The group was here to discuss the importance of nuclear materials security and the best practices for protecting such material as well as to see such measures demonstrated at one of our NNSA sites."So let me get this straight. We give them access to our top secret nuclear facilities, so they can give us the business end of a missile systems "unavailable in any other country?" I never thought I would have said this but I think I read too much.
Posted
11/17/2004 05:22:00 PM
by Douglas
And who is going to fill the engineering jobs? Foreigners, while millions of Liberal Arts grads complain about lack of opportunity. Hope you enjoyed your "History of Rock 'N Roll" course, gas-pumper!
Posted
11/17/2004 05:13:00 PM
by Douglas
A study in the New England Journal of Medicine found a four fold increase in the risk of an accident for people who drive while phoning -- the same risk as driving with a 0.08 blood alcohol level, the legal limit.The sad thing about this story? Most reactionists will see this and say that cell phones need to be banned. Yet I read this story and say that both should be legal, and all cars should be equipped with cow-catchers.
Posted
11/17/2004 05:04:00 PM
by Douglas
Monday, November 15, 2004
Posted
11/15/2004 05:49:00 PM
by Douglas
A bag of bills stolen from a casino was snapped up by beavers who wove thousands of dollars in soggy currency into the sticks and brush of their dam on a creek in eastern Louisiana.Also, when are you going to hear about 'casino people' happy about getting back wet cash from a beaver? Ok, I'm done.
Posted
11/15/2004 05:18:00 PM
by Douglas
And for apparently no reason, here are some kitties! Check out the one in the bowler hat!
Posted
11/15/2004 05:17:00 PM
by Douglas
Investigators are trying to identify the source of ice chunks that smashed through the roof of a house in this Seattle suburb last week, landing on the bed of a 7-year-old girl.At least it wasn't "blue ice" formed from frozen poo from leaky lavatories. Now that's what I call an ICBM. [No, I never tire of that joke.]
Posted
11/15/2004 05:04:00 PM
by Douglas
Not that I'm a huge fan of Win98, but hey, if it ain't broke, don't fix it. Well, it's broke. After removing all the extraneous CRAP that comes with my computer, I think it's up and running. I almost laughed my ass off when it asked me "Are you SURE you want to permanently remove AOL from your hard drive?" Gee, where could I possibly get a copy of AOL's software if'n I wanted it back? Don't homeless people crap AOL CDs now? It looks like I've got everything up and transferred, but I might have to hang on to the old HD for a while. I hope to cram it into the new machine eventually, yet I can't see any openings in this new machine that aren't riveted shut. I sure would hate to have to drill this case open. Really I would. At least before the warranty is up. Right now I'm trying to figure out if I like Firefox better than Netscape 7.2. Ideas? Sunday, November 14, 2004
Posted
11/14/2004 02:23:00 PM
by Douglas
"And the pre-hurricane top-selling item was beer."Why beer? Because Wal-Mart doesn't sell bourbon. If you're going to get carried off by a hurricane, honestly, do you want to go sober?
Posted
11/14/2004 01:31:00 PM
by Douglas
In a clear signal of the growing media clout of Houston-area Hispanics, radio behemoth Clear Channel Communications has yanked legendary rock station KLOL-FM (101.1) off the air and replaced it with a format that radio insiders call "Spanglish Top 40."The good (and bad) think about such a purely market driven decision is that it's what the people want. It's just inconceivable that the home of Stevens and Pruett is now "Spanglish Top 40." This should be a wake up call to all Texans: learn Spanish sooner, rather than later. Saturday, November 13, 2004
Posted
11/13/2004 02:52:00 PM
by Douglas
I'm teetering towards the latter, if you must know.
Posted
11/13/2004 02:38:00 PM
by Douglas
Scarlet Street I don't really think of Edward G. Robinson as a noir-film actor, but he ran through the gamut of his two facial expressions in this one. As a pussy-whipped clerk that fell for young working-girl, he doesn't elicit much sympathy when she starts playing him like a two-bit piccolo. But it's an interesting ride, but a disappointing ending. Touch of Evil Has Orson Welles made a bad movie? I think Citizen Kane is vastly overrated, but the man knows what he's doing, on both sides of the camera. And maybe it's just me, but Charlton Heston is forever typecast in my mind as Moses, and doesn't really make a believable Mexican narcotics officer, but Janet Leigh carries the both of them effortlessly. And then you've got Marlene Dietrich showing up in a brothel. How could go wrong there? But the opening shot with the camera crossing the border backwards is reason enough to see this one. Don't Bother to Knock I was really hesitant to get this one, because I thought it was going to be a 90 minute excuse to watch Marilyn Monroe giggle. (Is there a downside to that I'm not envisioning?) But man, she could really act! At least she could in this one, but I know some will say that she wasn't acting in this one, either. That she's really was that crazy. Either case, it makes for an excellent film. Interesting to compare her performance in this film with the jiggly trollops we're presented with from today's Hollywood. There's just no comparison. Asphalt Jungle I'm hesitant to say any of these old movies are the best I've ever seen, but this one is right up there. It's got it all. A crooked cop getting heat from the commissioner, an ex-con with the perfect plan for that last big score, the short-order cook with a game leg and a hunch back, and mouthy dame that just starts crying for seemingly no reason, and Sterling Hayden (could anyone say no to that man?) as the hooligan so deep in debt from betting the ponies he's willing to do anything for a buck. You've got the score, the double-cross, the take-down, and the get-away, and even though everyone watching the movie knows what's going to happen, you can't take your eyes off of it 'till the final credits. Marilyn shows up radiantly in this one, too, for about three minutes of screen time. Labels: film noir Friday, November 12, 2004
Posted
11/12/2004 05:17:00 PM
by Douglas
The Christmas-themed movie "Noel" most likely won't be coming to a theater near you — but if you miss it on cable, there's always the self-destructing DVD.Has Hollywood lost their freakin' minds? They won't stop crying about how piracy is ruining their industry, yet they churn out this crap that begs, no, demands to be copied by anyone who might want to watch it the day after tomorrow. DVD burners are now under $100 and falling fast. If that doesn't scare Hollywood into a better idea than this, nothing will. Thursday, November 11, 2004
Posted
11/11/2004 05:52:00 PM
by Douglas
"Big brother is riding shotgun"I'm going to stand by my original assessment and blame the insurance companies. Who else would have the power to pull this off and/or have as much to gain from the technology? EDRs are certainly not new. Information gathered on black boxes — typically everything from speed, brake pressure, seat belt use and air bag deployment — has already been used in determining guilt in criminal and civil cases across the country.[emphasis added]Well, duh. Insurance companies want to use this data to prove you were driving recklessly, thus giving them grounds to disavow your claim. But what I don't understand are the legal aspects. I realize this is a poor analogy, but how is this any different from the diary I wrote describing how I committed a crime? The EDR is in my car, I paid for it, right? How could I possibly be compelled to relinquish it if I didn't want to? Doesn't the 5th amendment still protect us from self incrimination? Then, Haseline said, he would prefer that laws address the issue of a car owner’s knowledge of the EDRs in their vehicles, and that car owners have ownership of the data once its recorded.So why do I have to have one in my car to begin with? Why can't I just unplug the damn thing if I want to? I think that's the real issue. Not only do I have to submit to this monitoring, but I have to pay for it, as well. Labels: EDR
Posted
11/11/2004 05:42:00 PM
by Douglas
A plan to teach British children the risque art of pole dancing, usually the preserve of strip bars, has been cancelled after an uproar from child welfare groups, the teacher said.As long as it's fitness training and not vocational training, what's the problem?
Posted
11/11/2004 05:37:00 PM
by Douglas
To date, the community has submitted about 275 pounds of mercury since the city and Environmental Protection Agency began the drive about a month ago, said Duree Duke, environmental health director for the city."Lying around their homes?" What the hell??? Why would anyone have mercury just lying around their homes? And 275 pounds? That's about two and a half gallons! That's a shit-load of broken thermometers.
Posted
11/11/2004 05:30:00 PM
by Douglas
It's likely, I imagine, that most moviegoers will be more concerned by the eerie listlessness of those characters' faces and the grim vision of Santa Claus's North Pole compound, with interiors that look like a munitions factory and facades that seem conceived along the same oppressive lines as Coketown, the red-brick town of "machinery and tall chimneys" in Dickens's "Hard Times." Tots surely won't recognize that Santa's big entrance in front of the throngs of frenzied elves and awe-struck children directly evokes, however unconsciously, one of Hitler's Nuremberg rally entrances in Leni Riefenstahl's "Triumph of the Will." But their parents may marvel that when Santa's big red sack of toys is hoisted from factory floor to sleigh it resembles nothing so much as an airborne scrotum.Ouch. What every kid wants to see this Christmas! An airborne scrotum! But I can only imagine that it's right on the money. I don't really understand the appeal of these cartoons that cost a million dollars for each minute of screen time.
Posted
11/11/2004 05:23:00 PM
by Douglas
Dell Inc. said its profit surged 25 percent in the third quarter as the world's largest personal computer maker posted record sales due to rising technology spending in the corporate and government sectors in the United States and abroad.Boy do I feel like a chump.
Posted
11/11/2004 05:13:00 PM
by Douglas
About four miles east of the U.S. Capitol, in an industrial section of town, sits a gas station that looks like any other. But it's not, because on Wednesday it became the first in North America to have a hydrogen dispensing pump.Again, where the hell is this hydrogen going to come from? Wednesday, November 10, 2004
Posted
11/10/2004 05:27:00 PM
by Douglas
Firstly, living in the sticks doesn't make you more American. Rural, urban or suburban--they're irrelevant. San Francisco's predominantly gay Castro district is every bit as red, white and blue as the Texas panhandle. But if militant Christianist Republicans from inland backwaters believe that secular liberal Democrats from the big coastal cities look upon them with disdain, there's a reason. We do, and all the more so after this election.Anyone that thinks that living in one part of America makes them more American than someone else is totally delusional. Pot, we have kettle on line one. Isn't that the crux of his whole argument? The smarter, cooler, more educated liberal elitists are some how superior, and thus, more American? As a poor, stupid red-neck from the Texas Panhandle, all I can say is that if he's the vision of enlightenment, I'll enjoy the darkness. Without reciprocating his vitriol, I can assure him his contempt is mutual.
Posted
11/10/2004 05:13:00 PM
by Douglas
Tuesday, November 09, 2004
Posted
11/09/2004 05:47:00 PM
by Douglas
(It's Lie-lex. Not lillecks.)And yes, I bought the book this week. It's my 8th Lie-Lix book. Can you stop whining now, please?
Posted
11/09/2004 05:42:00 PM
by Douglas
For some reason, I found this article fascinating, but not only for its content, but for the things it doesn't say. [via Ann.] A little-noticed bombshell was dropped by Justice Antonin Scalia in a recently released biography of Justice Clarence Thomas. It poses an interesting dilemma for President Bush this election season, in that it raises the question of whether he should continue to cite Thomas as one of his model Supreme Court justices.First off, that's the Court's job. Hear cases, establish case law, and interpret/adapt old laws that were either wrong from the beginning, or need to be amended to adapt to our present circumstances. So what does Scalia hold stare decisis with such veneration, when it would appear from this article that Thomas wants to throw it out the window with last month's cheese? There's nothing magical about a court's opinion, and when they're blatantly wrong, such as the case of Plessy, or even more egregiously, the ill-famed Dred Scott Decision, which were both perfectly Constitutional at the time, it's the Court's duty to stare precedent in the face and say just how wrong it is. So why is this a "little-noticed bombshell" that Thomas might be more apt to review old cases? Are most Post readers concerned with retroactive punishments in civil trials and interstate commerce? Of course not, but is there a certain controversial Supreme Court decision from about 30 years ago that has since become central to the Democrat's agenda? There sure is, and I'm sure if Thomas got his way, Roe v. Wade would soon become alternative ways of crossing the Potomac (I never tire of that joke). I don't know if Thomas has a chance of making it to Chief Justice, but I find it amusing that the Post is using issues that no one really cares about to sandbag him before he's even in the running. Why obfuscate it? Just come right out and say he's willing to hear arguments towards the constitutionality of Roe v. Wade. It certainly isn't going to make the liberals hate him more. Scalia either, for that matter.
Posted
11/09/2004 05:32:00 PM
by Douglas
I think I know this guy.
Posted
11/09/2004 05:23:00 PM
by Douglas
Defense contractor Northrop Grumman Corp. and Boeing Co., the world's largest aerospace company, said Tuesday they have drawn up a team to compete for NASA's Crew Exploration Vehicle and other components of Project Constellation, a planned architecture of human and robotic space systems that will allow astronauts to travel to and explore the moon, Mars and other parts of the solar system.Am I missing something? I know NASA has to share the love, but what do they gain by making one company the prime contractor for one phase, and another contractor prime for another? Doesn't that seem like a big fat waste of overhead? The next time a manned spacecraft lands on another planet, on its side I'll bet you can see an American flag (probably with 60 stars by then), and the corporate logos of Boeing, Lockheed, and Grumman. But I can guarantee that a current lack of managers isn't the long pole in the tent.
Posted
11/09/2004 05:14:00 PM
by Douglas
Dear MSN® Hotmail® Member:Well, apparently two weeks turned into four and a half months, because I just got my 250 Megs today when I logged in. And there was much rejoicing.
Posted
11/09/2004 05:10:00 PM
by Douglas
Two men robbed a man Sunday night, taking a PlayStation before disappearing into the darkness.Maybe I come from a different time and place, but the thought of calling the friggin' police because someone took my video game is completely foreign to me. How sad. Not sad because these dorks lost their video game, or even becuase X-Station-Box-Cube is the preferred pastime to just about everyone under the age of 27. What's sad is that these video game-playing dorks are such pussies. Monday, November 08, 2004
Posted
11/08/2004 05:42:00 PM
by Douglas
Best Buy's angels are customers who boost profits at the consumer-electronics giant by snapping up high-definition televisions, portable electronics, and newly released DVDs without waiting for markdowns or rebates.I can just see their new ad campaign; "Shop at BestBuy! We love people as dumb as you!" So, anyone that's going to take the time to read their promotional material might have the audacity to go to the store and demand merchandise at a publicly advertised price? How dare those little devils. I don't know about the re-selling aspect of that option, but hey, it's a free country (for now). I guess it's time for BestBuy to settle down and appeal to their core constituency: Stupid people, and those with ADHD.
Posted
11/08/2004 05:18:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
11/08/2004 05:07:00 PM
by Douglas
Exit PolesClassic. Sunday, November 07, 2004
Posted
11/07/2004 02:38:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
11/07/2004 02:35:00 PM
by Douglas
Andrew Veal. Andrew, you've raised the bar for post-election grief for years to come. A 25-year-old man from Georgia who was apparently distraught over President Bush's re-election shot and killed himself at ground zero. Andrew Veal's body was found Saturday morning inside the off-limits site, said Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. A shotgun was found nearby, but no suicide note was found, Coleman said.Suicide rarely resolves anything, and generally brings up more questions than it solves. For example, what the hell is wrong with these people?!? There was an election. More people voted for Bush than Kerry. That's how the system works, and I can't help thinking that maybe if Mr. Veal had showed the same zeal before the election as he's shown afterwards, maybe it would have had a different outcome. The ultimate irony, though, would be if for some reason there was a recount in Ohio and the election went to Kerry. Friday, November 05, 2004
Posted
11/05/2004 05:35:00 PM
by Douglas
The big picture here is that it's good to know that these folks are ignorant as they are misguided. A few years back, some states tried this. They weren't being happy at how they were be subjugated by the Federal Government, so they thought they'd start their own. It didn't turn out too well for them. In fact, most of the developed parts were burned. To the ground. Personally, I don't really have a problem with it. As long as Texas gets an international boundry all the way around, I could care less.
Posted
11/05/2004 05:34:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
11/05/2004 05:33:00 PM
by Douglas
COLUMBUS, Ohio - An error with an electronic voting system gave President Bush 3,893 extra votes in suburban Columbus, elections officials said.Somewhere, I hear the faint yet distinct sound of Carl Rove and James Baker circling their metaphoric wagons.
Posted
11/05/2004 04:16:00 PM
by Douglas
U.S. Warplanes Pound Targets in FallujahSchool, target range, target range, school. Come on?!? It was dark! At least he used the non-exploding 20mm rounds on the children's classroom. Are Iraqi schools that lucky?
Posted
11/05/2004 04:06:00 PM
by Douglas
The gently rolling highways leading into Canadian are dotted with small groves of Siberian elms, hackberry trees and looming cottonwoods, their leaves aglow in golden fall colors.Is TxDOT really that stupid, or are they just looking for a way to waste money? I know! This is probably president Bush's timber company that he didn't know he owned. Maybe I'm missing something, but isn't a tree next to the road an exponentially smaller threat to anything that's actually in the road? Unless these trees jump out at oncoming cars, there's nothing to you do hit them unless you run of the road. And if you make it a habit of running off the road, you're going to run into something eventually. Trust me. I've got some research data on this one. But they get dumber: Bill Jordan, another TxDOT official, said a contractor recently completed an environmental survey of all trees in a 30-foot "clear zone'' along U.S. Highways 60 and 83 in Hemphill and five other area counties.This is the kind of thing that makes me want to become a Overall, the impact to nesting birds would be minimal, Jordan said, if the trees are cut down when birds are not nesting.Are they going to leave notes in their nests? Dear bird:Seriously, doesn't TxDOT have anything better to do than removing trees from an already treeless plain? Labels: Killer Trees Wednesday, November 03, 2004
Posted
11/03/2004 05:28:00 PM
by Douglas
But I'm having a hard time figuring the lefty blogs' lament that though he's now talking bipartisanship, a Bush second term will be more of the same right-wing extremism, or extreme conservativsm.Egggggg. . . sactly.
Posted
11/03/2004 05:17:00 PM
by Douglas
Disgruntled Democrats seeking a safe Canadian haven after President Bush won Tuesday's election should not pack their bags just yet.For these poor souls that are so disenfranchised by America, I'm sure that Mexico is open if they want to head down south and really find out how a tyrannical government is run.
Posted
11/03/2004 05:07:00 PM
by Douglas
One comment, though, about the electoral college. For those of you that were too busy smoking weed in 9th grade social studies (Jack, I'm looking in your direction), we live in the remains of a Republic. A Representational democracy. The "one man, one vote" idea of democracy, or as most thinking people like to call it, "mob rule" doesn't work, either. You elect representatives. That's what makes the system work. Anyone that advocates getting rid of the electoral college should also be in favor of getting rid of the House of Representatives, the Senate, the Supreme Court, hell, why not all government? Everything to be decided by a plebiscite. Can you imagine any problems that might arise with that? For what it's worth, we've got four years until the next one, so sit back, grab a beer, and enjoy the ride. Tuesday, November 02, 2004
Posted
11/02/2004 08:53:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
11/02/2004 05:31:00 PM
by Douglas
A Moody Gardens electrician has been charged with stealing 15 tortoises from the popular tourist attraction, police said.So it's come to this. A zoo employee has been busted stealing turtles. Next thing ya know, some elephant is going to die mysteriously of herpes. Oh wait, that happened, too. Kimba, the beloved 13-year-old Houston Zoo elephant who died on Labor Day, succumbed, as suspected, to elephant herpes virus, laboratory tests confirmed.Some questions:
Monday, November 01, 2004
Posted
11/01/2004 05:56:00 PM
by Douglas
History may never know how many working hours were lost to Andrew Tanenbaum's Web site, www.electoral-vote.com..Well, you're bubble burst now, Andrew. Thanks for all the insight. Or is it incite?
Posted
11/01/2004 05:26:00 PM
by Douglas
The three best-selling U.S. newspapers have enjoyed an increase in readership this year, although the industry as a whole continues to struggle with falling circulation, new data released on Monday showed.Could it possibly mean that people were getting their news from a different source? Oh, I don't know. What's come along in the past 15 years that could put a dent in newspaper sales? The global availability of news from the Internet, perhaps? Newspaper circulation has drawn scrutiny because of a string of scandals over inflated data uncovered at several major publishers.No. Say it ain't so. I'm sure people will still keep buying such great pie-chart filled rags as USA Today, right? Circulation rose at five of the nine biggest newspapers, the trade group said. That included increases at the three top-selling U.S papers, Gannett Co Inc.,'s USA Today, Dow Jones & Co Inc.'s Wall Street Journal and New York Times Co.'s flagship New York Times.I'm sure that number has exactly nothing to do with that pile of crap that's flung at the door of every motel room in America, does it? Meanwhile, I've noticed that the Houston Chronicle is requiring registration to read local stories now. They too will soon disappear from my links, and hopefully soon thereafter, from the realm internet journalism.
Posted
11/01/2004 05:17:00 PM
by Douglas
But since bloggers are known for incensed rants without substitutive commentary, I'd be remiss if I didn't offer up my predictions for tomorrow's election. And, of course, for the court battles that are likely to ensue. Kerry's got it. The polls give most of the "undecided" vote to the challenger. Why? Because the incumbent had four years to make them "decided," that's why. It's like hitting a fork in a snow covered road with your mom in an '85 Oldsmobile. One way may be muddy as hell, but you know it's passable. The other might be better, but you just don't know 'till you get stuck up to your axles and are walking down the mud to the nearest farmhouse trying to get someone to come pull you out. Makes ya wish you'd have danced with what brung ya. So the question is, do we go down the same road, or do take a chance? Then the question becomes, could it get any worse? Of course, it could always get worse. We just don't know how yet. I still say it's going to get worse with Kerry, and the Florida of 2004 is going to be Ohio. Of course, if I'm wrong, I'll delete this post from an already embarrassing blog, and put up a picture of a cat or something instead. But for tonight, why don't we all go watch PBS and see just how pathetic both candidates reallyare on Frontline. Who knows, I just might have something to say tomorrow.
Posted
11/01/2004 05:11:00 PM
by Douglas
Bosses of American satirical show Saturday Night Live were left embarrassed by Eminem last night when the rapper lipsynced through parts of his two performances on the show. A week after Ashlee Simpson's miming fiasco made headlines, Eminem failed to keep up with his own guide track as he performed politically-charged "Mosh" and new hit "Just Lose It." This came after guest host Kate Winslet poked fun at last week's lip-syncing controversy during her opening monologue.Let's hope not.
Posted
11/01/2004 05:06:00 PM
by Douglas
If you click on Saint Clinton Store you can buy all kinds of crap with St. Clinton's image on it. I can look past the Clinton lunch boxes and the Lincoln coffee mugs, but there's an item at the bottom of the page that really got my attention. The I love abortion merchandise. The "I love abortion" infant t-shirt. Apparently the irony is totally lost on me, because I can't imagine a situation where it'd be funny for an infant to wear an "I love abortion" t-shirt. I really like the comment on the page: Not pro-choice. Not pro-life. Just kill all the babies.Admittedly, I don't know how the St. Clinton website is connected with this corner of Cafepress.com, but is it just me, or is it more than just a tad ironic that someone that wants to "kill all the babies" also thinks that Bush is the moral equivalent of Hitler? Because that irony isn't lost on me.
Posted
11/01/2004 04:49:00 PM
by Douglas
Bush and Kerry refused to debate Ralph - so we took matters into our own hands!Yes, the real political issues, like why we don't let Nader debate, and why there isn't a snowball's chance in hell of a third party candidate winning a presidential election. Would someone get the hook down off of the fence and pull Ralph out of the deep end? He obviously doesn't know he's drowning.
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