enthalpy |
The truth shall set you free, but first it's going to piss you off
Bemusements
Archives |
Wednesday, June 30, 2004
Posted
6/30/2004 09:21:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/30/2004 09:14:00 PM
by Douglas
The federal government and the state of Utah sued the Boy Scouts of America on Tuesday for nearly $14 million to recover the costs of a 2002 fire at a Scout camp.Ok, so maybe they were at fault, but it's not like the Boy Scouts are the only source of forest fire. Does that mean the federal government is going to hold a cloud liable if lightning starts a fire? Damn, I wish that was a dumb question. Tuesday, June 29, 2004
Posted
6/29/2004 08:23:00 PM
by Douglas
A teenager dressed as pizza mascot Chuck E. Cheese was pelted with pizza and threatened with a beating by an angry parent who said the mascot wasn't paying enough attention to her child, police said.It's important to note that it was the parent, not the child, that had a screaming fit and attacked a kid in a huge rodent costume. Still, I'd rather be pelted with pizza than robbed at gunpoint. Here's one example where jobs are being replaced with robots and no one is complaining. That woman could have beaten a robotic Chuck E. Cheese from now 'till Sunday, and I don't think anyone would have cared. Or noticed. Monday, June 28, 2004
Posted
6/28/2004 08:15:00 PM
by Douglas
Iraq's new leaders reclaimed their nation two days early, accepting limited power Monday from U.S. occupiers, who wished them prosperity and handed them a staggering slate of problems — including a lethal insurgency the Americans admit they underestimated.So that means the United States military will be withdrawing, when exactly. Ah yes. As soon as we withdraw from all the other foreign, sovereign nations that house our nation's troops. How 'bout a batting order?
Sunday, June 27, 2004
Posted
6/27/2004 12:59:00 PM
by Douglas
TEHRAN, Iran - Iran will resume building centrifuges for its nuclear program on Tuesday despite international objections, but will continue to hold off enriching uranium, the foreign ministry said Sunday.Are these guys just trying to get bombed? But let's be honest and give them the benefit of the doubt. They haven't actually started enriching uranium yet, they're just working on the centrifuges. And the uranium may have peaceful purposes. Why would anyone assume that a country sitting on one of the world's largest oil reserve would be using enriched uranium for anything other than nuclear power and cancer research? Iran had suspended the building of centrifuges, along with the enrichment of uranium, under international pressure, part of the IAEA's attempts to determine whether Iran's nuclear program is peaceful or aims to produce weapons, as the United States contends.It doesn't seem like the current administration has adopted the "wait and see" method to foreign policy, so it sorta begs the question. . . What are they waiting for? Friday, June 25, 2004
Posted
6/25/2004 05:54:00 PM
by Douglas
Investigators say the 30-year-old Beaumont woman wrote nearly two dozen phony checks on the chief prosecutor's personal bank account, passing herself off as "Cathy Rosenthal," with a fake driver's license to match.Stealing the identity of a D.A. is like date-raping Superman's sister. You're not going to get away with it, and when they catch you, you're going down in a big way. Thursday, June 24, 2004
Posted
6/24/2004 09:29:00 PM
by Douglas
Four University of Texas at Austin aerospace engineering professors have received a $5 million, five-year grant from the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research to develop more efficient engine concepts for space vehicles.Ok, better propulsion, lighter weight. So far we've caught up with the Wright brothers. What now? How 'bout some fancy thermodynamic name dropping? Engines use only one kind of “propulsion cycle”—a way of mixing fuel and oxidizer, combusting it and producing hot, high energy gas to propel the vehicle. Commercial aircraft, for example, use gas turbine cycles and a few supersonic systems use ramjet propulsion cycles, in which the speed of the vehicle is so high that the air is compressed in the intake without a mechanical compressor. In the future, aircraft may be propelled by “scramjet” cycles in which combustion of the fuel and oxidizer will occur at supersonic speeds. The scramjet cycle is most efficient at very high speeds. Each of these cycles provides optimal efficiency over a different range of speeds. By combining cycles, the engine maximizes its efficiency at all points in the flight.Gas turbines, ramjets, scramjets. Flim-flam Bo-Bam Jets. I don't have a clue as to what these guys are up to, but if there's one thing UT knows how to do, it's write up a grant proposal. I wish them the best. Nothing would be better than for a bunch of UT guys to come up with the next generation of air/space craft propulsion. Hell, I might even put another "UT College of Engineering" sticker on my car.
Posted
6/24/2004 09:11:00 PM
by Douglas
Two astronauts who stepped out of the international space station for an unusually risky spacewalk were quickly ordered back in Thursday when Mission Control spotted a pressure drop in one of the men's oxygen tanks.Within minutes? They made it back in, thankfully, but the plural use of the word "minute" in that sentence is pretty pointless, dontcha think? Four seconds may be too long if you're stuck in a vacuum, I'd say. Fincke had just popped open the hatch and floated outside when the frightening words came from Russian Mission Control: "You need to return. Something is not right."I don't know if the Russian Mission Control center records all of their conversations like Houston does, but I'm pretty sure this transmission would sound something like the Russian equivalent of "Holy Shit, RUN!" Sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do, I guess. But this is the space age in the 21st century. A Space Station that is under the control of two countries that don't like to talk to each other on the ground, much less at 200 nautical miles. And if the most complicated vehicle in the solar system is relying on rudimentary hand gestures from its maintenance crew, then we're in bigger trouble than we thought.
Posted
6/24/2004 08:47:00 PM
by Douglas
San Antonio has passed Dallas to become the second-largest city in Texas and the eighth-largest in the nation, according to new Census Bureau population estimates.¡San Antonio! ¡Se Habla Ingles!
Posted
6/24/2004 08:00:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/24/2004 07:47:00 PM
by Douglas
On Tuesday, Mayor Jeff Harrison told the council that bringing the project to a halt would only compound problems because the city would be left with several legal commitments and millions of dollars of improvements made to “a complex with no road, no lights and no drainage.”And let's not leave out this jewel from the city council: “By postponing things we’re just simply adding dollars,” Councilwoman Katie Benoit said.So what does this mean? It means that due to promises made by the mayor and city council, it's going to cost more in legal fees from lawsuits from developers to kill this project than it's going to cost to actually build this atrocity. I just love it when my city council has my best interest at heart. Also, where's that damn petition? Wednesday, June 23, 2004
Posted
6/23/2004 05:38:00 PM
by Douglas
"We get e-mails from people all the time who say 'Holy cow, I thought I was the only person who was crazy about this movie.' " says festival co-founder Scott Shuffitt, a Louisville truck driver, as he surveys the crowd.And if you're planning next year's festivities, this would probably a good place to go for info. I think I'm going to have to get a bumper sticker. It would really tie my car together.
Posted
6/23/2004 05:17:00 PM
by Douglas
"We need to have sex now," I said with roguish charm. "Like, right now. I have to get back home to watch JAG."Ok, that was the old g/f. Easy target. How 'bout the woman that runs the Korean market on the corner? "It's not what I want," I cooed. "It's what you want."And if there has ever been a better sentence that described Duran Duran music as an aphrodisiac, I'd love to see it top this: Now Rio came on, but I skipped ahead to Save A Prayer. Friends, it's like this: If you can't close the deal to Save A Prayer, you might as well just pack it in and go home.Classic. I hope he makes a million bucks. From the book deal, of course. Tuesday, June 22, 2004
Posted
6/22/2004 05:51:00 PM
by Douglas
Thirty years ago this month, Stanley Marsh 3 and a San Francisco group of architects dubbed the Ant Farm buried 10 vintage Cadillacs in the ground and launched an American legend.And many more to come.
Posted
6/22/2004 05:46:00 PM
by Douglas
Two men robbed the Chuck E Cheese's pizza restaurant Sunday night, injuring three employees after they had closed for the night.That's just the saddest thing I've ever heard.
Monday, June 21, 2004
Posted
6/21/2004 09:09:00 PM
by Douglas
More than 20,000 New Age followers, self-styled druids and other revelers celebrated the summer solstice at this ancient stone circle Monday, dancing to drums and holding aloft flaming torches.Boy, those New-aged Druids really know how to throw a first-class party. They may have become sociologically insignificant, but they sure know how to party like it's 1299. Ok, here's a really cool Solstice picture of the sun. I tried to poach it, but it was killing my bandwidth. Enjoy, and thanks DOD!
Posted
6/21/2004 07:57:00 PM
by Douglas
"The door to space is finally open to the rest of us," said George Whitesides, executive director of the National Space Society, which is wants to see space travel opened to people from all walks of life.Hold the phone, George, let's not get ahead of ourselves. This is an amazing accomplishment, no doubt, but it's still a far cry from even achieving Low-Earth Orbit. This is the same kind of sub-orbital flight that NASA realized was pointless more than 40 years ago. Is it interesting that they did it on their own dime? Yes, but that's like saying the second solo Trans-Atlantic flight was significant because Lindberg's plane wasn't blue. That dog don't hunt. Also all over the news today was its $20 Million price tag, versus a per flight cost of about $450 Million for a shuttle flight. Apples and Oranges. You can't compare the brainchild of the genius Rutan brothers to a NASA orbiter anymore than you can compare a 17 foot sailboat to the QE2. They both float on the water, but the similarities stop there. You just can't compare the capability, performance, or cost of SpaceShipOne to a LEO flight in an Orbiter. [Whitesides] said the team members "have proven that human spaceflight is no longer the realm of governments alone."Not exactly, but it's a dang good start. It's amazing to see that there's interest, funding, and the fabulous Rutan Brothers that are going to focus their genius on such a daunting task. I hope they can pull it off again in two weeks and finally claim the X-Prize.
Posted
6/21/2004 07:43:00 PM
by Douglas
Tens of thousands of Cubans rallied Monday, as Fidel Castro warned President Bush against launching a military attack on Cuba, saying it would provoke a mass exodus and an all-out ground war.When reached for a comment, President Bush said, "Well, we weren't going to invade Cuba, but now we pretty much have to. I've been wanting to kick their ass ever since their big Soviet Brother left their limp-wrist standing at the Western Hemisphere bus stop with a pocket full of lunch money. It's go time, now Fidel. Jenna said she needs a new place to work on her tan, anyhoo." Sunday, June 20, 2004
Posted
6/20/2004 06:37:00 PM
by Douglas
“The citizens in League City wanted their town back,” he said, shortly before giving a speech in which he described the day as a wonderful day for the city. “People put their hearts into this election and it shows how much they believe in my vision.”Strong words. If only any of this mattered.
Posted
6/20/2004 05:55:00 PM
by Douglas
It's a peaceful picture of remote Texas Panhandle countryside. The amber wheat fields, the grazing cattle, the smattering of farmhouses.Growing up in the shadows, or at least the mushroom cloud, of Pantex was eerily normal. Something about those sodium vapor lights visible from U.S. 287 that mom always pointed out when we drove by made it seem all too ordinary. Of course, in the height of the 80s cold war, it was the topic of many discussions, even before The Day After tried to scare the crap out of a whole new generation too young to remember the Cuban Missile Crisis. One thing was sure, though. We were right in the middle of it and we were toast. If those red bastards tried to nuke us, Amarillo was first, we were the first target on their list. Now it's a different story. Now the nuclear warheads at Pantex are being dismantled, with limited success. In January, technicians used duct tape to secure broken pieces of an explosive component to a nuclear warhead. Nothing exploded, and no one was hurt. Last fall, technicians taking apart an old warhead accidentally drilled into its radioactive core, forcing evacuation of the building.So it's come to this. It's truly incredible that such a massive endeavour as the American nuclear weapons program has been reduced to a 2-reeler of the Keystone Cops.
Posted
6/20/2004 03:23:00 PM
by Douglas
The fat nose covered with blue stars and the pea-shaped port holes make SpaceShipOne seem more like an oversized toy than a serious rocket plane -- but on Monday this craft will attempt to make the world's first private space trip.Check also here for info and drawings.
Posted
6/20/2004 02:58:00 PM
by Douglas
Saturday, June 19, 2004
Posted
6/19/2004 04:26:00 PM
by Douglas
Laura doesn't mind being moved around like furniture so Dubya can arrange a pic. She's a sport.
Posted
6/19/2004 03:01:00 PM
by Douglas
When space shuttle flights resume, the astronauts will have putty and other filler to repair cracks and small gashes in the wings, but they will not be able to patch a hole as big as the one that doomed Columbia, NASA said Friday.A bunch of rocket scientists, these guys. . . Friday, June 18, 2004
Posted
6/18/2004 09:14:00 PM
by Douglas
On May 15 last year, the city wrote developer Randy Hall a check for $250,000. The payment ensured the option to purchase 40 acres the city wanted for its Big League Dreams sports complex, and council considered the $1.25 million price tag a bargain. There was only one problem: Hall didn’t own the land.Sooo, Hall didn't own the property, but he controlled it, but only after the City wanted it? Does that make any sense? Rusty, drive it home for us: “There are three questions here,” said Councilman Rusty Tidwell. “First, why did the city front Randy Hall a quarter of a million dollars of the taxpayers’ money for land he didn’t yet own?And now, for the answers. Hall said the city persuaded him to sell the land at his cost in the interest of being a good corporate citizen. Although Hall said he hesitated, he ultimately agreed, believing that the Big League Dreams project would generate business.I don't know what in the hell a "good corporate citizen" is, but anyone that's going to piss away $1.5 million on a land deal to the City has to have another iron in the fire. Right?
Posted
6/18/2004 09:00:00 PM
by Douglas
How can anyone be suitably complex when he's born in a Capra set?What's amazing to those that didn't have the same experience during their upbringing is that this Norman Rockwellian universe was real, and still is in a lot of the rural landscape. It's hard for urban/suburban people to wrap their soccer balls around that fact. You can't describe the vastness of the Panavision prairie to East Coasters. Either the idea bores them--sorry, if there's not an all-night Thai take-out every ten blocks I am so not there. Or it's incomprehensible--what, a dirt ocean that just sits there?I once had a similar discussion with a suburban kid about the vast emptiness of West Texas. He said, as if it were a condemnation, "man, there's just nothing there!" I know, ain't it cool? Not a Starbucks or a stripmall for at least 100 miles in any direction. If only we all were that lucky.
Posted
6/18/2004 08:44:00 PM
by Douglas
An assistant principal at an East Texas high school has resigned after being accused of sending nude pictures of himself to a 16-year-old female student, authorities said Thursday.Ok, that will get you fired at any school in America, but it's surprising that it didn't get this guy shot in East Texas. Is there any mitigating evidence? Sharp said the photo was not sent from school.Well, that's the important part right? It's OK to send nude pictures of yourself (??) to minors if you use your own ISP, right?
Posted
6/18/2004 08:37:00 PM
by Douglas
Though an incredible clap of thunder and flash of lightning jarred residents in the Lakeside Estates subdivision off Wilcrest Road, they didn't immediately realize the bad weather had turned fatal.Ouch. Makes you want to leave the umbrella at home.
Posted
6/18/2004 08:15:00 PM
by Douglas
A former YMCA camp counselor voluntarily castrated after he was imprisoned for molesting 40 children is back in jail after a grand jury indicted him on two child sex abuse charges.Not much of a surprise there, really. Thursday, June 17, 2004
Posted
6/17/2004 05:17:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/17/2004 05:11:00 PM
by Douglas
Police searching for leads asked local news stations today to air a videotaped torching of a homeless man who was sleeping on a bench.What in the hell is wrong with people?
Posted
6/17/2004 04:57:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/17/2004 04:51:00 PM
by Douglas
A Contra Costa County jury needed less than a day to decide Wednesday that Justin Alan Helzer, with his brother and their roommate, brutally murdered five people in the summer of 2000, setting the stage for an even deeper journey into the mind of a shy young man who killed with a hammer and his bare hands.Craziness.
Posted
6/17/2004 04:49:00 PM
by Douglas
Delta Air Lines' chief executive on Wednesday said it is "completely clear" the No. 3 U.S. airline cannot survive in its current form, as fare levels continue to erode despite an improving economy.Not Al Queda, not Bin Laden, not even Star Jones. Competition is hurting their business, and they're still crying about it. Why? All this even after they got rid of their $2.73 Million CEO in 2003 for the paltry $500,000 CEO they have now. Tuesday, June 15, 2004
Posted
6/15/2004 05:08:00 PM
by Douglas
This week, a jury in Martinez, a small town outside San Francisco, will retire to consider the bizarre, brutally violent cult surrounding one Glenn Taylor Helzer, a lapsed Mormon accused of bludgeoning and dismembering five people in an elaborate extortion racket intended to hasten the second coming of Jesus Christ.Of course she's a good witch! She's a porn star! It's just so amazing that this kind of person can manage to get so many people to not only listen to his insane rantings, but do their bidding as well. At what point of psychosis does this sound like a good idea? The culmination of Helzer's plan was to have been an operation codenamed "Brazil", in which he would send South American orphans to Salt Lake City to kill the 15 elders who run the Mormon church.Right. Because that's what happens to people when their religious leaders are murdered. Kookoo for cocoa puffs. Monday, June 14, 2004
Posted
6/14/2004 07:23:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/14/2004 07:19:00 PM
by Douglas
A doctor's proposal asking the American Medical Association to endorse refusing care to attorneys involved in medical malpractice cases drew an angry response from colleagues Sunday at the annual meeting of the nation's largest physicians group.What's more tragic? An attorney's family that has to pay more to see a physician, or an entire community deprived of medical care because the cost of malpractice insurance? It's not like they're without options? They just might have to *gasp* pay a higher price for healthcare. It's about damn time, and I wish every physician in the country would follow their lead. I've never seen a commercial on TV from a doctor's office looking for someone that was bleeding.
Posted
6/14/2004 07:04:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/14/2004 07:01:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/14/2004 06:57:00 PM
by Douglas
A former night-shift cook at a Denny's Restaurant in Illinois is in hot water after allegedly getting creative in the kitchen.Sounds like this guy had some friend that would really appreciate the brownies, but as for the two customers that got the "tainted sauce," well, that's just nasty. Sunday, June 13, 2004
Posted
6/13/2004 12:01:00 AM
by Douglas
As of this Sunday, June 13, wonder twins Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen are legal adults. The girls will be able to vote and buy cigarettes. Their 18th birthdays also mark the end of an era for the Olsen Twins Countdown Clocks, the Internet sites devoted to tracking the years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes and seconds until the former Full House-rs come of age.I hope for their sake they save some of that #300 Million. I personally can't wait for their True Hollywood Story of "Child Star Turned Bad" when they start robbing video stores. Saturday, June 12, 2004
Posted
6/12/2004 04:01:00 PM
by Douglas
Stone recently graduated from Randall High School, where she helped plan and organize the United Way Youth Leadership Day. Their fund-raiser was Jell-O Jam. Senior students were given a week to raise money. The students raising the most money wrestled teachers in a pool of Jell-O.That's right. High school girls organizing Jell-O rasslin'. But hey, it's for a good cause, right? Here's the funny part: Ah yes, the sublime, inner serenity that only comes from rolling around in Jell-O. Maybe that's what my life is missing? Here's to you, Berkley. I'm sure this is but the first of a long and intricate career that consists of you and Jell-O. . . Friday, June 11, 2004
Posted
6/11/2004 07:09:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/11/2004 07:04:00 PM
by Douglas
Some agents for the U.S. Border Patrol are irate at what they see in their new uniforms: a "Made in Mexico" label.Uh yeah, and I think the message is clear: Cheep labor is OK, but only if it's in this country.
Posted
6/11/2004 06:59:00 PM
by Douglas
The three Hare Krishna pilgrims were denied entry to the Port Bolivar ferry this week after traveling more than 2,000 miles from Pennsylvania. Texas Department of Transportation employees who manage the ferries told the travelers they would not be able to travel on the ferry to Galveston because it was illegal to bring unconfined animals or animal-powered vehicles aboard.And I thought Hare Krishnas just annoyed LLoyd Bridges in the airport. Who knew? Galveston County Sheriff's office, come to the rescue: The pilgrims decided to wait for help Thursday. The Galveston County Sheriff's Office arrived later with a borrowed livestock trailer to take the horses and their companions across the bay to the Oleander City.At least they didn't have to go around the bay, but anyone going through Galveston on their way to, well, anywhere, obviously can't read a map. It's an island people. Unless you're headed to that particular island, it's probably going to be out of the way.
Posted
6/11/2004 06:53:00 PM
by Douglas
Authorities found Friday the body of a passenger on a sightseeing helicopter who plunged to his death at Grand Canyon National Park in an apparent suicide.The only way you could improve on this method of suicide is if you paid for the helicopter tour with a bad check.
Posted
6/11/2004 06:44:00 PM
by Douglas
And let's face it: that's still an awful lot of ladybugs.
Posted
6/11/2004 06:14:00 PM
by Douglas
Concorde's last flight provoked tears and eulogies from many thousands of people who had never even flown in her, including me. The slow demise of the Boeing 747, by contrast, is passing unnoticed and unmourned, despite its far greater significance in the evolution of modern travel, and in millions of personal stories.What he fails to mention is that there's a reason for the sagging orders of the Jumbo 747. Long, international flights are generally a loss-leader for the Airline. Why cram 400 people in the plane for long flight when smaller planes making short hops are much more profitable? But Airbus has staked at least $12 Billion on it, and barring any future EU bailouts, their success rest on the chance that the problem with the 747 is that it's just not big enough. Meanwhile, Boeing is developing the 7E7, a mid-sized twin-aisle plane with 300 passengers going 4,000 miles. So what's it gonna be? A huge aircraft with as many bodies as will fit servicing hub airports that have to be specially modified to accommodate this super-plane, or moderately sized efficient airplanes taking passengers to all the airports currently in service? The ramifications are huge, and both companies have staked their reputation and their futures on it. Hopefully the EU won't bail out Airbus if they fail.
Posted
6/11/2004 06:03:00 PM
by Douglas
The federal tax code, originally conceived to redistribute wealth from top to bottom, was "reformed" to eradicate social justice.So, Reagan's shameful legacy is that he wasn't a raging communist? Reagan wasn't without his deserved criticisms, but holy cow, Ted is off the deep end on this one. Presidents are largely a product of their era, and the people that say Reagan just got lucky to be in the right place at the right time are the exact same people that claim every freakin' sunrise during the Clinton Administration as a victory for progressive liberalism. Ted, maybe you shouldn't drink so much bong water before you pound out your next column.
Posted
6/11/2004 05:53:00 PM
by Douglas
Three days of tributes to Alberta Martin, the last widow of a Civil War veteran, began Thursday with her body lying in repose at the First White House of the Confederacy as re-enactors in gray uniforms stood guard.That really is an incredible story. Two words I hope don't appear in my obituary: re-enactors and musket. Tuesday, June 08, 2004
Posted
6/08/2004 08:45:00 PM
by Douglas
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Classmates of a 14-year-old boy who died last week in a skateboarding accident want a new law in his name requiring skateboarders to wear helmets.At what point do we as a society determine the extrapolation of such bullshit becomes too great to bear? I have a few hypothetical scenarios:
Posted
6/08/2004 08:38:00 PM
by Douglas
When the animals were found in late January, they were boney and emaciated, diagnosed with intestinal infections and a skin condition known as "rain rot."Other than tying her up unfed for four months, I'm having a hard time trying to figure out what would be cruel and unusual for her. At least she's getting bread and water.
Posted
6/08/2004 08:12:00 PM
by Douglas
Monday, June 07, 2004
Posted
6/07/2004 06:06:00 PM
by Douglas
If your partner is always changing channels, don't throw a wobbly, simply reply 'of course you can love' - have we gone mad? No there's method in our madness.Dude, don't throw a wobbly. . .
Posted
6/07/2004 05:36:00 PM
by Douglas
"You do get the feeling a little of being an anachronism," Glerum said. "There's no question that there's less and less classical music on the radio now, and more and more programming that's produced somewhere else. The trend seems kind of overwhelming at times, like something you can't overcome.ClearChannel has pretty much killed any competition among radio stations, so we're all reduced to the bile that industry consistently churns out. If I want to hear actual music? I find a CD, so I can't get too upset for people that want to listen to classical music having to do the same thing. But if you want to listen to Car Talk, All Things Considered, or Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, you're pretty much hosed if you live in an area that either doesn't have NPR, or has an NPR station that would rather play classical music. And yet--so what? A reader with small-government, libertarian-conservative sympathies will raise the inevitable question: Why should government-supported radio exist at all? For those who look to public radio for classical music (or for any of the other traditional, minority tastes that are being purged from its airwaves), the principled small-government man will ask, Scrooge-like: Are there no CDs? Is there not satellite radio? Aren't there many other private means by which such eccentrics may satisfy their craving?Exactly. The libertarian in me see everything worthwhile on NPR getting easily get picked up by commercial radio. Wait a second, that's how it is now. Most NPR shows have corporate sponsors (read: Commercials) right now. So what's the freakin' hold up? Yank NPR's public funding and give me back the 17¢ a year they extort from my taxes. Now! Sunday, June 06, 2004
Posted
6/06/2004 03:25:00 PM
by Douglas
There's a coincidence today. On this day 390 years ago, the great explorer Sir Francis Drake died aboard ship off the coast of Panama. In his lifetime the great frontiers were the oceans, and a historian later said, "He lived by the sea, died on it, and was buried in it." Well, today we can say of the Challenger crew: Their dedication was, like Drake's, complete. Friday, June 04, 2004
Posted
6/04/2004 06:41:00 PM
by Douglas
After Julie McMurry's husband died last summer, Verizon Wireless told the Enumclaw, Wash. woman that she would have to pay an early termination fee on his cell phone contract. "I said, 'This isn't an arbitrary thing, I'd be glad to fax you a copy of the death certificate. The man's dead.'"Early termination? I'm sure Verizon had a clause in the contract differentiating between the contract's early termination and the customer's early termination. Oh wait, did that say Verizon? Then of course it didn't.
Posted
6/04/2004 06:36:00 PM
by Douglas
Quite an interesting 20,000 word article about the Columbia disaster. I read what I could. Some excerpts that are ironically funny: It was Miracle Whip on Wonder Bread, standard NASA fareAnd an excerpt that I won't be able to forget for as long as I live: Shuttles arrive on time or they don't arrive at all. Thursday, June 03, 2004
Posted
6/03/2004 06:43:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/03/2004 06:36:00 PM
by Douglas
British composer Mike Batt found himself the subject of a plagiarism action for including the song, "A One Minute Silence," on an album for his classical rock band The Planets.I hope this is a joke. I bet the Cage Trust is really busy prosecuting all the live performance versions of 4'33 that happen every day. I think I just had one right now! Before the start of the court case, Batt had said: "Has the world gone mad? I'm prepared to do time rather than pay out. We are talking as much as £100,000 in copyright.I've heard a rumor that 4'33 became very popular in the 50s. People at diners would put as many nickels as they had on this record just so they could enjoy some silence with their meals. Eventually the record became quite scratched, and then entertained the patrons with cracks and hisses. Which to this day is still more enjoyable than anything by Justin Timberlake. Labels: silence Wednesday, June 02, 2004
Posted
6/02/2004 08:17:00 PM
by Douglas
Adult entertainers in Houston will have to abide by a city ordinance that require them to display their city licenses while performing, a federal appeals court has ruled.The obvious question. Where are they going to display their ID?
Posted
6/02/2004 08:11:00 PM
by Douglas
"I'm a better person today," Jones, 33, told the newspaper. "I'm grateful that I was caught when I was -- there's no telling how much I could have escalated."This is obviously a tragic case, but he admitted to molesting 40 children? Prisons are built for guys like this. . .
Posted
6/02/2004 08:06:00 PM
by Douglas
America has lost credibility with Muslims and the Arab world internationally, perhaps forever; and every American life is in far greater danger from terrorist reprisal, no matter who and where we are!What kind of soccer-mom veneration of self esteem is this? The worst part of the invasion, the prison scandal, and the media fallout that followed is the loss of America's credibility? Uh, I think maybe the body count might take precedent over America's credibility. Freedom of the press is a cherished commodity, guaranteed by our Constitution. But freedoms, if they are to be maintained and to have the original meaning, must be treated with grave responsibility and restraint.Disagreeing with the government is fundamentally American, as "guaranteed by our Constitution." And just like "hate speech" and plain-old tin-foil hat wearing craziness, everyone's opinion is protected by the same First Amendment. But flash back to the Clinton Administration. Every time Clinton talked about a new gun law, these folks thought their doors were going to be kicked in within the hour, their guns confiscated, and dogs murdered. Now, flash forward to the present Republican Administration, these same people that cried of government tyranny are telling us to sit back, relax, let Bush 43 run the show, and to treat our First Amendment Right of free speech with "restraint" when it comes to criticizing the administration. Consistency, folks.
Posted
6/02/2004 07:54:00 PM
by Douglas
A teenager was bitten by a shark during the holiday weekend along Galveston Island, where a near-drowning also was reported and crews continued searching for a missing swimmer.Summer is officially here. Tuesday, June 01, 2004
Posted
6/01/2004 08:24:00 PM
by Douglas
Seriously, how can you beat a cow decorated in mosaic tile like the Texas Flag? Short answer? You can't.
Posted
6/01/2004 08:11:00 PM
by Douglas
I can dream, can't I?
Posted
6/01/2004 08:04:00 PM
by Douglas
So in that case, it makes this website hilarious. Enjoy, kids!
Posted
6/01/2004 07:52:00 PM
by Douglas
Drivers passing through Bellaire ran headlong into a scrambled mess Monday when an 18-wheeler carrying 30,000 pounds of eggs overturned on the West Loop.Dang, half a mil, and no hash browns? I like my Houston freeway scattered, smothered and covered, with a side of sausage.
|