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The truth shall set you free, but first it's going to piss you off
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Friday, June 30, 2006
Posted
6/30/2006 05:10:00 PM
by Douglas
But if Discovery is seriously damaged at launch and the shuttle crew is sent to shelter aboard the space station, NASA chief Michael Griffin has said he would consider ending the quarter-century-old shuttle program.Let's save the pre-flight "I told ya so" for another day. A day, perhaps, after we get the crew in orbit. Thursday, June 29, 2006
Posted
6/29/2006 05:37:00 PM
by Douglas
During the "Dateline" interview, Spears tearfully implored the paparazzi to leave her alone. Her pleas were reasonable and tugged at the heart. One came close to forgetting that she had encouraged the attention with her provocative videos, snake-charming stage performance, open-mouthed Madonna-kissing, 15-minute marriage, grotesquely narcissistic reality show and second husband known for displaying the tawdry, laconic demeanor of a pimp on weed.Exactly. I'm sick of celebrity millionaires whining about their loss of privacy. Without celebrity attention, she wouldn't even be Britney Spears. She's be Britney Federline, trying to find a way to get time off from Wendy's so she can squeeze out her Irish twins. But then, today, I see this: Pregnant pop princess Britney Spears is baring nearly all on the cover of Harper's Bazaar magazine. The singer of "... Baby, One More Time" posed in the buff for the cover of the August issue; there's also a photo spread inside.Right. Because that's what every young mother, faced with the realities of motherhood, celebrity, fame and fortune do when they're sick of media attention and just want to be left alone: Pose nude and pregnant in a magazine. Way to go!
Posted
6/29/2006 05:22:00 PM
by Douglas
Michael Gannon, 49, of 26 Morgan St., was arrested Tuesday night, after he brought a video to the police station to try to file a complaint against Detective Andrew Karlis, according to Gannon’s wife, Janet Gannon, and police reports filed in Nashua District Court.I didn't consent to that camera on the stoplight, either. What possible reason would a public servant have to object to being videoed while pursuant to their duties? Why does "if you're not doing anything wrong, you don't have anything to worry about" only apply to us? Wednesday, June 28, 2006
Posted
6/28/2006 04:31:00 PM
by Douglas
Kansas v. Marsh, in which the court upholds a state law that requires the death penalty when the jury weighs the aggravating and mitigating factors and finds them in equipoise. In Lithwick's words "the tie goes to the hangman."That doesn't sound good, does it? Monday, June 26, 2006
Posted
6/26/2006 05:49:00 PM
by Douglas
No deposit. No monthly rental fee. No more rooting around in the glove box for that EZ Tag you left in the other car.If this is such an improvement, then why the silent treatment? For those of us that don't like to be tracked when we drive on Houston's freeways, it comes as a great surprise that we can't leave our EZ tag at home and NOT be followed by the HCTRA. Now, it's not even an option. And it's not just on HCTRA roads where EZ tag drivers are being tracked. According to Houston Transtar they're tracking our every movement even when we're not paying a toll. But hey, what's the worst that could happen? Why shouldn't some clock puncher at HCTRA know where you're going at all times? What have you got to hide? Saturday, June 24, 2006
Posted
6/24/2006 04:35:00 PM
by Douglas
A practical joker got a taste of revenge when friends turned part of his apartment into a human-sized hamster cage, complete with shredded newspaper bedding, a six-foot exercise wheel and a giant water bottle.And thus the spirit of the practical joke is preserved. No payback would have been much, much worse, although the foil thing is funnier.
Posted
6/24/2006 11:28:00 AM
by Douglas
My husband and I received the gerunkensplunk for our wedding five years ago: an object so-named because we couldn't, for the life of us, figure out what it actually was. We even called the store from which it had been purchased and described the thing to the salesgirl. She had no idea. At some point we learned that if you simply leave your gerunkensplunk lying around the kitchen long enough, someday some guest will amble up and begin to use it for its intended purpose. Then you will pounce upon them in wonderment and gratitude, understand its true nature, and finally get on with the business of being happily married.If only they spent half as much energy on their marriage as they did on their wedding.
Posted
6/24/2006 11:18:00 AM
by Douglas
Thursday, June 22, 2006
Posted
6/22/2006 05:50:00 PM
by Douglas
As a device explicitly designed to outrun the Second Law of Thermodynamics, an air-conditioner vividly illustrates the inevitable destruction caused by all economic activity, a process first described by Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen, the godfather of ecological economics.Hey guess what other device takes useful energy and produces worthless waste heat? Everything in the fucking universe! That's right, breathing oxidizes the useful energy of your blood and creates waste heat that's contributing to the eventual heat death of the planet. Sooner if you're just playing X-box, you worthless sack of shit. A/C is the primary cause for the explosion in population of the "sun belt" in the last 30 years, and without it, the gulf coast from Brownsville to Miami would be a ghost town. Who knows what the answer is going to be. I'd like to read this book, though. Maybe I'll check out my air-conditioned library and see if they have a copy. Monday, June 19, 2006
Posted
6/19/2006 05:50:00 PM
by Douglas
More than 10 inches of rain deluged parts of the Gulf Coast on Monday, forcing the evacuation of a Louisiana nursing home and stranding motorists on roads flooded up to waist-deep in Southeast Texas, where National Guard troops were on standby for more storms.That's a lot of rain, and 10 inches will put dang near anything underwater. I wish I could find it online, but I can understand why this quote would disappear. It was from Mayor Bill White, when asked what kind of upgrades to the drainage infrastructure have been implemented since this happened in 2001 with tropical storm Allison. He looked in the camera, and with a straight face, claimed that all his hard work paid off, and were it not for his efforts, the flooding today would have been much worse. Not much consolation for those that woke up today with three feet of water in at the foot of their beds. Sunday, June 18, 2006
Posted
6/18/2006 05:02:00 PM
by Douglas
Mr. McCartney, who recently appeared on the cover of AARP magazine, does not appear to be losing his hair yet, despite the song's augury. He has three grandchildren (not the song's "Vera, Chuck and Dave"). He is also the father of a 2-year-old daughter. And while he may not be living his own lyrical vision, Mr. McCartney seems closer to fulfilling Bob Dylan's "Forever Young" than Pete Townshend's "Hope I die before I get old."I'd like to see him in line for his free bus pass.
Posted
6/18/2006 04:39:00 PM
by Douglas
I bet it's a bitch to clean.
Posted
6/18/2006 04:37:00 PM
by Douglas
That guy needs a manicure.
Posted
6/18/2006 04:29:00 PM
by Douglas
But helmets generally save lives and prevent injuries.Honestly, how can you write that with a straight face? Why the hell is "freedom" in quotes? Is that because it's just a figment of our imagination? Think of how many lives would be saved if motorcycles were banned completely, and everyone was transported in padded busses? Kinda reminds me of the dangers of dihydrogen monoxide. Something tells me the helmet nuts look at the DHMO site and "don't get it." Saturday, June 17, 2006
Posted
6/17/2006 06:01:00 PM
by Douglas
But things in Sweden are not as good as the advocates would like to believe. Long the paragon of social democracy, the Swedish model is rotting from within. Ironically, the unique social and economic foundation that first allowed Sweden to construct its political edifice--and which makes it such a difficult model for other countries to emulate--has been critically weakened by the system it helped create. Far from a being a solution for the new sick men of Europe, Sweden must face serious and fundamental challenges at the heart of its social model.As Lincoln said after he promised more federal jobs than he could deliver, "there's too many piglets for the tits." Texas has over twice the number of people that Sweden has, and we don't even have our own language. Or perhaps we do, y'all.
Posted
6/17/2006 05:53:00 PM
by Douglas
populism gone awry or fascism barely avertedYou also gotta love the closer: “Someday Louisiana is going to get ‘good government,’ ” Earl Long once declared. “And when they do, they ain’t going to like it.”It'll never happen. Also, I had no idea this quote was from Edwin Edward and not Long: The only way I can lose this election is if I'm caught in bed with either a dead girl or a live boyIn the annals of political posturing, that's got to be the best.
Posted
6/17/2006 05:25:00 PM
by Douglas
The Wolves at the Door does more than chronicle Hall’s extraordinary career. Pearson gives vivid detail about Hall driving a crude ambulance loaded with wounded while under fire; how she twice escaped the continent; how she got through SOE training with her artificial leg (which she called Cuthbert); the agent problems she dealt with, including the discovery of a Gestapo double-agent; her disguises and her cover work as a milkmaid and farmer’s helper; and how she arranged the escape of several of her agents from a Gestapo prison. We also see something of this remarkable woman’s managerial abilities when Pearson tells how she overcame the reluctance of the French resistance to follow orders from a woman. After the war, Hall’s achievements were to be publicly recognized with the presentation of the Distinguished Service Cross by President Harry Truman. She declined the honor, however, preferring to receive the award without publicity from OSS chief Gen. William Donovan, and thus preserve her cover for clandestine work in the postwar era.Don't mess with a woman with a wooden leg and still jumps out of an airplane
Posted
6/17/2006 04:59:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/17/2006 04:42:00 PM
by Douglas
In Hudson v. Michigan, handed down Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court carved out yet another "drug war exception" to the Fourth Amendment, which was written to protect Americans from unreasonable searches and seizures of their persons and homes. Unfortunately, the ruling is likely to lead to more military-style no-knock raids of people's homes and businesses, which will mean some innocent people's homes will be raided, and a few people are likely to be killed.Well, that's just great! The fourth gets thrown down the toilet because dope-heads flush their drugs when someone knocks on the door. Even more disturbing is that judges are willing to authorize para-military raids on suspects homes under the cover of darkness, and with guns drawn. Gee, I can't imagine anything bad happening from something like that. For more refutation of Scalia's pipe-smoking, check this out. After all, Mr. Balko was cited in Breyer's dissent.
Posted
6/17/2006 04:19:00 PM
by Douglas
Earlier this week, Airbus - which is 80%-owned by EADS and 20%-owned by the UK's BAE Systems - said problems with wiring meant that it would have to cut its A380 delivery target to nine from an original target of up to 27 in 2007.Worry no more. Boeing sold two 747 freighters and even one passenger versions of the world's largest production aircraft. But the real story is the 787. While Airbus is trying to use its state-funded influence to pay for modifications needed to upgrade airports to accommodate the gargantuan A380, Boeing's 787 is flying off the shelf. Maybe not literally. I'll admit I'm a bit biased, but I'll never understand how Airbus could look at the functionality, sales and profitability of the 747 and think they could make it work if it were only bigger.
Posted
6/17/2006 04:00:00 PM
by Douglas
"At this time, I would like to award all 41 students who have achieved that honor," Meier said as the crowd cheered. "I tell these guys," Meier joked, "the only thing I have in common with them is I rarely received a B in high school myself."Not everyone can finish in first place. Unless it's in a public school, where everyone loses.
Posted
6/17/2006 03:57:00 PM
by Douglas
Caitlin Campbell couldn't spell collyrium but someone couldn't spell her last name. A billboard went up in this Panhandle city to honor Caitlin's eighth-place finish in the national spelling bee. It reads: "Congratulations! Caitlin Cambell for making Amarillo proud."Make Amarillo proud, indeed, Caitlin.
Posted
6/17/2006 03:54:00 PM
by Douglas
Sunday, June 11, 2006
Posted
6/11/2006 03:17:00 PM
by Douglas
"Whenever I look at TV and I see the weapon I invented to defend my motherland in the hands of these bin Ladens I ask myself the same question: How did it get into their hands?" the 86-year-old Russian gun maker said.It's not his fault he did such a good job, but there's a reason it's on the flag of Mozambique that he's probably not proud of.
Posted
6/11/2006 02:58:00 PM
by Douglas
Thanks guys. You thought of everything!
Posted
6/11/2006 02:32:00 PM
by Douglas
The arrest of a high school teacher for allegedly having sex with an 18-year-old student has raised questions about the age constraints of the state's three-year-old law criminalizing student-teacher sexual relationships.At the very least, Miss Bexar County should lose her job for having no sense, but 20 years in prison? State Rep. Helen Giddings, D-Dallas, wrote the Texas law in 2003 that criminalizes sex between educators and students. But she said she wanted the law to apply only to students 17 and younger — uncomfortable with making sex between two legal, consenting adults a felony.Why? 17 years and 360 days old, she does 20 years. 18 years old and it's perfectly legal. It's a pretty silly line to draw, but that's what we've decided is decent, and a high school teacher should have known better. But other legislators added amendments to Giddings' bill when it reached the floor of the House, making it illegal for educators to have sexual relationships with students of any age. Rep. Warren Chisum, R-Pampa, proposed dropping the age limit, arguing that teachers wield a power over students that diminishes the pupils' ability to consent.Come on, Warren. What about college students? It's just as immoral for a college professor to bang their students for the very reason he mentions, but just because it's immoral doesn't mean it should be illegal. Should any teacher be reprimanded and/or fired for this type of action? Probably, but 20 years in the clink is a bit harsh when you're dealing with two consenting adults. Saturday, June 10, 2006
Posted
6/10/2006 08:41:00 PM
by Douglas
A computer hacker got into the U.S. agency that guards the country's nuclear weapons stockpile and stole the personal records of at least 1,500 employees and contractors, a senior U.S. lawmaker said on Friday.This is getting a bit ridiculous. See, I read this book. . . It should be required reading for anyone that is responsible for this kind of data.
Posted
6/10/2006 05:36:00 PM
by Douglas
The state wildlife commission has voted to take the manatee off Florida's endangered species list, saying the animal's population is on the rebound.Manatee. . . hmmm, red or white wine? Since it's Florida, I'm going to go with a luke-warm Bud Light.
Posted
6/10/2006 05:31:00 PM
by Douglas
Four days after this routine, elective surgery, Lykins — a healthy, 23-year-old student from Minnesota — died of a raging infection.So what if it hasn't broken any federal laws? Federal laws alone haven't killed or saved a single person. Could a federal statue on the use and preservation of cadaver tissue prevented this incident? Maybe, but if companies are scavenging cadavers for parts to sell and failing to take the remedial precautions that most of us take when we buy ice cream at the grocery store, all the federal regulations in the world are only going to annoy those companies are already adhering to sanitary requirements. And why are they doing that now, when no regulations are in place? They don't want to get sued when parts from one of their rotting corpses kills a 23 year old kid.
Posted
6/10/2006 05:16:00 PM
by Douglas
For decades, researchers have been baffled by the intricate bronze mechanism of wheels and dials created 80 years before the birth of Christ.It's pretty amazing to think that level of sophistication of machining was available at the time to create a device that could predict the location of the celestial bodies known at the time, not to mention in a heliocentric solar system. Looks like this asks more questions than it answers. Labels: Antikythera Mechanism
Posted
6/10/2006 05:14:00 PM
by Douglas
A black bear picked the wrong yard for a jaunt, running into a territorial tabby who ran the furry beast up a tree — twice.And of course, the hilarious picture:
Posted
6/10/2006 05:10:00 PM
by Douglas
Tuesday, June 06, 2006
Posted
6/06/2006 05:43:00 PM
by Douglas
Personal data on about 2.2 million active-duty military, Guard and Reserve personnel — not just 50,000 as initially believed — were among those stolen from a Veterans Affairs employee last month, the government said Tuesday.Why should I bother to protect this info if no one else is? See, there's this book. . .
Posted
6/06/2006 05:31:00 PM
by Douglas
Monty Coles was 900m in the air when he discovered a stowaway peeking out at him from the plane's instrument panel -- a 1,35m black snake.Fly the plane. The first and last most important thing for a pilot to learn. But it gets funnier: An attempt to swat the snake only resulted in it falling to Coles's feet under the rudder pedals. It then darted to the other side of the cockpit.You know if anyone on the ground was a farker, they were laughing their arses off. "Samuel L. Jackson, you're cleared for landing." Monday, June 05, 2006
Posted
6/05/2006 11:52:00 PM
by Douglas
Pop open that cooler, sir.Why mention the cooler? Does the ferry have different alcohol laws than any other Texas roadway does? William Mallini, the ferry operations manager, said he believes fireworks are prohibited, but that firearms for which the owner has a permit are allowed. Alcohol regulations on the ferry are the same as on the highway, he said.So why mention it? Because it makes for a good story, and diverts attention from the real story: Homeland Security: The random screenings are part of the U.S. Coast Guard Homeland Security program and will be conducted by SeaWolf Marine Patrol, a security firm, under direction of the Texas Department of Transportation.So TxDOT has hired a private security firm to "screen" those entering the Bolivar ferry, yet they have no idea what they're "screening" for? For the sake of equal time, here's the Fourth Amendment: Amendment IVGet a warrant, ferry boy.
Posted
6/05/2006 05:03:00 PM
by Douglas
Gun-toting Texans can relax about one concern this hurricane season: The state has no plans to disarm residents in the wake of a big storm.Honestly, I can't believe the question was even asked. Taking guns away from Texans? How many people died during Hurricane Rita because pets weren't accepted at shelters, and they think Houstonians are going to leave their guns behind? Give me a break. Texas Department of Public Safety Sgt. Randy Jones said taking firearms from citizens has never been part of a state plan.Damn straight. Who can police a community better than the community? But for the obvious statement of the year, you gotta hang around for this one: "The locals know much better who belongs in their neighborhoods than a DPS trooper who may be from as far away as Lubbock," Jones said. "If you're guarding your neighbor's home with a shotgun, nobody is going to bother you.I don't care where the guy is from, the guy with the shotgun is always right. Unless it's your TV. Then, return fire. Also, Texas law says you can carry your gun in your car pretty much any damn time you feel like it, so why should that be any different during a hurricane? Sunday, June 04, 2006
Posted
6/04/2006 04:22:00 PM
by Douglas
"Look again at that dot. That's here. That's home. That's us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every "superstar," every "supreme leader," every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there - on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.Never, even for a second, fail to accept just how small and insignificant you really are.
Posted
6/04/2006 04:12:00 PM
by Douglas
Well, Microsoft just upped the ante on internal conflict with the release of Vista Beta 2. It boils down to this: The software giant is favoring security and IT controls over end-user productivity. Don't get me wrong, security and IT manageability are very good things. But some of the people actually using the Beta 2 Vista software describe their experience as akin to that of a rat caught in a maze.They haven't made any attempts to obfuscate the fact that they steal all their good ideas from Macintosh, but I was really surprised to see the screen captures of Vista and how much it looks like Mac's OSX. Get XP while you still can!
Posted
6/04/2006 03:58:00 PM
by Douglas
A US state is to enlist web users in its fight against illegal immigration by offering live surveillance footage of the Mexican border on the internet.What could possibly go wrong? When is this election year bullshit going to stop?
Posted
6/04/2006 03:26:00 PM
by Douglas
Okay, so we've got Christian paramilitary forces loose on the streets of New York, fighting to turn the United States into a theocracy, and shouting "Praise the Lord!" as they blow away those who refuse to convert. In the virtual world of Left Behind only the conservative Evangelical Christians were "raptured" - spirited into heaven for the big Super Bowl party and skybox seats to the ultimate battle between absolute theocracy and the absolutely AntiChrist. So who's "left behind" to blow away? Catholics, mainstream moderate Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus, atheists, suspiciously well-groomed men, lesbians, and conservative Evangelicals who are closet gays. (As Congressman Barney Franks (D-Massively Funny) has said, "Throw the gays out of church? Who do you think has been playing the damn organ all these years?") Blowing away these good folk ("Praise the Lord!") - is that supposed to be the "Christian stuff" or the "cool stuff"?Wow. Why do they need to take out their wrath on the unholy? Isn't that the job for a vengeful god? And on the same page is the Columbine role-playing game. What's wrong with these people? Whatever happened to Space Invaders and Frogger? Thursday, June 01, 2006
Posted
6/01/2006 05:11:00 PM
by Douglas
Posted
6/01/2006 05:10:00 PM
by Douglas
SAN FRANCISCO Police may enter Californians' homes without warrants to arrest those suspected of driving under the influence, the California Supreme Court ruled Thursday in a case testing the scope of the Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.Hold on a second. I thought this was America? Don't the police have to actually catch you doing something illegal in order to arrest you? Apparently not in California. If I back my car out of my driveway to move it to the adjacent garage while I'm shit-faced drunk, I'm equally as culpable of DWI as the guy that drove cross-town during rush hour, and that's fine if that's how you want to define the DWI laws, but put that in context with breaking someone's door down to find the "drunk driver". At what point do you decided that "exigent" powers aren't the norm, but the problem itself?
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