The Religious-Right-run US Department of Health and Human Services is redefining contraception as abortion, in order to make it harder -- or impossible -- for women to avoid pregnancy. They're doing this by claiming -- without any evidence -- that hormonal contraception acts to prevent implantation of a fertilized egg in the womb, and they're defining "prevention of implantation" as abortion because they're defining "the beginning of human life" as fertilization.
Feministing has plenty to say about this:( all your body are belong to bush ) Digby has a few choice words as well : ( nsfw )
Here's the NYTimes's view: ( behind cut )
Here's the full text of the memo in question, in pdf format.
You can tell the Department of Health and Human Services what you think about this. Or you can contact your Congressperson and express yourself more effectively, since your Congressperson is at least theoretically interested in what constituents think, while HHS doesn't really care. If you don't know how to reach your representative, check here. I'd suggest also yelling at your Senators about this, as well. Or, if for some reason neither of those links work, use this non-government-run information site's link (on the top of the left column) to find out contact info for your elected officials and phone them directly.
And, if you need a bit more documentation on the war against women (older but still relevant links) or the government efforts to control human sexuality through religious ideologies(updated), check out these pages from Theocracy Watch.
Finally (for now) a quote from The Christian Taliban, a 2004 AlterNet article:
Feministing has plenty to say about this:( all your body are belong to bush ) Digby has a few choice words as well : ( nsfw )
Here's the NYTimes's view: ( behind cut )
Here's the full text of the memo in question, in pdf format.
You can tell the Department of Health and Human Services what you think about this. Or you can contact your Congressperson and express yourself more effectively, since your Congressperson is at least theoretically interested in what constituents think, while HHS doesn't really care. If you don't know how to reach your representative, check here. I'd suggest also yelling at your Senators about this, as well. Or, if for some reason neither of those links work, use this non-government-run information site's link (on the top of the left column) to find out contact info for your elected officials and phone them directly.
And, if you need a bit more documentation on the war against women (older but still relevant links) or the government efforts to control human sexuality through religious ideologies(updated), check out these pages from Theocracy Watch.
Finally (for now) a quote from The Christian Taliban, a 2004 AlterNet article:
During the Taliban rule of Afghanistan the world got a good look at what happens when religious zealots gain control of a government. Television images of women being beaten forced to wear burkas and banned from schools and the workplace helped build strong public support for the President's decision to invade Afghanistan in the wake of 9/11.
But even as President George W. Bush denounced the brutal Islamic fundamentalist regime in Kabul, he was quietly laying the foundations for his own fundamentalist regime at home. For the first time far right Christian fundamentalists had one of their own in the White House and the opportunity to begin rolling back decades of health and family planning programs they saw as un-Christian, if not downright sinful.
Since 2001 dozens of far-right Christian fundamentalists have been quietly installed in key positions within the Department of Health and Human Services, the Food and Drug Administration and on commissions and advisory committees where they have made serious progress. Three years later this administration has established one of the most rigid sexual health agendas in the Western world....
YouTube user records to be divulged by court order. http://twistedchick.insanejournal.com/2 6356.html?mode=reply
My paid time on LJ, a gift from an anonymous friend, has run out. Because of LJ policies and management and poor customer service, I will no longer be posting linkfests and essays on LJ after it reverts. Because of changes in LJ policies/management/etc., I don't think the LJ owners' bad judgment deserves more money from me or anyone donating on my behalf. The management doesn't appear to be interested in retaining or serving loyal longtime users who want good service, anyway; their preferred demographic is much younger. That's their decision, and their loss.
If you want to continue reading my posts, they will be at twistedchick on InsaneJournal. The RSS feed for the InsaneJournal posts is
twistedchickij -- and that will put the posts into your friendslist here, if you are not on IJ. I am waiting eagerly for
synecdochic's new Dreamwidth journaling service to open; I would almost say I'm waiting breathlessly but with the asthma that's kind of a given; when it does, I may be found there under the same name.
I don't want to lose anyone in the transitions, but this is how it is. I will, however, still be reading LJ and commenting on other people's posts until things sort out one way or another; I just won't be adding content in this journal. Management of The Free Speech Zone has been turned over to
supremeherptile. I am not leaving the net, just migrating to a friendlier strand of it.
If ad content falls into an empty journal, does anyone hear the clang of coins?
If you want to continue reading my posts, they will be at twistedchick on InsaneJournal. The RSS feed for the InsaneJournal posts is
I don't want to lose anyone in the transitions, but this is how it is. I will, however, still be reading LJ and commenting on other people's posts until things sort out one way or another; I just won't be adding content in this journal. Management of The Free Speech Zone has been turned over to
If ad content falls into an empty journal, does anyone hear the clang of coins?
Changing the world, one word at a time: http://twistedchick.insanejournal.com/2 4958.html?mode=reply
Apologies to anyone who has tried to comment on my IJ; it's behaving badly and not letting anyone including me comment. I hope to post there again tomorrow or Saturday.
Pigs fly. Hell freezes. http://twistedchick.insanejournal.com/2 4541.html
You should be aware that LJ cuts made in InsaneJournal do not translate to LJ even though it's the same code. (The journals are weird that way. Turf, and all that.) Apologies in advance for very long posts. It may be possible for you to set your preferences so that you only get the first line and have to click the link for the rest, if you want. (I am not sure of how to do it or I'd tell you.)
You should be aware that LJ cuts made in InsaneJournal do not translate to LJ even though it's the same code. (The journals are weird that way. Turf, and all that.) Apologies in advance for very long posts. It may be possible for you to set your preferences so that you only get the first line and have to click the link for the rest, if you want. (I am not sure of how to do it or I'd tell you.)
Memebait: http://twistedchick.insanejournal.com/2 4142.html
If you are receiving the RSS feed for the Insane Journal account, you should get the full text of the linked post in that feed.
If you are receiving the RSS feed for the Insane Journal account, you should get the full text of the linked post in that feed.
You think nobody cares about your Google searches? Think again, if you get into trouble (or plan to cause any).
Sometimes technology is lifesaving. And sometimes older technologies are forcibly removed from people who are using them -- aka, farewell to Usenet.
Obama, telecoms and the beltway system, from Salon.
If you needed proof that the formerly impartial Washington Post is now a strongly Republican publication, consider this "coverage" of Rep. Dennis Kucinich's resolution proposing impeachment for Bush based on 35 articles of proof. This is not the journalism I was taught to follow; this is the yellowest of yellow journalism. Shame on the Post for this. They know better; they are refusing to remember.
You may not know this, but Christianity did not start out stressing the Cross and the death; it started out talking about paradise, and it did that for a thousand years. This is an earlier date than I'd realized; I'd thought the hell-and-damnation talk started at the time of the Black Plague, when Europe was depopulated despite people's prayers (because nobody then understood how it was transmitted by fleas on rats) and religious devotions turned toward penitence and preparations for death instead of how to live a full life.
Bush and the phone companies get off without even a wrist slap for violating our privacy and spying on us. More here.
Onward Christian Soldiers -- evangelicals and the military. ( more than you think )
Yes, America is racist. This is not news. It's not even a viable excuse for anything any more. My question to anyone who thinks saying it is a conversation: what are you doing to change this?
What really happened in Building 7 of the World Trade Center? Were there explosions before the building collapsed? And who were the dead bodies?
I've thought for some time that the Bush Administration rules by making us afraid; moreover, it specializes in using fear to make people want someone else to make their decisions, trying to turn us into children with itself as Big Daddy. As part of that, it's trying to protect us *from* the information we used to have, info that allowed us to make our own decisions and track health concerns. In doing this, it's being criminally irresponsible. For instance, Bush's people are suing to make it illegal to test meat for mad cow disease, so that nobody can tell whether meat is safe. Anybody got a spare copy of The Compleat Vegetarian?
In the 'glass houses' department, John and Cindy McCain really have no room to throw stones. More here.
What's it like to fly without ID under the new TSA rules? Uncomfortable.
Whales, lonely, may be losing the will to live.
Paving the road to hell with green intentions.
Sometimes technology is lifesaving. And sometimes older technologies are forcibly removed from people who are using them -- aka, farewell to Usenet.
Obama, telecoms and the beltway system, from Salon.
If you needed proof that the formerly impartial Washington Post is now a strongly Republican publication, consider this "coverage" of Rep. Dennis Kucinich's resolution proposing impeachment for Bush based on 35 articles of proof. This is not the journalism I was taught to follow; this is the yellowest of yellow journalism. Shame on the Post for this. They know better; they are refusing to remember.
You may not know this, but Christianity did not start out stressing the Cross and the death; it started out talking about paradise, and it did that for a thousand years. This is an earlier date than I'd realized; I'd thought the hell-and-damnation talk started at the time of the Black Plague, when Europe was depopulated despite people's prayers (because nobody then understood how it was transmitted by fleas on rats) and religious devotions turned toward penitence and preparations for death instead of how to live a full life.
Bush and the phone companies get off without even a wrist slap for violating our privacy and spying on us. More here.
Onward Christian Soldiers -- evangelicals and the military. ( more than you think )
Yes, America is racist. This is not news. It's not even a viable excuse for anything any more. My question to anyone who thinks saying it is a conversation: what are you doing to change this?
What really happened in Building 7 of the World Trade Center? Were there explosions before the building collapsed? And who were the dead bodies?
I've thought for some time that the Bush Administration rules by making us afraid; moreover, it specializes in using fear to make people want someone else to make their decisions, trying to turn us into children with itself as Big Daddy. As part of that, it's trying to protect us *from* the information we used to have, info that allowed us to make our own decisions and track health concerns. In doing this, it's being criminally irresponsible. For instance, Bush's people are suing to make it illegal to test meat for mad cow disease, so that nobody can tell whether meat is safe. Anybody got a spare copy of The Compleat Vegetarian?
In the 'glass houses' department, John and Cindy McCain really have no room to throw stones. More here.
What's it like to fly without ID under the new TSA rules? Uncomfortable.
Whales, lonely, may be losing the will to live.
Paving the road to hell with green intentions.
I have been watching old La Femme Nikita episodes, with Don Francks as Walter, who takes care of munitions and who has a solid crush on Nikita. The more I watch them, the more I realize just how much Rainbow Sun Francks, aka Lt. Ford on Atlantis, looks and acts just like his dad. He looks especially like Walter when he's gone feral and is wearing a headscarf, but before that happens in the series his mannerisms and expressions are very similar as well. I've always liked Walter; I'm adding Ford (and Rainbow) to my list of men to keep an eye on.
Words I did not ever expect to put together in the same sentence: Alligator found in the Chicago River.
Near West 37th and Racine, apparently, quite happily feasting on carp. It's thought that it was an abandoned pet.
In my latest LiveMocha spoken exercise, I was told that I was 'perfectly understandable, if with a strong American accent'. (No surprise there.) But I'm a little confused. Apparently, the s at the end of fils and the f at the end of neuf are pronounced. I thought the rule was that last consonants were silent. Could any of you find me the guideline that says when you do or don't pronounce the ends of words?
Near West 37th and Racine, apparently, quite happily feasting on carp. It's thought that it was an abandoned pet.
In my latest LiveMocha spoken exercise, I was told that I was 'perfectly understandable, if with a strong American accent'. (No surprise there.) But I'm a little confused. Apparently, the s at the end of fils and the f at the end of neuf are pronounced. I thought the rule was that last consonants were silent. Could any of you find me the guideline that says when you do or don't pronounce the ends of words?
More wordles, this time from Shakespeare and other places:
Macbeth.
As You Like It.
Henry V.
Much Ado About Nothing.
Romeo and Juliet.
Hamlet.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Kubla Khan.
Alfred, Lord Tennyson's, Lancelot and Elaine, from Idylls of the King.
The first six sections of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass, including Song of Myself.
Macbeth.
As You Like It.
Henry V.
Much Ado About Nothing.
Romeo and Juliet.
Hamlet.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Kubla Khan.
Alfred, Lord Tennyson's, Lancelot and Elaine, from Idylls of the King.
The first six sections of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass, including Song of Myself.
I decided to play with Wordle.net to see what would happen. So, I plugged in the text of The Recreation of the Warrior, an Andromeda story I wrote a while back from Tyr Anasazi's viewpoint, and this is what happened.
This is the Wordle for No W, the first La Femme Nikita story I wrote. One for Identity, the first long Sentinel story in the series that might actually get finished one of these days if Jim Ellison tells me the last episode. And one for Ice, the Sports Night/due South crossover featuring Dan Rydell and Mark Smithbauer.
And this is the one for the longer bloglinks and essays in this journal back to June 4.
This is the Wordle for No W, the first La Femme Nikita story I wrote. One for Identity, the first long Sentinel story in the series that might actually get finished one of these days if Jim Ellison tells me the last episode. And one for Ice, the Sports Night/due South crossover featuring Dan Rydell and Mark Smithbauer.
And this is the one for the longer bloglinks and essays in this journal back to June 4.
A smattering of recent news bits, and a reminder at the end:
This opinion piece claims that Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal is worse for the state than Katrina. Anyone who lives in that area want to talk about this?
Congress is finally banning the outsourcing of interrogation to mercenary contractors. ( because this is several days old NYT ... )
More here on the semantics of Bush's torture policy.
Does the US *really need* to have 58 military bases permanently in Iraq? Is this what McCain is talking about with his hundred-years war?
Is the Army casting aside its neediest soldiers? Of the thousands of U.S. troops getting discharged from the Army each year, many who are suffering from post traumatic stress disorder and brain injuries aren’t getting the vital care they need. The Army claims these soldiers have pre-existing mental illnesses or are guilty of misconduct. But advocates say this is a way for the Army to get rid of “problem” soldiers quickly, without giving them the treatment and benefits to which they’re entitled. The NOW website has streaming video of the entire episode.
Stupid. Heartbreaking. Criminally negligent. And just plain *wrongheaded*. The money should be going to programs for children, not to fancy trips for administrators. grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
How human actions have affected the Iowa flood.
We got a 5-4 vote from the Supreme Court -- that's a scary thing, when three of the five justices are of retirement age and the next President gets to nominate their replacements. ( and this is why it's important to get a Democrat as president ) McCain, in fact, sees this Supreme Court ruling as 'one of the worst in history.' Let me remind you about what that ruling does. It gives habeas corpus rights -- the right to challenge being arrested in a court of law, to hear the charges against you and to be defended by an attorney -- to the Guantanamo detainees. Also, if you read the Military Commissions Act carefully, it returns those Constitutional rights to the rest of us. Yes. All of us. We lost our Constitutional rights with the Military Commissions Act, when it took them away from anyone suspected of various kinds of acts. Not convicted or charged with various acts, just suspected of them. And the level of suspicion allowable included hearsay evidence. Under the Military Commissions Act, it's possible to be condemned to death on hearsay without having the right to an attorney, to hear the charges against you in court, to speak in your own defense or have an attorney speak in your own defense. That is the unConstitutional truth of it. And McCain doesn't want us all to have our Constitutional rights. A man who does not want to fulfill and carry out and preserve and protect and defend the Constitution of the United States of America has no business running for president, because he is already violating the oath of office.
Of course, he and the rest of the neoCons who voted for it have a vested interest in not changing the status quo, because the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Civil Rights is hearing testimony that hundreds of detainees have died in US custody and at least 25 were murdered. That's war crimes, plain and simple.
The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee has subpoenaed the FBI's transcripts of interviews with Bush and Cheney about exposing the cover of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame. Note that they're getting the FBI copies, not the I'm-sure-they've-been-shredded-burned-la ndfilled-and-fed-to-the-dog White House copies.
We may be facing a change in the way we are all charged for Internet access. Time Warner Cable, Comcast and AT&T want to charge based on metering the amount of bandwidth used. ( behind the cut )
Meanwhile, the Associated Press continues to shoot itself in the foot with a howitzer and follow up with a full cannon barrage. Now, supposedly, they're rethinking this, but I haven't seen further evidence of stepping back. Anyone?
BTW, if you want to boycott AP links, here are some helpful graphics for use.
Normally, if Congress were to declare more wild places as wilderness, I'd just be happy about it. This time, I have to wonder *why* they want more land under federal control. It couldn't be so they can drill in it, could it?
A deal on fighting child pron online in NY State raises some free-speech issues.
Now, these bugs I could like -- they produce diesel fuel.
My paid time on LJ, a gift from an anonymous friend, is running out. Because of LJ policies and management and poor customer service, I am not planning to continue posting these linkfests and essays on LJ. Because of changes in LJ policies/management/etc., I'm not even sure if my account will go back to being a free basic account or an ad-supported one. (I've been here for a long time, long enough to get the basic, but who knows what they'll do?) I don't think the LJ owners' bad judgment deserves more money from me or anyone donating on my behalf. From what I've seen, they're not interested in having or serving loyal longtime users who want good service, anyway; their preferred demographic is much younger. That's their decision, and their loss.
At this point I am planning on posting to InsaneJournal (the account is also twistedchick) and putting a link to that post in this journal, at least for a while. If this journal devolves into an ad-supported account there will be one final post here telling you to go to Insane Journal or subscribe to the RSS, and that will be it; I have no intention of asking anyone to look at advertising on my behalf. The RSS feed for the InsaneJournal posts is
twistedchickij -- and if you want to continue to read what I write, then you may want to subscribe to it if you are not on IJ. I am waiting eagerly for
synecdochic's new Dreamwidth journaling service to open; I would almost say I'm waiting breathlessly but with the asthma that's kind of a given; when it does, I may be found there under the same name.
I don't want to lose anyone in the transitions, but this is how it is. I will, however, still be reading LJ and commenting on other people's posts until things sort out one way or another; I just won't be adding content in this journal. If ad content falls into an empty journal that nobody reads, does anyone hear the clang of coins?
This opinion piece claims that Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal is worse for the state than Katrina. Anyone who lives in that area want to talk about this?
Congress is finally banning the outsourcing of interrogation to mercenary contractors. ( because this is several days old NYT ... )
More here on the semantics of Bush's torture policy.
Does the US *really need* to have 58 military bases permanently in Iraq? Is this what McCain is talking about with his hundred-years war?
Is the Army casting aside its neediest soldiers? Of the thousands of U.S. troops getting discharged from the Army each year, many who are suffering from post traumatic stress disorder and brain injuries aren’t getting the vital care they need. The Army claims these soldiers have pre-existing mental illnesses or are guilty of misconduct. But advocates say this is a way for the Army to get rid of “problem” soldiers quickly, without giving them the treatment and benefits to which they’re entitled. The NOW website has streaming video of the entire episode.
Stupid. Heartbreaking. Criminally negligent. And just plain *wrongheaded*. The money should be going to programs for children, not to fancy trips for administrators. grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
How human actions have affected the Iowa flood.
We got a 5-4 vote from the Supreme Court -- that's a scary thing, when three of the five justices are of retirement age and the next President gets to nominate their replacements. ( and this is why it's important to get a Democrat as president ) McCain, in fact, sees this Supreme Court ruling as 'one of the worst in history.' Let me remind you about what that ruling does. It gives habeas corpus rights -- the right to challenge being arrested in a court of law, to hear the charges against you and to be defended by an attorney -- to the Guantanamo detainees. Also, if you read the Military Commissions Act carefully, it returns those Constitutional rights to the rest of us. Yes. All of us. We lost our Constitutional rights with the Military Commissions Act, when it took them away from anyone suspected of various kinds of acts. Not convicted or charged with various acts, just suspected of them. And the level of suspicion allowable included hearsay evidence. Under the Military Commissions Act, it's possible to be condemned to death on hearsay without having the right to an attorney, to hear the charges against you in court, to speak in your own defense or have an attorney speak in your own defense. That is the unConstitutional truth of it. And McCain doesn't want us all to have our Constitutional rights. A man who does not want to fulfill and carry out and preserve and protect and defend the Constitution of the United States of America has no business running for president, because he is already violating the oath of office.
Of course, he and the rest of the neoCons who voted for it have a vested interest in not changing the status quo, because the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Civil Rights is hearing testimony that hundreds of detainees have died in US custody and at least 25 were murdered. That's war crimes, plain and simple.
The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee has subpoenaed the FBI's transcripts of interviews with Bush and Cheney about exposing the cover of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame. Note that they're getting the FBI copies, not the I'm-sure-they've-been-shredded-burned-la
We may be facing a change in the way we are all charged for Internet access. Time Warner Cable, Comcast and AT&T want to charge based on metering the amount of bandwidth used. ( behind the cut )
Meanwhile, the Associated Press continues to shoot itself in the foot with a howitzer and follow up with a full cannon barrage. Now, supposedly, they're rethinking this, but I haven't seen further evidence of stepping back. Anyone?
BTW, if you want to boycott AP links, here are some helpful graphics for use.
Normally, if Congress were to declare more wild places as wilderness, I'd just be happy about it. This time, I have to wonder *why* they want more land under federal control. It couldn't be so they can drill in it, could it?
A deal on fighting child pron online in NY State raises some free-speech issues.
Now, these bugs I could like -- they produce diesel fuel.
My paid time on LJ, a gift from an anonymous friend, is running out. Because of LJ policies and management and poor customer service, I am not planning to continue posting these linkfests and essays on LJ. Because of changes in LJ policies/management/etc., I'm not even sure if my account will go back to being a free basic account or an ad-supported one. (I've been here for a long time, long enough to get the basic, but who knows what they'll do?) I don't think the LJ owners' bad judgment deserves more money from me or anyone donating on my behalf. From what I've seen, they're not interested in having or serving loyal longtime users who want good service, anyway; their preferred demographic is much younger. That's their decision, and their loss.
At this point I am planning on posting to InsaneJournal (the account is also twistedchick) and putting a link to that post in this journal, at least for a while. If this journal devolves into an ad-supported account there will be one final post here telling you to go to Insane Journal or subscribe to the RSS, and that will be it; I have no intention of asking anyone to look at advertising on my behalf. The RSS feed for the InsaneJournal posts is
I don't want to lose anyone in the transitions, but this is how it is. I will, however, still be reading LJ and commenting on other people's posts until things sort out one way or another; I just won't be adding content in this journal. If ad content falls into an empty journal that nobody reads, does anyone hear the clang of coins?
We got home from lunch out today to find a boil order: boil all water until Thursday noon, don't do laundry, don't run dishwashers and don't drink anything that hasn't had a fast rolling boil for a minute or so. The swimming pools are closed. I'm not going to be catching up on the laundry. It's going to be an interesting time.
Hmm. Interesting article. Quote:
The article suggests that any number of other Republicans might be dropped in at the last possible minute in an effort to continue the neoCon Republican control of government. Here's the names they dropped as possibilities:
Possible? Yes, I think so. ( some thoughts behind cut )
Hmm. Interesting article. Quote:
I think there is every reason to believe John McCain won't be the nominee. Ok, let me say that again. McCain will not be the Republican candidate in November.
Here's how it could happen:
At some point in mid August, John McCain will announce that he has decided that he can not accept his party's nomination for president. The reason will be health-related, and that may turn out to be the truth. Anyone who's seen him on stage these days knows he looks like he's about to keel over. And anyone who's been on a presidential campaign knows the physical demands are grueling and can be a challenge for a young man.
But excuses or facts hardly matters. He won't be accepting his party's nomination.
The reasons are simple. He can't win. Now that Obama is the presumptive Democratic nominee -- the polls all show that McCain's pro-war stance and Bush endorsement make him a lost cause in November. That combined with soft stand on litmus test conservative issues make him an unpopular candidate among the base....
The article suggests that any number of other Republicans might be dropped in at the last possible minute in an effort to continue the neoCon Republican control of government. Here's the names they dropped as possibilities:
Condoleezza Rice (Secretary of State)
Colin Powell (fmr Sec. of State)
Marilyn Musgrave (Colorado Congresswoman)
Mitt Romney (fmr Massachusetts Governor)
Mike Huckabee (fmr Governor of Arkansas)
Charlie Crist (Florida Governor)
Tim Pawlenty (Minnesota Governor)
Bobby Jindal (Louisiana Governor)
Mark Sanford: (Governor of South Carolina)
John Thune (Senator from South Dakota)
Dick Lugar (Senator from Indiana)
Chuck Hagel (Senator from Nebraska)
MIchael Bloomberg (NYC Mayor)
Possible? Yes, I think so. ( some thoughts behind cut )
Over the last few years I've linked a lot of articles by Jeff Sharlet, who wrote Killing the Buddha and who writes on The Revealer website (and other places) about the intersection of politics and religion in America.
For example, this article, The F-Word, on Christian fundamentalism affecting US politics.
Since Borders' Rewards had sent me a nice discount coupon, I went over to the local Borders today to pick up a copy of Sharlet's book, 'The Family', which documents his time underground in Ivanwald and other branches of the fundamentalist neoCon Right wing alliance with militant Christianty. (Here's an AlterNet revew of the book, which notes the Family's propensity for citing Hitler as a source of good ideas for government.) I checked the new books rack, and the new nonfiction and the special displays -- nothing.
I asked one of the clerks to find it for me. It took him about ten minutes on the computerized index. (I've worked at Borders; their index needs some work). He finally found it buried upstairs in General Religion.
I've been linking chapters of The Family here for weeks. I believe it's the most powerful book about the undercover successful connections between religion and power in this country. I believe that the more people who even look through it on the stand in the store, the more will be a bit enlightened about the religious influences on the current government. But the people who are going to learn the most from it aren't ones who are going to go looking in General Religion; hell, I'm reasonably tolerant of theology and I'm allergic to the General Religion section at Borders because whoever indexes it at the head office appears to be ignorant of theology in general and either the Library of Congress system or the Dewey Decimal system in particular. And that's not even taking into account the fact that most Borders' are understaffed, which means that many sections simply aren't shelved properly more than once a week or so.
When I said the book was misindexed, the clerk said he couldn't do anything about that; indexing is determined at the head office in Ann Arbor. (True.) But I told him what it was about, and he started reading it right there and said he would review it and give it a 'Borders Recommends' display, which would at least get it out from the shelf and onto the sales floor where the general nonreligious public will see it.
So, here's what I'm asking you to do: Go to your local large chain bookstore, Borders or other, and ask for the book: The Family, by Jeff Sharlet. See if you can persuade the clerk who is helping you to read and review the book for the store, and put it out where it will be seen by more people. If enough people do that, it may make a real difference. Consider it your good deed for the day, or your contribution toward a saner and more sensible government by spreading the truth in the hope of justice for the American way (to misquote Superman.)
Can we argue for a Second Amendment right to arm bears, particularly polar bears?
In China, part of the preparations for the Olympics is the deliberate slaughter of cats.
The Associated Press wants you, me and everyone to quit linking their stories because they don't think it's fair use. Quoting: What a brilliant move — try to drive away the very people who are luring others to your content. What is AP trying to do — blow up the blogging world? You might remember that AP went after Google, too, although Google = Samson, and other bloggers = Delilah, and Google and AP struck a deal and avoided a showdown of biblical proportion. This latest move by the AP is a potential threat to RSS, which comes in quite handy for news and business and sports junkies or any other kind of junkie except, you know, the real kind. It’s bullying, some say. Already, a blogger who says AP “leaches off original reporting” — has called on other bloggers to go crazy and post entire AP stories an an act of solidarity. This could get ugly. Buzzmachine suggests, in return, that in all fairness the AP should start linking to all its own sources for stories, to promote transparency and good ethics. ETA: TechCrunch bans AP links.</ a>
McCain's idea of birth control = none at all. Video. It figures, considering that one of McCain's supporters thinks 'rape is like the weather, as long as it's inevitable you should just lie back and enjoy it. Suggestion for Mr. Williams, author of that sentiment: Stop off at any of the maximum security prisons in Texas and offer yourself up for the taking, and see just how much you enjoy it.
Rick Warren, author of the 'Purpose Driven Life' books et al, is planning to send out 200,000 missionaries to spread his view of Christianity. Since Warren is also strongly homophobic and intolerant of gays and lesbians, this litttle evangelical spree of his is something to keep an eye on.
Photos here of the results of the earthquake (7.2, I think) in Japan.
More on the Midwest floods.
Would Australia's prime minister ban Botticelli? Probably.
For example, this article, The F-Word, on Christian fundamentalism affecting US politics.
Since Borders' Rewards had sent me a nice discount coupon, I went over to the local Borders today to pick up a copy of Sharlet's book, 'The Family', which documents his time underground in Ivanwald and other branches of the fundamentalist neoCon Right wing alliance with militant Christianty. (Here's an AlterNet revew of the book, which notes the Family's propensity for citing Hitler as a source of good ideas for government.) I checked the new books rack, and the new nonfiction and the special displays -- nothing.
I asked one of the clerks to find it for me. It took him about ten minutes on the computerized index. (I've worked at Borders; their index needs some work). He finally found it buried upstairs in General Religion.
I've been linking chapters of The Family here for weeks. I believe it's the most powerful book about the undercover successful connections between religion and power in this country. I believe that the more people who even look through it on the stand in the store, the more will be a bit enlightened about the religious influences on the current government. But the people who are going to learn the most from it aren't ones who are going to go looking in General Religion; hell, I'm reasonably tolerant of theology and I'm allergic to the General Religion section at Borders because whoever indexes it at the head office appears to be ignorant of theology in general and either the Library of Congress system or the Dewey Decimal system in particular. And that's not even taking into account the fact that most Borders' are understaffed, which means that many sections simply aren't shelved properly more than once a week or so.
When I said the book was misindexed, the clerk said he couldn't do anything about that; indexing is determined at the head office in Ann Arbor. (True.) But I told him what it was about, and he started reading it right there and said he would review it and give it a 'Borders Recommends' display, which would at least get it out from the shelf and onto the sales floor where the general nonreligious public will see it.
So, here's what I'm asking you to do: Go to your local large chain bookstore, Borders or other, and ask for the book: The Family, by Jeff Sharlet. See if you can persuade the clerk who is helping you to read and review the book for the store, and put it out where it will be seen by more people. If enough people do that, it may make a real difference. Consider it your good deed for the day, or your contribution toward a saner and more sensible government by spreading the truth in the hope of justice for the American way (to misquote Superman.)
Can we argue for a Second Amendment right to arm bears, particularly polar bears?
In China, part of the preparations for the Olympics is the deliberate slaughter of cats.
The Associated Press wants you, me and everyone to quit linking their stories because they don't think it's fair use. Quoting: What a brilliant move — try to drive away the very people who are luring others to your content. What is AP trying to do — blow up the blogging world? You might remember that AP went after Google, too, although Google = Samson, and other bloggers = Delilah, and Google and AP struck a deal and avoided a showdown of biblical proportion. This latest move by the AP is a potential threat to RSS, which comes in quite handy for news and business and sports junkies or any other kind of junkie except, you know, the real kind. It’s bullying, some say. Already, a blogger who says AP “leaches off original reporting” — has called on other bloggers to go crazy and post entire AP stories an an act of solidarity. This could get ugly. Buzzmachine suggests, in return, that in all fairness the AP should start linking to all its own sources for stories, to promote transparency and good ethics. ETA: TechCrunch bans AP links.</ a>
McCain's idea of birth control = none at all. Video. It figures, considering that one of McCain's supporters thinks 'rape is like the weather, as long as it's inevitable you should just lie back and enjoy it. Suggestion for Mr. Williams, author of that sentiment: Stop off at any of the maximum security prisons in Texas and offer yourself up for the taking, and see just how much you enjoy it.
Rick Warren, author of the 'Purpose Driven Life' books et al, is planning to send out 200,000 missionaries to spread his view of Christianity. Since Warren is also strongly homophobic and intolerant of gays and lesbians, this litttle evangelical spree of his is something to keep an eye on.
Photos here of the results of the earthquake (7.2, I think) in Japan.
More on the Midwest floods.
Would Australia's prime minister ban Botticelli? Probably.
Rep. Kucinich's resolution to impeach Bush for high crimes and misdemeanors has gone to the House Judiciary Committee on a vote of 251-166.
The Post covers up Bush's messes and tries to sweep them under the rug. Kay Graham's son is way too close ideologically to his neoCon uncle the Senator for the comfort of anyone who wants honest newspaper coverage.
How progressive is your Congressperson? Find out here.
The BBC uncovers the $23 bilion scam of private military contractors profiteering in Iraq. Why wasn't this in the Post? A US gagging (sic) order is preventing discussion of the allegations. The order applies to 70 court cases against some of the top US companies.
Families sue over Guantanamo suicides.
Vidders: is your work disappearing from YouTube?
I don't know enough about the contracts involved to be able to give this context. But I'm very wary of anything that will restrict Internet access to large commercial sites only. Check out this YouTube video, 2012: The Year The Internet Ends, and let me know if this is as scary as it feels.
Bush threatens to cut the pay of active-duty military personnel. He can't do this, can he?
Iowa farmland is now the newest Great Lake. This is not going to help food prices a bit, you realize. Expect your grain goods to cost more. Here are views of Vinton, Mason City -- hell, there are 53 counties in a state of emergency and the governor calls it unprecedented destruction, with nine rivers overflowing their banks. A total of 640 Iowa National Guardsmen have been mobilized in the flood fight. The number could soon grown to 1,500 to 1,700, said Maj. Gen. Ron Dardis, the Guard’s adjutant general. The soldiers and airmen are providing security, evacuating people, sandbagging, and providing water and other supplies. Only 640 for the whole state? Is that all that's left, all those who aren't in Iraq with the Guard's equipment (which will be abandoned there as too impractical to return to the states that paid for it.) And then there's the tornado that ripped through a Boy Scout camp, killing four and injuring 48. And where's FEMA? Where's Bush while Iowa drowns?
Is McCain sane any more? He really doesn't care when the troops come home. It's not his problem. He's also just making things up about Obama, purposeful misquotations to deceive. Has anyone checked his meds lately?
Why giving poor kids computers doesn't improve scholastic performance.
"We have to learn to love ourselves just the way we are, just the way we look. We have to do it as a means to survival."
British birds at risk.
The Post covers up Bush's messes and tries to sweep them under the rug. Kay Graham's son is way too close ideologically to his neoCon uncle the Senator for the comfort of anyone who wants honest newspaper coverage.
How progressive is your Congressperson? Find out here.
The BBC uncovers the $23 bilion scam of private military contractors profiteering in Iraq. Why wasn't this in the Post? A US gagging (sic) order is preventing discussion of the allegations. The order applies to 70 court cases against some of the top US companies.
Families sue over Guantanamo suicides.
Vidders: is your work disappearing from YouTube?
I don't know enough about the contracts involved to be able to give this context. But I'm very wary of anything that will restrict Internet access to large commercial sites only. Check out this YouTube video, 2012: The Year The Internet Ends, and let me know if this is as scary as it feels.
Bush threatens to cut the pay of active-duty military personnel. He can't do this, can he?
Iowa farmland is now the newest Great Lake. This is not going to help food prices a bit, you realize. Expect your grain goods to cost more. Here are views of Vinton, Mason City -- hell, there are 53 counties in a state of emergency and the governor calls it unprecedented destruction, with nine rivers overflowing their banks. A total of 640 Iowa National Guardsmen have been mobilized in the flood fight. The number could soon grown to 1,500 to 1,700, said Maj. Gen. Ron Dardis, the Guard’s adjutant general. The soldiers and airmen are providing security, evacuating people, sandbagging, and providing water and other supplies. Only 640 for the whole state? Is that all that's left, all those who aren't in Iraq with the Guard's equipment (which will be abandoned there as too impractical to return to the states that paid for it.) And then there's the tornado that ripped through a Boy Scout camp, killing four and injuring 48. And where's FEMA? Where's Bush while Iowa drowns?
Is McCain sane any more? He really doesn't care when the troops come home. It's not his problem. He's also just making things up about Obama, purposeful misquotations to deceive. Has anyone checked his meds lately?
Why giving poor kids computers doesn't improve scholastic performance.
"We have to learn to love ourselves just the way we are, just the way we look. We have to do it as a means to survival."
British birds at risk.
I've been waiting seven years to use an icon with the I word on it.
Thank you, Rep. Kucinich.
Thank you, Rep. Kucinich.
Rep. Dennis Kucinich is on C-SPAN *right now* calling for the impeachment of President George W. Bush.
Pakistan has been training Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan. This is from the RAND corporation, a right-wing think tank, so take it as you will.
The US has pulled out of the UN Human Rights Council under charges of human rights violations; 56 House members call for an investigation of 'possible war crimes'. The US exit from the council is not being taken well.
Bush has had more and stronger ties to felon superlobbyist Jack Abramoff than were suspected. Meanwhile, the House Oversight Committee releases its report on the Abramoff investigation.
Obama says he's partnering with Elizabeth Edwards on health care. Elizabeth has a few quesions for McCain: why are people like me left out of your health care proposal, Senator?
Taser Inc. loses first product liability suit. Will that change cops' propensity to use them on people?
Friday should be interesting. The House Judiciary Committee has officially requested former White House press secretary Scott McClellan to testify about obstruction of justice by Bush, Cheney and Libby. Looks like people *are* reading Scotty's book, and taking notes. And he will testify in public and under oath. And oh, by the way, Bush authorized the leak of Valerie Plame's identity, which is a felony. But then George III had less power than Bush.
Why is gas so cheap in Missouri?
Dan Rather slams corporate media. I've been wondering what Rather thinks of some of this; he is not disappointing me.
Lingro-- where to look for those odd words when you read another language online.
Al Gore helped airlift 270 diabetic patients out of Charity Hospital in New Orleans during the Katrina debacle -- why are we only learning about this now? Notably, nobody in the Bush Administration wanted him to do it. More details here. What was the Administration doing at that point? Consider how Karl Rove played politics while people drowned.
In true neoCon Republican style, the Bush Administration orders interrogators to destroy their notes in case someone thinks they're behaving improperly.
Will soldiers with PTSD get Purple Hearts? Maybe.
Some people online aren't fond of this article about John McCain's first wife, the one he divorced soon after his return from captivity in Vietnam in order to marry the model he's with now. Two things to note: it's a British article with a tabloid slant, which is more understood abroad than here, and it's worthwhile to know what kind of man McCain is when seen from a different viewpoint than what the US media shows. Granted, nobody outside a marriage actually knows what goes on inside it, but, even so, it does say something about McCain that the Republican-owned US media aren't touching.
The extinction of small, supposedly 'insignificant' species does matter -- to you and me. To everyone. We are all linked, more than we know.
Five ways to survive any disaster.
Legend of the crystal skulls.
Solar-assisted rickshaw.
The US has pulled out of the UN Human Rights Council under charges of human rights violations; 56 House members call for an investigation of 'possible war crimes'. The US exit from the council is not being taken well.
Bush has had more and stronger ties to felon superlobbyist Jack Abramoff than were suspected. Meanwhile, the House Oversight Committee releases its report on the Abramoff investigation.
Obama says he's partnering with Elizabeth Edwards on health care. Elizabeth has a few quesions for McCain: why are people like me left out of your health care proposal, Senator?
Taser Inc. loses first product liability suit. Will that change cops' propensity to use them on people?
Friday should be interesting. The House Judiciary Committee has officially requested former White House press secretary Scott McClellan to testify about obstruction of justice by Bush, Cheney and Libby. Looks like people *are* reading Scotty's book, and taking notes. And he will testify in public and under oath. And oh, by the way, Bush authorized the leak of Valerie Plame's identity, which is a felony. But then George III had less power than Bush.
Why is gas so cheap in Missouri?
Dan Rather slams corporate media. I've been wondering what Rather thinks of some of this; he is not disappointing me.
Lingro-- where to look for those odd words when you read another language online.
Al Gore helped airlift 270 diabetic patients out of Charity Hospital in New Orleans during the Katrina debacle -- why are we only learning about this now? Notably, nobody in the Bush Administration wanted him to do it. More details here. What was the Administration doing at that point? Consider how Karl Rove played politics while people drowned.
In true neoCon Republican style, the Bush Administration orders interrogators to destroy their notes in case someone thinks they're behaving improperly.
Will soldiers with PTSD get Purple Hearts? Maybe.
Some people online aren't fond of this article about John McCain's first wife, the one he divorced soon after his return from captivity in Vietnam in order to marry the model he's with now. Two things to note: it's a British article with a tabloid slant, which is more understood abroad than here, and it's worthwhile to know what kind of man McCain is when seen from a different viewpoint than what the US media shows. Granted, nobody outside a marriage actually knows what goes on inside it, but, even so, it does say something about McCain that the Republican-owned US media aren't touching.
The extinction of small, supposedly 'insignificant' species does matter -- to you and me. To everyone. We are all linked, more than we know.
Five ways to survive any disaster.
Legend of the crystal skulls.
Solar-assisted rickshaw.
I cannot even begin to express my disgust with the people who are vilifying one qualified candidate for the presidency now that it's fairly certain another qualified candidate will take the nomination.
The trash talk, the slinging of 'bitch' as if it were not a hurtful word, the comparisons with the Wicked Witch of the West, the misogynistic remarks, the sexist attacks, the sheer personal hatred being aimed at Hillary are vomit-inducing. Agree with her positions or not, like her hairdo or not, like her husband or not, or her daughter, or her views on the war or on any other issue or any other challenge facing this country -- there is no rational reason for this outpouring of ignorance and hatred.
Because ignorance it is, and hatred it is, and both are born of fear that -- for once in the history of this country -- a competent, intelligent, educated woman might make it into the boy's club.
And ignorance is not rational. Ignorance ignores rationality and goes directly for the part of the brain that is afraid and kicks the hell out of it. ( Oh, I'm just getting started. Stick around. )
The trash talk, the slinging of 'bitch' as if it were not a hurtful word, the comparisons with the Wicked Witch of the West, the misogynistic remarks, the sexist attacks, the sheer personal hatred being aimed at Hillary are vomit-inducing. Agree with her positions or not, like her hairdo or not, like her husband or not, or her daughter, or her views on the war or on any other issue or any other challenge facing this country -- there is no rational reason for this outpouring of ignorance and hatred.
Because ignorance it is, and hatred it is, and both are born of fear that -- for once in the history of this country -- a competent, intelligent, educated woman might make it into the boy's club.
And ignorance is not rational. Ignorance ignores rationality and goes directly for the part of the brain that is afraid and kicks the hell out of it. ( Oh, I'm just getting started. Stick around. )
I may have a chance soon to see one or more movies by an Iranian-born director, Ali Shah-Hatami, but I don't know much about him or his work. Have any of you heard of him or seen his movies? The titles I've found are: Gipsy, Shrapnels in Peace, Chasing the Shadows, the Iron Bird, the Last Reconnaissance, the Turtle, and the Friends, and they have won international awards and have been featured at festivals around the world. He is in Dubai now working on 'Goodbye Harry Potter'. And what's above is all I know. Anybody out there know more?
1. It's happening there; is it happening here?
Vladimir Putin's opponents vanish from the media -- by Putin's order. NYTimes article, today. ( the start of it... )
2. It used to happen there; now it's happening here. Why?
During the time of Jane Austen and Dickens, prisoners were sent to the Fleet, old ships that served as prisons. Now, the US is hiding terrorism suspects on prison ships. Isn't that one of those things we were supposed to be past, nowadays?
3. Faith and its practice, or the lack of it
Jeff Sharlet considers: Are we all gay Episcopalians now? And beyond belief -- reviewing Founding Faith, a book on the religious history of the Founding Fathers, which was not what the Religious Right or the neoCons would have you believe. And how that difference -- a freedom from a government-established and government-affiliated religion -- matters. ( a look at the past> <blockquote> ) Also, another excerpt from Sharlet's book The Family, which examines from the inside the hidden religious structure at the heart of the current US government. ( Down the rabbit hole into Ivanwald... )
Bobby Jindal, the conservative son of Punjabi immigrants, now governor of Louisiana, also linked to the Religious Right in ways I find uncomfortable. What's the chance he might be tagged as VP for McCain?
Did Biblical scholars mislead people about the Gospel of Judas? Is it about the document or the translators or the people who hired them? And what if Judas really was the good guy?
How much do we have to care about?
4. Fuel prices are rising. Farmland is being used for bioenergy, which competes with food production. Where will the food come from?
For the first time in decades, US farmland is maxed out, with all of it in production. Are we falling behind because of commercialized seed companies' policies, or farming practices, or because there are so many people to feed? Or is it something else?
Bonus:
Top ten solutions to the world's biggest problems, from Reason.
Vladimir Putin's opponents vanish from the media -- by Putin's order. NYTimes article, today. ( the start of it... )
2. It used to happen there; now it's happening here. Why?
During the time of Jane Austen and Dickens, prisoners were sent to the Fleet, old ships that served as prisons. Now, the US is hiding terrorism suspects on prison ships. Isn't that one of those things we were supposed to be past, nowadays?
3. Faith and its practice, or the lack of it
Jeff Sharlet considers: Are we all gay Episcopalians now? And beyond belief -- reviewing Founding Faith, a book on the religious history of the Founding Fathers, which was not what the Religious Right or the neoCons would have you believe. And how that difference -- a freedom from a government-established and government-affiliated religion -- matters. ( a look at the past> <blockquote> ) Also, another excerpt from Sharlet's book The Family, which examines from the inside the hidden religious structure at the heart of the current US government. ( Down the rabbit hole into Ivanwald... )
Bobby Jindal, the conservative son of Punjabi immigrants, now governor of Louisiana, also linked to the Religious Right in ways I find uncomfortable. What's the chance he might be tagged as VP for McCain?
Did Biblical scholars mislead people about the Gospel of Judas? Is it about the document or the translators or the people who hired them? And what if Judas really was the good guy?
How much do we have to care about?
4. Fuel prices are rising. Farmland is being used for bioenergy, which competes with food production. Where will the food come from?
For the first time in decades, US farmland is maxed out, with all of it in production. Are we falling behind because of commercialized seed companies' policies, or farming practices, or because there are so many people to feed? Or is it something else?
Bonus:
Top ten solutions to the world's biggest problems, from Reason.
I drove back today after a weekend at Pendle Hill for the basic level of the Alternatives to Violence program. [More about AVP later, but I do want to mention that if I'd known some of this weekend's skills and tools back 30 years ago my life would have been *significantly* different...]
Anyway, I can now say that I drove through hail and high water to get back, if by 'high water' you mean *horizontal.*
I was heading south on Route 1, and saw some dark clouds ahead, so I got over to a side road with a handy-dandy Starbucks and phoned home to find out if there were any weather alerts I needed to know about. The SU checked out both weather.com and noaa.gov and found nothing more than 'occasional thunderstorms and showers'. Oooookay. Armed with coffee, I headed back south.
The first clue that something was coming my way was the cloud-to-earth lightning bolts that were coming from high-ceiling clouds a few thousand feet up, past a heavy gray mass in between. And then the hail started. Pea-sized hail, disintegrating on contact with hard surface. With no warning I was driving on something perilously like ice -- in 84 degree weather.
The hail let up and the rain intensified so I couldn't see, so I turned on the double blinkers and pulled off the side of the road (like every other vehicle within sight.) Then something happened that I have *never* seen in my lifetime.
It was still raining, but the rain was blowing horizontally, hard enough to strip the leaves and small branches off the trees by the roadside where I was pulled over. Thing is, the wind wasn't that strong. It wasn't shoving at the flat sides of the 4-Runner enough for me to notice. But the rain was coming so hard and so fast that it was like looking at thick glass -- it was a white-out. I'm used to snow doing that. I've never seen a blizzard before that wasn't frozen. It lasted for 15 minutes. Then it thinned, the rain went back to being vertical again, and went away. When I got back on the road, the pavement was dry a mile away.
The sideways rain came back again, thicker and possibly with more hail, when I got up on the Baltimore Beltway; I took shelter under the Towson overpass with all the lights on and was nearly hit by several cars sliding on what was coming down ten feet away. Again, it went away in a few minutes, and the road only a little way further was dry.
And when I got home and checked the weather radar for passing storms -- there was no evidence of what I'd just driven through.
Weird weather.
Anyway, I can now say that I drove through hail and high water to get back, if by 'high water' you mean *horizontal.*
I was heading south on Route 1, and saw some dark clouds ahead, so I got over to a side road with a handy-dandy Starbucks and phoned home to find out if there were any weather alerts I needed to know about. The SU checked out both weather.com and noaa.gov and found nothing more than 'occasional thunderstorms and showers'. Oooookay. Armed with coffee, I headed back south.
The first clue that something was coming my way was the cloud-to-earth lightning bolts that were coming from high-ceiling clouds a few thousand feet up, past a heavy gray mass in between. And then the hail started. Pea-sized hail, disintegrating on contact with hard surface. With no warning I was driving on something perilously like ice -- in 84 degree weather.
The hail let up and the rain intensified so I couldn't see, so I turned on the double blinkers and pulled off the side of the road (like every other vehicle within sight.) Then something happened that I have *never* seen in my lifetime.
It was still raining, but the rain was blowing horizontally, hard enough to strip the leaves and small branches off the trees by the roadside where I was pulled over. Thing is, the wind wasn't that strong. It wasn't shoving at the flat sides of the 4-Runner enough for me to notice. But the rain was coming so hard and so fast that it was like looking at thick glass -- it was a white-out. I'm used to snow doing that. I've never seen a blizzard before that wasn't frozen. It lasted for 15 minutes. Then it thinned, the rain went back to being vertical again, and went away. When I got back on the road, the pavement was dry a mile away.
The sideways rain came back again, thicker and possibly with more hail, when I got up on the Baltimore Beltway; I took shelter under the Towson overpass with all the lights on and was nearly hit by several cars sliding on what was coming down ten feet away. Again, it went away in a few minutes, and the road only a little way further was dry.
And when I got home and checked the weather radar for passing storms -- there was no evidence of what I'd just driven through.
Weird weather.
I'm less social fannishly as I get older, or perhaps differently social. ( and my hair's a different color, too. )
According to the synopsis on the site, this looks like a live-action remake of Lady and the Tramp. But based on the preview, I think someone at Disney is smoking the drapes again.
And this morning my cousin's husband saw a bear half a mile from their house, just above Naples, NY, in the Finger Lakes. Not a small bear, either. ( see for yourself )
And this morning my cousin's husband saw a bear half a mile from their house, just above Naples, NY, in the Finger Lakes. Not a small bear, either. ( see for yourself )
Scott McClellan verifies what I've been saying for a while from a distance: Bush confused propaganda and war, was badly advised and played fast and loose with the truth. McClellan was Bush's press secretary, the one who had to talk to the media about all of this, and the Bushites are savaging his reputation left and right. But who's getting the blame for all of this? Left-wing bloggers.
In Washington, DC, Veterans for Peace was disinvited from the Memorial Day Parade, after initially having been welcomed.
Bush wanted to cut down national forests 'to save them from forest fires.' Three US judges -- and remember, *nearly all* US judges now are Republicans -- repudiated this proposal. From the judges' ruling: ( you can almost hear the sarcasm reeling off the page )
In this country of immigrants, it's an ugly thing to see the tradition of blaming 'undocumented workers and aliens' for anything and everything is still going strong. And who will take care of the American children of the people who are locked away?
Barry Nolan talks about being fired for protesting O'Reilly being given the Governors Award at this year's Emmy Awards. This is the highest honor handed out. ( and he says plenty ) And here's the article about his being fired.
Canadian media fen, be warned! Border guards may soon be checking your laptop, iPod and other devices for contraband music and movies because of a copyright deal. The deal would create a international regulator that could turn border guards and other public security personnel into copyright police. The security officials would be charged with checking laptops, iPods and even cellular phones for content that "infringes" on copyright laws, such as ripped CDs and movies.
The guards would also be responsible for determining what is infringing content and what is not....Anyone found with infringing content in their possession would be open to a fine. They may also have their device confiscated or destroyed, according to the four-page document.
The original Indiana Jones -- Otto Rahn. (For values of Indy including the third movie, more or less.)
In sex now, oral is normal. Actually, from talking to the kids next door I knew this twenty years ago; where has Slate been?
How do you live on what you find in the woods? Well, it's pretty much all you do.
You're not forgetful; you're growing wiser and sifting information. ( and distractability isn't a bad thing )
Fine, it's a concept car, great, but when will it be available to the people who need it?
Farewell to the Journal of Mythic Arts.
In Washington, DC, Veterans for Peace was disinvited from the Memorial Day Parade, after initially having been welcomed.
Bush wanted to cut down national forests 'to save them from forest fires.' Three US judges -- and remember, *nearly all* US judges now are Republicans -- repudiated this proposal. From the judges' ruling: ( you can almost hear the sarcasm reeling off the page )
In this country of immigrants, it's an ugly thing to see the tradition of blaming 'undocumented workers and aliens' for anything and everything is still going strong. And who will take care of the American children of the people who are locked away?
Barry Nolan talks about being fired for protesting O'Reilly being given the Governors Award at this year's Emmy Awards. This is the highest honor handed out. ( and he says plenty ) And here's the article about his being fired.
Canadian media fen, be warned! Border guards may soon be checking your laptop, iPod and other devices for contraband music and movies because of a copyright deal. The deal would create a international regulator that could turn border guards and other public security personnel into copyright police. The security officials would be charged with checking laptops, iPods and even cellular phones for content that "infringes" on copyright laws, such as ripped CDs and movies.
The guards would also be responsible for determining what is infringing content and what is not....Anyone found with infringing content in their possession would be open to a fine. They may also have their device confiscated or destroyed, according to the four-page document.
The original Indiana Jones -- Otto Rahn. (For values of Indy including the third movie, more or less.)
In sex now, oral is normal. Actually, from talking to the kids next door I knew this twenty years ago; where has Slate been?
How do you live on what you find in the woods? Well, it's pretty much all you do.
You're not forgetful; you're growing wiser and sifting information. ( and distractability isn't a bad thing )
Fine, it's a concept car, great, but when will it be available to the people who need it?
Farewell to the Journal of Mythic Arts.
Obama v. McCain. An electoral race straight out of the West Wing, and for good reason.
McCain breaks with Bush and goes hard-line on North Korea disarmament.
Daily Kos: Ted Kennedy, the roar of a Democratic lion.
Did you know that Danny Strong, from Buffy, is the brain behind HBO's 'Recount'? And he did a good job on it. Roger Ebert has good words to say about this, especially about Laura Dern as Katherin Harris.
Karl Rove, stepping on his own toes in public.
Salon: Domestic spying under Bush -- warrantless wiretapping and much more. Who are you talking to? What are you saying? Can you be sure nobody else is listening? (No, you can't. Even in LJ.)
And in Britain, students were arrested for excessive diligence in researching Islamic extremism. The paper they were arrested for accessing was from a US Dept. of Justice server, publicly available.
A school movie wins the Palme d'Or, the highest honor at the Cannes Film Festival.
For once, the union representing the laborers wins... against Burger King.
Rape in the military -- up to one third of women soldiers have been harrassed. The entire episode of NOW is available streaming online here.
A kid finds a way to degrade plastic in his school science fair project. Now, can we apply that to the pile of plastic debris in the Pacific Ocean that is the size of the continental US?
Social networks may be underestimated (so says the Post.)
Larry McMurtry reviews 'The Comanche Empire'.
Farewell, Sydney Pollack. And Roger Ebert says more.
McCain breaks with Bush and goes hard-line on North Korea disarmament.
Daily Kos: Ted Kennedy, the roar of a Democratic lion.
Did you know that Danny Strong, from Buffy, is the brain behind HBO's 'Recount'? And he did a good job on it. Roger Ebert has good words to say about this, especially about Laura Dern as Katherin Harris.
Karl Rove, stepping on his own toes in public.
Salon: Domestic spying under Bush -- warrantless wiretapping and much more. Who are you talking to? What are you saying? Can you be sure nobody else is listening? (No, you can't. Even in LJ.)
And in Britain, students were arrested for excessive diligence in researching Islamic extremism. The paper they were arrested for accessing was from a US Dept. of Justice server, publicly available.
A school movie wins the Palme d'Or, the highest honor at the Cannes Film Festival.
For once, the union representing the laborers wins... against Burger King.
Rape in the military -- up to one third of women soldiers have been harrassed. The entire episode of NOW is available streaming online here.
A kid finds a way to degrade plastic in his school science fair project. Now, can we apply that to the pile of plastic debris in the Pacific Ocean that is the size of the continental US?
Social networks may be underestimated (so says the Post.)
Larry McMurtry reviews 'The Comanche Empire'.
Farewell, Sydney Pollack. And Roger Ebert says more.
A few things:
I went outside this morning to do a set of tai chi on the somewhat-cleared patio ("cleared" means I have pulled all the weeds from between the paving stones in one area, though I haven't managed to get rid of all of them yet) and found an unexpected present: a dead mouse, about five feet from the back door. Fairly freshly dead, too. There are neighborhood cats, but I didn't think any of them liked us enough to leave presents. The only other suspects I can think of are a local fox (who is practical enough not to leave breakfast just sitting there) and an owl or crow (also practical and not inclined to leaving gifts.) So I'm going to have to keep an eye out to see if more of them show up, if only to keep from stepping on them when I go outside.
Saw the new Indiana Jones movie again, and was struck by the number of references in it to previous Spielberg movies -- not just Raiders but American Graffiti, among others. Some day someone is going to sit down and watch it carefully and make a long long list of all the cultural and movie references in it. After the movie, I ended up explaining the chronology of the movies to the people I was with, who hadn't realized that movies 2 and 3 took place before movie 1, or that Marion wasn't in either of them.
I'm intrigued by the preview for Brad Pitt's new Benjamin Button movie, and by the preview for the Big Brother-ish one with Shia LeBoeuf. Both of them look interesting enough to pry me out of the house and down to the cineplex. Has anyone heard anything about them?
I went outside this morning to do a set of tai chi on the somewhat-cleared patio ("cleared" means I have pulled all the weeds from between the paving stones in one area, though I haven't managed to get rid of all of them yet) and found an unexpected present: a dead mouse, about five feet from the back door. Fairly freshly dead, too. There are neighborhood cats, but I didn't think any of them liked us enough to leave presents. The only other suspects I can think of are a local fox (who is practical enough not to leave breakfast just sitting there) and an owl or crow (also practical and not inclined to leaving gifts.) So I'm going to have to keep an eye out to see if more of them show up, if only to keep from stepping on them when I go outside.
Saw the new Indiana Jones movie again, and was struck by the number of references in it to previous Spielberg movies -- not just Raiders but American Graffiti, among others. Some day someone is going to sit down and watch it carefully and make a long long list of all the cultural and movie references in it. After the movie, I ended up explaining the chronology of the movies to the people I was with, who hadn't realized that movies 2 and 3 took place before movie 1, or that Marion wasn't in either of them.
I'm intrigued by the preview for Brad Pitt's new Benjamin Button movie, and by the preview for the Big Brother-ish one with Shia LeBoeuf. Both of them look interesting enough to pry me out of the house and down to the cineplex. Has anyone heard anything about them?
Is there a lolcat-type site or group for Stargate (either SG-1 or Atlantis) macros? If so, where?
Hacking away at the editorial staffs of major newspapers with a hatchet.
Sgt. Matthis Chiroux has refused to serve in Iraq. Meanwhile, the army is having to deal with desertions. And a federal court says the military can't kick people out for being gay; they ahve to prove that the person's sexual orientation has a negative effect on their unit.
Bats can reseed devastated forests.
The government is looking for moles to spy on protesters during the Republican National Convention.
Alaska is suing to block protection for polar bears.
Bush signs a genetic anti-discrimination law.
Carbon nanofibers may act like asbestos, not in a good way.
Garrison Keillor: mutterings over the graves of soldiers.
Sgt. Matthis Chiroux has refused to serve in Iraq. Meanwhile, the army is having to deal with desertions. And a federal court says the military can't kick people out for being gay; they ahve to prove that the person's sexual orientation has a negative effect on their unit.
Bats can reseed devastated forests.
The government is looking for moles to spy on protesters during the Republican National Convention.
Alaska is suing to block protection for polar bears.
Bush signs a genetic anti-discrimination law.
Carbon nanofibers may act like asbestos, not in a good way.
Garrison Keillor: mutterings over the graves of soldiers.