Tuesday, August 28, 2007

An Armed Society is a Polite Society

There was an article on the Drudge Report today that states the United States is the most armed nation in the world.  I say "Hell, yeah, we are."  Now, out of the 50 states, where does Texas rank?  And how guns does the average armed American own?  You have to consider that many Americans don't own any firearms, so of those who do, what's the average? 
 
Justin throws the average.
 
U.S. most armed country with 90 guns per 100 people
U.S. citizens own 270 million of the world's 875 million known firearms, according to the Small Arms Survey 2007 by the Geneva-based Graduate Institute of International Studies.
 

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Not Your Grandfather's Door Gunner


Jefe sent this to me. I thought it was worth sharing.

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Monday, August 27, 2007

Walking Around Houston

On Saturday morning I went for a long walk through the neighborhood. It turned out to be 4.6 miles in an hour and a half.

The neighborhood is really eclectic. There are half-million-dollar-plus town homes next door to one-storey single family homes next to a restaurant or antique store.


Here's a map of the path I took.

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Friday, August 24, 2007

The Power of Stupid

I don't necessarily agree with everything that Scott Adams is saying in this post, but it is pretty funny.

via The Dilbert Blog by Scott_Adams on Aug 24, 2007

A reader sent this story about his workplace.

-------------
"A theme from many of your previous comics came true to life for us today. Quality in the workplace.

Yesterday, a pointy-haired boss decided our meeting room needed nice motivational pictures on the wall. Twelve by eight inch, wooden frame, 1940s-style motivational tools (think 'Rosie the Riveter' in artwork, color and font). So an assistant was ordered to procure such things.

The first mistake was where the artwork was obtained from. Rather than pay $15 per picture for the real thing, it was decided to take the small JPEG images of what we wanted from a website that sold these trinkets. Cheap picture frames were bought (from a dollar store, by the look of things).

When the images were enlarged to fit into the 12 by 8 frames, the pixelation was terrible. In itself, this was funny. A picture that celebrates the idea of quality in the workplace looked cheap, and knowing it was a stolen image lessens the impact of the message slightly."
-------------

This story made me think about one of the great wonders of capitalism: It is driven by morons who are circling the drain, and yet. . . it works!

Think about all the people working and earning paychecks from companies that will ultimately fail. It's a lot of people. But until those companies fail, the employees are getting paid, buying goods, and contributing to the economy. After the failure, those employees hop over to another sinking ship, and so on.

Within successful companies, a huge portion of resources are dedicated to projects and products that will ultimately fail. But in the meantime, everyone is getting paid and propping up the economy.

I once worked in a bank, making loans to small business start-ups. Our rule of thumb was that 90% of new businesses fail. The exceptions were franchisees and pizza places. But we saw no shortage of people willing to mortgage their homes to start their own sporting good stores and boutique dress shops, despite the 90% chance of failure. Without clueless optimists, the economy would grind to a halt. My own career has been a long string of failures and a few notable successes.

I understand the math of capitalism, and how the few successes are so large they pay for all the failures and then some. But at any given moment, the majority of resources in a capitalist system are being pushed over a cliff by morons. This fascinates me. And it's clearly the reason that humans rule the earth. We found a system to harness the power of stupid.

In the rest of the animal kingdom, being a moron is nothing but bad. A moron lion, for example, who can't catch anything to eat, is adding nothing to the lion economy. But a moron human who starts a business selling garlic flavored mittens is stimulating the economy right up until the point of going out of business.

My point is that I hope the monkeys that already know how to use sticks for tools don't start using leaves for money. If that happens, we're screwed.

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USB Missile Launcher


Jefe got Yeager and me a USB Missile Launcher a couple of weeks ago. Here's mine set up in my office.


UPDATE:


I showed the Missile Launcher to my manager and he loved it! My coworkers found it hilarious as well.


Thanks, Jefe.


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Thursday, August 23, 2007

Hillary Announces Agenda To Improve the Quality of Health Care for All Americans

Hillary's plan to social healthcare is LADEN with buzzwords...

I don't have time at the moment to scrutinize her blog post, but rest assured I will blog about it later.

There is sure is a lot of empowerment going on in her 'plan'.

I am still shuddering at the use of all nefarious word usage. She even invented a '"Best Practices" Institute'!

I've highlighted the disingenuous words used below. When I get a chance later I will actually comment on the substance and meaning. Right now it's just difficult to read the post because of the blatant disregard for respect to the English language and our intellect.


via blogHillary by Crystal Patterson on Aug 23, 2007

Today in Lebanon, New Hampshire, Hillary outlined her plan to improve the quality of health care for all Americans.

As President, Hillary would fundamentally reform the nation's health care system by lowering costs, improving quality, and covering all Americans. Earlier in the campaign, she announced a multi-faceted plan to lower costs and increase value in the nation's health care system, which taken together would lower national health spending by at least $120 billion a year. Today, she announced several proposals that build on those initiatives to ensure high quality care by empowering health professionals, patients, and private and public payers to improve the financing and delivery of health care that every American receives. And next month, she will unveil her proposals to ensure universal coverage, so that every American will have quality, affordable health care.

Hillary's agenda returns patients to the center of the health care system again by empowering and relying on the skill of those who provide care - physicians, nurses, other clinicians, and health care organizations - to improve that care continually.

Background

While health care in the U.S. has enormous strengths, many Americans worry about the quality of care they receive. In 2006, a survey conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation and AHRQ found that 51 percent of Americans were dissatisfied with the quality of the American health care system. Per capita health care spending in the U.S. is far greater than in any other industrialized country, yet other nations have better health outcomes, including longer life-expectancy, lower rates of obesity and related conditions such as heart disease and diabetes, fewer years of life lost due to failure to treat treatable conditions, and lower infant mortality.

According to a RAND study, adults in the U.S. on average fail to receive about half the recommended care that modern clinical science says they need. In fact, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) in 1999 reported that between 44,000 and 98,000 people die each year in our nation's hospitals as a result of preventable injuries from medical care. In short, for the amount of money that we spend in health care, Americans should be getting better quality care. Improving the quality of our health care system can and will reduce costs.

Hillary's Agenda: Reforming Health Care by Focusing on Quality

A reformed high-quality healthcare system must include a strong evidence base so we know what treatments work best, a quality measurement infrastructure based on this evidence to assess the quality of care patients receive from their health care providers, the integration of those quality measures into the delivery of care through health information technology, reimbursement incentives and accountability, and a commitment to placing patients at the center of the system, through increased transparency and greater access to information. To achieve this, Hillary will:

Empowering Providers:

1. Empower Physicians to Improve Quality Through Physician-Driven Certification Programs

2. Recognize Independent Private-Public Quality Trust and Improve Quality Measures

3. Emphasize Quality in Health Care Workforce, with Focus on Nurses

  • Address Nurse and Nurse Faculty Shortages
  • Prioritize the Retention of New Nurses
  • Increase Number of Direct Support Professionals
  • Address Diversity and Cultural Competency in the Healthcare Workforce
  • Link Nursing Education and Quality
Empowering Patients

4. Empower Patients with Information on Provider Performance
  • Develop a Patient-Friendly Quality Database
  • Develop Patient-Friendly Decision Aids to Promote Informed Patient Choice

5. Reduce Health Care Disparities
  • Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities as Part of the National Quality Agenda
  • Require More Accurate Data Collection
  • Improve Cultural Competency in Clinical Care
  • Prioritize the Development of Medical Homes Designed to Improve Quality for Racial and Ethnic Minorities


Empowering Purchasers and Payers:

6. Incentivize Quality Through Increased Federal Payments

  • Financially Reward Excellence in Care
  • Develop New Reimbursement Models to Encourage Innovative Care Delivery Systems that Reward Quality -- Not Assembly-Line Care


7. Prohibit Payment of "Never Events" in FEHBP and all Federal Programs


These proposals to improve quality build on Hillary's existing health care agenda:

  • Institute a New "Paperless" Health Information Technology System
  • Transform Care of Today's Chronically Ill Population to Improve Outcomes
  • Create an Independent "Best Practices" Institute and Invest in Research for New Treatments

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Fwd: Today's driving lesson

So the following is an e-mail from a friend of mine.  He sent it to me this morning.  I thought this was a wonderful start to the day, so I'm sharing it with you.
 
The term "C1" (used in the last sentence) refers to me.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Aug 22, 2007 10:49 AM
Subject: Today's driving lesson


So today I learned something on the road, that I thought I'd share with you. A 'safety moment' if you will....
 
Knowns: I am a very observant person. I take calculated risks. I handle my truck well.
 
Actors: J1Yeage (me) and A1Hole (the other guy)
 
Scenario: I am travelling at 75 mph westbound on IH 610 N in the left lane. Traffic is relatively light between 45 and 290. There is a distant car ahead and a couple cars in the lane to my right. No one is behind me. I have just gotten off of the Hardy ramp to enter 610 westbound and sat in the line waiting to pass the backup that occurs every morning where 45 south dumps onto 610 west. After those slow 4 miles, it's usually smooth sailing until 290.
 
As I mentioned earlier, there is no one behind me and I haven't squeezed my truck in anywhere, blocked anyone, tailgated, or otherwise upset any other drivers (this morning at least).
 
Next thing I know, there is a silver, late model Lincoln Town car right on my ass. He has offset to the left (half on the shoulder) to make we aware of his presence. By this time, because I am traveling 75 in a 65, I have nearly caught up to the car in front of me. There is still a solid wall of cars to my right. There is really no where for me to go at this point. I have been known to tailgate and it really doesn't make me the slightest bit nervous to have someone close on my tail. I continue at 75 with him probably 3 feet off my rear bumper. He is so close, I can see him getting upset in my very large side view mirror. This gave me a warm fuzzy, so I smiled at A1.
 
The car ahead of me slows for the traffic in front and I let off the throttle, but didn't hit the brakes. A few seconds later the car in front hits his brakes, so I am forced to apply mine. A1 also applied his brakes and slipped into a small gap that opened up one lane to my left. When he's even with me, he stares, so I smile back again. His next move is to cut me off, and hit his brakes (standard A1 move, totally expected) He proceeds to drive 35 mph allowing the gap ahead to grow to 300 yards.
 
I figured, "hmmm....I'll ride your ass the whole way to 610 & I-10 if you want me to...it would be my pleasure actually." He ended up doing something I didn't see coming though, he got out of my way and started changing lanes rapidly to the right as we approached 290. As I was passing him, he flipped me off...so I smiled and waved. Then I stopped and he came up to me again, flipped me off again, and I again....smiled and waved while laughing hysterically. I think that made him even madder. It was great.
 
Lesson for today:
"Smile at your enemies C1.....it confuses the shit out of them." - J1Yeage

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Zimbabwe inflation hits new high

The following article just shows how bad Zimbabwe, under Robert Mugabe, is spiralling out of control.

Also worth noting are these paragraphs from the article:

Last month, the International Monetary Fund warned annual inflation could
reach 100,000% by the end of the year.

Unemployment stands at about 80%
and there are mass shortages of fuel and foodstuffs.

via BBC News World UK Edition on Aug 22, 2007

Zimbabwe's annual inflation rate jumps to 7,638% in July according to the first official figures for three months.

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Iran's Revolutionary Guard

There's no question that Iran is peddling it's influence on Iraq, supplying weapons and material to Shi'ite militants in Iraq, supporting Hezbollah and the Iranian government hates us to death.
What to do about it, then?

Well, the US has long had Iran on the list of nations that support terrorism. Sanctions long been in place, they've been declared part of the 'Axis of Evil' and plenty of UN fingers wagged in their face.

Now the Bush Administration is going to ratchet up the rhetoric a notch by declaring Iran's Revolutionary Guard, their largest military branch, a terrorist organization. Gee, I hope that doesn't scare them.

It's clear the American public doesn't have the stomach to take a hard-line stance against the totalitarian regimes of this world, so what, then, is the point of notching up the rhetoric? What exactly is declaring the R.G.'s a terrorist organization going to do for us? I would be floored if anyone (US, UN, NATO, France) actually flexed military power on Iran.

It's clear the world sees the West as a bunch of wussies because of our weak will and fast capitulation in the face of adversity.

The only reason I continue this rant is due to the fact that I don't see the 'end game' here on the declaration. It's just rhetoric. It's a waste of time. Anyway, I thought I would share my disgust with you.

See the original article [NY Times]: U.S. Weighing Terrorist Label for Iran Guards.

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Formatting Issue

There appears to be a formatting issue right now for the right hand side pane of the blog. I'll look into it later when I have time.

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Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Economic Illiteracy

I think the following is a fascinating article:



Economic Illiteracy
By John Stossel


When I speak on college campuses, students often ask what can be done about the "problem" of young people who don't care enough to vote. I always say that I don't see it as much of problem "because most of you don't know anything yet. I'm OK with you not voting!" The students laugh, but I'm not joking.

It wasn't until I was about 40 that I started to believe I had acquired a good sense of what domestic policies might serve people well. (I still have no clue about international affairs.) I only started to think I knew what ought to be done after years of reporting and reading voraciously to absorb arguments from left and right. The idea that most voters vote without having done much of that work is, frankly, scary.

I'm not alone in this concern. An economist at George Mason University, Bryan Caplan, says few people think about their vote or even see any benefit in doing so. His new book, "The Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies", argues that most voters cast their ballot on the basis of irrational biases about economic matters. That's why so many candidates hostile to free markets, profits, free world trade and immigration get elected. People tend to acquire their wrong opinions about economic policy packaged in worldviews they inherited while growing up. They never test their views against the evidence because that would be unsettling. No one likes having his worldview challenged. So people vote for candidates who make them feel good. They vote irrationally.

Caplan stresses that most voters see no reason to do otherwise because they don't bear the consequences of their choices. This irrationality does not carry over into their personal lives because there they bear the brunt of their own decisions. But when irrationality is free, notes Caplan, people will indulge their biases.

Caplan divides them into three categories: antimarket bias, antiforeign bias, make-work bias and pessimistic bias. Antimarket bias describes people feeling that trade and profit are zero-sum games, that one person's gain is another person's loss. They haven't learned that free exchange is win-win and that in a free market, profit comes from cost-cutting innovation. Antiforeign bias, perhaps a vestige of primitive man, consists of distrusting "them" even though our prosperity increases according to how global the division of labor is. Foreigners don't want to invade us; they want to sell us useful things. Make-work bias is the belief that what makes us rich is jobs, rather than goods, and so anything that eliminates jobs is bad. If that were really true, we could prosper by outlawing all inventions created after 1920. Think of all the jobs that would create! Finally, pessimistic bias is the view that any economic problem is proof of general decline. Lots of people actually think we're poorer than our grandparents were!

As a result of these biases, people often support price controls, foreign-trade barriers and laws against job "outsourcing," and oppose immigration. Most economists are eager to demonstrate that these policies are bad for society, but most people aren't interested in evidence. They're interested in what confirms their worldview and makes them feel good. So they often vote for protectionists, anti-immigration advocates and other opponents of the free market.

Caplan's book isn't calculated to cheer up those of us who favor more market and less democracy. He offers some solutions that aren't likely to be adopted any time soon, such as permitting only the economically literate to vote, or giving them more votes, or eliminating get-out-the-vote campaigns (which serve only to get out the uneducated vote).

More practically, he thinks that "Everyone who knows some economics" should grab every opportunity to teach it. That's what I try to do with my "20/20" segments, television specials and the Stossel in the Classroom program, which brings economic ideas to high-school and college classrooms.

I hope we will create some rational voters in the process.

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Pidgin

Didier introduced me to an IM software, Pidgin, that let's you consolidate all of your IM protocols into one interface (with the option of tabbed discussions).

Check it out: http://www.pidgin.im/

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Blu Ray out in Front

I thought I would share the article I was talking about that declares Blu Ray in front of the HD DVD format:

http://news.com.com/8301-10784_3-9750763-7.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-5

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Abuse? Yeah, From the Left

I subscribe to the blog feeds of all the major candidates running for their party's nomination for presidential candidate (2008). Today I came across one that has infuriated me. It's from Hillary's campaign.

The entire post is below, but here's the synopsis and my commentary: Hillary wants to set aside some of our hard earned tax dollars to bail out folks who can't manage their money or pay attention to the type of mortgage they've selected. Right now the housing market in certain areas of the country is going through a natural economic process of correcting itself. In the excitement of new home sales and record housing growth, lenders abandon their reserve and loaned a lot of money out to high risk borrowers. Some of those borrowers are now defaulting and foreclosures are up.

Hillary refers to lenders using the words "unscrupulous", "abuse", "unfair". What??? These are legitimate business people. Hillary acts as though these are drug dealers preying on children. It's YOUR fault if you don't understand what an Adjustable Rate Mortgage is. The writing is there. A little research and you should be able to decide if an ARM is write for you.

Like any good liberal, Hillary thinks it's time to redistribute our money to bail out people who the market says

a). can't pay their bills
b). has a house that is way outside their price range
c). should probably go back to renting until they can figure out their finances

Now I know you're thinking: Gee, Colin, you're ruthless and heartless. Not true. Look at the example that she uses. Kristi and Paul, they have a huge house, apparently... this is the quote from Hillary's blog: "but their adjustable rate mortgage payments continued to climb from $2,400 to its current level of $6,000 a month"... WHAT? How big is your house? Where do you live? Obviously you are in WAY OVER YOUR HEAD. This is infuriating. I make good money and couldn't afford a mortage like that. Now Hillary wants ME to HELP THEM? I'm seeing red.

So the message is clear: "Are you in over your head living in a house you can't afford? Don't worry, we'll pay for it with other people's money! Vote liberal 2008."




Hillary Announces Plan to Address Mortgage Lending Abuses

By Crystal Patterson

With foreclosure rates continuing to skyrocket across the country, Senator Hillary Clinton in Derry, NH today laid out a plan to preserve the American dream of home ownership that would crack down on unscrupulous brokers, curb mortgage lending abuses, assist families facing foreclosure and expand affordable housing options.

"Today, we have a choice. We can look at the statistics, wring our hands, and continue to do nothing, or we can do what America has always done in times of difficulty: acknowledge that we face a real challenge, and confront it head-on with real solutions," said Clinton. "I think the choice is clear. I think we need to act now, with smart, practical solutions to strengthen our housing and mortgage markets. If I were President, I would address abuses across the mortgage industry with a plan to curb unfair lending practices and hold brokers and lenders accountable, give families the support they need to avoid foreclosure, and increase the supply of affordable housing."

New Hampshire resident Kristi Schofield joined Senator Clinton in Derry today. On July 31st, Kristi and her husband Paul lost their home of eight years in East Hamstead, NH because it had been purchased by the bank at a foreclosure auction. Yesterday, their mortgage company asked them to be out of the house in 17 days. They had planned to raise their three children and spend the rest of their lives in their home, but their adjustable rate mortgage payments continued to climb from $2,400 to its current level of $6,000 a month.

"We tried to do the right thing and continued to make the payments as long as we could with our savings and what earnings we had from unemployment, temporary and part time work. My husband had a good job, we had a great home. We were living our dream. Hillary Clinton is standing up today because she wants to help protect the American dream," said Schofield.

PROTECTING THE DREAM OF HOME OWNERSHIP



Senator Clinton's plan will curb mortgage abuses, assist families facing foreclosure, and expand affordable housing to protect the American dream of home ownership. She will introduce her plan when Congress returns in September.

Crack Down on Unscrupulous Brokers:

  • Require mortgage brokers to disclose to borrowers that their compensation rises when borrowers' mortgage rates and mortgage fees are high.
  • Work with states to develop strong licensing standards and require federal registration for mortgage brokers.
Crack Down on Mortgage Lending Abuses:


  • Eliminate prepayment penalties on mortgage products.
  • Require mortgage lenders to include the cost of taxes and insurance in the underwriting assessment of higher-risk mortgages.
Help Reduce Foreclosures:

  • Establish a $1 billion fund to assist state programs that help at-risk borrowers avoid foreclosure.
  • Expand Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's Foreclosure Prevention Efforts. Hillary would expand the goals of Fannie and Freddie, the government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) that help stabilize the mortgage markets, to include helping a larger number of at-risk homeowners avoid foreclosure.
Expand Affordable Housing:
  • Establish a $1 billion fund to provide federal support to housing trust funds established by state, county, and municipal governments.

The plan announced today supplements the plan Hillary announced earlier this year to address the problems in subprime mortgages. In that earlier announcement, Hillary called for expanding access to independent face-to-face counseling; restricting prepayment penalties for subprime mortgages; requiring "plain-talk, no-fine-print disclosure"; promoting "foreclosure timeout" in which at-risk borrowers and lenders work out alternatives to foreclosure; and strengthening the Federal Housing Administration so that it could provide more homebuyers with an alternative to the subprime market.

For more on Hillary's plan to preserve the dream of home ownership, click here.

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You Can't Make This Stuff Up!

People out there ACTUALLY believe this. Perhaps we should set them up in a warm and religiously open society like Iran, Saudi Arabia, Somalia or the Sudan. Their independent, free wheeling liberal ideas and lifestyles will be welcomed with open arms. They'll no longer have to live so oppressed by the 'moral majority' in the West. They will at last have found their freedom.



Nothing to Fear from Bin Laden; Bush Is the Enemy in Edinburgh

A quote from The Independent, 5 August 2007
We have nothing to fear from al-Qa'ida. Christian fundamentalists are the real extremist threat. That's the message from the writers of a new play being shown at the Edinburgh International Fringe Festival. […] The writers said that, while there is public discussion about the dangers of radical Islamic groups, the influence of the Christian far right is underestimated. "I've been very sensitive to extremists in other religions, particularly Islam, being demonised," said Badham. "I find the Christian right groups that are enormously powerful in our own culture a larger numerical threat than extreme Islam. […] Bush is from the religious right and he has the bomb; that terrifies me far more than the potential of other extremists to get their hands on nuclear weapons. In the religious right it is the self-appointed moral majority that sets its own rules, and anybody opposing them is labelled unpatriotic and shouted down."

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Heinz Commercial

Hi everybody!

My brother entered a commercial contest for Heinz 57. He and his friends produced a 30 second commercial and it's on YouTube. Please check it out and rate it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gg0OdeiEVkk

I'm not exactly sure what the next step is, but I think judges will whittle the entries down and then let everyone vote for their favorite.

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Who Are These People?

Okay... so Matt Drudge had found several interesting articles. My unwelcomed opinion precedes the link to the articles and quotes.



Don't Speak Spanish? Get Out!
Here we have a guy in Florida who's losing the lease where he runs his business because he doesn't speak Spanish. As wrong as the landlord is (in my opinion), he does have the right as a private business owner to impose his will. I can only imagine the furor if the tables were reversed here?

Geoff Oldfather: English-speaker says landlord's message is clear [http://www.tcpalm.com/news/2007/aug/05/no-headline-05sgfcol]



Pelosi's Liberal Taxers Levy Taxes on Big Oil
Next we have my favorite liberal, Nancy Pelosi, vomiting non sequitur sound bytes. The House, in its infinite wisdom, decided to approve a tax on oil companies. Now, you might think this is a good idea, but it's just another way of the government to tax us.

This article left me fuming. These libs have decided to FORCE private industry to find new fuel sources. In this day and age who wouldn't LOVE to be the first to market with a revolutionary new fuel source? Any company with such revolutionary technology would be infinitely rich. But it hasn't happened. And as novel as it is to pour corn syrup into your paperweight Prius, this country is run on oil. Why? Because it is the most effective fuel source we have. Period. You can't haul trailer loads of goods around the nation with a Prius. It takes big rigs, trains, and ships - and they don't run on hugs and hope, people. So learn to love oil until someone comes up with a better alternative.

Below I've posted one of Pelosi's comments. Some how by taxing oil companies we're being futuristic? I don't know, I never quite understand what she's getting at.

House Approves Taxes on Oil Companies [http://apnews.myway.com/article/20070805/D8QQNQM00.html]

"We are turning to the future," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.



Bloggers Want to Unionize. Why? Who's Exploiting You?
Okay... somewhere along the line folks like Susie Madrak came to the misguided conclusion that they're entitled. They're entitled because the life they've chosen for themselves is fraught with little idiosyncrasies that we just don't understand. But, have no fear, if we pay them for their lifestyle choice, then everything will be alright.

If bloggers can make a living blogging about politics (or whatever), then good for them. If not? Then get a real job and go get some exercise! What I truly don't understand here is who these idiots want to organize against? Blogging in itself is a hobby or a personal choice. It's not as though you work in a factory with poor conditions. You CHOOSE to spend hours on the internet writing about things no one asked your opinion on. So, if you unionize, who are you unionizing against? Seriously, have you thought this through? Or maybe Nancy Pelosi is going to pay you to blog with the taxes from the Big Oil?

In the first quote below, Susie Madrak uses two of the words I most despise in the same sentence: "feel" and "entitled." I can't stand people basing decisions on feelings and the only people who are entitled to anything are veterans. Apparently blogging is too tough for her. The use of a mouse is wearing out her neck and shoulder. Really? I don't even know what to say.

Bloggers Consider Forming Labor Union
[http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/070806/unionized_bloggers.html?.v=2]

"I think people have just gotten to the point where people outside the blogosphere understand the value of what it is that we do on the progressive side," said Susie Madrak, the author of Suburban Guerilla blog, who is active in the union campaign. "And I think they feel a little more entitled to ask for something now."

Madrak hopes that regardless the form, the labor movement ultimately will help bloggers pay for medical bills. It's important, she said, because some bloggers can spend hours a day tethered to computers as they update their Web sites.

"Blogging is very intense -- physically, mentally," she said. "You're constantly scanning for news. You're constantly trying to come up with information that you think will mobilize your readers. In the meantime, you're sitting at a computer and your ass is getting wider and your arm and neck and shoulder are wearing out because you're constantly using a mouse."

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Don't Throw Out That Carr Jersey --> Improve it!

The Chronicle has an article on how to convert a Carr jersey to a Schaub jersey.

Don't throw out that Carr jersey – improve it
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/life/5026250.html

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Godwin's Law

I came across this in an article and thought it was worth sharing:
Godwin's Law is simply stated: "As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches one."

The article: Defending Wikipedia's impolite side

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Mobile Blogging --> Ready

I have set up mobile blogging through Blogger. This should give me fewer excuses not to blog. It's been several months since the last update.

Note that if you want to find a post from before August 2007, there's an archive link on the right hand side of the page.

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mobile blogging

Mobile blogging through Blogger.

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Migration Successful

The migration back to Blogger's software was successful. The blog's URL must still be migrated.

The reason for the transfer back is to take advantage of Google's suite of tools.

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Test - First Post --> Blogger

I'm testing the move back to blogger, but hosted on my site.

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