Wednesday, September 30, 2009
License needed for a few minutes of free child care
Bird-borne parasite may have felled Tyrannosaurus
So did Obama speak with forked tongue?
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Monday, September 28, 2009
Medical mixup wipes out wild jaguar population
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Friday, September 25, 2009
If you drove for NASCAR, what would they call you?
'It Can't Happen Here' more relevant, though harder to find
Leading our children in songs of praise
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Political undead back for a reunion tour
Do you actually believe they read what they vote on?
Whoops - speaking of being full of it ...
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
The truth is out: Guns don't kill people - idiots kill people
Getting what we ask for: It's not smart people
Want to know how to derail ObamaNation? Ask Biden
On The Workbench: Twitter appeal, Chrome workaround
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Obama makes Earth, Wind, and Fire cool again
Does newspaper bailout bill include government control?
Naked old man thwarts drunken home invasion
USA having its own brain drain
Don't loose that dictionary: You're most common misspellings
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Sweden is the new USA, USA the new Sweden
New rule for kids at petting zoo: Look, don't touch
Component for great garden fertilizer may be within you
Sanford on Wilson: Enough is enough
Wilson, who shouted out "You lie!" during Barack Obama's speech on health care, instantly propelled himself from a relative unknown in background of Congress to national news -- and contoversial figure -- during his outburst.
Sanford said Wison's issues cover the "same dynamic" as his own.
From CNN:
... "the guy apologized, and then you can have a bunch of other people come back and say, 'We want you to apologize again and again and again,'" Sanford told CN2 News in Rock Hill, South Carolina. "But what do people want out of federal representation? They want somebody representing them up in Congress ... he apologized to the president. Does he have to issue 25 more apologies before folks will leave him alone?"
Sanford knows a little something about this. He's been on a mea culpa tour for the past few months, ever since he admitted having an extramarital affair in Argentina, which had him leave the state's business on the back burner while he traveled to South America to visit the woman he referred to as his "soul mate."
Wilson says he wants to let bygones be bygones. From the Post & Courier:
... the South Carolina congressman who shouted "You lie" at President Obama last week during a speech to Congress said Friday that he would not make such an outburst again, and the donations pouring into campaign coffers are not worth the negative attention he's received ...
Enough soap opera. Can we get back to work sometime this year or next?
Saturday, September 19, 2009
New evidence suggests Obama 'ain't from around here'
Amnesty for illegals may be part of health plan
Burglar can't stay away from Facebook
Viagra 2.0: Rub it in
Friday, September 18, 2009
Melts in your sleeve, not in your hand -- or something
Sanford's security clearance pulled for a week
PBR renaissance is fruit of recession
... but still, if PBR costs more and advertises less, why is it up 25% this year, vs. an 18% gain for Keystone and low- to mid-single-digit gains for the others? ... the answer, wholesalers and beer-marketing experts said, is likely found in marketing activity that occurred long before the current recession. Back in 2004, Pabst executed a highly effective word-of-mouth campaign that made the long-declining brand an "ironic downscale chic" choice for bike messengers and other younger drinkers who viewed the beer as a statement of non-mainstream taste.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Young blogger tells senator off in town hall
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
No wonder nobody's working: ESC automated
M.O. in hard times: Ready, fire, aim
Whatever the cause, tempers are getting short. People are going off the deep end, shooting from the hip without aiming first.
I'd reported the first part of this before; the outburst of Congressman Joe Wilson (R, SC) during Barack Obama's speech to a joint session of Congress last week. Whether he was right or wrong in calling Obama a liar is moot, but the man did go off in a most public and undignified way. Earlier today, Wilson told local radio show host Rocky D that he "had a Town Hall moment." Says it all.
Then, there's Serena Williams. For at least a decade she and her sister owned women's tennis. Up against Kim Cljisters in the U.S. Open last week, she went nuts after the ref called her on a foot fault. Got loud and said something about where she'd like to shove the ball.
And on Sunday, Kanye West went bonkers. Now, I don't really know who this Kanye West is; I'd have to ask my younger friends who are more hip to this pop culture thing. But during an MTV music video awards ceremony, West got on stage and interrupted Taylor Swift's acceptance speech with a rant using lots of words beginning with the letter F.
Maybe these folks, who don't exactly have holes in their shoes, are feeling the pinch of the times too. It's a little hard for us working stiffs to understand what kind of pressure the Williamses, Wests, and Wilsons may feel, but it's there regardless.
I know that here on the mean streets of Anywheresburg, USA, people are getting slap crazy, as we say Down South. Short with other people. They're on edge, and sometimes completely over it. Watching out more for Numero Uno than before. And that's understandable. Times are squirelly. Those who have jobs are wondering how long they'll keep them, and those with a little money in the bank or a 401(k) are watching their balances shrink.
As our economy gets more uncertain, tranquilizer darts become essential survival gear.
We had a batch of layoffs at work last week, and I was one of four casualties in a small shop. OK, that's a personal thing, and my own situation doesn't really play into this topic. But for a 10-day period -- from the time my boss announced that layoffs were coming until the day the ax finally fell -- nobody was worth a flip at work. Everybody on the ol' totem pole guarded his own hindparts, from the lowest to the highest. No one was really sure where the cuts were to occur -- bottom or top. Also under scrutiny was whether the railroad company might shut the whole ramp down, as it incurred heavy losses in the past eight months or so.
Because of this uncertainty, all of us were on edge. There were one or two guys we were especially worried about. One guy was a crane operator, running heavy equipment, and we were concerned he might attempt to carve a whole new lane right on top of the office. He was chosen as Most Likely To Go Postal in our informal staff poll, and we had our escape routes mapped out in case we heard that crane engine roar.
For that week and a half, very little work got done. But once the ax fell, things started getting back to normal. Layoffs were announced Thursday, and three of those casualties showed up for work Friday to finish their terms. Kind of a sad scene -- Handshakes and hugs all around as the newly-minted ex-employees clocked out for the last time, and the folks in my department bought me lunch and gave me a nice card. But for all of us the pressure was off. For now, anyway.
Among truckers, this mess our politicians call an economy had them under the gun for several months and tempers were quite short there, too. More haulers were driving like idiots than before, cutting one another off in line, scaring people on the freeway, screaming that they were in a hurry to make some coin while it's still there. One trucking company -- the one most affected by the railroad's loss of its biggest client -- is likewise in a precarious position. I expect to see many of its drivers laid off within the month, and now they're getting crazy.
A few other haulers saw layoffs in the past few months, and there's more a spirit of every-man-for-himself among the survivors. I began to see more predatory practices. Truckers were hauling things I'd never seen them haul before. Rather than one company handling one shipping company, the lines were blurred. As an example, Bridge Terminal Trucking (BTT) used to haul all Maersk containers. It was an exclusive contract. Now four or five companies are pulling them, and I used to rag those drivers about all the starving BTT drivers. The usual response? "Screw 'em."
Strangely enough, the one place where everyone seemed at a low key was at the unemployment office. I'm serious. At least things are a little more certain there. It's a lot easier to operate -- or at least hold your mud -- when some ax isn't hanging over your head.
Either that, or those tranquilizer darts are taking effect.
Monday, September 14, 2009
Hoax has pretend terrorists attack nonexistent town
We passed the eighth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks unscathed, except for a suicide bombing by a nonexistent group on an equally nonexistent town.
In fact, the only real thing about this "attack" was the press coverage. In Germany, the DPA wire service -- which is similar to the Associated Press -- was all over this one, after an attack on the town of Bluewater was thwarted and The Berlin Boys rap group arrestedin the plot.
Except the town, which reportedly straddles the Colorado River between San Bernardino County, California and La Paz County, Arizona, doesn't really exist. And neither does the Berlin Boys group.
According to Wired:
The work of German filmmakers peddling a satirical movie called Short Cut to Hollywood, the elaborate hoax involved at least two faked websites, a faked Wikipedia entry and California phone numbers for "public safety" officials that were actually being answered by hoaxsters in Germany using Skype ... the hoax has transfixed this country. It prompted a 1,000-word tome on the website of Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Germany’s most respected newspaper, and even a press conference denouncing the incident by the DPA – the German wire service responsible for first disseminating the news about the "attack" ...
There really is a Bluewater, kinda sorta. Although the "official town website" carries a link to the Berlin Boys and is probably fake, there are some other indicators. Sperling's Best Places lists Bluewater with a population of 331 (counting dogs?) and not much else. Wrapped among the Colorado River Indian Reservation, the nearest California town is Earp and the closest anything is the Bluewater Casino in Parker, Arizona. Earp is so insignificant that I haven't found population figures for the town, but 1,545 people live in the 92242 Zip code, where the town sits. (The Web site ZipSkinny, where I got this information, reports that no schools are listed in that area. That's how small the place is.)
Out there, you just might see roadrunners using oven mitts to pick up lizards on those hot days.
Part of the target's "appeal" is that it's so remote.
... locals were blissfully unaware of the hoax that involved their sparsely populated resort area, whose greatest claim to fame is a nearby casino. Hardly anyone lives on the California side of Bluewater, says Dorothy Randall, who runs the Bermuda Palms RV Park in Earp. There’s no city hall or council. The area is called Bluewater by locals, so it wouldn’t make sense for a suicide bombing to have occurred in town anyway, because there really is no town to begin with, Randall said. "There’s not much here."
Like, if the place was hit in a suicide bombing, who'd know?
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Strange politics is universal, but SC brings giggles
But strangeness still seems to be the order of the day in South Carolina politics.
Witness the bizarre twists and turns in Gov. Mark Sanford's life. In his almost two terms at the state's helm, he showed himself a good, smart governor who only fell short in charisma and in playing well with others. Neither of these was enough to really handicap him, as he was considered prime presidential timber for 2012.
The whole Sanford story now reads like a bad movie script. Married man has midlife crisis so real you can paint it. Married man meets girl. Married man runs off with girl, leaving his job in the lurch. Married man's wife moves out with the kids. Married man swears other woman is his soul mate. Forget Days Of Our Lives; here's the mother of soap operas.
But while state Republicans -- Sanford's own party -- are looking at ways to escort Sanford out of office, another politico deflects some of the lightning. Relative unknown Joe Wilson pipes up during President Barack Obama's speech before a joint session of Congress and calls him a liar. Oops. Meanwhile, public perception is divided on Wilson: Hero or goat? Hey, I report. You decide.
Once again, recent events beg the question: What's up with South Carolina and politics? If you ask around, you'll probably get a bunch of different answers, mostly not complimentary. Some swear it's just because it's the South.
A close friend of mine grew up in the Lowcountry, and now lives up North. She's tried to lose all traces of Southernness, successfully so far. To hear her talk, you'd swear she was born and raised Up There (first time we talked by phone, she commented on how southern I sounded). To this day, about the only evidence she gives of her Down South roots is her love for sweet tea -- something that can not be found or duplicated above the Mason-Dixon Line (Note to y'all Up North: Sugar stirred in a glass of Lipton doesn't even come close).
To many Up There, a southern accent still brings a preconceived notion: Backwards country boy who probably shoots his dinner from his front porch. Uneducated. Barely literate. Family tree that doesn't fork. Confederate flag and rifle rack adorning the family truck. And racial relations? Don't ask.
I used to get asked that last question all the time from visitors from Up North. How's your race situation down here? Just fine, I'd say. How's yours up there?
It doesn't help any that South Carolina is a perennial tail-ender in those stats that folks love to toss around. Near the bottom in high school graduation rates. Among the lowest in literacy and the number of teeth per capita. Among the worst in obesity, diabetes, gun violence, and DUI fatalities. The rest of the southern states (not counting Florida, which was annexed by New York years ago) are also clustered toward the rear. If these statistics were horse races, you'd need searchlights to find us half the time.
But it's our politics that really give people the giggles. Since I started reading newspapers, the only real Southern folks who made any kind of dent in presidential races were George Wallace and Jimmy Carter. Shoot, Jimmy's brother Billy would have been better in the White House, but only if you could catch him sober.
Now, it's Sanford and Wilson in the national arena, and the giggles continue.
My family is spread all over the country. Mom and Dad have lived in California for 50 years. My brother lives in upstate New York, and I've settled here in South Carolina. All of us are political watchers, and we've been known to talk a little trash to one another by email. So when Californians voted Gov. Gray Davis out of office in what amounts to little more than a coup d'etat and replaced him with a movie actor, you know the comments flew thick and fast. Especially when you consider some of the folks who wanted to be governor. There were a few actors (including Gary Coleman, the wisecracking kid from Diff'rent Strokes), Hustler Magazine publisher Larry Flynt (who billed himself as "a smut peddler with a heart,") porno actress Mary Carey, who repeatedly flunked IQ tests on Howard Stern's show, and about a zillion others. Now California is a wreck, with state workers and unemployment recipients wondering whether they'll be paid by check or IOU this week. The state is overrun by illegal aliens, my old grade school is now around 70 percent Hispanic, and it's getting harder to find someone who habla the ingles these days.
And New York? Let's see. Even after Sanford's life took a dogleg left, Rudy Guliani's marital relations still make him look like a Boy Scout. Hillary Rodham Clinton redefined political ambition while a senator from the Empire State. Former Gov. Eliot Spitzer found his name on more call girl customer lists than useful legislation.
Now New York is led by a blind guy, and California by someone who doesn't speak English all that well. But lately I've been on the receiving end of much of the familial trash talk.
Oops. There's a possum lumbering across my front yard. Better get the shotgun; guess dinner will be the other white meat tonight.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Thirst overtakes common sense in Florida case
This is from the Miami Herald:
George R. Linthicum II (a.k.a. George Linthicum III) was waiting outside the store and followed the deputy inside, according to the report ... Linthicum, 47, of Bayou George, told the deputy that he had come into the store earlier and drank some beer. He said he didn’t have money to pay for the beer. He added that if he was going to jail, then he was going to finish the beer first ... when the deputy told him to come along, the report said, Linthicum became argumentative, raised his voice and “with an aggressive tone stated that he was going to finish the beer.”
I mean, think of all the sober people in China!
ACORN firings: Pimps, and performance artists
From USA Today:
Fox News Channel broadcast excerpts from the video Thursday. On the video, a man and woman visiting ACORN's Baltimore office asked about buying a house and how to account on tax forms for the woman's income. An ACORN employee advised the woman to list her occupation as "performance artist." The pair also claimed they planned to employ teenage girls from central America as prostitutes, and an ACORN employee suggested that up to three of the girls could be claimed as dependents, according to transcripts of the video posted online by conservative activist James O'Keefe ... O'Keefe told Fox he posed as the pimp and that he was shocked by the ACORN employees' helpfulness.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Just who is this Joe Wilson guy anyway?
South Carolina Congressman Joe Wilson, who had been so lightly regarded that even this Palmetto State resident had never heard of him, put himself on the map with a two-word outburst during President Obama's speech on health care during last night's joint session of Congress.
To Obama's claim that the proposed national health care plan would not be available to illegal aliens, Wilson shouted out, "You lie!" from his seat.
The congressman became a heckler from the cheap seats, or even from the peanut gallery. Here's a story from Slate (beware of popups):
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said, "I have never in my 29 years heard an outburst of that nature with reference to a president of the United States speaking as a guest of the House and Senate," while White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said, "No president has ever been treated like that. Ever." Is Obama really the first president to get heckled during an address to Congress? ... It depends on what you mean by heckle.
Wilson has since apologized, and Obama accepted the apology. But Newsweek columnist Kate Dailey penned an editorial calling Wilson a "healthcare hypocrite."
Cut the man some slack. He's passionate! I know this because he told me, in the sole message that blazes across his campaign Web site: JOE WILSON IS PASSIONATE ABOUT STOPPING GOVERNMENT RUN HEALTH CARE! ... except that he's not—at least not when it comes to his, and his family's, government-run health care. As a retired Army National Guard colonel, Wilson gets a lot of benefits (one of which, apparently, was not a full appreciation of the customs, traditions, and courtesies that mandate respect for one's commander in chief). And with four sons in the armed services, the entire Wilson brood has enjoyed multiple generations of free military medical coverage, known as TRICARE ... yes, it's true ...
As I mentioned, Wilson is a relative unknown among the 535 legislators who haunt the House and Senate, but this may change soon. In fact, you can call his extemporaneous outburst a career-maker and you won't be far off.As an example, as I wrote this I looked up Wilson's official Congressional web site to get some background on the man -- like for starters, who is this guy? -- when I couldn't get very far:
Due to exceptionally high traffic, this site is temporarily unavailable ... please come back shortly.
Keep in mind, this was almost 20 hours after Wilson spoke his piece.What's my take on Wilson's outburst? This is a tough one. Give him points for saying what needed to be said. In fact, this may have been the most intelligent thing uttered in the Capitol that day. But take every one of those points away -- plus a few more for good measure -- for Wilson blowing his cool. Despite all rumors and indications to the contrary, Congress is populated by adults having a serious discussion, with our national way of life at stake.
I guarantee you'll hear more of this Joe Wilson character. With a shout, he deep-sixed any idea of him being ignored. It's more than 15 minutes of fame for him.
Time will tell, though, whether he will become a force in Congress, or a farce.
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
McHenry: What's with all these czars?
McHenry, a Republican, says there's a problem with these officials, who are appointed by the President without going through the Senate confirmation process,and he wants a hearing to find out more.
His comments came after green-jobs czar Van Jones' current practices and past comments helped force his resignation.
This is from McHenry's office:
“Each of the two possible scenarios here is troubling ... if the czars have high-level, decision-making authority as their titles would indicate, then it is my concern that their appointment without Senate approval represents a circumvention of our Constitutionally-mandated confirmation process. On the other hand, if the czars have no actual power, then I am equally concerned that taxpayers are fronting the bill for the salaries of these figureheads and their staff ..."
Here's my take. Anyone who actually enjoys being called a czar should be watched. Closely.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Parents using social media to monitor offspring
Eeeewwww!!
According to the Wall Street Journal, parents are using social networking sites to monitor their young.
Check it out (but watch out for the click-through ad):
"Facebook is kind of like a parenting tool," says Joel O'Driscoll, a 41-year-old father of eight in Woodside, Calif. Mr. O'Driscoll likes to keep tabs on whom his 18-year-old daughter, Holly, is friends with on Facebook—especially the boys ... several times recently, he says, he's used information he discovered on his daughter's Facebook page to spark a discussion with her in person, most recently about the need for a boy to ask her out by calling, rather than texting or emailing ... "It's a good way to have some contact in your child's life," says Mr. O'Driscoll, an executive at a consulting firm ... Holly O'Driscoll says she's fine with her dad monitoring her friends on Facebook. "I think it's sensible," she says. Still, she admits she sometimes blocks him from seeing her status updates, explaining she doesn't want him to see how often she's on Facebook.
While this isn't quite the same thing, often the first scrap of news my own parents may get from my world might be this blog, or my Twitter account. OK, I'm sometimes a little tardy writing email. Again, this isn't the same thing, and keep in mind I'm probably older than most of the parents who are keeping track of their offspring.
Meanwhile, the kids are fighting back -- with tongue firmly implanted in cheek:
... so, you finally caved. You've accepted a friend request from your Mom, Dad, crazy Aunt Ida, and your college roommate’s newly divorced mother. Well here's your chance to get back at them for taking away your public privacy ... email us at:
myparentsjoinedfacebook@gmail.com
because we want to laugh at your Mom’s ridiculous Facebook status and the embarrassing message your Dad wrote on your wall too! If you want your relative to remain anonymous include that in the email ...
... Family. Can't Facebook with 'em, can't unFriend 'em!
Don't put the word out, whatever you do
I have no idea whether this is genuine, or where it is (and please note my usual caveats on stuff from the Internet). But this is kind of interesting.
Monday, September 7, 2009
Of five fw: cell phone tricks, one really works
Recently I got an email from Mom, one of those wonderful Fw: subjects that make the rounds and some swear is gospel. This missive was a fairly old one outlining some things you can use your cell phone for besides making calls. She forwarded it to my brother and to me, knowing that at least one of us would pick it apart and have an answer. Here's her preface:
"Hi, Fact-checkers! Is this stuff valid? If so, it could be useful information. Thanks for checking for Ol'Mom! All my love, Mom"
I did this, partly by running my own tests, and partly by going to Snopes, the great debunker. Here's the upshot: Of these four cell phone claims, four are at least partially bogus.
Anyway, here's the note, with my comments.
====================
Five Things You Never Knew Your Cell Phone Could Do
For all the folks with cell phones. This should be printed and kept in your car, purse, and wallet. Good information to have with you.
There are a few things that can be done in times of grave emergencies. Your mobile phone can actually be a life saver or an emergency tool for survival.
Check out the things that you can do with it:
FIRST Emergency - The Emergency Number worldwide for Mobile is 112. If you find yourself out of the coverage area of your mobile network and there is an emergency, dial 112 and the mobile will search any existing network to establish the emergency number for you, and interestingly, this number 112 can be dialed even if the keypad is locked. Try it out.
My comments: This might work, if you're in Europe. According to Snopes, 112 is their version of our 911. I tried it here in South Carolina and the recorded message indicated the number has been changed or disconnected. In other words, it's every bit as useful as some of the other "alternative" emergency numbers you may have read about in your email box. I wrote about this some time ago, as a matter of fact.
SECOND Have you locked your keys in the car? Does your car have remote keyless entry? This may come in handy someday. Good reason to own a cell phone: If you lock your keys In the car and the spare keys are at home, call someone at home on their cell phone from your cell phone. Hold your cell phone about a foot from your car door and have the person at your home press the unlock button, holding it near the mobile phone on the ear end. Your car will unlock. Saves someone from having to drive your keys to you. Distance is no object. You could be hundreds of miles away, and if you can reach someone who has the other 'remote' for your car, you can unlock the doors (or the trunk). Editor's Note: It works fine! We tried it out and it unlocked Our car over a cell phone!
My comments: It's just another good reason to avoid those bad drugs before going onto the Internet.
THIRD - Hidden Battery Power. Imagine your cell battery is very low. To activate, press the keys *3370#. Your cell phone will restart with this reserve and the instrument will show a 50% increase in battery. This reserve will get charged when you charge your cell phone next time.
My comments: Doesn't work with my LG. Dial it in and hit OK, and the phone stares at me. Dial it in and hit SEND, and all I get is an admonition to check the number and try again. But, some cell phones (particularly Nokia) will give you better battery life if you punch in *#4720# - but there's a trade-off. Your sound quality will suck. Not quite the same thing.
FOURTH - How to disable a STOLEN mobile phone: To check your Mobile phone's serial number, key in the following digits on your phone: *#06#. A 15-digit code will appear on the screen. This number is unique to your handset. Write it down and keep it somewhere safe. When your phone get stolen, you can phone your service provider and give them this code. They will then be able to block your handset so even if the thief changes the SIM card, your phone will be totally useless. You probably won't get your phone back, but at least you know that who ever stole it can't use/sell it either. If everybody does this, there would be no point in people stealing mobile phones.
My comments: I tried this on my LG phone, and got the same result as I did while trying out the third tip. But it seems that with some cell phones you will get that 15-digit number. Whether it's any help in shutting down a stolen cell phone is "limited," the folks at Snopes report. Better to call your phone carrier's customer service and explain your situation; the guy answering may even speak English.
And Finally.....
(My comment: Good -- that's about all the crap I can choke down at one sitting!)
FIFTH - Free Directory Service for Cells: Cell phone companies are charging us $1.00 to $1.75 or more for 411 information calls when they don't have to. Most of us do not carry a telephone directory in our vehicle, which makes this situation even more of a problem. When you need to use the 411 information option, simply dial: (800)FREE411, or (800) 373-3411 without incurring any charge at all. Program this into your cell phone now.
My comments: I do have this on my cell phone, along with Google 411 (the number is 800-466-4411), and I've never used either one. Therefore, I can't vouch for the authenticity here. But according to Snopes, this is pretty much the straight stuff although your own cell phone carrier may still charge for the call.
==========================
OK. I'm fairly savvy with all this electronic gear, and there are a few things I can do with my plain-vanilla cell phone. I can post short subjects to my blog. I can send off something to Twitter. I can check the weather, or put things on my Google calendar.
But forget about opening your car with it, unless you fling it through the windshield ...