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The way God made themby Prometheus 6
May 10, 2005 - 8:09am. on Race and Identity Quote of note: The Swedish researchers have now repeated the experiment but with the addition of gay men as a third group. The gay men responded to the two chemicals in the same way as did women, Dr. Savic reports, as if the hypothalamus's response is determined not by biological sex but by the owner's sexual orientation. Gay Men Are Found to Have Different Scent of Attraction Using a brain imaging technique, Swedish researchers have shown that homosexual and heterosexual men respond differently to two odors that may be involved in sexual arousal, and that the gay men respond in the same way as women. Grover Norquist on the Republican view of acceptable minority behaviorby Prometheus 6
May 10, 2005 - 7:54am. on Politics Quote of note: Grover Norquist, the president of Americans for Tax Reform and a leading figure in both the DeLay and Bush political operations, chose more colorful post-election language to describe the future. "Once the minority of House and Senate are comfortable in their minority status, they will have no problem socializing with the Republicans," he told Richard Leiby of The Post. "Any farmer will tell you that certain animals run around and are unpleasant. But when they've been 'fixed,' then they are happy and sedate. They are contented and cheerful." A GOP Plan to 'Fix' the Democrats An interesting precedent, no?by Prometheus 6
May 10, 2005 - 7:48am. on Economics Virtual Secretary Puts New Face on Pakistan In a chic downtown lobby across the street from the Old Executive Office Building, Saadia Musa answers phones, orders sandwiches and lets in the FedEx guy. And she does it all from Karachi, Pakistan. As receptionist for the Resource Group, Musa greets employees and visitors via a flat screen hanging on the lobby's wall. Although they are nine hours behind and nearly 7,500 miles away, her U.S.-based bosses rely on her to keep order during the traffic of calls and meetings. Not if it costs anyone anything at allby Prometheus 6
May 10, 2005 - 7:39am. on Economics Quote of note: Without strong and sustained support for the superintendent's new academic standards, his plans to rebuild and repair schools, his determination to put better teachers and principals in the schools, and his desire to enlist more parents and volunteers to become involved in the schools, Mr. Janey will most assuredly join the list of other D.C. school chiefs who -- after being undercut by the board, overruled by the politicians, picked apart by school activists and abandoned by parents -- have thrown up their hands and departed. Will D.C. Support Mr. Janey? CLIFFORD B. JANEY became D.C. school superintendent eight months ago, but the countdown on his stewardship actually began last week. That is when he unveiled his "Declaration of Education" -- his plan to raise student academic achievement "in every classroom in every school." Mr. Janey pledged to convert the school system's broken procurement, human resources, technology and other support activities into high-performing systems that undergird student achievement. And he promised to create a "culture of increased transparency, open communications" that will engage teachers, principals, parents and the community and increase participation in the schools. Achieving those goals, he said, will take three to five years. (In a meeting at The Post last month, he said it could take as long as seven years.) The overarching aim of Mr. Janey's plan is to improve student learning, beginning in the core subjects of English language arts and mathematics, and to boost graduation and attendance rates, while reducing truancy and dropout rates. I think they're considering a smell codeby Prometheus 6
May 10, 2005 - 7:18am. on War DHS Considers Alternatives To Color-Coded Warnings Responding to widespread criticism, Department of Homeland Security officials are considering changes to the color-coded terrorism warning system and other methods of providing more useful information to the public without causing panic or disclosing closely held intelligence. Among the possibilities forwarded to Secretary Michael Chertoff are issuing lower-key alerts on the department's Web site -- as the State Department does now with travel advisories -- rather than by holding news conferences, and changing the color categories to numbers or letters, current and former officials said. I meant to bring this up on Sundayby Prometheus 6
May 10, 2005 - 7:07am. on News George Will on This Week, speaking about Russia: Yes, into the eyes of his good friend Vladimir he peered famously (chuckles from his peers) and found a soul that he liked. Well, that's the soul of a product of the thug culture of the KGB who is nostalgic for the Soviet Union, the collapse of which he has termed 'the greatest geopolitical disaster of the 20th century.' No law that's still useful is obsoleteby Prometheus 6
May 10, 2005 - 6:30am. on Justice I'm pretty sure the sheriff had other issues and hit on this excuse. I guess he figured if it was good enough for Ashcroft when he went after Greenpeace it's good enough to bully employees. Quote of note: "Certainly the government has no business regulating relationships between consenting adults in the privacy of their own homes," said Jennifer Rudinger, state executive director of the ACLU. "This law is 200 years old, and a lot of people are very surprised that we even have it on the books." ACLU Challenges N.C. Cohabitation Law I was out walking again todayby Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 11:29pm. on Random rant This could become semi-regular because
Wimpy wussby Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 4:34pm. on Politics Quote of note: Reid Calls Bush 'A Loser,' Then Apologizes Reid Offers Olive Branch on Bush Nominee Oh yeah?Bush: Americans Ready to Invest S.S. Funds Now ask them what's in the 401K. Do as you say, not as you doby Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 4:04pm. on War Quote of note: ...the US efforts have been frustrated by a block of developing countries, led by Egypt, that have insisted the gathering should also address US disarmament pledges. Nations say US shirks its arms vows See what happens when you embarrass the national media?by Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 3:57pm. on Media Orrr....when they embarrass themselves? Bride prosecuted on '96 shoplifting charge ATLANTA --The attorney for runaway bride Jennifer Wilbanks previously prosecuted her for shoplifting nearly a decade ago and, in another case, Wilbanks served jail time for shoplifting, according to court records. Lydia Sartain -- Wilbanks' current attorney -- prosecuted her in 1996 for allegedly shoplifting $1,740 in merchandise from a Gainesville mall, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported, citing court records. Sartain, who was then Hall County district attorney, dropped the felony charge after the then 24-year-old completed a pretrial diversion program, which included 75 hours of community service and restitution, according to court records. Make up your damn mindby Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 2:09pm. on Politics Quote of note: But significantly, the fact that George Bush's black votes in Ohio doubled since 2000 (8% to 16%), and given the margin of victory at a little over 100,000 votes, these voters probably delivered victory for the president. Whut? I thought Bush owed his victory to the Religious Right. Now, if Bush owes his victory to Black folks, are we going to start getting pork? GOP Whispers To Black Voters As if America's 'loyal opposition' didn't have enough trouble, another issue is quietly trickling its way into the public eye. An editorial piece in the Philadelphia Enquirer entitled, "Black Voters Warm to GOP," overtly states what, up to now, could only be whispered within Beltway confines: some black voters are leaving the Democratic Party. Meditations on Chapelle's Showby Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 10:42am. on Media Dear Animal Rights Activistsby Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 8:02am. on News Stop being dicks. Animal Rights Activists Step Up Attacks in N.Y. That's it, tell the truth and shame the Devilby Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 7:57am. on News | Politics | Tech | The Environment An Assertive Scientific Advisory Group Challenges Federal Policies By PHILIP M. BOFFEY The National Academy of Sciences, once thought of as a timid, somnolent adviser on national affairs, has shown an unusually tough and independent streak in recent weeks. In rapid succession the academy's operating arm, the National Research Council, has criticized some pet projects and policies of powerful federal agencies and even the White House. That is a welcome onslaught of truth-telling at a time when rabid partisans routinely shade the facts for political gain. The academy, which is based in Washington, operates a vast array of advisory committees that provide advice to the federal government and other sponsors who contract for its services. Typically, Congress or a federal agency might ask the academy to review the evidence and render a verdict on some important technical issue - everything from improving the census to protecting the environment from genetically engineered animals. The academy will then round up experts to produce a report that is supposed to be the definitive word on the subject. It's just not that simpleby Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 7:43am. on Culture wars Quote of note: Teen birthrates fell by 30% between 1991 and 2002. The number of violent crimes in schools was halved between 1992 and 2002. Teen homicide rates dropped to their lowest level since 1966. Teen suicides decreased by 25%, and drug abuse, binge drinking and smoking all fell. Our Kids Are Not Doomed Looks like that fling with Abdullah was forgivenby Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 7:21am. on News Bush and Putin Stand Unified on Terrorism The wedding dance: Mac-tiveX?by Prometheus 6
May 9, 2005 - 6:48am. on Tech Mac users running Safari: First: Type "remove widget" into Apple Help, and you find out:Most of those reading this are probably aware of the workaround - just remove the offending widget from ~/Library/Widgets/. The Dashboard bar is not very good about updating when a widget is removed, but eventually it figures things out. Also: Daniel Naito The reason I mention it is someone figured out how to make and autoinstall evil widgets...which are much easier to monitor and get rid of than ActiveX controls are, but still... Dancing with the one that brought youGOP, Like Companies, Wants Workers to Carry the Safety Net ...Bush and other Republicans are looking to limit government's financial exposure and shift more of the risk for ensuring pension and healthcare security to workers and retirees in the name of increasing choice. That's exactly what employers have done for a generation, replacing plans that guaranteed workers a fixed monthly pension with systems that obligate employers to make only a monthly contribution to investment accounts workers manage themselves. On healthcare as well, employers are replacing programs that provided workers a defined benefit with alternatives that promise only a defined contribution. |