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That explains why I haven't had any identity theft problemsby Prometheus 6
April 27, 2005 - 8:12pm. on Seen online Debtor Nation Sorry kids, that genie is out of the bottle for good. You can only stuff yourself in it now.by Prometheus 6
April 27, 2005 - 8:08am. on Onward the Theocracy! Quote of note: Today's religious extremists are not only trying to use the state, with all its power, as religious proselytizer. They oppose science when it happens to conflict with their version of revealed truth. They twist history to claim that the Republic's freethinking Founders, like Jefferson, Adams, and Madison, were really theocrats like themselves. They long for the predemocratic world of absolutes circa 1500. Whose nation under God? WHEN John Kennedy was running for president and passions were running high about whether a Catholic could serve both the American citizenry and Rome, a joke made the rounds about a priest and a minister whose friendship nearly came to blows. Finally the priest phoned his old friend. ''What a pity," he said. ''Here we are, both men of the cloth, fighting over politics." ''It's true," said the minister. ''We're both Christians. We both worship the same God -- you in your way, and I in His." Reality rears its ugly head, redux - Medical Editionby Prometheus 6
April 27, 2005 - 7:46am. on Health Doctors Influenced By Mention Of Drug Ads Actors pretending to be patients with symptoms of stress and fatigue were five times as likely to walk out of doctors' offices with a prescription when they mentioned seeing an ad for the heavily promoted antidepressant Paxil, according an unusual study being published today. The study employed an elaborate ruse -- sending actors with fake symptoms into 152 doctors' offices to see whether they would get prescriptions. Most who did not report symptoms of depression were not given medications, but when they asked for Paxil, 55 percent were given prescriptions, and 50 percent received diagnoses of depression. What is the actual problem this is supposed to address?by Prometheus 6
April 27, 2005 - 7:34am. on News Florida Expands Right to Use Deadly Force in Self-Defense MIAMI, April 26 - Gov. Jeb Bush signed a bill on Tuesday giving Florida citizens more leeway to use deadly force in their homes and in public, a move that gun-control groups and several urban police chiefs warned would give rise to needless deaths. The measure, known as the "stand your ground" bill, lets people use guns or other deadly force to defend themselves in public places without first trying to escape. Floridians already had the right to defend themselves against home intruders under what is known as the castle doctrine, but until now, they could not do so in public. Reality rears its ugly head, redux, footnoteby Prometheus 6
April 27, 2005 - 7:28am. on Economics "Many Americans are potentially open to scams because they don't understand the purpose of the financial markets," he said yesterday. The Republican economic plan, in a nutshell. From the very beginning of their push for private accounts it has been obvious they've been counting on the public's lack of knowledge. This is not unusual, by the way. A "free market" will work the way economists project if all players have perfect knowledge of the market...if you know the relative value (effectiveness and cost) of all your options. But no one has that, and frankly the continued emphasis on choice means you'll be ever less likely to have it. We manipulate the mental environment to invoke desire and manipulate the information environment to imply difference where there is none, to imply effectiveness where there is none...there's simply no intent to provide the level of information necessary for a true free market. Reality reares its ugly head, reduxby Prometheus 6
April 27, 2005 - 6:52am. on Economics Quote of note: "Many Americans are potentially open to scams because they don't understand the purpose of the financial markets," he said yesterday. Survey Finds Many Have Poor Grasp of Basic Economics That was the right thing to doCelera to Quit Selling Genome Information Celera Genomics, which raced with the publicly financed Human Genome Project to decipher the human DNA sequence, has decided to abandon the business of selling genetic information. The company said yesterday that it was discontinuing its genome database subscription business and putting the information into the public domain. Celera succeeded in signing up some subscribers to its genome database, but the company is still losing money and it never quite calmed critics who argued that fundamental information about basic human biology should be openly available to all. Reality rears its ugly headby Prometheus 6
April 27, 2005 - 6:32am. on Politics Quote of note: "We fumbled the ball badly," said one senior Republican official who spoke anonymously because he did not want to be viewed as critical of the leadership. Do you know how sad it is that such a statement would be viewed as "critical of the leadership?" DO you know how sad it is that someone would have to consider such a thing when making a blatantly obvious statement? House Republicans Weigh Vote on Ethics Changes WASHINGTON, April 26 - House Republican leaders on Tuesday moved toward reversing rules changes that have paralyzed the ethics committee, a decision that could clear the way to an investigation of the overseas travel of Representative Tom DeLay, the majority leader, and other House members. Nothing like a little truth to undermine a theocracyby Prometheus 6
April 26, 2005 - 8:24pm. on Onward the Theocracy! Since a real understanding of what actually happened is so useful in keeping Black folks sane and centered in the midst of everything from Thug Life to Black Republicans, I thought it might be interesting to apply the same technique to the most widespread delusion amongst white folks...Conservative White Americans, to be specific. That delusion is that America's Founding Fathers built some special reverence for religion into the Constitution. Let's start with an obvious fact. The North American colonies were a military and economic venture (the two thoroughly interpenetrated each other at the time). Religious colonies were established after the economic and military base was established. Everything built on that base, including the religious colonies. The National Humanities Center maintains a site called TeacherServe that has a section called Divining America: Religion and the National Culture. (I'm giving you all these links because they're all useful). I want to start with a brief excerpt from The Middle Colonies as the Birthplace of American Religious Pluralism by Patricia U. Bonomi, Professor Emeritus, New York University: Changin' test scores is part of our heritage, and we will fight to preserve our heritageby Prometheus 6
April 26, 2005 - 2:09pm. on Education Texas Officials Shrug Off Fine Over Bush Law By SAM DILLON The authorities in Texas yesterday shrugged off a fine that the federal Department of Education has imposed on the state because it was late last year in notifying schools and districts whether they had reached student achievement benchmarks under President Bush's No Child Left Behind law. While promising to notify schools in a timely fashion this year, the education commissioner of Texas, Shirley Neeley, said, "Classrooms and teachers will not be harmed by this fine." Education Secretary Margaret Spellings announced the $444,282 fine on Friday. It appears to be the largest fine imposed on any state since Mr. Bush signed the federal law in 2002. I gotta get home SOMEhow...by Prometheus 6
April 26, 2005 - 11:10am. on Tech via Slashdot: Aglassis writes One of those random thoughtsby Prometheus 6
April 26, 2005 - 11:07am. on About me, not you | Random rant Suppose you owned a factory. You make world-class widgets as a step in manufacturing a product for a market you've dominated years. Suppose someone else also makes widgets for their product in a different market. Their widgets are aren't as good as yours, but they're made by a different process at significantly less cost. Do you adapt their widget technology, maybe putting a little more expense in to bring it up to your quality standards? Do you buy widgets from them? Suppose the widgets are people? It's a matter of priorities, I guessRobert Scheer in the LA Times We need to put such gargantuan numbers in some perspective. The emergency funding that the Senate passed 99 to 0 last week gives the military roughly $80 billion and pays for the occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan only through September. That is twice what President Bush insists he needs to cut from the federal support for Medicaid over the next decade. Meanwhile, secular humanists are just trying to let everyone decide for themselvesby Prometheus 6
April 26, 2005 - 9:55am. on Onward the Theocracy! Faith 'War' Rages in U.S., Judge Says WASHINGTON Just days after a bitterly divided Senate committee voted along party lines to approve her nomination as a federal appellate court judge, California Supreme Court Justice Janice Rogers Brown told an audience Sunday that people of faith were embroiled in a "war" against secular humanists who threatened to divorce America from its religious roots, according to a newspaper account of the speech. Brown's remarks come as a partisan battle over judges has evolved into a national debate over the proper mix of God and government and as Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) ponders changing the chamber's rules to prevent Democrats from using procedural moves to block confirmation of conservative jurists such as Brown. Several really evil jokes leap to mind"Wait until you meet Jim." LIP-SERVICE PUSH FOR OIL WASHINGTON President Bush yesterday held hands with Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah and took him on a stroll through a field of bluebonnet flowers at his Texas ranch in a pitch to get the Saudis to pump more oil. They embraced and traded air kisses on both cheeks after the prince, clad in flowing robes, arrived nearly 30 minutes late for his second visit to the Bush ranch in Crawford. The president firmly held the hand of his guest, who's in his 80s, and guided the Saudi ruler through the field of blooming bluebonnets as they headed to an office for a few hours of meetings. I have to remember to log in as a regular userby Prometheus 6
April 25, 2005 - 5:29pm. on Tech
The comment editor has the link and image buttons for everyone now.
I wonder how many of them are contracted out as sub-market rate labor?by Prometheus 6
April 25, 2005 - 2:39pm. on Justice Nation's Inmate Population Increased 2.3 Percent Last Year WASHINGTON, April 24 (AP) - The nation's prisons and jails held 2.1 million people in mid-2004, 2.3 percent more than the year before, the government reported on Sunday. The inmate population increased by slightly more than 48,000 from mid-2003 to mid-2004, a growth of about 900 inmates each week, according to the latest figures from the Bureau of Justice Statistics. The total inmate population has hovered around two million for the last few years: It was 2.1 million on June 30, 2002, and just below that mark a year later. They said "state of mind," not "mind"by Prometheus 6
April 25, 2005 - 1:52pm. on Tech Improved Scanning Technique Uses Brain as Portal to Thought By NICHOLAS WADE By peering not into the eyes but into the brain, an improved scanning technique has enabled scientists to figure out what people are looking at - even, in some cases, when they are not aware of what they have seen. The advance, reported today, shows that the scanners may be better able than previously supposed to probe the border between conscious and unconscious thought and even, in certain circumstances, to read people's state of mind. The scanning technique, known as functional magnetic resonance imaging, is a more powerful version of a technique widely used in hospitals. It can show which regions of the brain are actively performing some task, but until now has lacked the resolution to track specific groups of neurons, as the functional units of the brain are called. I need someone with a subscription to The Chronicle of Higher Educationby Prometheus 6
April 25, 2005 - 10:06am. on Education | Race and Identity In the Today's News section of their web site, which is only accessible to subscribers, is this: In response to hate mail, college temporarily moves minority students off campus That's some shit I want to read. Statistics vs Quality of LifeQuote of note: The point is that people sense, correctly, that Mr. Bush doesn't understand their concerns. He was sold on privatization by people who have made their careers in the self-referential, corporate-sponsored world of conservative think tanks. And he himself has no personal experience with the risks that working families face. He's probably never imagined what it would be like to be destitute in his old age, with no guaranteed income. Oh, hell, here's another. I feel generous... Over the past three years, wage and salary income grew less than in any other postwar recovery - less than a tenth as fast as profits. But wage-earning Americans aren't part of the base. The Oblivious Right |