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Week of December 03, 2006 to December 09, 2006Time warpSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 9, 2006 - 2:32pm.
on Random rant I just found out The Best of Soul Train comes on Saturdays. It was inevitable, I suppose. I thik WCBS-FM or AM still does Golden Oldies in New York City...I haven't even turned on a radio in months...which is why The Best of Soul Train was inevitable. When I was in high school (circa 1970), Golden Oldies were the records that came out in the 50s. I remember someone in a bullshit session wondering what WCBS would do when funk hit 20 years old. Consensus was they'd be '50s station instead of an Oldies station. Not for nothin', really. I'm just turning into the guy I used to make fun of. And that's the ONLY reason they have no liabilitySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 9, 2006 - 1:28pm.
on Impeachable offenses | Justice | War U.S. Denies Liability in Torture Case The Bush administration asserted in federal court yesterday that Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and three former military officials cannot be held liable for the alleged torture of nine Afghans and Iraqis in U.S. military detention camps because the detainees have no standing to sue in U.S. courts. How Republicans support the troopsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 9, 2006 - 11:09am.
on For the Democrats Their political ambition is so important...
They gove no thought to the real-world impact of their strategies. Incoming Democrats face fiscal minefield WASHINGTON -- The outgoing Republican Congress has placed a political time bomb for incoming Democrats: Nearly all domestic programs paid for by the federal government are level funded through mid-February with no adjustments for inflation, a situation that probably will trigger cuts or reductions in such popular areas as veterans' affairs, children's healthcare, housing vouchers, and low-income fuel assistance. There is a problem with Iraq Study Group's suggestions
...and sums up the whole problem. Presidential ingratitude PRESIDENT BUSH let the ball roll under his glove Thursday when he hinted that he has little enthusiasm for the recommendations of the commission co-chaired by former secretary of state James Baker and the former House International Relations Committee chairman Lee Hamilton. Whatever might be questioned in any particular recommendation of the report, the bipartisan spirit and consensus-building purpose of the Iraq Study Group deserve grateful praise from the president, not a defensive rejection. Techie stuffSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 9, 2006 - 10:41am.
on Tech Been having database connectivity problems recently. Looks a lot like DOS attacks...I'd actually have a lot better traffic figures otherwise. You Texans are just being shitty nowSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 9, 2006 - 9:15am.
on Onward the Theocracy! | Religion
Not to mention...
just plain stupid. Neighbors in Texas object to mosque plan KATY, Texas -- A plan to build a mosque in this Houston suburb has triggered a neighborhood dispute, with community members warning that the place will become a terrorist hotbed and one man threatening to hold pig races on Fridays just to offend the Muslims. Many neighborhood residents maintain they have nothing against Muslims and are more concerned about property values, drainage, and traffic. Legal persons are already better off than flesh and blood persons...Submitted by Prometheus 6 on December 8, 2006 - 7:15pm.
on Justice
This is why the Committee on Capital Markets Regulation want to raise the standard for criminal prosecution of corporations...they want you to prove the corporation is criminal "from top to bottom." And this is whose bidding Senator Specter is doing. Senator Calls for an Easing of Corporate-Wrongdoing Rules The departing chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee proposed legislation yesterday calling for a rollback of the tactics adopted by federal prosecutors to combat corporate wrongdoing after the Enron collapse. The bill from Senator Arlen Specter, a Pennsylvania Republican, is the latest challenge to the tactics, which have come under scrutiny from trade groups, former United States attorneys general and a prominent federal judge. Mr. Specter said he would reintroduce the bill next month when Congress convenes. From the "You can't make this stuff up" departmentSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 8, 2006 - 4:28pm.
on Onward the Theocracy! This is from this morning's Washington Journal. It's one of the things that weirded me out this morning. So make sure all your weapons are legalSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 8, 2006 - 1:37pm.
on News
Voting machinesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 8, 2006 - 12:41pm.
on Tech You realize just printing a piece of paper doesn't add a bit of security, don't you? How would you actually do a recount? Changes Are Expected in Voting by 2008 Election By the 2008 presidential election, voters around the country are likely to see sweeping changes in how they cast their ballots and how those ballots are counted, including an end to the use of most electronic voting machines without a paper trail, federal voting officials and legislators say. New federal guidelines, along with legislation given a strong chance to pass in Congress next year, will probably combine to make the paperless voting machines obsolete, the officials say. States and counties that bought the machines will have to modify them to hook up printers, at federal expense, while others are planning to scrap the machines and buy new ones. If I started this blog todaySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 8, 2006 - 12:21pm.
on Open thread | Random rant I'd name it Ouroboros. Spurious specificitySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 8, 2006 - 12:09pm.
on Justice They're going to find that "the bullet that killed him" wasn't fired by Undercover Mike. The fact that a guy emptied his clip, reloaded, and emptied it again will be deemed unimportant because he wasn't the killer. The killer responded within acceptable parameters and Undercover Mike gets diversity training. Ballistics Report Is Guide to Queens Police Killing The Police Department has delivered to prosecutors in Queens a 43-page ballistics report on the shooting of Sean Bell, a crucial piece of evidence that will act almost as an annotated guide to how the 50-shot police fusillade that claimed his life unfolded. Offered with a grain of saltSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 8, 2006 - 11:22am.
on Education
There was a time when an education was a social decoration more than anything else. Where being educated meant knowing the things society had deemed sufficient to impress. Because the rate of change seems to have accelerated, training to a specific set of facts seems less important than learning how to reason. Who cares?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on December 8, 2006 - 9:00am.
on Politics Articles like this should be published in the Lifestyle section. It's pure noise, totally useless. Dueling Views on Diplomacy Pit Baker Against Rice WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 — Many of the blistering critiques of the Bush administration contained in the Iraq Study Group’s report boil down to this: the differing worldviews of Baker versus Rice. Former Secretary of State James A. Baker III was the architect of the “new diplomatic offensive” in the Middle East that the commission recommended Wednesday as one of its main prescriptions for extracting the country from the mess in Iraq. Ever since, he has been talking on television, to Congress and to Iraqis and foreign diplomats about how he would conduct American foreign policy differently. Very differently. I'm kind of bugging this morningSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 8, 2006 - 8:38am.
on Open thread | Random rant I'm listening to Washington Journal this morning...the 1/3 of the country that believed Dubya is the Celestially Ordained Savor of the American People and Through Them, The World (quite coincidentally, the same position to be claimed by the Antichrist) are even more delusional. I'm considering the Iraq Study Group's 79 suggestions and wonder why they get lauded when they've produced a grab bag much like Rumsfeld's parting shot. I read some responses to Heather Mac Donald's anti-Black screed over at City Journal...the National Review bragged on it AFTER linking it on its home page. Responses by police officers on NYPD Rant (a bulletin board for police supporters) were interesting too. And the Class Wars continue. I linked that beause it's easier than typing shit out. The next person that says Christianity is a monotheistic religion gets laughed out of the houseSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 8:39pm.
on Religion
Manliness is next to godliness NASHVILLE — The strobe lights pulse and the air vibrates to a killer rock beat. Giant screens show mayhem and gross-out pranks: a car wreck, a sucker punch, a flabby (and naked) rear end, sealed with duct tape. Brad Stine runs onstage in ripped blue jeans, his shirt untucked, his long hair shaggy. He's a stand-up comic by trade, but he's here today as an evangelist, on a mission to build up a new Christian man — one profanity at a time. "It's the wuss-ification of America that's getting us!" screeches Stine, 46. A moment later he adds a fervent: "Thank you, Lord, for our testosterone!" Just recognizin'Submitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 4:32pm.
on Culture wars | Race and Identity Patrick said that the house must be saved. "This is a gem, that it be preserved, restored, and sustained," he said. The words belonged to Frederick Douglass, who spoke them almost a century and a half ago as he rallied abolitionists in Boston after an antislavery meeting was broken up: "After all the arguments for liberty to which Boston has listened for more than a quarter of a century, has she yet to learn that the time to assert a right is a time when the right itself is called into question?" Yesterday, it was the incoming governor, the first black to be elected to the office, who spoke. Reading excerpts of Douglass speeches, Deval L. Patrick helped to launch a 200th anniversary celebration of Boston's African Meeting House. Thank ghod for the DHSSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 3:00pm.
on News Flatulence leads US jet to divert An American Airlines plane made an emergency landing in Nashville after passengers reported the smell of sulphur from burning matches. The matches were found on the seat of a woman who had attempted to conceal the odour of flatulence with the matches, Nashville airport authorities said. All 99 passengers and five crew left the plane while it was searched. The woman was questioned by the FBI but released without charge and allowed to board another American Airlines flight. "It was determined that she was trying to conceal body odour," said Lynne Lowrance of the Nashville Airport Authority. Changes I been going throughSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 1:26pm.
on Culture wars | Economics | Race and Identity
Okay, that looks interesting...
He said that? The first two points are the same...more people means more poor people. That 'racially' in 'more diverse, racially and economically" seems stuck in there sideways. REALLY sounds like, "All the new poor folks are un-white." And this is coming out of The Brookings Institution? The George and Tony ShowNothing short of impeachment is going to stop these fools. Great Britain is lucky...The Poodle's days are already numbered. This press conference may speed him out the door, which is why they are lucky. We don't get "no confidence" votes. But Bush... Bush keeps talking about "if we were to fail" like 'we' haven't failed already. George W. Bush's policies have failed, and all the things he made you fear are waiting for you over the horizon because it failed.
We interrupt my thought processes to bring you this special bulletinSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 11:09am.
on Race and Identity City Journal and Heather Mac Donald (latest) rant (latest because there's a lot of links with titles that threaten to piss me off on the page) has come to my attention, courtesy(?) of ptcruiser.
Of course, no one is making that allegation. The concern is over the fact that Black folks keep getting shot. Heather knows this because after savaging the strawman with blow after matchless blow, she says
Okay? Baby gets paid per word, looks like. The heifer continues with the ploy that's been standard since The Bell Curve was published: throw a pile of shit at people until they can only respond with inchoate rage. But I'll play. Bob Herbert takes the high roadSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 9:40am.
on Justice | Race and Identity The way Bob Herbert started [TS] Waiting for Answers, I thought he was going to wimp out a bit.
Because enough has come out to determine Undercover Mike has to fucking go. You don't get to reload your weapon and call it an accident. But Mr. Herbert is talking medium, if not long, game.
THANK you for saying thatSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 8:17am.
on News
When I saw this case reported, I said NOTHING. Someone mentioned it here in the comments, I forget who...my only response was that I'm not feeling the racism part of the complaint. This is because race obviously had nothing to do with it. And I'm glad the race noise was just editorializing in the media...while at the same time I'm totally unhappy that it was editorialized as a racial issue. We got enough legitimate ones. Racism was only part of Pierce's case Genie Harrison is the attorney who represents Tennie Pierce in his case against the L os Angeles Fire Department. December 7, 2006 WHAT HAPPENED to Tennie Pierce at Fire Station 5 in Westchester cannot be compared, as one angry Angeleno suggested, to an episode of "Survivor" or "Fear Factor" with a payout of $2.7 million. Pierce wasn't given a choice. Instead, he was fed dog food against his will for the purpose of "humbling" him, as the Fire Department's own inquiry found, and was forced off the job when he followed department rules and reported the incident. In the end business ALWAYS trumps politicsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 7:51am.
on Media | People of the Word
Lean Left? Lean Right? News Media May Take Their Cues From Customers When Matt Lauer declared on the “Today” show last week that NBC would start referring to the conflict in Iraq as a “civil war,” he inadvertently started his own civil war within the news media. Fox News refused to follow suit, saying that non-Iraqis were involved in the fighting, “and that makes it something different.” Accusations of partisanship arose all around. Yet newspapers around the country have been making decisions on this matter for months. The Los Angeles Times and The Christian Science Monitor have somewhat officially termed the conflict a civil war; The Washington Post has not. Any politician will tell you that sometimes what we call things is the most political decision of all. Getting rid of 'activist judges' apparently means nothing gets doneSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 7:31am.
on Supreme Court
Case of the Dwindling Docket Mystifies the Supreme Court WASHINGTON, Dec. 6 — On the Supreme Court’s color-coded master calendar, which was distributed months before the term began on the first Monday in October, Dec. 6 is marked in red to signify a day when the justices are scheduled to be on the bench, hearing arguments. The courtroom, however, was empty on Wednesday, and for a simple reason: The court was out of cases. The question is, where have all the cases gone? So what makes anyone think Bush gives a damn about their opinion?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 7:16am.
on War
Where have I seen this problem before? Ah, I remember...UNMOVIC. More specifically, every WMD inspection report produced by Hans Blix. Oh they can ignore it, all rightSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 7, 2006 - 6:22am.
on Politics
But not if they want their job...and that's not that dumb "vote Republican to send a message" line. You can punish folks with the primaries. Cherry-Picking Campaign Promises Weeks before they take majority control of the Capitol, the Democrats are reported to be wriggling out of one of their most important campaign vows: to repair Congressional oversight of the nation’s intelligence agencies. Congress was found to be nothing less than “dysfunctional” on this duty by the Sept. 11 commission, which wisely recommended a full-scale revamping of the committee structure. Plus there's a glut in the bacheloriate marketSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 6, 2006 - 9:36pm.
on Education
Texas' `top 10 percent law' under fire DALLAS - It's been praised for keeping public universities in Texas racially diverse. It's been criticized for hurting talented students with less-than-stellar grades. Good decisionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 6, 2006 - 9:28pm.
on Race and Identity
Hawaii Schools’ Racial Enrollment Upheld The Kamehameha Schools in Hawaii, private schools with an endowment of more than $6 billion, are entitled to limit their enrollment to Native Hawaiian children, a federal appeals court panel in San Francisco ruled yesterday by a vote of 8 to 7. CompromiseI once heard "negotiation" defined as "discussing an issue until it is sufficiently ambiguous to let everyone claim victory. Ladies and gentlemen, I present The Iraq Study Group report. |
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