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Kerry Trashes Bush in Baghdad
Today's Headlines
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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Bill Gates’ System Crashes with Blue Screen of Death
oops
Bill Gates's legendary luck failed him during his keynote presentation at the 2005 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
The best evidence for why MSFT is a monopoly is that they don't care about working in operating system reliability, preferring to focus on embedding a media player, calling it an operating system "enhancement."
His demonstration of Microsoft Media Center crashed during the presentation on integrating digital photography, and later a Microsoft product manager failed to access the internet with a Tablet PC.
He should be used to that sort of thing by now.
A new game, Forza Motor Sport, also triggered the dreaded Windows blue screen of death.
it's not a bug. it's a feature.
The presentation started on a jokey theme, with late-night TV host Conan O'Brien presenting a mock version of his own show and a video diary of his and Bill's 'lost weekend' in Las Vegas. "I got too drunk, I woke up with a hooker," O'Brien said. "Bill got too drunk, he woke up with an Apple computer." O'Brien said that he was unable to criticise Microsoft because it had implanted a Pentium in his brain, and suggested that Gates should be played by Milhouse from The Simpsons. But his banter was less welcome when things started to go wrong. "OK, and right now nine people are being fired," O'Brien said as they waited for a slide show to appear. Gates traditionally has a reputation for being lucky at showing off software to its best effect. A major slip occurred at a Windows 98 demo at Comdex in 1998 that went into blue screen mode, but Gates returned the next year to successfully show off the progress that had been made.
Posted by: PlanetDan || 01/06/2005 2:14:00 PM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Rehearse Dammit!

Famous last woids.... the presenttion didn't take this long to load on my desktop.... it's just pictures.
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 15:20 Comments || Top||

#2  O’Brien said that he was unable to criticise Microsoft because it had implanted a Pentium in his brain,..

He's not the first one.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 01/06/2005 15:25 Comments || Top||

#3  Who built my machine?
Have them killed...
Posted by: Bill Gates || 01/06/2005 16:22 Comments || Top||

#4  Heh! Indeed!
Posted by: Chuck Simmins || 01/06/2005 16:30 Comments || Top||

#5  hee hee BAr
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 16:54 Comments || Top||

#6  This is too weird. I stopped getting BSOD's starting with Windows 2000.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 01/06/2005 17:23 Comments || Top||

#7  Well public embarrassment is a thing Bill G has down. This isn't the first time this has happened.
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom || 01/06/2005 17:23 Comments || Top||

#8  Zhang: yep....all you really get now is a boring little dialog asking if you want to send the info to Bill & Co. Now with Mac OSX, one can cause "kernel panic" and get a "Black Screen of Death" Very kewl!
Posted by: Rex Mundi || 01/06/2005 18:39 Comments || Top||

#9  Not half as embarrassing as having this guy as your CEO.
Posted by: AJackson || 01/06/2005 19:36 Comments || Top||


Alexander: Farrell, Stone have more stupid things to say
[Edited for maxiumum laughter]
Irishman Colin Farrell, in the title role, has defended as historically accurate his portrayal of Alexander Buahahahah! who carved out an empire stretching from the Mediterranean to Afghanistan in the 4th Century B.C.
He said the reaction to the film in America as "shocking", but he expected the response in Europe and Asia to be better.
Don't get your hopes up Colin baby. Oh, you look mighty cute in them jeans boy!
Stone, a three-time Oscar winner and director of acclaimed films including "Platoon" and "Born on the Fourth of July", said his latest venture had fallen victim to events in Iraq.
Or fallen victim to being a boring, chattering class piece of tripe.
"Because Alexander at times sounds like George (W.) Bush, (people) get the two confused," he said.
Oliver, do you actually believe the things you say? Colin, I think it would be best if you stopped hanging out with Oliver.
"I think it makes people feel queasy about empire and the concepts that Alexander espoused, but Alexander was not attacking the east in order to drain it of its resources. He stayed in the east."
These last two sentences are comedy gold. Cogradulations Oliver: your ethics are now so completely twisted around that you have actually become French.
For an ever-so-slightly different take on Alexander's lust for ... gold, read this book.
Posted by: Secret Master || 01/06/2005 12:41:27 PM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hey, all we need now is Oliver Stone doing a movie about Michael Moore (or vice-versa).
Posted by: John Q. || 01/06/2005 15:33 Comments || Top||

#2  The war. Fundamentalism. What'll it be tomorrow? Doubt it'll "my movie sucked".
But Angelina's looking real good!
Posted by: tu3031 || 01/06/2005 15:39 Comments || Top||

#3  Oh, gawd! Why can't you just admit your movie sucked? Get over yourself!
Posted by: Dar || 01/06/2005 16:02 Comments || Top||

#4  As I recall, dear Alex was in the habit of sending loot trains back home after particularly advantageous battles. But I could be misremembering, I suppose.

And of course, Colin's Alexander has an Irish accent, whereas GWB sounds Texan. Even the tone deaf can hear that particular difference. But Colin can take comfort in looking terribly good in a leather apron...
Posted by: trailing wife || 01/06/2005 16:18 Comments || Top||

#5  ... and I also got paid up front.
Posted by: Colin Farrell || 01/06/2005 16:24 Comments || Top||

#6  Article: response in Europe and Asia to be better.

In Europe, maybe. In Asia, homosexuality remains a criminal offense in many countries. In China, it has always been frowned upon and until recently, gays were in fact executed.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 01/06/2005 16:31 Comments || Top||


"Fear Factor" sued over rat-eating episode
I think Saddam needs this legal genius on his team!
Watching contestants eat dead rats on NBC's gross-out stunt show "Fear Factor" so disgusted a Cleveland man that he has sued NBC for $2.5 million, saying he could not stomach what he saw.
Guess he lost the remote in the sofa cushions again....
In a handwritten four-page lawsuit filed in federal court in Cleveland on Tuesday, paralegal Austin Aitken said, "To have the individuals on the show eat (yes) and drink dead rats was crazy and from a viewer's point of view made me throw-up as well an another in the house at the same time."
I don't know what impresses me more....his conversational style in a legal document, or the fact that this so-called legal professional couldn't type the damn thing up first before submitting it.
His suit added, "NBC is sending the wrong message to its TV watchers that cash can make or have people do just about anything beyond reasoning (sic) and in most cases against their will."
Hmm. I don't recall people being forced at gunpoint to participate....or to watch, either...
He said the show caused his blood pressure to rise so high that he became dizzy and light-headed, and when he ran away to his room, he bumped his head into the doorway.
Everyone all together now.....AWWW!
In a brief telephone interview with Reuters, Aitken said, "I am not at liberty to discuss the complaint unless it is a paid-interview situation."
"Please pass my phone number on to "Inside Edition"!
A spokesman for "Fear Factor" said the show would have no comment until it sees a copy of the complaint. The spokesman said the program did feature a rat-eating scene in New York's Times Square on Nov. 8.
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 01/06/2005 12:33:16 PM || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Relating to another article posted today, it looks like we need warnings labels for TVs now, too.
Posted by: Dar || 01/06/2005 16:21 Comments || Top||

#2  Who watches this shit?
Posted by: tu3031 || 01/06/2005 16:22 Comments || Top||


-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Peters TSUNAMI RIPPLES: A NEW STRATEGIC MAP
EFL

The Indian Ocean theater contains the world's largest democracy (India), the world's most populous Muslim state (Indonesia), the greatest concentration of oil (on the Arabian Peninsula and in the Persian Gulf), the first Muslim nuclear power (Pakistan), the most progressive economies in Southeast Asia (Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand) and the greatest concentration of terrorists in the world.

On its eastern extreme, this vast region is bounded by Australia, a sturdy Western outpost. To the west, the Indian Ocean laps the old Swahili Coast and the Republic of South Africa, a state on its way to becoming the continent's first indigenous great power.

This is where Islam must — and can — change; where nuclear weapons are likeliest to be used; where the future economic potential is vast; where the bulk of the world's heroin is produced; and where the heroin of the world economy — oil — could be cut off with a handful of nuclear weapons (think Iran, the Suez Canal and a few Arab ports).

The tsunami drew a strategic map of the 21st century. It took a tragedy to inspire serious American involvement in the region (apart from the Middle East, with which we remain rabidly obsessed). While cognizant of the horrors that brought them to Indonesia, U.S. Navy officers are relieved to have a mission at last. Largely excluded from participation in Iraq and Afghanistan because of the reactionary choices the service made, our Navy has suffered from a perception of fading relevance.

Yet, our Navy remains as important to America's security as it ever was. The problem is that the Navy itself can't see it. The service suffers from the destructive nostalgia that afflicted the Army a decade ago, the desire to perfect a force to fight the wars of the past.

Nonetheless, our Navy remains the lead service for security affairs in the Indian Ocean. The Air Force will have a role in crises, while the Army and Marines will be needed to fight the region's ground campaigns of tomorrow (they're coming), but our naval presence is the indispensable military and strategic tool required by the Indian Ocean's strategic environment.

We have lost our focus on the control of the seas.

India has become a prized source of top-flight human capital. Afghanistan's proving that democracy can work in the absence of superhighways and investment bankers. South Africa is pioneering a dynamic multiracial society on a continent old-school thinkers blithely write off. And Indonesia, for all its problems, relishes its new democracy and its tolerant forms of Islam.

The future is waving its arms and shouting, but we see only the past.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 01/06/2005 4:07:55 PM || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I personally think South Africa is well on its way to becoming the new Zimbabwe of the continent, not the new super power. None of my female expat friends are willing to take an assignment there because of the high risk of rape, robbery and general mayhem. I only hope my cousins in Cape Town have moved off-continent.
Posted by: trailing wife || 01/06/2005 16:26 Comments || Top||

#2  No nation or nations can fight a war(s) that haven't been fought yet - the best anyone can gen do is anticipate based on best evidence but remain flexible as against the unknown. The prob for Islam in the Indian Ocean is the same as for Islam in the rest of the world - Islam, like Communism, tyrannically maintains the status quo and is mostly inflexible to change or reform, espec when it comes to economics and domestic or socio-cultural materialism. A primary reason for the unrest in the Islamic world is that the average or ordinary Muslim is unable to care for himself or his own, nor is he allowed by the mullahs to engage in individualist iniatives whereby he materially improve his personal lot in life. Militarily conquering non-Muslim societies in the long term gives new resources to use and consume, but doesn't resolve his basic problem. The more developed and wealthy non-Muslim sectors in Indonesia want autonomy or independence, which the majority local Muslims fear because without the non-Muslim sectors they are gen just a bunch of uneducated, un-modern farmers and limited traders. Many Islamist militants are in reality fighting to keep their nation together in order to preserve Muslim political control over their non-Muslim donminated local and national economies! Its very similar in the ME, where modernity is generally for the oil-rich ruling few, the mullahs, and political-theocratic elites, not the ordinary masses -its easy to blame capitalism and America but in reality this situation had existed for many hundreds of years. Like the Leftists, Socialists, Marxists or Commies, men like Osama see the near-term looming self-implosion, self-oblivion, and self-irrelevance of Islam as a potent force for anything - THEIR VIOLENT RADICALISM IS AS MUCH TO SAVE ISLAM AS IT IS TO EMPOWER AND ENFORCE IT ON THE WORLD, AN ACT OF DESPERATION!
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 01/06/2005 21:33 Comments || Top||

#3  JM! You were Sooooooo close to a great lucid comment! damn!
Posted by: Frank G || 01/06/2005 22:37 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Saudi Arabia Holds Telethon for Tsunami
Saudis streamed into a stadium to load bundles of clothes into trucks and stuff glass boxes with cash Thursday as the government launched a public campaign to help southeast Asian tsunami victims. The stadium was the heart of a live national telethon that raised $67.4 million in 11 hours, of which King Fahd donated $5.3 million and Crown Prince Abdullah donated $1.3 million, according to Saudi television. During the broadcast, which was to last 12 hours, state TV alternated scenes of Saudis coming to the stadium to make their donations in person and images from the destruction and suffering in the stricken areas. A number was flashed across the screen for pledges by telephone. Diamond and gold jewelry, as well as clothes, tents, blankets and even a schoolboy's daily $1.30 allowance, were among the donations. Individual contributions ranged from $1 to $133,000.
Posted by: Fred || 01/06/2005 8:30:12 PM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


First 'Made in Saudi Arabia' Mobile Coming
A new brand of mobile phones made in Saudi Arabia by a Saudi company will hit the market later this month. Based on indigenous technology, the product will be the first "Made in Saudi Arabia" mobile phone, Ghazi Saleh Al-Shalhoub, chairman of Saudi Television Manufacturing Company, told Arab News. "The product is made without collaboration with any foreign manufacturer," he claimed. He said Saudi Television Manufacturing Company's new mobile phone is the first such product in the Kingdom and the Middle East region. It puts Saudi Arabia in a league of nations possessing electronic technology capable of producing such sophisticated products on its own. Al-Shalhoub said the company has invested about $9 million to develop its own technology for the product named Islamic Saudi Mobile Phone which will be offered for sale at the end of January.
It has a built in camera, but it won't take pictures of wimmin...
The new mobile phone has high memory capacity, can save numbers of incoming and outgoing calls and record calls lasting more than 15 minutes. The new phone is equipped with color screen and a battery for continuous 12-hour use. The phone, which displays the Qibla direction and prayer times in over 5,000 cities worldwide, has a number of languages available, such as Arabic, English, French, Urdu, Persian and Bahasa Indonesia, as it is also targeted at the Haj pilgrim market. Al-Shalhoub said that the price of the mobile would not exceed SR400, and it would come with a one-year warranty. The company aims at producing 2 million units during 2005, for sale in Saudi Arabia and neighboring countries.

The Kingdom imports around six million mobile phones a year, with 70 percent of consumers regularly changing their mobiles, something that has greatly boosted demand. Competition in the mobile phone market is expected to intensify with the arrival of a new competitor to the Saudi Telecom Company which until now has been dominating both the mobile and land phone markets. Ettihad Etisalat which won the second mobile phone service license said it expects to get up to seven million subscribers in the first five years of its operations in the Kingdom.
Posted by: tipper || 01/06/2005 12:54:13 AM || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Um, okay. Sure, I'll play...

"Based on indigenous technology..."
Well, there's an excellent chance that this is simply bullshit. Much of the circuitry and most of the chips will be standard stuff, probably purchased from Motorola, Nokia, TI, Samsung - the usual suppliers. You don't build cleanroom chip fabrication facilities and do the design and all of the other aspects of this - ready for production runs, for $9M. Sorry - that doesn't add up. Their custom chip(s) will be produced elsewhere, prolly Indonesia or Malaysia. Methinks that likely one little programmable DSP contains locally produced microcode to gen their little Mecca pointer onscreen (the only unique thing identified and something the Arab Airlines have done on their in-flight progress screens for years). A funny thought occurs to me... if the US Govt ever turns off GPS, as in a time of war - as a recent article here implied was possible - there will be a buncha Muzzie asses pointed wrong-wise. How will Allan take it, heh? Their dependence upon technology continues to grow...

Kudos on what they did "themselves" - and raspberries for implying they did it all.

I've always wondered why Allan didn't embed digital watches with a compass in every Muslim's right wrist...
Posted by: .com || 01/06/2005 3:13 Comments || Top||

#2  I'd be more impressed if a company in Dubai hadn't announced this 6 months ago.
Posted by: AzCat || 01/06/2005 5:00 Comments || Top||

#3  I found this German gem about those mobile phones:

"Das LG-Handy G5300 Quiblah macht's möglich. Laut LG-Sprecher Kim Kyong Hwan wurde das mit einem Kompass ausgestattete Gerät eigens für die islamische Welt entwickelt. Der Kompass richte sich dank GPS immer genau auf Mekka aus. Die erste Lieferung werde noch in dieser Woche auf den Weg nach Saudi Arabien gebracht."

Haha the "speaker of that company LG is called Kim Kyong Hwan and the mobile "was sent to Saudi Arabia".

I suppose the only thing the Saudis did was to stick "Made in KSA" on it.
Posted by: True German Ally || 01/06/2005 7:59 Comments || Top||

#4  I thought Standard Can was a US company.
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 8:57 Comments || Top||

#5  Does it come standard with the port to connect to your explosives, or is that optional?
Posted by: Steve || 01/06/2005 9:33 Comments || Top||

#6  Steve, the explosives pack comes with the battery upgrade.
Posted by: BH || 01/06/2005 10:58 Comments || Top||

#7  #3
Saudi cell phone joins a venerable list:
Arabic numerals, Damask steel, etc.
Posted by: gromgoru || 01/06/2005 11:34 Comments || Top||

#8  Yeah what's next? Female drivers?
Posted by: True German Ally || 01/06/2005 11:36 Comments || Top||

#9  Wireless because it uses string.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 01/06/2005 11:37 Comments || Top||

#10  Made in Saudi Arabia...by imported workers from India, no doubt.
Can't wait for the next KSA scientific breakthrough.
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 01/06/2005 12:14 Comments || Top||

#11  Bluetooth bombvest accessory? Or is the technology israeli, and if you call one of the phones and type in a code, will it explode?
Posted by: Mark E. || 01/06/2005 13:03 Comments || Top||

#12  "Customized in Taiwan, Assembled in the Magic Kingdom!"
Posted by: mojo || 01/06/2005 13:48 Comments || Top||

#13  Does it come standard with the port to connect to your explosives, or is that optional?

The communication protocol used by the phone to interface with external devices will be fully compatible with Wahhabi remote triggering requirements.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 01/06/2005 17:25 Comments || Top||


China-Japan-Koreas
Rent-A-Girlfriend
Agencies in China's Chengdu city are offering rented girlfriends to bachelors who need someone to show off to relatives during the upcoming Chinese Lunar New Year.
Why is the advertisement in English?
Posted by: Anonymoose || 01/06/2005 9:43:54 AM || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  AFP has never heard of Escort Services?
Posted by: eLarson || 01/06/2005 9:52 Comments || Top||

#2  Frenchmen working for an organization headquartered in Paris have never heard of prostitution?
Posted by: Mike || 01/06/2005 10:47 Comments || Top||

#3  Their mothers refused to talk about work at home.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 01/06/2005 13:27 Comments || Top||

#4  When I was a youngster this was called something... I can't recall quite... Damn, the memory is the second thing to go.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins || 01/06/2005 14:00 Comments || Top||

#5  "Me love you long time!"
Posted by: Raj || 01/06/2005 14:21 Comments || Top||

#6  Didn't someone offer to be a 'pretend' net-girlfriend on ebay a few months ago? They would send email, chat messages, and letters but 'Notice that this does not really mean that I am your girlfriend - this is all pretend!'.....
Posted by: CrazyFool || 01/06/2005 14:23 Comments || Top||

#7  "So who the srut?"
Posted by: Chinese Mom || 01/06/2005 14:27 Comments || Top||

#8  "So who the srut?"
Posted by: Chinese Mom || 01/06/2005 14:27 Comments || Top||

#9  LOL
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 15:25 Comments || Top||

#10  I have a friend in China, an American, who has been there 3 years and been engaged 4 times. Lots of young Chinese women want out of China. The engagement stops when they realize he has no intention of leaving China. These aren't bad people, just looking for a way out. He's also a sucker for a sad story.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 01/06/2005 16:36 Comments || Top||

#11  Oh, I don't know - young Chinese women just want a husband, fast. I've had several fall in love with me, and when I asked if they wanted to leave China or go live in America, they always said they wanted to stay home.

China is just like everywhere else, they think they're the best country in the world.
Posted by: gromky || 01/06/2005 18:45 Comments || Top||

#12  I got into a friendship with a chinese woman over the net once. After about 3-4 chats she invited me over to visit -- even offered to pay for the flight!

That kind of put me off. But in truth she was a pretty nice person. I got the impression she was pretty naive.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 01/06/2005 18:50 Comments || Top||


Down Under
Tsunami: Our Military Dollars At Work
Department of defense Tsunami Site


Newsday
The Pentagon is spending about $6 million a day to operate the fleet of ships, aircraft and other military resources that have joined the tsunami relief effort in south Asia, a spokesman said Thursday.

Army Lt. Col. Gary Keck, a Pentagon public affairs officer, said the $6 million per day covers a U.S. contingent of about 13,000 military personnel, of which about 12,000 are aboard 17 Navy ships in the region hit by the Dec. 26 earthquake and resulting tsunami.
Navy Newsstand
SAN DIEGO (NNS) -- Hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH 19), based in San Diego, set sail Jan. 5 for the Indian Ocean area as part of relief efforts following the devastating earthquake and tsunami that recently struck the region.

The Navy has deployed Mercy in an imaginative way, utilizing a creative approach to provide the type and level of care that will be needed to aid the tsunami victims. There is presently an opportunity to configure Mercy with a humanitarian assistance crew - which might be staffed significantly by nongovernmental organizations and people with significant medical capability who can provide relief in other forms.

It will take the 894-foot hospital ship about 30 days to reach the Indian Ocean region. The ship's 1,000-bed hospital facility will be initially staffed to support 250 patient beds. The number of patient care beds can be expanded up to 1,000 with additional medical staff, if necessary. Equipment and supplies will be available to treat a wide variety of patients from young children to the elderly.

Mercy has 12 operating rooms, but it is likely the focus of care for this mission will be on patients suffering from illness or infections.

About 275 medical and medical support personnel will sail with Mercy to ready the ship for the humanitarian mission. The remaining hospital staff will join the ship later this month. The ship is operated by 64 Navy civilian mariners.
Navy Newsstand
By Journalist 3rd Class Ryan Valverde, USS Bonhomme Richard Public Affairs

ABOARD USS BONHOMME RICHARD, At sea (NNS) -- USS Bonhomme Richard's (BHR) (LHD 6) Repair Division began manufacturing more than 20 fresh water distribution manifolds Jan. 2 to help dispense fresh water to tsunami victims in South Asia. The manifolds will be used in conjunction with large water bladders that can hold vast quantities of fresh water.

"With the fresh water problems they are having in the region, the CO (Commanding Officer) asked us to come up with a method of distributing fresh water," said Hull Maintenance Technician 1st Class (SW) Jason Curry, hull maintenance technician shop leading petty officer, from Freemont, Iowa. "These people lost everything, and this will bring them a source of fresh water to cook with, drink and clean their belongings."

Repair division Sailors have been working around the clock to produce the in-house-designed manifolds. "We used deep sink faucets and other parts that we were going to return as surplus," said Hull Maintenance Technician 1st Class (SW) William Phinney, repair division leading petty officer from Chicago. "This was an all hands evolution. Everyone had a part in designing or building these manifolds."

The repair division designed the manifolds to have five dual-head deep sink spouts welded to a two-foot copper nickel pipe. "We all put our brains together and produced a product," said Hull Maintenance Technician 2nd Class (SW) Michael Nyland, a Trevor City, Mich., native, who helped make the manifolds. His co-worker, Hull Maintenance Technician 3rd Class Branden Stone, from Bullhead City, Ariz., echoed, "We basically made something out of nothing, but helping these people was the main goal."

Bonhomme Richard is currently operating off the Indonesian island of Sumatra providing humanitarian aid to tsunami victims.
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Jan. 5, 2005 — Navy helicopters continue to airlift aid to thousands of people left struggling for survival due to the earthquake- generated tsunami that hit Indian Ocean nations from Indonesia to Somalia. The helicopters — part of newly named Operation Unified Assistance — are delivering supplies to parts of the Indonesian province of Aceh, the epicenter for the disaster. Aceh lost almost 100,000 people Dec. 26, and officials estimate that more than 155,000 people died across the region.

Secretary of State Colin Powell visited Indonesia and received a look at the affected area today. "In the course of my career, I've been in war and I've been through a number of hurricanes, tornadoes and other relief operations, but I have never seen anything like this," Powell said during a news conference following the tour. He noted he saw during his overflight of Bandar Aceh "how the wave came ashore, pushing everything in its path — cars, ships, freighters overturned, all the way up to the foothills, and then starting up the foothills until finally the waves came to a stop." "I cannot begin to imagine the horror that went through the families and all of the people who heard this noise coming and then had their lives snuffed out by this wave," he continued. "The power of the wave to destroy bridges, to destroy factories, to destroy homes, to destroy crops, to destroy everything in its path is amazing."

Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka and India were hardest hit by the tsunami, although Somalia — more than 3,000 miles all the way across the Indian Ocean — lost at least 200 people due to the waves.

U.S. Pacific Command officials stressed that the affected nations themselves are directing the relief operations. "The U.S. role is to support these efforts by responding to these nations to our fullest capability," said Navy Capt. Rodger Welch, an operations specialist with the command. "Our mission remains to minimize the loss of life and to mitigate human suffering."

Some 20 U.S. naval vessels are in the region and 85 U.S. military aircraft are working to deliver supplies to the survivors. U.S. servicemembers have delivered more than 610,000 pounds of relief supplies to the region. In the last 24 hours, U.S. helicopters delivered 5,560 pounds of water, 142,940 pounds of food and 2,100 pounds of supplies.

Beginning Jan. 6, six maritime pre-positioning ships will begin arriving in the region. These ships carry supplies and a built-in capacity for making and pumping fresh water. Welch said U.S. helicopters from the USS Bonhomme Richard Expeditionary Strike Group began flying missions into Aceh Jan. 4. U.S. helicopters also started delivering supplies to survivors in Sri Lanka.

Eleven nations have teamed with the United States to deliver needed humanitarian aid. They are Australia, Japan, Malaysia, Germany, New Zealand, France, India, Korea, Pakistan, Singapore and the United Kingdom. The nations have provided 26 planes, 41 helicopters and 26 naval vessels. All are teaming up effectively, officials said. Joint Task Force 536 in Utapao, Thailand, is now designated as a combined support force. The U.S. support groups in Indonesia, Thailand and Sri Lanka are now combined support groups.

In military language, the term "joint" refers to operations in which at least two services work together. "Combined" is a term used when forces from two or more countries are involved. Welch said an example of the cooperation among the nations occurred when a Boeing 737 jet blocked a runway at Bandar Aceh on Jan. 4 after striking a herd of cows. "Five countries' worth of people organized five countries' worth of equipment, and moved the aircraft within hours," he said. Welch said the U.S. military brings "speed and capacity" to the disaster response. "We can come there quickly," he said. "(We were) coordinating and operating within a day, and we can come with a lot."
Posted by: Chuck Simmins || 01/06/2005 1:58:41 PM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Europe
UK: Mohammed enters top boys' names
Posted by: ed || 01/06/2005 15:03 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Chirac urges international aid tax
Posted by: Dragon Fly || 01/06/2005 13:21 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "President Jacques Chirac made a new call today for an "international tax", saying such a levy would help generate funds to help poor countries and those hit by disasters such as the Asian tsunami."

Phat phucking chance, Phroggie.
Posted by: Dave D. || 01/06/2005 13:42 Comments || Top||

#2  Repeat after me, Jack:

"No taxation without representation!"
Posted by: mojo || 01/06/2005 13:51 Comments || Top||

#3  President Jacques Chirac made a new call today for an "international tax"

Fine. You write the first cheque, Jacques.
Posted by: Raj || 01/06/2005 14:22 Comments || Top||

#4  No.
Posted by: trailing wife || 01/06/2005 17:08 Comments || Top||

#5  No better way to guarantee that crisis will never go out of fashion...

Oh, and what TW said.

Posted by: Seafarious || 01/06/2005 17:22 Comments || Top||

#6  Jaques, FOAD.
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom || 01/06/2005 17:26 Comments || Top||

#7  Here's an idea. How about a French international aid tax? You can pay for it and the world will come and hit it whenever they need it. Sound good to you, Jake?
Posted by: tu3031 || 01/06/2005 18:37 Comments || Top||


What Glass Ceiling?
World's cleverest woman can't find a job
A Bulgarian woman rated the world's cleverest wants a British firm to give her a job after spending two years on the dole. Bulgarian Daniela Simidchieva, a mother of three, has five Masters Degrees and an IQ of almost 200. She's listed by the country's Mensa office as the world's cleverest but despite sending off hundreds of applications she still hasn't found a job.
"Bob, I've got a resume here that sez the applicant's the world's smartest woman. We got anything for her?"
Her IQ is the same as that of chemist Marie Curie who was the first person to win the Noble Prize twice but cannot even get a cleaning job. Daniela said: "I love learning, but I also want to work. In the last 44 years I have studied economics, education and sociology at universities in Bulgaria and Britain. I am qualified as an industrial engineer, as an English teacher and as an electrical engineer as well as having my five Masters degrees. "But in Bulgaria I have found that employers do not want clever employees. Even when I had a job, the largest salary I ever managed was just £90 a month."
Once upon a time... Aren't there any Think Labs left, ala Bellcore? This is a stupid shame.
Somehow I doubt we're getting the entire story here. Paging Paul Harvey!
Posted by: .com || 01/06/2005 7:21:33 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I bet she's a woeful driver.
Posted by: Howard UK || 01/06/2005 8:03 Comments || Top||

#2  44 years study, 5 masters degrees?

Maybe she has an IQ of 200 but obviously no clue what she wants.
Posted by: True German Ally || 01/06/2005 8:09 Comments || Top||

#3  no common sense or she would have already figured out how to purchase an airline ticket to a country that would pay her well.
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 8:20 Comments || Top||

#4  If being smart was the sole qualification for holding a job, any company I ever worked at would have had much fewer staff...
Posted by: Carl in N.H. || 01/06/2005 8:33 Comments || Top||

#5  That just proves that "intelligent" does not equate "clever".
Posted by: True German Ally || 01/06/2005 8:34 Comments || Top||

#6  I have always asserted that clever and intelligent are 2 seperate traits. They are good to have in combination but are not commonly found together.
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom || 01/06/2005 8:39 Comments || Top||

#7  She may be one of those people who doesn't interview well.
Posted by: Mike || 01/06/2005 8:48 Comments || Top||

#8  She may be one of those people who doesn't interview well.

"I'm very sorry, but you are overqualified for this position. Have you tried the food service industry?"
Posted by: Steve || 01/06/2005 9:46 Comments || Top||

#9  I worked at an R&D Lab for 5 yrs - and there were a few people there who would have been rather out of place anywhere else, but they had their names on the plaque in the foyer - for holding 25 or more patents. I believe the key was that, internally, most still had a child's gift of pure imagination and creativity. Frustrating, but fun, too, to program their ideas into applications for the desktops of the engineers for real-world use. I loved working and interacting with those characters.
Posted by: .com || 01/06/2005 9:57 Comments || Top||

#10  geeks are my favorite.
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 9:59 Comments || Top||

#11  Ya, but can she take shorthand?
Posted by: Captain America || 01/06/2005 10:47 Comments || Top||

#12  Watch out Fred, Larsons got savage lawyers.
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 10:56 Comments || Top||

#13  200 IQ, 5 masters, a love of learning and a willingness to work... and it never occurred to her to go entrepenurial? WTF?
Posted by: BH || 01/06/2005 11:01 Comments || Top||

#14  TGA and 2b nailed it. Intelligence, cleverness and -- particularly -- common sense seldom all reside in the same person. Its like that wisdom/knowledge thingy.

Truth to tell, I am quite, quite certain that this Bulgarian lady is completely unsuited for the real world. She would be much better off writing a few brilliant papers, then going for a professorship somewhere... perhaps in one of those trendy multidiscipline slots.

I, too, worked in an R&D lab for a few wonderful years. But the PhDs were generally kept away from managing anything more than a technician or two, and promoted up the Technical track rather than into Management -- and a wise decision that was, to be sure.

But I discovered that I, too, while not able to boast of anything even close to a genius IQ (darn it!), was completely unsuited for the rough'n'tumble of the real world. We are all much happier with me covering the home front while Mr. Wife plays all day at the Corporation. Quite a shock to Little Miss Liberated Me it was to discover this about myself, but there it is.
Posted by: trailing wife || 01/06/2005 11:12 Comments || Top||

#15  How did she pay for all of this education? How did she have time to raise 3 children? Apparently, she has too much time on her hands.
Posted by: Rightwing || 01/06/2005 11:37 Comments || Top||

#16  learning isn't doing. Building your resume in school until you are in your 40s is of course going to end in disaster when you compete against someone who has been actually doing the job for years. As it is we rely too much on credentials vs. competency.
Posted by: Mark E. || 01/06/2005 13:33 Comments || Top||

#17  hmmm what shock to Hillary - someone else is the world's smartest woman
Posted by: Frank G || 01/06/2005 13:45 Comments || Top||

#18  I thought that our fr
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 15:29 Comments || Top||

#19  In Europe staying in school until 30 or even 40 is not unusual. The culture demands that new hires be fully trained with all the skills and knowledge needed to do the job. My husband had colleagues who thought he must be a genius (ha!) because he outranked them with only a B.S. (ChemE). Over there that would have kept him a lab technician. Only PhDs are allowed to manage others, only those with additional degrees in Business Management are permitted to manage a real business unit. And if, when you graduate, there is no call for your particular skill set, you have to go back to school to get another degree.

Now granted, things are a little looser in, say, small entrepreneurships in the Czech Republic, but I'm not aware that Bulgaria is as free wheeling a place.
Posted by: trailing wife || 01/06/2005 17:17 Comments || Top||

#20  Wait a minute. Five *masters* degrees? I know a lot of decent guys with masters degrees, but in general masters degree holders are held in low esteem - they're commonly held to be too dim or lame or whatever to get a proper doctorate. Mostly, this attitude is a crock of shit, but given that it is a common attitude, who in their right mind would go chasing *five* masters degrees? Sounds like the world's most accomplished mediocrity, really.

...says the guy who barely has a bachelors... oh, well.
Posted by: Mitch H. || 01/06/2005 17:26 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
Dems ask McAuliffe to remain party chair
Via Bros. Judd:
Senior Democrats are trying to persuade national Chairman Terry McAuliffe to continue his service as party chairman, especially if none of the current candidates gains momentum in the race to replace him. About a half-dozen candidates are in the race and a couple of others are considering a run for the position. It will be filled in February at the Democratic National Committee's winter meetings. McAuliffe met privately Wednesday with several Democratic senators on Capitol Hill, and was asked again to consider serving for another year or two, Democrats say. McAuliffe's response was not immediately known, but he has been cool to such overtures in the past. Democratic senators reportedly at the meeting included Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Charles Schumer of New York. "Terry McAuliffe has been a great chair and he could continue that," Schumer said Wednesday. "The bottom line is that Democrats have a lot of good candidates to lead us."...
Posted by: anonymous2U || 01/06/2005 12:54:44 PM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This would be absolutely wonderful. Say Yes, Terry! Say Yes! Heh! Heh! He! He!
Posted by: leaddog2 || 01/06/2005 13:02 Comments || Top||

#2  You can almost hear the GOP collectively holding its breath! Oh please, oh please!
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 13:03 Comments || Top||

#3  I think keeping Terry is a winning strategy.... for us Republicans, that is.
Posted by: Secret Master || 01/06/2005 13:10 Comments || Top||

#4  Ickes is out of the race.... Deano is getting the big Mo.
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 13:15 Comments || Top||

#5  I'm not so sure that having Terry McAwful stay on is anything to be jubilant about: I'm not certain about this, but I suspect that much of the extreme looniness we saw from him in the '04 campaign was a put-on, calculated to egg Kerry and his idiots into doing stupid things that would lead to defeat-- thus clearing the way for Hillary in '08.

I may be wrong; but if I'm right, we should start to see a much more sophisticated, canny McAuliffe emerge as Hillary builds up a head of steam.

I ain't popping the cork on the champaigne yet.
Posted by: Dave D. || 01/06/2005 13:34 Comments || Top||

#6  McAwful's 0 for 2 (insert Minnesota Vikings joke here). Make sure they hire Bob Shrum, then we pop the corks!
Posted by: Raj || 01/06/2005 13:42 Comments || Top||

#7  Raj - 1st thing that came to mind was a Shrum-Terry package deal....beat me to it :-)
Posted by: Frank G || 01/06/2005 13:48 Comments || Top||

#8  Sounds like they can't get anyone else to take the job.
Posted by: tu3031 || 01/06/2005 15:33 Comments || Top||

#9  I'm tellin' you, Rove is a genius!
Posted by: Fred || 01/06/2005 16:00 Comments || Top||

#10  and devious.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 01/06/2005 16:09 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Sen. Boxer may challenge results of presidential election
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) is considering launching a challenge to Ohio's electoral votes when the Senate meets tomorrow to certify the votes of the Electoral College. The challenge -- should Boxer decide to offer it -- would force a debate in the House and Senate over whether President Bush's electoral victory will stand. Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) is planning to issue a challenge in the House. Conyers and 23 other House members today outlined their reasons for opposing the certification of Ohio's electors, claiming there were "numerous, serious election irregularities" in Ohio. Bush carried Ohio by more than 100,000 votes. The state handed him an Electoral College victory over Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass).

Meanwhile, Rev. Jesse Jackson made an 11th hour appeal today to Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), urging him to object to the Ohio vote. "The anomalies in Ohio are greater than the anomalies in Florida" in 2000, Jackson told The Hill. Jackson pointed to problems with new voting machines, and noted that many black voters stood in line for several hours in some precincts. He said the Senate had an "obligation" to debate problems that occurred in Ohio voting.
Yeah, Jesse. The anomalies in Ohio are greater than anything ever seen before, anywhere, under any circumstances...
Posted by: Fred || 01/06/2005 9:24:03 AM || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Minor road bumb that should delay the vote by 30 seconds if Boxer actually follows through. Once the "Debate" goes to the separate houses it will be over. I would be surprised if the House/Senate leaders didn't have plans in place for this kind of nonsense.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 01/06/2005 10:36 Comments || Top||

#2  Perhaps the Republicans should scrounge up a "special" review committee for Pennsylvania (a closer vote) and for the outright fraud circus that is the Washington State governor race.
Posted by: Laurence of the Rats || 01/06/2005 10:36 Comments || Top||

#3  Oh, Babs. You're such a tool!
Posted by: mojo || 01/06/2005 11:15 Comments || Top||

#4  Oh, good, Jesse weighs in too!
A little louder, Jesse please? I can't hear you too good from way back there in the oblivian line.
Posted by: tu3031 || 01/06/2005 11:23 Comments || Top||

#5  Laura Ingraham likes it cos it takes the attention away from Alberto Gonzales...
Posted by: Seafarious || 01/06/2005 11:26 Comments || Top||

#6  Our own Babsey, certifiably a whacko.

Kerry won comfortably, Babsey by a bigger margin here in Leftyland-by-the-sea.

All you lurking trolls who voted properly for the "W" and then had a brain cloud when you split your ticket, THIS IS WHAT YOU GET!

Enjoy the waste of time let Babsey expell some flatulance, and then get it over with.

Seafarious : Ms. I. may be correct, but it is annoying, and the objectors look like idiots.

Consider the what-if scenario in 2000.

If Florida was objected to by BOTH a House member and a Senator. All I saw was members of the Congressional Black Caucus led my Mad Maxine Waters bloviating. No Senator joining in the objection.

The senate was split 50-50 until jumpin Jim jumped. SO, The house votes Bush, the senate is tied. Since Algore was still VP, and Pres of the Seante for two weeks, he votes to reject the Florida VP votes, and Colleague Lieberman becomes VP. Unless Lieberman was too embarassed under the circumstances, and did the right thing.

Eerie...
Posted by: BigEd || 01/06/2005 11:49 Comments || Top||

#7  BigEd - Hmm, that might not have been so bad. Cuz then we might have gotten Cheney as SecDef, and Rummie as SecState... *grin*
Posted by: Laurence of the Rats || 01/06/2005 11:53 Comments || Top||

#8  It's official: Boxer signed up with the other idiots.
Posted by: growler || 01/06/2005 12:31 Comments || Top||

#9  CSPAN is Broadcasting Babsey's Flatulance right now!

She need a little ritalin. She'll feel better.
Posted by: BigEd || 01/06/2005 12:54 Comments || Top||

#10  Can the New York state votes be counted for Kerry since they were certified for John L. Kerry? I wonder what the legal ramifications of this are. If Kerry can't legally get the votes from New York, what's the deal on Ohio?
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 01/06/2005 13:16 Comments || Top||

#11  Actually, BigEd, I think Congress has to agree on the electoral slate. So, if the House says the GOP slate is right and the Senate says the Dem slate is right, that doesn't mean a Bush/Lieberman administration.

I think if Congress doesn't agree, the result is returned to the state and the Governor (aka Bush's brother) decides which set is correct.
Posted by: jackal || 01/06/2005 14:32 Comments || Top||

#12  You are correct Jackal, but I was just brainstorming.

A congresswoman from Michigan named Miller who was the ex-SOS of MI said part of the complaint filed suggested that Carl Rove had a secret computer in the basement of the White House and was hacking into the Ohio voting machines to change votes.

Lemee see hack to change votes to a 118,000 majority for "W". This means Rove had to change 59,000 votes AT LEAST!

Some years ago a Christmas comic strip of "Peanuts", by Charles M Schulz, had Linus getting an explanation of Santa Claus' task on Christmas eve to deliver gifts to millions of little boys & girls around the world in one night.

Linus said, "Gee, he must be highly skilled".

Now we all know who Karl Rove trained with!
Posted by: BigEd || 01/06/2005 14:44 Comments || Top||

#13  Babsy was the only Senator to vote to uphold the challenge.

1 Yes
74 No
25 Not Voting

Waiting on the House. Mad Maxine is yapping now...
Posted by: BigEd || 01/06/2005 15:11 Comments || Top||

#14  Linus said, "Gee, he must be highly skilled".

Took me a minute..... ah faith.
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 15:43 Comments || Top||

#15  Ahhh.. at least Babs got to see where she stands.
Posted by: Dishman || 01/06/2005 17:05 Comments || Top||

#16  Report from DU...much seething, along with vows of never voting again...ever.

:: shrug ::
Posted by: Seafarious || 01/06/2005 17:10 Comments || Top||

#17  Seafarious, thanks loads for checking the DU filth, so that we don't have to. Now go take a long, hot shower!
Posted by: trailing wife || 01/06/2005 17:38 Comments || Top||

#18  All is well the yapping dogs are silenced and the vote was certified by both houses. I wrote an especially seething email Babs. I told her the 'sore loser' had become synonymous with 'Democrat'. I doubt her staff will show it to her or if she can understand the word 'synonymous'. Big Ed, is it too early to talk recall of this idiot in the Senate? I am willing to open my wallet for that purpose.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 01/06/2005 18:55 Comments || Top||

#19  Oh, yeah, its HAIL HILLARY - unless the various International Rogues crisies are resolved, I strongly believe Hillary will be at best a VPOTUS candidate in 2008! Rest assured the Commie Betty Crocker-crats will do their best to ensure JEB BUSH serves only one term ala the BUSH FAMILY CURSE. Hillary's next and likely last window to be POTUS will be 2012/2014, where she will run for POTUS but with a woman VPOTUS, her and the Failed Left still doing their best to disguise anti-US Communism as pro-America or Saving America Liberalism!? As for Kerry, IRAN-SYRIA-NORTH KOREA, etal. are still out there, as is the Clintons' "THIRD WAY", aka THIRD-PARTY/TERTIARY ALIBISTS, which could be anyone or any scenario or event(s) from anti-Dubya "LONE NUT" ASSASSINS and MISC. CRAZIES TO LEGAL INVESTIGATIONS INTO ALLEGED BUSH/BUSH-CHENEY-GOP "CRIMES" AGAINST AMERICA, ANY ANDOR EACH, ONE ANDOR ALL! THe DemsLeft is promo itself as the Party of Propriety, Prudence, and Protection, where Regulation, Big Government, and Global Govt., etc. has a well-meaning and "justified" puprose or utility. You can tell because the anti-American and anti-GOP-Right, but PC, HISTORY CHANNEL, this week is exploring the need and dev of OSHA, i.e. Regulation is good for babies, old Yeller, the USMC and apple pie!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 01/06/2005 21:56 Comments || Top||


Wash State GOP Demands New Gov Election
Posted by: .com || 01/06/2005 06:56 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Time to get those orange scarves back out...
Posted by: eLarson || 01/06/2005 8:53 Comments || Top||

#2  Actually they have a real case. There are hundreds of 'voterless ballots' which cannot be explined away (i.e. some precents have more ballots being counted then voters). Plus the Sec of State allowed ballots in 'king county' (strong Democratic) to be 'reconsidered' while leaving other (Conservative) counties out cold. And there are the military who, through no fault of their own, did not receive their ballot in time. (you see only King Country votes matter).

And of course the MSM is saying 'movealong.... nothing to see here' since the DNC is ahead now.
Very fishy.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 01/06/2005 9:14 Comments || Top||

#3  I wasn't being facetious. :)
Posted by: eLarson || 01/06/2005 10:02 Comments || Top||

#4  Their recipe for stealing an election finally paid off. Expect more of the same in the future. Between the Jihadists and the Dems...it's lookin' like a two front war.
Posted by: Rex Mundi || 01/06/2005 19:49 Comments || Top||

#5  Ok here is a link to King County's Enron Math.

The democrat 'won' by some 127 votes and only by a 'hand' recount - the republician won the previous 2 counts. King County (a democratic stronghold) counted 3,500 more votes then registered voters.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 01/06/2005 20:11 Comments || Top||


CNN's Crossfire & Capital Gang Axed (Who would notice?)
Hat Tip: Lucianne
CNN, which lost the services of conservative pundit Tucker Carlson to MSNBC yesterday, immediately signaled plans to get rid of his former program, "Crossfire," the 22-year-old shout show that gave birth to dozens of high-decibel cable slugfests.
And don't let the digital door hit ya in the...
CNN/U.S. President Jonathan Klein sided yesterday with comedian Jon Stewart, who used a "Crossfire" appearance last fall to rip the program as partisan hackery. "I think he made a good point about the noise level of these types of shows, which does nothing to illuminate the issues of the day," Klein said in an interview. Viewers need "useful" information in a dangerous world, he said, "and a bunch of guys screaming at each other simply doesn't accomplish that."
Klein. Stewart. Grate minds think alike.
CNN plans to incorporate "Crossfire" debate segments with the remaining hosts -- Democratic strategists James Carville and Paul Begala and conservative columnist Robert Novak, plus a right-leaning replacement for Carlson -- into the afternoon program "Inside Politics." The network also plans to end "Capital Gang," the long-running Saturday night panel show created by Novak, later this year.
...
So. Q.E.D. I doubt any of you would've noticed, so think of this as a PSA.
Posted by: .com || 01/06/2005 6:50:03 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I never even heard of Capital Gang...
Posted by: Charles || 01/06/2005 8:47 Comments || Top||

#2  the only good show on MSNBC is Dennis Miller and they ruin that by putting so many ads on it (probably cause it's the only show they have that gets ratings). If you haven't watched it, you should, it's really good. He has lots of bloggers on too. He's the only celebrity with the guts and the sharp wit to take on the looney left. I think it's 9:30 and 12:30 ET.
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 9:58 Comments || Top||

#3  2b, Dennis Miller's show is a full hour, at 9 pm and 12 pm ET, I believe. And he is wonderful, although what he'll do now that his chimpanzee companions is old enough to join the rest of its tribe, I don't know.
Posted by: trailing wife || 01/06/2005 11:19 Comments || Top||

#4  Yeah, blame Carlson for Crossfire. Because he invented it while day-dreaming in Mrs. French's first period Biology class, second year of Jr. High.

Who was the original lineup on that show? Novak and Shields, or was it Buchanan and Kinsley? Either way, it's ancient.
Posted by: Mitch H. || 01/06/2005 11:20 Comments || Top||


Sen. Boxer may challenge results of presidential election
Follow-up to yesterday's House Dem challenge article. Hat Tip: Lucianne
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) is considering launching a challenge to Ohio's electoral votes when the Senate meets tomorrow to certify the votes of the Electoral College. The challenge -- should Boxer decide to offer it -- would force a debate in the House and Senate over whether President Bush's electoral victory will stand. Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) is planning to issue a challenge in the House. Conyers and 23 other House members today outlined their reasons for opposing the certification of Ohio's electors, claiming there were "numerous, serious election irregularities" in Ohio. Bush carried Ohio by more than 100,000 votes. The state handed him an Electoral College victory over Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass). Meanwhile, Rev. Jesse Jackson made an 11th hour appeal today to Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), urging him to object to the Ohio vote.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: .com || 01/06/2005 6:36:01 AM || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  My biggest post-election worry has been that the Democrats would get smart: put their adults back in charge, and muzzle the droolers and foamers who have been costing them elections. It's starting to look like there wasn't much reason to worry.
Posted by: Dave D. || 01/06/2005 7:21 Comments || Top||

#2  My thoughts exactly, Dave D. Looks like they're going to beat the rush in sabotaging their chances in 2008.
Posted by: BH || 01/06/2005 11:12 Comments || Top||

#3  Let's see who (if anyone) steps up along with Senator Boxer. (Dumber than a Boxer rocks...)

60 in '06!
Posted by: eLarson || 01/06/2005 14:40 Comments || Top||

#4  Let's see who (if anyone) steps up along with Senator Boxer.

The answer is.......a big fat "NO".
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 01/06/2005 21:30 Comments || Top||


Bothering With Okrent, One More Time
It's been months since I've wasted my time being lied to by New York Times "public editor" Dan Okrent. But today there was one I couldn't pass up. Here's my email to him today:

I know we have stopped "corresponding," and that you claim such as a victory for your columnist corrections policy (imagine what a victory you could claim if you just stopped checking email altogether). But this one is so egregious I had to bother, though I'm sure it will go down the hole like all the others.

In today's op-ed "Choose and Lose" by Barry Schwartz, the author states:

What's more, the administrative costs of keeping track of these private accounts, according to President Bush's Commission to Strengthen Social Security, will be 10 to 30 times the cost of administering the current system, eating up almost all of the hypothetical gains that equity investments could provide.

Here is the report of the Commission. On page 9 and again on page 97 it sets the administrative costs at 30 basis points, which means 3 tenths of one percent. This figure was agreed by the Commission and the Office of the Actuary of the Social Security Administration.

Here is the statement of the Social Security Trust Fund from its Board of Trustees. You can see that administrative costs for the existing system are $4.6 billion on an asset base of $1530.8 billion, or 30 basis points. The costs are the same. They are not "10 to 30 times."

Why the Times would have ever let a professor of psychology mouth off about the administrative costs of Social Security I have no idea. But I'm sure you and Gail Collins will come up with one.
Posted by: tipper || 01/06/2005 2:08:59 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Don Luskin's vicious, precisely why I like him. Too bad we don't know why he sued Atrios last year; any theories?
Posted by: Raj || 01/06/2005 14:38 Comments || Top||

#2  m-o-n-e-y
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 01/06/2005 14:48 Comments || Top||


International-UN-NGOs
Chiraq opens his yap and it's going to cost US big time
Via No Pasaran:
Meanwhile, Roger Cohen adds that

Jacques Chirac, the French president, sees a chance to place the United Nations, rather than the United States, at the center of an international initiative that plays to the image he seeks to cultivate of Europe as peacemaker and donor. His government has proposed the creation of a global civil protection force to intervene in such emergencies, a form of intervention that could scarcely be more distinct from that of American forces in Iraq.

The United Nations, hurt by the oil-for-food scandal, battling the image of ineffective talk-shop, sees an opportunity to demonstrate its ability to coordinate an emergency relief operation. Its bureaucrats have become loquacious, indulged by European television networks with on-air time to fill.

Not all of this is edifying. 

Posted by: anonymous2U || 01/06/2005 12:37:37 PM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "President Jacques Chirac was reported to be growing increasingly concerned that U.S. aid efforts were designed to circumvent the United Nations in potentially damaging ways."

He noticed that? Wow, maybe he's not as stupid as I thought he was.
Posted by: Dave D. || 01/06/2005 12:45 Comments || Top||

#2  When you speak of response to anything, you are talking ships and planes.... i.e.... airlift capacity, etc. Maybe it will happen in the E.U., in 10 to 25 years, but I seriously doubt it. (It will NEVER HAPPEN in the U.N. because Thugs cannot steal that money easily if it goes for airlift).

The E.U. has NO airlift capacity to speak of. Canada's use of commercial planes to move their DART group is another example.
Posted by: leaddog2 || 01/06/2005 12:49 Comments || Top||

#3  that's cool. We'll just have them house the effort in France or somewhere other than here, and we'll have to look at restructuring the financing aspects...as it wouldn't be proper to have the blood money from the US financing the adventure. I smell opportunity here!
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 12:57 Comments || Top||

#4  Chirac has become a comic book villain, spending every available minute trying to scheme against the US. Does he actually run a country, or does he spend all of his time concocting bizarre conspiracies to try and undermine his arch-enemy? Is he like The Joker, obsessed with Batman? Dr Doom to the Fantastic Four? Kingpin, enemy of Daredevil and Spiderman? Snidely Whiplash?
Posted by: Anonymoose || 01/06/2005 13:02 Comments || Top||

#5  FUCK chirac, FUCK the u.n., FUCK phrancistan(formerly known as france).
Posted by: Dudley Doright || 01/06/2005 14:12 Comments || Top||

#6  Now that's a GOOD analogy.

Perhaps he's more like Syndrone, because other than his obsession, he doesn't really have anything.

Thankfully he doesn't have giant robots or zero-point energy. Hopefully if he gets that far we can make sure he also winds up with a cape...
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 01/06/2005 16:11 Comments || Top||

#7  Captain Ahab commanding the Charles de Gaulle?
Posted by: Raj || 01/06/2005 16:31 Comments || Top||

#8  Remember the scene in the Michael Keaton Batman movie, where The Joker dresses up like a mime to assassinate a mob boss? I can imagine Chirac as that Frenchified mime Joker, but a still from the movie would be nice.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 01/06/2005 18:06 Comments || Top||

#9  Helen....place this article in our file cabinet under the heading of "wet dream"
Posted by: Captain America || 01/06/2005 19:17 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
South Korea warns of terror against its relief workers
South Korean relief workers helping victims of Asia's tsunami disaster may become targets of terror attacks, the government warned Thursday. South Korea sent a "request to related countries" to take security measures for the aid workers, said Lee Kyu-hyung, a spokesman of Seoul's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade. "We have acquired intelligence that our relief groups in Indonesia and some other areas are becoming a possible target of terror attacks," he said in a statement. He did not elaborate, and it was not immediately clear whether South Koreans were more at risk than aid workers from other countries. Fears that South Koreans may be targeted by terrorists have increased in recent months because the country has 3,600 troops in northern Iraq's Kurdish town of Irbil. The deployment is the third largest contribution of troops to the coalition after the United States and Britain.
Posted by: Seafarious || 01/06/2005 3:20:21 PM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  He did not elaborate, and it was not immediately clear whether South Koreans were more at risk than aid workers from other countries. Fears that South Koreans may be targeted by terrorists have increased in recent months because the country has 3,600 troops in northern Iraq's Kurdish town of Irbil.

Sounds like paranoia to me.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 01/06/2005 17:30 Comments || Top||


U.N. taking over relief effort; death toll may double
EFL
The United Nations will take over coordination of tsunami relief and reconstruction efforts from a core group of nations, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell told donors Thursday.
And you thought Rawanda was bad.
Powell had convened the core group -- the United States, Australia, Japan, India, Canada and the Netherlands -- at U.S. President George W. Bush's request following criticism his administration had not responded aggressively enough to the crisis.
Well, not exactly. We are doing just what we would have done even if the MSM had not attempted to create a meta-narrative that paints Bush as slack ass.
The announcement came shortly after U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan told the regional donor conference in Jakarta that Indian Ocean countries will need $977 million in cash assistance over the next six months to recover.
This one is too obvious: Oil-for-food, Kojo, The Congo, Toyota Taliban, $400 a day per diem...etc.
Posted by: Dragon Fly || 01/06/2005 8:27:45 AM || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Like I said yesterday - now that the 5-star Hotel has 24-hr catering restored the U.N. is ready to 'tke over' the credit for other people's work.....

Farking Vultures.....
Posted by: CrazyFool || 01/06/2005 8:53 Comments || Top||

#2  I was forced to listen to the Perky Katie show this morning. Haven't done that for a long time, and I was amazed at how much it was like watching a soap opera (ie: you can watch once every six months and they still haven't moved the show forward from where you left off.) Headline topics: Abu Gharib, Michael Moore, and I'm sure if I watched abit longer, they would have covered Scott Peterson, the election and Jon Bennet Ramsey.

The reason I bring this up here, was they actually do have a new topic, the tsunami - but they covered it by saying (something like) now that the UN has taken over, do you think Bush has "redeemed himself"? ...ah yes, redeemed....

and they wonder why no one watches them anymore
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 8:54 Comments || Top||

#3  Just saw the post from yesterday. My apologies to all.
Posted by: Dragon Fly || 01/06/2005 10:07 Comments || Top||

#4  The UN immediately requested $1B of the $3B plus pledged thus far....not Oil-for-Food, but....
Posted by: Captain America || 01/06/2005 11:03 Comments || Top||


Dead bodies pose no epidemic threat, say experts
Posted by: tipper || 01/06/2005 08:17 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "People repeat so often that bodies have to be disposed of to protect public health, that people assume it must be true," says Oliver Morgan, an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

Yes, best to leave them rotting so that the flies, maggots and rats will busy themselves multiplying on the corpses and not go around bothering others with the diseases they carry.

Dead bodies can release faecal bacteria into water, which can cause problems if people drink the water. But removing dead bodies will not stop this: flooded sewers and the living release also faecal bacteria, usually in closer proximity to survivors.

Yep...since both the living and the dead release fecal bacteria, it's best to leave 100,000+ dead bodies lying around so that in addition to the living, you can add the fecal bacteria of the dead to the water supply. Good thinking!

Meanwhile, mass graves cause their own problems. "Dumping them in pits is the worst possible practice," says Roger Yates, head of emergency relief for the charity Action Aid. "It's a bad thing. It happens every single time and causes enormous emotional trauma [as if rotting corpses laying around does not] later on," he told New Scientist from Chennai in southern India....snip....But people can at least be photographed, and identifying marks such as rings or tattoos recorded." In Sri Lanka, bodies are reportedly fingerprinted and photographed before mass burial, but in Indonesia, military teams are reported to be simply bulldozing bodies into pits.


ok...but wait, didn't you just say that disposing of the bodies unnecessarily uses resources that should be used working on other tasks? "This causes problems, Morgan says, when disposing of bodies takes resources away from survivors - as when hospital wards are converted into morgues, as has been reported in Sri Lanka.

soooo...in one paragraph, we are told that disposing of bodies takes away resources from surviors, that should be used setting up sanitation and clean water, and then in another paragraph in the same article, we are told that collecting, identifying, photographing, etc. apparently will not.

Make up your mind, dufas. Where do they get these logically challenged marroons?
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 9:26 Comments || Top||

#2  The thing is to know who writes the stuff before trying to understand "their" logic.

CodeBlueBlog has something to say about a medical journal that makes me wonder where we will end up if we take them at their word.

Wow! Is that The BMJ or The Nation? He's calling us (that's you and me, fellow citizens) crippled, lonely and...loveless! And he's doing that under the aegis of the BMJ, where we would expect to be reading reports of the latest brilliant British discoveries: new epidemiological data;...
Just couldn't resist.

No. He's a sports writer...AND acting editor of the British Medical Journal.
Posted by: Shater Spoluper1654 || 01/06/2005 10:49 Comments || Top||

#3  SS - it would be funny, if it wasn't so sad.
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 13:39 Comments || Top||


Africa: Subsaharan
Malawi President Forgives Alleged Plotters
Malawi's president on Thursday accused his predecessor of complicity in a plot to assassinate him but said he was dropping all charges against the alleged conspirators and forgave them. Bingu wa Mutharika said the plot involved members of his own governing United Democratic Front, to which his predecessor Bakili Muluzi also belongs. Muluzi's spokesman Sam Mpasu said it was "an outrageous accusation," while ruling party spokesman Salule Masangwi accused wa Mutharika and his allies of a political witch hunt. Three senior ruling party officials were charged with treason Wednesday after they were accused of trying to bring handguns into a meeting with wa Mutharika earlier in the week aimed at resolving a deepening rift between the president and his party. Another official was charged Thursday after police found three knives in his vehicle. Wa Mutharika came to power in a turbulent May election marred by opposition allegations of vote-rigging that set off violent clashes in and around the capital of this impoverished southern African country. He has since angered members of his party by embarking on an anti-corruption drive, arresting senior members of Muluzi's administration.
Posted by: Fred || 01/06/2005 8:36:45 PM || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Well, they've got a fresh slate with which to make sure that next time, it's done right.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 01/06/2005 21:33 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine
Egyptian paper: Israel-India nuke test caused tsunami
conspiracy. it's not just for moonbats anymore. but what a great way for them to sing kumbaya with vile-spewing joooo haters.
The earthquake that struck the Indian Ocean on December 26, triggering a series of huge waves called tsunami, "was possibly" caused by an Indian nuclear experiment in which "Israeli and American nuclear experts participated," an Egyptian weekly magazine reported Thursday.

According to Al-Osboa', India, in its heated nuclear race with Pakistan, has lately received sophisticated nuclear know-how from the United States and Israel, both of which "showed readiness to cooperate with India in experiments to exterminate humankind."
not humankind. the vermin that infests humankind. there's a difference.

Since 1992, the magazine argued, leading geological centers in Britain, Turkey and other countries, warned of the need "not to hold nuclear experiments in the region of the Indian Ocean known as 'the Fire Belt,' in which the epicenter of the earthquake lies.

Geologists labeled that region 'The Fire Belt' for being "a dangerous terrain that can move at anytime, without human intervention," Al-Osboa' wrote.

Despite warnings not to carry out nuclear experiments in and around the 'Fire Belt', "Israel and India continue to conduct nuclear tests in the Indian Ocean, and the United States has recently decided to carry out similar tests in the Australian deserts, which is included in the 'Fire Belt', the Egyptian weekly magazine wrote.
I can't think of anyone who would know better about such things than the cracked editorial staff of some egyptian rag.

"Last year only, Arab and Islamic states have asked the United States to stop its nuclear activities in that region, and to urge Israel and India to follow suite," Al-Osboa' reported.

Although Al-Osboa' does not rule out the possibility that the tsunami could have been caused by a natural earthquake it speculates however that, "while it has not been proved yet, there has been a joint Israeli-Indian secret nuclear experiment [conducted on December 26] that caused the earthquake."
more than speculated. they hoped and prayed that's what caused it.

The Egyptian weekly magazine concludes in its report that "the exchange of nuclear experts between Israel and India, and US pressure on Pakistan which is exerted by supplying India with state-of-the-art nuclear technology and preventing Islamabad from cooperating with Asian and Islamic states in the nuclear field, pose a big question mark on the causes behind the violent Asian earthquake."

Incitement against Israel and Jews in Egyptian media is usually limited to the context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict yet exceptions are known to occur.

In August 2002, the Paris Supreme Court summoned Ibrahim Naafi', editor of the Egyptian daily Al-Ahram, for having authorized the publication of a controversial article entitled 'Jewish matza is made from Arab blood' in the October 28, 2000 edition of the paper.

Naafi' was charged with incitement to anti-Semitism and racist violence.
bet he thought "Great! So it did work after all!"
Posted by: PlanetDan || 01/06/2005 2:48:40 PM || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Do they get "The Wild Wild West" reruns in Egypt? I seem to remember Dr. Loveless hatching a plan like this.
Posted by: Artemus Gordon || 01/06/2005 15:16 Comments || Top||

#2  I suppose the aftershocks were all of the follow up tests that didn't go quite as well. Too bad about the Tamils a guess they were just fodder for the great Aryan Agrandizer. LOL with that theory Ibrahim. PS something tells me the Anzacs don't like mushroom clouds growing in the outback.
Posted by: Rightwing || 01/06/2005 15:35 Comments || Top||

#3  I have it on good authority that the tsunami was due to resonance caused by ROPers hitting their foreheads to the ground at the same time.
Posted by: ed || 01/06/2005 15:37 Comments || Top||

#4  "ZIONIST DEATH RAY", successor to the "TESLA DEATH RAY" the real culprit for those in the know...Tunguska redux...
borgboy in the subjunctive
Posted by: borgboy || 01/06/2005 16:34 Comments || Top||

#5  Despite warnings not to carry out nuclear experiments in and around the ’Fire Belt’, "Israel and India continue to conduct nuclear tests in the Indian Ocean, and the United States has recently decided to carry out similar tests in the Australian deserts, which is included in the ’Fire Belt’

Here's an idea. Test them in Iran.
Posted by: tu3031 || 01/06/2005 16:36 Comments || Top||

#6  This is the scientific consequence of the harmonic convergence of the planets back in 199whatever. We were warned, but we still voted for Bush.
Posted by: Shipman with mushrooms || 01/06/2005 16:42 Comments || Top||

#7  Not being a geologist, but an engineer, I have a sneaking suspicion that even us evil 'mericans and the Joos don't have ANYTHING in our arsenal that can cause an underwater 9.0! Don't know how many kilotons (or even megatons) that would take, but I have a hunch it's an awfully large #!
Posted by: BA || 01/06/2005 20:21 Comments || Top||

#8  Posh BA! We have it and we're willing to use it! Ya hear that, Iran, NKorea, and Syria?
Posted by: Frank G || 01/06/2005 20:28 Comments || Top||

#9  Michael Moore, Oliver Stone is on line one.
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 20:30 Comments || Top||

#10  "This is the scientific consequence of the harmonic convergence of the planets back in 199whatever."

Nah. It's part of an ongoing Third World moronic convergence.
Posted by: Dave D. || 01/06/2005 20:32 Comments || Top||

#11  Posh BA! We have it and we're willing to use it! Ya hear that, Iran, NKorea, and Syria?

Oh yeah, I forgot about the Zionist Underwater Faultline Eruption Maker(tm)! My, my, am I glad the Mossad's not hanging around!
Posted by: BA || 01/06/2005 21:29 Comments || Top||

#12  we aren't. Don't forget it
Posted by: The Mossad || 01/06/2005 21:45 Comments || Top||

#13  Good to see you check in every once in a while. Where's the next tsunami gonna be Moss?
Posted by: BA || 01/06/2005 21:47 Comments || Top||

#14  whereever it needs to be, with plausible deniability, of course
Posted by: The Mossad || 01/06/2005 22:39 Comments || Top||

#15  "SNORK!"

I feel embarrassed for any Egyptian that is educated in earth sciences that has to read this crap. Well after I was done laughing I did.
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom || 01/06/2005 22:47 Comments || Top||

#16  2b,

"Michael Moore, Oliver Stone is on line one"


That must be a big, load leveling line.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 01/06/2005 22:48 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Tech
Cartographers redrawing maps after tsunami
EFL. Worth reading it all.
Water depths in parts of the Straits of Malacca, one of the world's busiest shipping channels off the coast of Sumatra, reached about 4,000 feet before last month's tsunami. Now, reports are coming in of just 100 feet — too dangerous for shipping, if proved true. A U.S. spy imagery agency is working around the clock to gather information, warn mariners and begin the time-consuming task of recharting altered coastlines and ports throughout the region. Officials at the Bethesda, Md.-based National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency say the efforts will take international cooperation over months, if not years. Thousands of navigational aides, such as buoys held in place by mushroom-shaped anchors, were carried off to new locations by 50-foot to 100-foot waves. Old shipwrecks marked on charts have been relocated, joined by new wrecks that will have to be salvaged, moved or charted.

The agency has received an unconfirmed report that one area of the Strait of Malacca, which divides Malaysia and the devastated Indonesian island of Sumatra, had its depth cut from 4,060 feet to just 105 feet. In another area of tsunami-effected waters, a merchant marine ship has logged that the depth was cut from 3,855 feet to just 92 feet.

Among other international operations, the Navy is sending two ships to begin efforts to rechart the waters. One, the USNS John McDonnell, could arrive by next week. It is expected to be followed by the newer USNS Mary Sears, which is awaiting final orders to head out from Japan. On board will be sonar, a dozen scientists and 34-foot vessels used to rechart the shipping channels. The Navy does not know what it will find. "We may have buildings or buses in the channels of the harbors," Best said.
Posted by: Seafarious || 01/06/2005 2:24:00 PM || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1 
We may have buildings or buses in the channels of the harbors
I'd bet on it. And a whole lot worse.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 01/06/2005 14:57 Comments || Top||

#2  Info on the USNS John McDonnell and USNS Mary Sears.

Also, links on their actual namesakes:
John McDonnell -- Can't find THE John McDonnell--too many matches and none definite
Mary Sears
Posted by: Dar || 01/06/2005 16:18 Comments || Top||

#3  Very interesting links, Dar. Thanks.
Posted by: Seafarious || 01/06/2005 17:04 Comments || Top||

#4  Damm thats a hell of a uplift.
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom || 01/06/2005 17:25 Comments || Top||

#5  "Mark. Twai--aaiinn!"

Good article, do y'all think this will slow down the pirates any?
Posted by: trailing wife || 01/06/2005 17:41 Comments || Top||

#6  Only a little while as they map out their new hidey holes...
Posted by: Seafarious || 01/06/2005 17:47 Comments || Top||

#7  Dangerous for shipping? Hard on a sub too I'd guess.
Posted by: john || 01/06/2005 20:59 Comments || Top||

#8  4000' vertical shift in sea floor? Seems highly unlikely. I don't think rock is capable of storing enough energy to lift that much mass that fast - I'd be surprised at 100' of vertical lift. Perhaps a few hundred feet of lateral shift moved a shoal into a GPS location that used to be deep, but even there 4000' would represent a Grand Canyon type topography on the sea floor. Maybe there's some submerged debris drifting around being seen by sonar as shallow water?
Posted by: Glenmore || 01/06/2005 23:17 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Staples Boycotts Sinclair; Will It Boycott CBS?
Staples, the office supply retailer, said it will stop advertising on Sinclair news broadcasts, after liberal activists complained that Sinclair was "placing partisan interest ahead of the public interest" by broadcasting conservative and pro-President Bush commentaries.
Simple enough. Conservatives can take their business to Staples.
Staples spokesman Owen Davis told the Washington Post that "concerns expressed by our customers" regarding Sinclair were indeed a factor in Staples decision to withdraw its advertising from the network.
Customers? More like liberal pressure groups: Last month, the Media Matters-led coalition launched a campaign to change Sinclair's news programming. Charging the broadcaster with ''continued misuse of public airwaves to air one-sided politically charged programming without a counterpoint," the coalition is encouraging Americans to call or e-mail their complaints to advertisers such as Staples, McDonald's Corp., Target Corp., Kraft Foods Inc., and Sprint. While other companies on the coalition's published list of Sinclair advertisers have sent either a stock response or no response at all to 37,000 e-mailed complaints, said Media Matters president David Brock, Staples responded that as of Jan. 10, it would no longer run ads on ''The Point." When the coalition learned of that response, Brock said it confirmed the information with Staples and then issued a press release. ''We hope that something like this could focus attention on the issue," Brock said. ''What we learned this fall is that Sinclair seemed to be susceptive to public pressure."
Still simple. Conservatives can now take their business to Office Depot.
The National Center for Public Policy Research, a conservative/free market think tank, said it has contacted Staples to ask if Staples will also stop advertising on CBS (or other media) if it receives complaints from customers.
Conservatives have already for the most part taken their business from See BS...
It has not yet received a reply. "If Staples wants to avoid supporting political media, it should start by boycotting CBS," said National Center President Amy Ridenour. "Sinclair may irritate some on the left by being openly pro-American, but unlike CBS, it didn't team up with forgers in an attempt to play dirty politics on the eve of the last presidential race." On Sept. 8, two months before the November 2004 election, CBS News ran a fabricated story apparently intended to damage President Bush politically, then failed to correct its reporting until -- in the National Center's words -- CBS and Dan Rather "had become a focus of national derision."
Posted by: Steve || 01/06/2005 11:14:09 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Staples = WIMPS. I don't have to buy at Staples. Left wing buttheads. Anti free speech nut jobs. The lefties want to be able to say whatever they want to say but want to shut down any disagreement. That is very un-American. By the way Target, I believe, is french owned.
Posted by: John Q. || 01/06/2005 11:33 Comments || Top||

#2  Well...I guess Office Depot is the place for me and my co-workers, eh?
Posted by: mjh || 01/06/2005 11:34 Comments || Top||

#3  Staples sucks anyway.

And I try to avoid Target ever since they kicked out Santa Claus. (salvation army bell-righers).

Looks like Office Depot for me too.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 01/06/2005 11:38 Comments || Top||

#4  Regardless of the recent media fiascos Target has been making (booting Salvation Army bell-ringers this Christmas, for example), they donated heavily Republican. I was trying to find the list of corporate donors and donations on BuyBlue.org that I'd seen some weeks ago, but they seem to have removed it. Target and Wal-Mart were both heavy "red" donors.
Posted by: Dar || 01/06/2005 12:26 Comments || Top||

#5  Oops--my mistake--it was actually a different site, "ChooseTheBlue.com". Here's the page of retailers.

Surprisingly, the donations from Staples were 61% Republican and 39% Democrat? This article really seems contrary to where they're putting their money.
Posted by: Dar || 01/06/2005 12:31 Comments || Top||

#6  Aw, hell - now I'll have to go all the way to Office Depot or Office Max.

Staples is more convenient, but if they're going to pull this crap....

They don't have to spend their money at Sinclair, and I don't have to spend my money at Staples.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 01/06/2005 12:53 Comments || Top||

#7  Sorry - it isn't politics. Staples, like any other large business, is looking out for themselves.

I suspect that if PETA could get significant numbers of people to complain that a brand of office furniture because squirrels were supposedly harmed during its manufacture, Staples would stop selling that brand.
Posted by: Pappy || 01/06/2005 12:57 Comments || Top||

#8  COOL! I was just on my way out the door to buy a $400 HP printer at the local Staples. Seriously, I was!!

Off to Office Depot. Actually Amazon is easier. I spose I should send Staples a note to let them know.

No offense, Staples, it's just business.
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 13:02 Comments || Top||

#9  The liberal believes that the group has a right to control every aspect of everyone's life. He may permit many freedoms, but only those of which liberals approve. Abstract or general freedom holds no appeal for him. The limbic instinct of the inveterate liberal is to harry, regulate, and stifle the individual, of whose penchant for independent action he is profoundly distrustful.

Of course he does not think that he is stifling and imposing, but improving and instructing. For the unwilling he has no patience. The liberal is a creature of the homiletic herd, like a gnu wielding tracts, and believes in the "the masses," in their infinite plasticity and potential for uplift and betterment, guided by him. Particularly he wants to uplift those who do not want to be uplifted, as their independence might be infectious. He sees himself in the capacity of the patient mother of a society of wayward two-year-olds who must be diapered, formed, and taught.

Thus his love of government in all its meddlesome intrusiveness, pedestrian witlessness, and unrestrained drive for dominion. He-or rather more often, she-knows that without coercion, some people will not do as they ought: that they will besot themselves, behave wrongheadedly, teach their children heaven knows what, and march off in all different directions. They must be restrained. And since the restrained usually find ways of evading the constricting tentacles, ever more and more-detailed laws must be enacted to thwart each new escape. Thus the government will eventually come to dictate the altitude, material, color, shape, texture, and compressive strength of toilet seats.

Liberalism is a feminine creed, embodying the kindness, short horizons, modest familiarity with reason, and placidity of the sex. It wants to buy people nice things without reflecting on how to pay for them. It believes in goodness but doesn't often get much further, being benevolent while falling short of beneficence. As good mothers will, it tries to protect everyone from everything.

This is why the Democratic Party unrelentingly promotes security. Children must wear helmets while riding bicycles, swimming pools must not have deep ends, canoeists must wear life preservers, we must outlaw guns, and smoking, and drinking while driving, and we should all wear sunscreen so as to avoid melanoma. We must worry about safety until there is nothing left in life but its preservation.

With the seldom recognized totalitarianism of the female, liberals seek to impose happiness, whether desired or not, by therapy and mood-altering drugs, whether desired or not. People must be happy, must be safe, must be forcibly socialized to a life of orderly boring routine whether they want it or not. The herd will provide for all; the price is that all must yield to the herd. Thus the liberal aversion to any form of self-defense, whether conducted with a gun or a baseball bat. Self-defense is distressingly individual.
Courtesy of Fred Reed, Fred on Everything

Posted by: Deacon Blues || 01/06/2005 13:05 Comments || Top||

#10  2b - be sure to FAX a copy of the receipt from a 'non-staples' store to the Staples HQ.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 01/06/2005 13:08 Comments || Top||

#11  Ha, ha! I just purchased a new HP 7310 from Amazon which I had planned to pick up from Staples today. *snicker* Seldom do I get such sweet revenge so fast.

It cost exactly the same price, but with free shipping, it's more convenient. That's the worst part for Staples, their sales staff actually sold me the machine, but I didn't have room to take it home, so I was going back to get it today.

I'll be sending them the receipt and maybe a copy of .com's sign language photo from yesterday's rantburg :-)

I think I recall hearing on the radio that Staples was recently bought out ...or merged with another Co. I wonder if that's behind this. Might have been the Office Despot...need to go have some more tumeric to remember.
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 13:21 Comments || Top||

#12  That was a heck of a piece of ASL yesterday. I've used it six times already.
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 15:38 Comments || Top||

#13  Boy, that didn't take long:

Statement about Staples media buying and Sinclair Broadcasting

In response to recent reports about Staples media buying and Sinclair Broadcasting, Staples has the following statement:

Our media buying process with Sinclair Broadcasting stations has recently been misrepresented by an organization with no affiliation to Staples. Staples regularly drops and adds specific programs from our media buying schedule, as we evaluate and adjust how to best reach our customers.

Staples does not support any political party. We advertise with a variety of media outlets, but do not necessarily share the same views of these organizations or what they report. As we have done for a number of years, Staples will continue to advertise on Sinclair Broadcasting stations.

Contact: Paul Capelli, 508-253-8530
paul.capelli@staples.com

Posted by: Steve || 01/06/2005 16:34 Comments || Top||

#14  Dang The AOS is like wired this week.
Sounds like they discovered JavaScript or somesuch thing.
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 16:59 Comments || Top||

#15  2b, it is wonderful to think [more] clearly, but for some reason all my clothes now have yellow spots ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 01/06/2005 17:27 Comments || Top||

#16  So David Brock is once again a proven liar first, journalist second
Posted by: Frank G || 01/06/2005 18:42 Comments || Top||


Use only as directed
The sign on the toilet brush says it best: "Do not use for personal hygiene." That admonition was the winner of an anti-lawsuit group's contest for the wackiest consumer warning label of the year. The sponsor, Michigan Lawsuit Abuse Watch, says the goal is "to reveal how lawsuits, and concern about lawsuits, have created a need for common sense warnings on products." The $500 first prize went to Ed Gyetvai, of Oldcastle, Ontario, who submitted the toilet-brush label. A $250 second prize went to Matt Johnson, of Naperville, Ill., for a label on a children's scooter that said, "This product moves when used." A $100 third prize went to Ann Marie Taylor, of Camden, S.C., who submitted a warning from a digital thermometer that said, "Once used rectally, the thermometer should not be used orally..."
Posted by: Anonymoose || 01/06/2005 9:32:06 AM || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  My personal favorite is the warning label on my hairdryer which reads in part:

"Do not operate while sleeping."
Posted by: amyw || 01/06/2005 11:35 Comments || Top||

#2  Slippery when wet.
Posted by: True German Ally || 01/06/2005 11:37 Comments || Top||

#3  Warnings are corporate nominations for Darwin awards. Most of those warnings are there because of a lawsuit some company lost.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 01/06/2005 11:38 Comments || Top||

#4  Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball!
Posted by: CrazyFool || 01/06/2005 11:42 Comments || Top||

#5  All I kept thinking about was that Simpson's episode where Bart gets really fat....then has an interview with a local reporter when he says "I wash myself with a sponge on a stick...."
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 01/06/2005 12:04 Comments || Top||

#6  I have a pressure washer with a warning not to drink from it.
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 13:33 Comments || Top||

#7  shipman...lol!
Posted by: 2b || 01/06/2005 13:35 Comments || Top||

#8  "...count thou not to four..."
Posted by: mojo || 01/06/2005 16:26 Comments || Top||

#9  I think we need this warning for Rantburg:

This product is meant for educational purposes only. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead is purely coincidental. Void where prohibited. Some assembly required. List each check separately by bank number. Batteries not included. Contents may settle during shipment. Use only as directed. No other warranty expressed or implied. Do not use while operating a motor vehicle or heavy equipment. Postage will be paid by addressee. Subject to CAB approval. This is not an offer to sell securities. Apply only to affected area. May be too intense for some viewers. Do not stamp. Use other side for additional listings. For recreational use only. Do not disturb. All models over 18 years of age. If condition persists, consult your physician. No user-serviceable parts inside. Freshest if eaten before date on carton. Subject to change without notice. Times approximate. Simulated picture. No postage necessary if mailed in the United States. Breaking seal constitutes acceptance of agreement. For off-road use only. As seen on TV. One size fits all. Many suitcases look alike. Contains a substantial amount of non-tobacco ingredients. Colors may, in time, fade. We have sent the forms which seem right for you. Slippery when wet. For office use only. Not affiliated with the American Red Cross. Drop in any mailbox. Edited for television. Keep cool. Process promptly. Post office will not deliver without postage. List was current at time of printing. Return to sender, no forwarding order on file, unable to forward. Not responsible for direct, indirect, incidental or consequential damages resulting from any defect, error or failure to perform. At participating locations only. Not the Beatles. Penalty for private use. See label for sequence. Substantial penalty for early withdrawal. Do not write below this line. Falling rock. Lost ticket pays maximum rate. Your canceled check is your receipt. Add toner. Place stamp here. Avoid contact with skin. Sanitized for your protection. Be sure each item is properly endorsed. Sign here without admitting guilt. Slightly higher west of the Mississippi. Employees and their families are not eligible. Beware of dog. Contestants have been briefed on some questions before the show. Limited time offer, call now to ensure prompt delivery. You must be present to win. No passes accepted for this engagement. No purchase necessary. Processed at location stamped in code at top of carton. Shading within a garment may occur. Use only in a well-ventilated area. Keep away from fire or flames. Replace with same type. Approved for veterans. Booths for two or more. Check here if tax deductible. Some equipment shown is optional. Price does not include taxes. No Canadian coins. Not recommended for children. Prerecorded for this time zone. Reproduction strictly prohibited. No solicitors. No alcohol, dogs or horses. No anchovies unless otherwise specified. Restaurant package, not for resale. List at least two alternate dates. First pull up, then pull down. Call toll free before digging. Driver does not carry cash. Some of the trademarks mentioned in this product appear for identification purposes only. Record additional transactions on back of previous stub. Unix is a registered trademark of AT&T. Do not fold, spindle or mutilate. No transfers issued until the bus comes to a complete stop. Package sold by weight, not volume. Your mileage may vary. This article does not reflect the thoughts or opinions of either myself, my company, my friends, or my cat. Don't quote me on that. Don't quote me on anything. All rights reserved. You may distribute this article freely but you may not make a profit from it. Terms are subject to change without notice. Illustrations are slightly enlarged to show detail. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is unintentional and purely coincidental. Do not remove this disclaimer under penalty of law. Hand wash only, tumble dry on low heat. No substitutions allowed. For a limited time only. This article is void where prohibited, taxed, or otherwise restricted. Caveat emptor. Article is provided "as is" without any warranties. Reader assumes full responsibility. An equal opportunity article. No shoes, no shirt, no articles. Quantities are limited. While supplies last. If any defects are discovered, do not attempt to read them yourself, but return to an authorized service center. Read at your own risk. Parental advisory - explicit lyrics. Text may contain explicit materials some readers may find objectionable, parental guidance is advised. Keep away from sunlight. Keep away from pets and small children. Limit one-per-family please. No money down. No purchase necessary. You need not be present to win. Some assembly required. Batteries not included. Instructions are included. Action figures sold separately. No preservatives added. Slippery when wet. Safety goggles may be required during use. 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Happy Fun Ball contains a liquid core, which if exposed due to rupture should not be touched, inhaled, or looked at. Do not use Happy Fun Ball on concrete. Discontinue use of Happy Fun Ball if any of the following occurs: Itching, Vertigo, Dizziness, Tingling in extremities, Loss of balance or coordination, Slurred speech, Temporary blindness, Profuse Sweating, or Heart palpitations. If Happy Fun Ball begins to smoke, get away immediately. Seek shelter and cover head. Happy Fun Ball may stick to certain types of skin. When not in use, Happy Fun Ball should be returned to its special container and kept under refrigeration. Failure to do so relieves the makers of Happy Fun Ball, Wacky Products Incorporated, and it's parent company, Global Chemical Unlimited, of any and all liability. Ingredients of Happy Fun Ball include an unknown glowing substance that fell to Earth, presumably from outer space. Happy Fun Ball was shipped to our troops in Saudi Arabia and was also dropped by our warplanes on Iraq. Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball. May cause any of the aforementioned effects and/or death. Articles are ribbed for your pleasure. Possible penalties for early withdrawal. Offer valid only at participating sites. Slightly higher west of the Rockies. Allow four to six weeks for delivery. Must be 18 to read. Disclaimer does not cover misuse, accident, lightning, flood, tornado, tsunami, volcanic eruption, earthquake, hurricanes and other Acts of God, neglect, damage from improper reading, incorrect line voltage, improper or unauthorized reading, broken antenna or marred cabinet, missing or altered serial numbers, electromagnetic radiation from nuclear blasts, sonic boom vibrations, customer adjustments that are not covered in this list, and incidents owing to an airplane crash, ship sinking or taking on water, motor vehicle crashing, dropping the item, falling rocks, leaky roof, broken glass, mud slides, forest fire, or projectile (which can include, but not be limited to, arrows, bullets, shot, BBs, shrapnel, lasers, napalm, torpedoes, or emissions of X-rays, Alpha, Beta and Gamma rays, knives, stones, etc.).

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It is understood that you have read and agreed with the terms stated in this disclaimer and can now go back to the world of today.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 01/06/2005 16:38 Comments || Top||

#10  ROFLMAO CF! Classik! Copyied it all!
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 17:00 Comments || Top||

#11  I gotta get one of those Happy Fun Balls. Is the warranty transferable?
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 17:03 Comments || Top||

#12  Only if you return it in the original packaging, and if you left the mattress tag on.
Posted by: Seafarious || 01/06/2005 17:08 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Islands in the Universe
The Andaman and Nicobar Islands of the Indian Ocean are among the most isolated places on Earth, and their inhabitants include several aboriginal tribes that have varying degrees of interaction with the outside world. In the aftermath of the tsunami, which swept across and even reshaped the islands, there was pressing concern about the fate of these tribes.

It was an odd bit of good news, therefore, when an Indian coast guard helicopter that was delivering aid in the islands recently came under attack. The attackers were of the Sentinelese tribe, the most isolated of the aboriginal groups, who used bows and arrows to ward off the helicopter. The reason this is good news is that it showed that the Sentinelese, who number only in the dozens, had survived. Moreover, they evidently were well enough to maintain their usual practice of rejecting approaches by outsiders.

In general, the primitive tribes of the islands seem to have weathered the tsunami better than expected. There are reports that they moved to higher ground before the wave hit. This has even led to some speculation that the tribes possess a paranormal "remote viewing" capability, such that they could see the wave approaching beyond human eyesight. A more prosaic, but still intriguing, explanation is that they followed the movements of birds and wildlife that fled in response to tremors or other environmental cues.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: tipper || 01/06/2005 8:50:14 AM || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Leave it to the tribe to give a lesson to the world: self-reliance over victimhood. The Dummycrats wouldn't like that, no.
Posted by: Captain America || 01/06/2005 10:41 Comments || Top||

#2 
the Sentinelese tribe, the most isolated of the aboriginal groups, who used bows and arrows
Am I the only one who thought of "The Sentinel" (semi-scifi syndicated TV show a few years back) when reading this?

When I get some time, I'm going to google the tribe; I'd love to know more about them.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 01/06/2005 13:28 Comments || Top||

#3  When I get some time, I'm going to google the tribe; I'd love to know more about them

several have blogs - interesting stuff ;-)
Posted by: Frank G || 01/06/2005 13:43 Comments || Top||

#4  Links Frank, Links! I'll be back at 9:00.

Mike
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 01/06/2005 13:45 Comments || Top||

#5  LOL
Posted by: Frank G || 01/06/2005 13:50 Comments || Top||

#6  Here's one: http://www.andamanindia.com/people.htm

From the site: "The Sentinelese make and use outrigger parallel canoes driven with long poles. They also possess bows and arrows." No shit, Sherlock. :-D

Also a picture at the site; seems these natives are African pygmies (or possibly Aussie Aboriginals). Assuming they came by sea, that's one hell of a journey from either place.

Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 01/06/2005 13:54 Comments || Top||

#7  Check out "The Sign of Four" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Barbara.
Posted by: mojo || 01/06/2005 14:00 Comments || Top||

#8  This only goes to show that Primitive != Dumb.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 01/06/2005 14:14 Comments || Top||

#9  Happy Birthday Sherlock!
Posted by: Shipman || 01/06/2005 15:23 Comments || Top||


Africa: Subsaharan
Nelson Mandela's son dies
Former president Nelson Mandela's only surviving son, Makgatho Mandela (54), has died, radio news reports said on Thursday. Makgatho had been in a critical condition in the Linksfield hospital in Johannesburg since late November, and Mandela had been spending time at his son's bedside. Last month, spokesperson Maretha Slabbert could not say what illness Makgatho was suffering from, and referred all queries to the former president's daughter, Makaziwe Mandela. Makaziwe then said it was "a private family matter".
Yep. Another AIDS case...
Diners Club South Africa, where Makgatho had held the position of company secretary, in mid-December said his hospitalisation was unexpected. "This comes as a major surprise to us. He made a diligent contribution to Diners Club," said managing director Terry Timson.
The same kind of contribution Kojo made to Cotecna, I'd guess...
Makgatho had tendered his resignation as company secretary in order to continue with other responsibilities within the Standard Bank group, Timson said. He had been part of Standard Bank's legal team, and had worked as a consultant for the group. Makgatho was Mandela's eldest child and only surviving son from his first marriage to Evelyn Ntoko Mase, a former nurse, in the 1940s. Last year, Makgatho's wife, Zondi, died -- reportedly of pneumonia. He leaves behind three sons, Ndaba (21), Mbuso (13) and Andile (11).
Gave her AIDS, too, huh?
The 86-year-old Mandela's only other son, Thembekile, died in a car accident while his father was in prison. The twice-divorced former president also has three daughters.

The Democratic Alliance has extended its condolences to Mandela and his family. "We have learned with great sadness of the death this morning of Makgatho Mandela, only surviving son of former president Nelson Mandela," DA leader Tony Leon said in a statement issued on Thursday.

The South African Communist Party also sent its condolences and sympathy to Mandela and his family. "His passing is a pain we also feel. We share the family's grief and sorrow. We extend our hand of support during this hard time," the SACP said in a statement.
Posted by: tipper || 01/06/2005 7:48:27 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  At least he didn't die with a bunch of flaming tires around his neck...
Posted by: tu3031 || 01/06/2005 10:05 Comments || Top||

#2  You nailed it, Fred: South Africa's Nelson Mandela, one of Africa's most committed campaigners in the battle against AIDS, announced that his only surviving son had succumbed to the disease on Thursday. Makgatho Mandela, 54, died in a Johannesburg clinic where he had been receiving treatment for more than a month. His wife Zondi died in 2003 from pneumonia. "I announce that my son has died of AIDS," the 86-year-old Nobel Peace laureate told a news conference, urging a redoubled fight against the disease. "Let us give publicity to HIV/AIDS and not hide it, because the only way to make it appear like a normal illness like TB, like cancer, is always to come out and to say somebody has died because of HIV/AIDS. And people will stop regarding it as something extraordinary," said a frail-looking Mandela, surrounded by his grandchildren and other family members.
Posted by: Steve || 01/06/2005 11:25 Comments || Top||

#3  Well, at least I gotta give Nelson Mandela credit if he's telling why his son died. I can't imagine Zimbabwe Bob doing the same.
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 01/06/2005 12:44 Comments || Top||

#4  There are things about Mandela I don't like, but it's incredibly hard to bury your children. He has my deep sympathy on that.
Posted by: rkb || 01/06/2005 14:09 Comments || Top||

#5  I'd prefer that Winnie went first
Posted by: Frank G || 01/06/2005 14:16 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Atheist Joins Others to Sue Over Pledge
An atheist who sued because he did not want his young daughter exposed to the words "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance has filed another lawsuit — this time with other parents. Michael Newdow won his case more than two years ago before a federal appeals court, which said it was an unconstitutional blending of church and state for public school students to pledge to God. In June, however, the Supreme Court dismissed the case, saying Newdow could not lawfully sue because he did not have custody of his elementary school-aged daughter and because the girl's mother objected to the lawsuit.

In the latest challenge filed Monday in Sacramento federal court, eight co-plaintiffs have joined the suit, and all are custodial parents or the children themselves, Newdow said. The plaintiffs' names have been withheld from the lawsuit. "It's because of the potential adverse impacts of having your name on a case like this. That's why they are not named," Newdow said Wednesday. He had promised to refile when the Supreme Court dismissed his case this summer. "I want this decided on its merits," said Newdow, a doctor and a lawyer, who again is the attorney in the latest pledge case.
Posted by: tipper || 01/06/2005 12:41:27 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hey, everybody! Look at ME!!! Again!!!
Posted by: Michael Newdow || 01/06/2005 0:47 Comments || Top||

#2  Hmm secret Plaintiffs? Will they hold a secret trial too? Who is paying for this massive waste of time?
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom || 01/06/2005 1:18 Comments || Top||

#3  You're an embarrassment to athiests, all across America, Mikey, who recognize the only "danger" here is your pathetic need to be important. Your choice, Mikey, image1, image2, or image3.
Posted by: .com || 01/06/2005 1:27 Comments || Top||

#4  with all of the problems and issues in the world right now and these imbeciles focus on this.
Posted by: anymouse || 01/06/2005 2:29 Comments || Top||

#5  Who is paying for this massive waste of time?

IIRC Newdow's an attorney. He'll just keep filing until he wins and isn't overturned on appeal.
Posted by: AzCat || 01/06/2005 5:04 Comments || Top||

#6  Let's get these term straight. These folks are not atheists. They are antitheists.
Posted by: badanov || 01/06/2005 5:39 Comments || Top||

#7  Ah - excellent point and clarification, bad -- thx, melike!
Posted by: .com || 01/06/2005 6:04 Comments || Top||

#8  These folks are not atheists. They are antitheists.

I'm sure they can be both.
Posted by: Aris Katsaris || 01/06/2005 17:11 Comments || Top||


Africa: North
Winds of change blow in Egypt
He's 78 years old. I'll betcha he uses Grecian Formula...
Nine months before a referendum to choose Egypt's president, the state newspaper Al Ahram has announced the result on its front page — Hosni Mubarak will be re-elected for another six years. "President Mubarak will take the oath of office at this historic session (of parliament), signalling the start of a new presidential term," the paper said.
Terry McAuliffe, eat your heart out.
The story prejudged the roles that the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP), parliament and the Egyptian people are supposed to play in deciding whether Mubarak, in power since 1981, should stay in office till 2011. Not so fast, say many Egyptians quietly and under their breaths, who more than at any time since Mubarak came to power are challenging the fundamentals of a system which gives them only a bit part in the drama. Prominent people have stepped forward to make a symbolic challenge to Mubarak and an unusual demonstration in central Cairo last month said no to any fifth term for the 76-year-old president or any transfer of power to his son Gamal. "The mood of the country is for change — a new atmosphere, new institutions, new leadership," said Mohamed El-Sayed Said, political analyst at Cairo's Al Ahram Centre.

In frank comments published in the newspaper Al Masry Al Youm at the New Year, politicians and activists took off their gloves and went straight for the jugular of a political elite which sometimes gives the impression their power is a privilege rather than a burden. "Egyptian public opinion and the political forces have had their fill and are ready for disobedience and to come out on the streets, as in Ukraine," said sociologist Saadeddin Ibrahim, one of three symbolic candidates for the presidency. But analysts say the dissidents have no chance of preventing the ruling party nominating Mubarak or stopping him from winning a one-candidate referendum in September.
Be nice to see them try, wouldn't it? Our aid money might actually become useful.
Posted by: Steve White || 01/06/2005 12:06:15 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  How about a nice, protracted civil war?
Posted by: gromgorru || 01/06/2005 4:46 Comments || Top||

#2  "... and to come out on the streets, as in UKRAINE,..."

I wonder what the side effects of the Orange Revolution will be?
Posted by: JackassFestival || 01/06/2005 8:25 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
CNN Telethon to aid tsunami coverage
ScrappleFace
(2005-01-05) -- Cable News Network (CNN) president Jonathan Klein today announced that his 24-hour news channel would conduct a telethon early next week to raise money for desperately needed news coverage of the aftermath of the tsunami in South Asia.

Mr. Klein said he will personally step before the camera to plead with CNN viewers to "flood the phone banks" with calls pledging money to help pay for the cost of charter airplanes, satellite linkups and industrial-strength hairspray incurred by CNN while reporting from the disaster area.

"The need is great, so we're asking our viewers to open their hearts and wallets to pay for this round-the-clock coverage," said Mr. Klein. "Like any other altruistic agency, our need for funding continues year round but it takes a colossal crisis like this to put a human face on it -- or at least the face of Anderson Cooper.

Despite the urgency of the crisis, President George Bush has not yet made a public statement about the plight of CNN. However, a spokesman said the White House paid its cable bill this month and will assess the need for further contributions when the next bill arrives.
Posted by: Korora || 01/06/2005 12:04:14 AM || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Maybe them and the UN can double up on the catering service? Just doing my part...
Posted by: tu3031 || 01/06/2005 0:37 Comments || Top||

#2  Ott Rulez!
Posted by: .com || 01/06/2005 0:41 Comments || Top||

#3  CNN and UN?

Let's see...CUNNN-T?
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 01/06/2005 22:57 Comments || Top||

#4  I'd rather you don't denigrate my recreational areas in such a manner. Thnks
Posted by: Frank G || 01/06/2005 23:01 Comments || Top||



Who's in the News
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On Sale now!


A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.

Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.

Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has dominated Mexico for six years.
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Meet the Mods
In no particular order...
Steve White
Seafarious
tu3031
badanov
sherry
ryuge
GolfBravoUSMC
Bright Pebbles
trailing wife
Gloria
Fred
Besoeker
Glenmore
Frank G
3dc
Skidmark

Two weeks of WOT
Thu 2005-01-06
  Kerry Trashes Bush in Baghdad
Wed 2005-01-05
  Algeria celebrates the end of the GIA
Tue 2005-01-04
  Zarqawi in jug?
Mon 2005-01-03
  19 killed in Iraqi car bombing
Sun 2005-01-02
  Another most wanted found among Riyadh boomer scraps
Sat 2005-01-01
  Algerian deported from San Diego
Fri 2004-12-31
  NKors threaten to cut off contact with Japan
Thu 2004-12-30
  Ugandan officials meet rebel commanders near border with Sudan
Wed 2004-12-29
  43 Iraqis killed in renewed violence
Tue 2004-12-28
  Syria calls on US to produce evidence of involvement in Iraq
Mon 2004-12-27
  Car bomb kills 9, al-Hakim escapes injury
Sun 2004-12-26
  8.5 earthquake rocks Aceh, tsunamis swamp Sri Lanka
Sat 2004-12-25
  Herald Angels Sing
Fri 2004-12-24
  Heavy fighting in Fallujah
Thu 2004-12-23
  Palestinians head to polls in landmark local elections


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