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Friday, November 17, 2006
Friday Orchid Blogging
This is a Phal. (Orange County Bounty 'Midas' x manii 'Irene'). It's just blooming for the first time, and has 4 spikes in the air simultaneously, with a total of 14 or so buds. Four of the buds are open already. The thing has become rather huge in the three years I've had it - it has two sister plants growing up out of it now, thus the 4 flower spikes. Anyway, I don't love the flower and will be hopefully trading this soon for something I do like.
Enjoy. Read the rest of this post...
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Cheney still wants to stay the course
As you recall, Cheney was hunting with his lesbian daughter on election day. He apparently missed what happened. He's still on the "stay the course" message:
U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney insisted on Friday that America must not turn its back on Iraq, even as the Bush administration considers a course change in the war after voters vented anger over it in this month's elections.Stay the course and Rummy's a hero. That's what got us in to so much trouble in the first place. Read the rest of this post...
"Some in our country may believe in good faith that retreating from Iraq would make America safer. Recent experience teaches the opposite lesson," Cheney said in a speech to the Federalist Society, a conservative legal group.
Cheney was speaking publicly for the first time since the November 7 elections in which voter anger over Iraq helped oust President George W. Bush's Republicans from power in Congress.
He praised departing Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld as a reformer and "one of the great public servants of the age," drawing applause from the audience.
Rove may be leaving the White House in weeks
Just in time to NOT make a difference in the elections. George Bush, the gift that keeps on giving. For us.
Read the rest of this post...
Funniest CNN moment, ever
I hate to laugh, because it's a horrible story, but CNN a short while ago reported on a horrific plot to kill all 9 Supreme Court justices, members of the military, and more. Apparently, some incredibly sick woman mailed homemade cookies and chocolates to all 9 justices, and members of the military, and the goodies contained enough rat poison to kill half of Kentucky.
CNN's reporter then dutifully informs us that, fortunately, the killer cookies and candies never got to the justices because of increased security measures adopted after September 11. She then goes on to note that part of the credit for the court's crack security team having foiled this plot also goes to notes included with the cookies and candies saying the following:
Yeah, that might have helped too. Read the rest of this post...
CNN's reporter then dutifully informs us that, fortunately, the killer cookies and candies never got to the justices because of increased security measures adopted after September 11. She then goes on to note that part of the credit for the court's crack security team having foiled this plot also goes to notes included with the cookies and candies saying the following:
Yeah, that might have helped too. Read the rest of this post...
UCLA student columnist defends tasering of student, asks readers to send him Rodney King jokes
Still think this story isn't about the larger problem of our citizens forgetting what the Bill of Rights were and are all about?
Here is the beginning of this guy's story.
And here is how he closes his story.
Read the rest of this post...
Here is the beginning of this guy's story.
And here is how he closes his story.
Read the rest of this post...
Still proud to be a Bruin?
UCLA grad Ezra Klein weighs in about the university policy having repeatedly tasered a student, in handcuffs, simply because he didn't have his ID in the library:
I'm not at UCLA anymore. I wish I was. Because buildings should be occupied until there's a response to this. Classes should be disrupted, disobedience constant, the student body lit with fury. This can't happen. And every student, and every person, should be outraged that it did.Read the rest of this post...
GOP Insider predicts Republican bloodbath -- Bush "self-destructing"
Tucked in to the bottom of an article in the New York Daily News about the Hoyer/Murtha election was this little tidbit:
The GOP bloodbath will be great fun to watch. Let the games begin. Read the rest of this post...
For all the focus on the Democrats, a former Bush official who predicts a coming bloodbath between the White House and disgruntled conservative Republicans brushed off the Pelosi-Hoyer tussle as much ado about process.The reporters, Tom DeFrank and Ken Bazinet, always have very, very good inside GOP sources.
"The Democrats are the sideshow," he said. "Bush self-destructing is the big story in town."
The GOP bloodbath will be great fun to watch. Let the games begin. Read the rest of this post...
Would UCLA have tasered Rosa Parks?
After all, Rosa Parks was black, committed a premeditated crime, and loudly and rudely disrupted the commute of a lot of nice white people who simply wanted to get home after a hard day's work. Bitch.
Then there's Ernesto Miranda - another colored guy. Hell, Miranda wasn't even American - he was one of those Mexicans that Lou Dobbs is always talking about. And Miranda was even worse than Parks. Miranda got arrested, and convicted, of kidnapping and rape. Yeah, real nice guy. According to the court, he was a "seriously disturbed individual with pronounced sexual fantasies." Freak.
Or how about Roy Allen Stewart - robber, murderer, sentenced to death. He was an indigent black guy who dropped out of school in the sixth grade. Loser.
The list goes on. Michael Vignera, robber. Charles Townsend, 19-year-old heroin addict and "near mental defective" accused of murder, and found guilty.
So there you have it:
I'm glad the police repeatedly tasered that student at UCLA, while handcuffed and seated and offering no resistance, for simply not having his ID in a university library. That student was an asshole. And in America, civil rights aren't for assholes, or niggers, or spics, or burn-outs. They're only for people like you and me.
(PS In case a few of you haven't figured it out, the names above are all of famous US civil rights cases. Each of those nasty individuals is responsible for you having some of your most important rights as American citizens. Think about that. You have YOUR rights because the courts recognized THEIR rights. That's why cases like this, where the victim is an "asshole," matter. Those assholes are responsible for most of the rights you now take for granted.) Read the rest of this post...
Then there's Ernesto Miranda - another colored guy. Hell, Miranda wasn't even American - he was one of those Mexicans that Lou Dobbs is always talking about. And Miranda was even worse than Parks. Miranda got arrested, and convicted, of kidnapping and rape. Yeah, real nice guy. According to the court, he was a "seriously disturbed individual with pronounced sexual fantasies." Freak.
Or how about Roy Allen Stewart - robber, murderer, sentenced to death. He was an indigent black guy who dropped out of school in the sixth grade. Loser.
The list goes on. Michael Vignera, robber. Charles Townsend, 19-year-old heroin addict and "near mental defective" accused of murder, and found guilty.
So there you have it:
- Uppity black chick.
- Illegal Mexican.
- Poor grade-school drop-out.
- Retarded heroin addict.
I'm glad the police repeatedly tasered that student at UCLA, while handcuffed and seated and offering no resistance, for simply not having his ID in a university library. That student was an asshole. And in America, civil rights aren't for assholes, or niggers, or spics, or burn-outs. They're only for people like you and me.
(PS In case a few of you haven't figured it out, the names above are all of famous US civil rights cases. Each of those nasty individuals is responsible for you having some of your most important rights as American citizens. Think about that. You have YOUR rights because the courts recognized THEIR rights. That's why cases like this, where the victim is an "asshole," matter. Those assholes are responsible for most of the rights you now take for granted.) Read the rest of this post...
Tasered UCLA student retains prominent civil rights lawyer, plans massive law suit
Good for him. It's about time we took back our country. In America we don't taser people for not having IDs in a school library. We don't taser people for civil disobedience - i.e., sitting on the floor when you ask them to leave. We don't taser people for simply being a jerk. Civil rights exist for a reason - they exist to protect you especially when the authorities think you're being a jerk. UCLA just embarrassed itself in front of the entire world. How the administration responds to this incident will affect its reputation for decades to come.
More info here, including a student-shot video of the incident.
There's a protest at UCLA today at noon. I hope someone is going to post video on YouTube.
Interim Chancellor Norman Abrams
Telephone: 310-825-2151
Fax: 310-206-6030
Email: chancellor@conet.ucla.edu
Read the rest of this post...
More info here, including a student-shot video of the incident.
There's a protest at UCLA today at noon. I hope someone is going to post video on YouTube.
PROTEST POLICE BRUTALITY AT KERCKHOFF STEPSAnd feel free to contact the chancellor of UCLA:
No Taser Guns PLEASE!
Friday, November 17, 2006
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Kerckhoff Steps on BruinWalk
308 Westwood Plaza (map)
Los Angeles, CA
Interim Chancellor Norman Abrams
Telephone: 310-825-2151
Fax: 310-206-6030
Email: chancellor@conet.ucla.edu
Read the rest of this post...
GOP keeps same House leaders. They're staying the course with Boehner and Blunt
CNN reports that the House Republicans have voted to keep the same leadership that got them to where they are today. John Boehner(R-OH) was elected Minority Leader. Roy Blunt (R-MO) is the Minority Whip.
Thanks, GOP. Let's hope your new leaders keep up the good work.
Sure, Hastert's gone from leadership but who ever thought he did that much anyway? He was the puppet speaker.
From the Washington Post:
Thanks, GOP. Let's hope your new leaders keep up the good work.
Sure, Hastert's gone from leadership but who ever thought he did that much anyway? He was the puppet speaker.
From the Washington Post:
Some commentators had suggested that a Boehner victory would open the door for Shadegg to edge out Blunt, a longtime member of the House leadership and the current majority whip.The GOP House members are staying the course. Read the rest of this post...
They interpreted heavy Republican losses on Election Day as a call for a new approach, and speculated that House members may choose someone from outside the leadership for the No. 2 position to demonstrate that they understood that message. Instead, the vote could be seen as a continuation of the existing leadership, albeit without Hastert.
"Outside the Beltway, people were expecting us to give ourselves a little more of a wakeup call than this," said Arizona Republican Jeff Flake, a conservative reformer who had backed both Pence and Shadegg. "There simply wasn't the mood to change."
New super-secure computer chip in UK passports cracked, all info available to anyone
US passports will have these chips in them come January. Get ready for your entire life to be available to any kid, or terrorist, with a computer from Best Buy.
Read the rest of this post...
CENTCOM commander: more troops a bad idea
I wrote recently that a moderate increase in Coalition troops in Iraq not only wouldn’t help, but would likely hinder our mission. It seems that Central Command commander General Abizaid agrees. In response to Senator McCain’s continued – and inexplicable – insistence that 20,000 more soldiers (less than 15% more than the current number) will make the difference between success and failure, Gen. Abizaid said,
So do military leaders have different goals than their civilian overseers, or has the President changed the mission without telling anybody? Again, I’m in favor of making a handover the primary goal, but I’d also like to know who made that decision, if it will hold, and how we’re trying to accomplish it. Read the rest of this post...
I met with every divisional commander, General Casey . . . General Dempsey . . . And I said, in your professional opinion, if we were to bring in more American troops now, does it add consiberably to our ability to achieve success in Iraq? And they all said no.This response indicates either a shift in administration goals or a difference between administration and military aims. His answer seems to demonstrate that the primary U.S. goal is to hand over Iraq to Iraqis, rather than the loftier (and less likely) aims of establishing basic security or creating a functional democracy. I personally think that handing over Iraq to Iraqis is likely to further those goals indirectly, but until now, that hasn’t been the stated mission of the U.S.
So do military leaders have different goals than their civilian overseers, or has the President changed the mission without telling anybody? Again, I’m in favor of making a handover the primary goal, but I’d also like to know who made that decision, if it will hold, and how we’re trying to accomplish it. Read the rest of this post...
Schumer/Emanuel developing legislation to end deceptive robo-calls and other campaign scams
More needed election reform. The GOP has to cheat to win. It's despicable and it should be illegal:
When you win, you can write new laws to address and prevent abuses instead of just getting abused again. Read the rest of this post...
With their new power, Democratic leaders want to craft a constitutional way to stop voters from being flooded with robo-calls peddling deceptive information. They are floating the notion that authorizing calls with fraudulent content should be a crime. "These robo-calls, somehow, constitutionally, we are going to have to find some way to stop this," Reid said.TPM Muckraker reports that incoming Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will include legislation dealing with robo-calls and other campaign scams in the first ten bills he sponsors.
Schumer said he and Rep. Rahm Emanuel -- the boss of the House Democratic campaign committee, who is expected to be elected to a leadership spot today -- made a list of what they consider abusive campaign practices. In some cases, the volume of calls that went out to targeted likely Democratic voters was so heavy as to constitute harassment.
In other examples, the calls peddled disinformation -- whether about a candidate or the location of a polling place. Criticizing the robo-call dirty tricks, Schumer was blunt. "It's despicable" and the perps "should go to jail for 10 years."
Schumer said he and Emanuel are looking at legislation applying criminal penalties to certain kinds of campaigning and creation of a separate unit at the Justice Department to prosecute.
When you win, you can write new laws to address and prevent abuses instead of just getting abused again. Read the rest of this post...
Pentagon upgrades homosexuality. No longer a mental disorder, now it's just a defect
Because the Pentagon has nothing better to do these days, the military brain trust has been spending a lot of time thinking about homos. The great minds of the military have decided gays aren't suffering from mental disorders anymore. But, they still think homosexuality is a defective condition:
And, here's an idea: Spend less time obsessing about gays and try to figure out how to prevail in Afghanistan and Iraq. Read the rest of this post...
Pentagon guidelines that classified homosexuality as a mental disorder now put it among a list of conditions or "circumstances" that range from bed-wetting to fear of flying.So, now where does your nation's military rate homosexuality? It's lumped in with these conditions:
The new rules are related to the military's retirement practices. The change does not affect the "don't ask, don't tell" policy that prohibits officials from inquiring about the sex lives of service members and requires discharges of those who openly acknowledge being gay.
The revision came in response to criticism this year when it was discovered that the guidelines listed homosexuality alongside mental retardation and personality disorders.
Among the conditions are stammering or stuttering, dyslexia, sleepwalking, motion sickness, obesity, insect venom allergies and homosexuality.You can't make this stuff up. Note to the military: All the branches are chock full of gays and lesbians. They do the job. You need them. Our country needs them.
And, here's an idea: Spend less time obsessing about gays and try to figure out how to prevail in Afghanistan and Iraq. Read the rest of this post...
Friday Morning Open Thread
So, we're finding out that John McCain is now a "common sense conservative." What the hell does that mean? Some mutant variation of compassionate conservative? It must mean that McCain pretends to the media that he's got a moderate streak while he's really a hard core right winger. Common sense conservative is another GOP lie. We'll be talking a lot about the McCain fraud. A lot.
And? Read the rest of this post...
And? Read the rest of this post...
The Gitmo kangaroo courts
History will not be kind to Bush and his trashing of the American way. Why is Bush so afraid of using our system?
The analysis of transcripts and records by two lawyers for Guantanamo detainees, aided by more than two dozen law students, found that hearings that determined whether a prisoner should remain in custody gave the accused little opportunity to contest allegations against him.Some of the highlights of the report:
“These were not hearings. These were shams,” said Mark Denbeaux, an attorney and Seton Hall University law professor who along with his son, Joshua, is the author of the report. They provided an advance copy of the report to The Associated Press late Thursday and planned to release it Friday on the Internet.
* The government did not produce any witnesses in any hearing.Read the rest of this post...
* The military denied all detainee requests to inspect the classified evidence against them.
* The military refused all requests for defense witnesses who were not detained at Guantanamo.
* In 74 percent of the cases, the government denied requests to call witnesses who were detained at the prison.
* In 91 percent of the hearings, the detainees did not present any evidence.
* In three cases, the panel found that the detainee was “no longer an enemy combatant,” but the military convened new tribunals that later found them to be enemy combatants.
Global warming doesn't exist
I'm convinced that someone is hiding the ice in their backyard and they probably have some fancy-smancy gizmo that is helping these plants grow in the tundra. Don't believe the brainwashing and ignore the science. It's all just a plot by the liberals to make the right look like a bunch of blithering idiots and jackasses.
Read the rest of this post...
It's Segolene in 2007
The votes have been tallied and Segolene Royal has been given the nod to be the Socialist candidate for president in next years election here in France. Her competition will be her media image-loving counterpart on the right, Sarkozy and probably the runner up from the last election, ultra-right Le Pen. Sarko and Segolene both have impressive (though cheesy) PR machines at work.
Segolene has been the darling of the media for a while, with many charging that she offers less substance and more spin/PR than other candidates, as she has been very light on details other than her talk of being the Tony Blair of France (ugh!) as well as her deep respect for Mitterrand. I guess I know what she means about Blair and if you can carve out the war and the police state policies that would be fine though I'm not a fan of the king of cronyism Mitterrand who took corruption, back room deals and egoism to a whole new level in the country of Napoleon.
If nothing else, the two primary candidates represent change. Change of generations, change of issues, change of concerns, change of direction. Talking about change and delivering are two different things and I remain pessimistic that anyone can bring major changes to the French system, but if someone can do it I'm all for it. There is so much pessimism in the system of France so let's hope whoever the winner is next year, they actually deliver on at least a few of their promises for change.
Let the race begin! Read the rest of this post...
Segolene has been the darling of the media for a while, with many charging that she offers less substance and more spin/PR than other candidates, as she has been very light on details other than her talk of being the Tony Blair of France (ugh!) as well as her deep respect for Mitterrand. I guess I know what she means about Blair and if you can carve out the war and the police state policies that would be fine though I'm not a fan of the king of cronyism Mitterrand who took corruption, back room deals and egoism to a whole new level in the country of Napoleon.
If nothing else, the two primary candidates represent change. Change of generations, change of issues, change of concerns, change of direction. Talking about change and delivering are two different things and I remain pessimistic that anyone can bring major changes to the French system, but if someone can do it I'm all for it. There is so much pessimism in the system of France so let's hope whoever the winner is next year, they actually deliver on at least a few of their promises for change.
Let the race begin! Read the rest of this post...
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