Monthly Archive for March, 2008

Long Day + NewsRadio

It’s been a really, really long Monday. So long that it’s lasted until about 3 a.m. on Tuesday. I even almost went to bed, and realized I still had something to do yet. Whew.

When you have this kind of day, you need some humor. Whenever I find I need some humor, I go a YouTube and find a NewsRadio clip.

I think that’s my second favorite clip, after the “Super Karate Monkey Death Car” clip …

Eliot Spitzer and Photos in the News

My brother and I have had an ongoing conversation about how it sometimes appears that news organizations pick the worst possible photo of an individual to use for a story.

The photo of Eliot Spitzer utilized by many news outlets after he announced his resignation is a prime example. I borrowed this one from a Christian Science Monitor article:

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If he sucks in his bottom lip much more he’ll swallow his chin.

I think that’s probably the best example in recent memory, save the Orange County Sheriff’s Department booking photo of Lisa Nowak after her little kerfuffle with her lover-boy’s other girlfriend:

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That, my friends, is a priceless image if there ever was one.

No Wonder the Economy is in the Toilet …

I found this piece of mail in my mailbox a few days ago:

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Besides being addressed to “Four-Ight-Four Sftwr Works” … I was amused at the idea of “keep[ing] [my] business in the black” while charging stuff to a credit card.

Is it any surprise that our nation is in serious economic trouble when a credit card company can send out something like this (presumably with some modicum of straight-facedness)?

IE8 Beta 1 Hits the Streets

Last night I downloaded the IE8 Beta 1 release and started playing with it. I cloned one of my XP Pro virtual machines and installed it on that so that I still had machines for IE6 & IE7.

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For the love of all things good, why haven’t you guys fixed that gawdawfuluglyhorrendous interface?

At least you’re making strides towards being seriously standards compliant.

Sunday Afternoon Photos

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Have I ever mentioned that I like the Market Street Bridge? I have? Oh, sorry …

Step 1: Activate Brain

So, I’ve been thinking about picking up some noise cancelling headphones since I work from time to time in coffee shops and other places that aren’t necessarily too quiet. I decided to look at some reviews of some of the less-expensive models to see if they were at all effective.

I found the following statement in a review of one particular model:

… there was absolutely no ambiant noise reduction at all if the NC was in “off” mode.

Hmmm … you think?

No wonder the bulk of our nation votes Republican or Democrat.

I mean … is the person in question so mind-numblingly stupid that they would make statements like the following?

… my TV won’t show any channel at all, cable or broadcast, if I have the power turned off!!!
My car won’t move with the ignition off!!!
I tried to bake a cake with my oven off to save energy, and even after 48 hours it still wasn’t done!!!
When I close my eyes I can’t see any more!!!

I hope not, but expecting the headphones to cancel noise with the noise cancellation circuitry turned off … well, it boggles the mind.

George Washington (Remember Him?)

Against the insidious wiles of foreign influence (I conjure you to believe me, fellow-citizens) the jealousy of a free people ought to be constantly awake, since history and experience prove that foreign influence is one of the most baneful foes of republican government. But that jealousy to be useful must be impartial; else it becomes the instrument of the very influence to be avoided, instead of a defense against it. Excessive partiality for one foreign nation and excessive dislike of another cause those whom they actuate to see danger only on one side, and serve to veil and even second the arts of influence on the other. Real patriots who may resist the intrigues of the favorite are liable to become suspected and odious, while its tools and dupes usurp the applause and confidence of the people, to surrender their interests.

The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign nations is in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as little political connection as possible. So far as we have already formed engagements, let them be fulfilled with perfect good faith. Here let us stop. Europe has a set of primary interests which to us have none; or a very remote relation. Hence she must be engaged in frequent controversies, the causes of which are essentially foreign to our concerns. Hence, therefore, it must be unwise in us to implicate ourselves by artificial ties in the ordinary vicissitudes of her politics, or the ordinary combinations and collisions of her friendships or enmities.

– from George Washington’s Farewell Address (emphasis mine)

When Ron Paul makes a statement like the bolded bit above, he gets called an isolationist, dangerous, etc. Anybody care to level that accusation against George Washington too?

I’ll be waiting. Don’t be shy.

The “None of the Above” Party

Tonight, while talking to my buddy Will Adair online, I came up a new idea for a political party, and I’m actually halfway serious about this.

If you’ve read my political rants over the past few months, you know that I think that the two-party system in the US is fundamentally broken and only serves to preserve the status quo of government that gradually increases in size, scope, and power … and that I believe that breaking the stranglehold of the Democratic and Republican parties and having a system with 4-5+ political parties would be preferable.

The problem, of course, is launching a party that has a clearly-defined platform that can attract enough people to be a serious challenge to the two parties we have today. The Libertarians, who are arguably the most successful third party in the last fifty years, haven’t even been able to do it. The problem is that a system with, say, five political parties ends up with each of the parties having an average of maybe 15% or so of the population, with the remaining folks being independent or perhaps in smaller minor parties.

Of course, any party that broadens their platform enough to seriously challenge the Democrats and Republicans ends up in the same position that they are in right now … they have a party that doesn’t really stand for anything but vagaries and reassuring platitudes about change, hope, and all that B.S.

So, I present to you my idea .. the “None of the Above” Party.

The NotA party will have one plank in its platform … that voters ought to be able to vote AGAINST all candidates in a particular race by voting for “None of the Above” … thus signaling to the establishment “we don’t like any of the bums you’ve sanctioned as candidates.”

Each candidate for the NotA party will simply say that he stands for a vote against the other candidates. He or she would promise that, upon election, he or she would either step down in such a way as to force a special election to replace him or work to disrupt the political process until such an election were held.

I feel relatively certain that the platform of the NotA party would be attractive enough to a large enough portion of the population that it could gain ballot access.

The NotA party would have no problem running candidates who had publicly affiliated themselves with other parties. In fact, the idea would be that the NotA party would disband when we had a multi-party system, and, upon disbanding, it would encourage anybody associated with it to seek out an existing party or form a new one.

Somebody out there is bound to complain that if in an election … let’s say the general presidential election this year … the NotA candidate gets elected, then it would mean that we essentially have elected a candidate that doesn’t intend to actually serve as president, and that if such a scenario were repeated all over the nation, the government would fail to function. Well … I say let’s go for it! If the government were unable to function normally because the major parties weren’t willing to let third parties in on their little ball game, or nominate people that were acceptable to the general population … then that’s exactly what we need. Besides … the last time the Federal Government shut down because it didn’t have a budget … do you remember missing it? I seem to have gotten along OK without it.