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Saturday, December 5, 2009
Really? Iran Demands That Nurses in Bolivia Wear Hijabs
At Gateway Pundit.
Dr. Zero - Government can’t fix this
This guy certainly has a way with words. Anyone know who he is?
"A corporate executive who squandered a year of his investors’ income on a failed attempt to fix unemployment would not be rewarded with a new contract, six times as large, to manage health care… especially when a review of his firm showed a century of nothing but costly failures and fraudulent “business plans."
If Barack Obama truly wanted to help the economy, and reduce unemployment, he would stop giving endless speeches that only reinforce his image as a man who has no idea what he is doing, but is relentlessly determined to do it."
Walk the dog or face time behind bars
via RightWingNews: "There's more to soft totalitarianism than forbidding things. That which is not forbidden must be made mandatory. Take walking your dog, for example. Bureaucrats can't find a reason to forbid it. Therefore, in Australia they are pushing a law to make it illegal not to walk your dog."
Friday, December 4, 2009
Wow. Obama’s “Safe Schools Czar” Is Promoting Porn in the Classroom.
Definitely NSFW. Maybe even not safe for home.
Excellent Canadian news report on climategate
via Kathy Shaidle, who tweets, "You Americans have LOTS of great stuff, but our conservative writers are better."
She also has a very useful (and constantly growing) list of Christmas presents for conservatives.
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Terrorist dry run?
"If this wasn't a dry run, I don't know what one is. They wanted to see how TSA would handle it, how the crew would handle it, and how the passengers would handle it. I'm telling this to you because I want you to know. The threat is real. I saw it with my own eyes."
Climategate is undermining the objectivity of science.
"Hard science, alongside medicine, was one of the few things left accorded automatic stature and respect by most untrained lay persons. But the average person reading accounts of the East Anglia emails will conclude that hard science has become just another faction, as politicized and "messy" as, say, gender studies."
Kristof busted
"In other words, at the time Kristof’s article was published this past Sunday, Brodniak was already being treated and cared for by some of the best neurologists in the country! . . . Kristof’s readers have been raising money to pay for the Brodniaks to get him treated. But Brodniak is covered. He doesn’t have to pay a dime.”
Derb - Trust Science
"Trust science, but don’t trust scientists."
Climategate is the tip of the iceberg
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Dr. Zero - The Rhetoric of Failure
"Obama’s Afghanistan speech last night would have been adequate for a department store manager, informing the staff that extra help would be hired for the big Going Out of Business sale next year. It wasn’t very inspiring as a war speech. Inspiration is very important in warfare. As a modern liberal with an academic background, Obama sees military operations as unpleasant administrative chores, to be resolved rather than won… but Afghanistan is more than a distraction from the fun industry-nationalizing, trillion-dollar aspects of the President’s job, and resolution is never as inspiring as victory."
Shhh… Congress is raising the debt limit
"Congress doesn’t want you to know it, but they are about to raise the debt limit because they’ve spent the full $12.1 trillion allowed on their taxpayer-funded credit card."
Villagers sue male monkey for harassing female monkey
The case was filed at a police station near the village.
A Government Pension That's Lasted 271 Years
The Dubai debt problem and Shariah-compliant finance
"What makes this story (the financial meltdown of Dubai World) more than simply one of a massive real-estate-investment company gone bad is the double-edged sword so prevalent in the chase for oil-based Middle East wealth: sovereign wealth funds and Shariah-compliant finance."
Today only eBay has 50% off insertion fees
My daughter, who sells a LOT on eBay, saves up listings for these occasional days.
via DealNews.
U.K. Cancer Death Rate Is 38% Higher Than In U.S.
"The Guardian, the UK’s left wing daily, estimated that “up to 10,000 people” are dying each year of cancer “because their condition is diagnosed too late, according to research by the government’s director of cancer services.” While many people die because of late detection due to their own negligence, there is no reason to believe this self-neglect is more common in the UK than in the US."
The Corner: Will Turkey Spoil?
How was Turkey lost and why did Washington do nothing to stop it are questions that historians will ponder... Alas, Obama has, like Bush before him, turned a blind eye toward Erdogan's abuses, wishing to believe that Turkey remains a Western democracy even as its prime minister re-orients his country toward Syria, Iran, and Sudan.
The Lasik reform for health care
Interesting property rights case coming before SCOTUS
"Typically done in the name of deterring erosion, the government carts in truckloads of sand, making the beach bigger. But rather than extending the property of the owner, the state declares itself owner of the sandy addition, effectively separating waterfront home owners from the water itself."
Climate Scandal Has Diverted Attention From the Climate Scandal
Will monkeys really type Shakespeare if given enough time?
...The theory is flawed. After one month - admittedly not an "infinite" amount of time - the monkeys had partially destroyed the machine, used it as a lavatory, and mostly typed the letter "s".
via GeekPress.
Climategate: it's all unravelling now
"So many new developments: which story do we pick? Maybe best to summarise, instead. After all, it’s not like you’re going to find much of this reported in the MSM."
Global Warming Revolt
Brooklyn ACORN and NY Schools Employee Accused of Fraud
Investigators on Tuesday alleged that a Brooklyn-based bookkeeper and community organizer for the beleaguered antipoverty group Acorn improperly received $500,000 in merchandise for a corporate rewards program with Verizon, the telephone company, through a complex fraud scheme that went on for more than four years.
via JammieWearingFool.
Iranian arms dealer, extradited in '07, secretly jailed in Phila.
WASHINGTON - Federal authorities are expected today to reveal a major international undercover sting in which Philadelphia-based federal agents arrested an Iranian arms dealer in Eastern Europe and secretly extradited him to the United States.
The Iranian has been quietly jailed in a Philadelphia-area prison for nearly two years - the case sealed from public view - as U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have scoured his laptop to pursue hundreds of leads about Iran's covert effort to acquire American military gear, law-enforcement sources said.
Jonah Goldberg: Washington, Home of Intellectual Hypocrisy
"The crusade against moral hypocrisy necessarily hits conservatives harder, not because conservatives are more immoral, but because they uphold morality more publicly, making them richer targets. The Left aims much of its moralizing at moralizing itself — “thou shalt not judge.” Meanwhile, the Right focuses on the oldies but goodies — adultery, drug use, etc. I think we’re right to uphold a standard even if we sometimes fail to live up to it.
What I don’t think we hear enough about is intellectual hypocrisy. What’s that? Well, if moral hypocrisy is saying what values people should live by while failing to follow them yourself, intellectual hypocrisy is believing you are smart enough to run other peoples’ lives when you can barely run your own."
via The Corner.
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Perfume designed from Michael Jackson's DNA
How to solve a parking problem
Russia lags US in training military sea mammals
Makes me feel safer.
Now, vodka that comes in a pill
Gerbils with borders
"A new study from the University of Haifa finds that animals on either side of the Israel-Jordanian border exhibit different characteristics and behaviors."
via Kottke.
Japanese animation of Tiger Woods' accident
Using Math to Engineer Weight Loss
via Wired.
Sarah Palin Stars as Heroine in New Children's Book
"In the book written by Katharine DeBrecht, “Governor Sarah” (a character based on Palin) attempts to help two young boys hold onto their dream of a swing-set business which is struggling as a result of high taxes, heavy regulations and 246 czars.
“I am trying to let all Americans know that these radicals are killing the American Dream and I want to stop them from hurting people that produce products and provide jobs,” the Palin character consoles the frustrated boys after their business is destroyed by “Marxus Obunduf” who is based on President Obama."
Dr. Zero: Climategate is the Crime of the Century
Global warming is a scam, pure and simple. By any objective measure, it’s the crime of the century, with a dollar value that dwarfs the sins of Bernie Madoff or Enron. People like Al Gore have become millionaires by selling books and “carbon credits” to their marks… many of whom knew perfectly well they were being taken for a ride, but felt political pressure to play along, or saw opportunities created by the exercise of raw government power. The economic damage from legislation passed in response to this hoax will run into trillions of dollars, if Barack Obama’s disastrous cap-and-trade legislation passes the Senate.
via HotAir's Green Room.
The Psychology of Being Scammed
The full report can be found here (PDF format): "Understanding scam victims: Seven principles for systems security".
via Geekpress.
Something in the Water Is Feminizing Male Fish. Are We Next?
via Instapundit.
Monday, November 30, 2009
NPR: Marijuana Sales Boost Northern California County
"These are boom times for the marijuana trade, especially in Northern California's Humboldt County. Humboldt pot is sold throughout the country, including some of the many medical marijuana dispensaries in Los Angeles.
Decades after back-to-the-land hippies first moved to the rural area, it remains a mecca for marijuana."
Scientists Grow Meat in Lab
The advent of so-called “in-vitro” or cultured meat could reduce the billions of tons of greenhouse gases emitted each year by farm animals — if people are willing to eat it."
Royal Society puts 60 seminal scientific papers online
The Royal Society of London for the Improvement of Natural Knowledge (aka The Royal Society) is celebrating is 350th birthday next year. Spun out in part of the fantastically cool Invisible College, the Royal Society's members have included Isaac Newton, Robert Hooke, Charles Darwin, Tim Berners-Lee, Lise Meitner, Stephen Hawking, Marie Curie, Francis Crick, and countless other smart folks. The organization kicks off its big anniversary year with Trailblazing, a new interactive timeline that includes 60 choice articles from the journal Philosophical Transactions.
Holding Holder Accountable: The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights steps up
"For now, the commission is doing what no other government entity is: challenging the Justice Department's lack of transparency and politicization."
UK taxpayer dollars at work
Australians try to stop sheep burping
John Goopy, the study leader, measured the sheep's emissions by herding them into a specially designed booth shortly after they eat and then calculating the amount of gas belched.
His team hopes to find whether there is a genetic link between the sheep that produce the least methane, which could then be exploited to breed low-emissions sheep.
The Atlantic on climategate
"In my previous post on Climategate I blithely said that nothing in the climate science email dump surprised me much. Having waded more deeply over the weekend I take that back.
The closed-mindedness of these supposed men of science, their willingness to go to any lengths to defend a preconceived message, is surprising even to me. The stink of intellectual corruption is overpowering. And, as Christopher Booker argues, this scandal is not at the margins of the politicised IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] process. It is not tangential to the policy prescriptions emanating from what David Henderson called the environmental policy milieu [subscription required]. It goes to the core of that process."