From Pine View Farm

2007 archive

Now That’s Obnoxious! (Geek Alert) 0

On the work computer, I have Norton Anti-Virus.

The reason I have Norton on it is that it’s not my computer; it’s the company’s. (Were it mine, I’d have F-Prot.)

Norton just interrupted me to ask whether I wanted to run Live Update. So I agreed.

At the end, displayed a message to save all my work and restart the computer.

Now, here’s the obnoxious thing: It then proceeded to shut down all the programs itself.

Immediately. I didn’t get time for a mouse-click.

(Yeah, I did get the option to save my work, but really, now.)

Gosh, I’m really glad I don’t use Windows unless I have to.

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Bait and Switch 2

From time to time, I get email forwards.

I don’t get many. When you go to Snopes, research the myth, paste the link into the “compose message” window, and send back a one word reply, “Hoax,” with the link, eventually the forwarders get the message.

One of my friends very judiciously chooses what to forward to me. Those forwards usually bring a smile (though I do not forward them to 10 people within one hour–I am the king of breaking the chain).

I got a forwarded email the other day from one of my old bosses–the best boss, in fact, that I or anyone ever had. I hear from her seldom, so I know it was a forward from the heart, not just some reflex:

We need to show more sympathy for these people. They travel miles
in the heat, they risk their lives crossing a border, they don’t get
paid enough wages, they do jobs that others won’t do or are afraid
to do, they live in crowded conditions among a people who speak a
different language, they rarely see their families, and they face
adversity all day every day.

I’m not talking about illegal Mexicans, I’m talking about our troops.
Doesn’t it seem strange that the Democrats are willing to lavish all
kinds of social benefits on illegal’s, but don’t support our troops
and are now threatening to defund them?

Please pass this on. This is worth the short time it takes to read it.

While the sentiment seems sincere, the reasoning is fallacious.

The message sounds nice, but it is a distraction. It’s a political version of the shell game, designed to get us to look under the wrong shell for the truth.

The decision to go to war, especially to go to a war of choice, rather than a war of self-defense, is ultimately a political decision. The email forward quoted above attempts to distract us from that fact with thoughts of the service of the men and women in the uniform of the United States of America.

The troops did not send themselves to Iraq, however honorably they may serve there.

They were sent to Iraq by a corrupt and conniving regime that cynically and duplicitously marketed a war, much as someone would market toothpaste or Tylenol.

It did not “support the troops” to send them on a fool’s errand, or on an errand for a fool.

It does not “support the troops” to keep them on a fool’s errand, or on an errand for a fool.

The Current Federal Administrator broke the egg that has become the constant carnage of the War in Iraq, a cascade of American and of even more–much more–Iraqi blood. And we, as American citizens, are implicated as his accomplices.

There is no graceful exit.

And the fool’s errand–the errand for a fool–will forever stain our sacred homor.

Meanwhile.

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More Than Anything Else, This Exchange Illustrates How the Current Federal Administration Has No Clue What the United States Is About 0

Via TPM Muckraker:

“I took an oath the president, and I take that oath very seriously,” Sara Taylor said in answer to a question early in the hearing.

And right after a break, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) asked her if she was sure about that. “Did you mean, perhaps, you took an oath to the Constitution?” Leahy asked. It was a telling exchange.

Just in case there’s any question, here’s the oath of office for the United States of America (emphasis added):

Before he enter on the execution of his office, he shall take the following oath or affirmation:–“I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.

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Bearding the Lion 0

Via Andrew Sullivan, an interview with the Current Federal Administrator. Why does not the American press ask these tough questions?

Twist and spin, spin and twist.

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Kim Il Bush 1

Dick Polman on ex-Surgeon General Carmona’s testimony regarding his being hamstrung by Bushie ideologues (emphasis added):

I was particularly struck, however, by one item in his sworn testimony – fresh evidence that the loyal Bushies were trying to compel nonpartisan public servants to subscribe to the kind of leadership cult commonly seen in places like North Korea:

It was the little detail about how he was ordered to invoke Bush’s name three times on every page of every speech.

By the way, the White House countered in the usual fashion yesterday, contending that Carmona failed in his job. Make of that what you will. I also anticipate that the Bush defenders will blithely ignore Carmona’s list of substantive complaints (among other things, he was ordered not to talk about advances in stem-cell science, or about how Bush’s abstinence-only stance on teen sex contradicted the best public health science), and simply take refuge in the “What About Clinton?” defense. And, yes, it’s true that Carmona’s predecessor, David Satcher, was barred in 1998 from releasing a new report about sexuality because its release would have been politically awkward for a president enmeshed at the time in the Monica Lewinsky scandal. And yes, it’s also true that Clinton forced Satcher’s predecessor, Jocelyn Elders, to resign in 1994 after she suggested publicly that masturbation should be discussed in sex ed courses.

But Carmona’s remarks need to be seen in proper context – as further evidence of the Bush regime’s unprecedented attempts to politicize the institutions of government, to bend them in the service of partisan ends.

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Good Grief, Hypocrisy Dept. 0

In the wake of U.S. Sen. David Vitter’s apology after his phone number turned up in an escort service’s call list, a member of the Republican State Central Committee called for him to resign.

Vincent Bruno of Kenner said today that Vitter should resign “for his own good, the good of the party and the good of his family.” If he doesn’t resign, Vitter should “join the Democratic Party where they think that kind of behavior is OK.”

Hmmmm.

I’m thinking back.

Isn’t the motto of the Party of Family Values, “leave no page unturned“?

Ya know, it ain’t the sex. Sexual misconduct is part of the human condition and cuts across all the lines, political, social, religious, ethnic, all the lines we think divide us.

It’s the hypocrisy.

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Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire 0

As he sought to renew the USA Patriot Act two years ago, Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales assured lawmakers that the FBI had not abused its potent new terrorism-fighting powers. “There has not been one verified case of civil liberties abuse,” Gonzales told senators on April 27, 2005.

Six days earlier, the FBI sent Gonzales a copy of a report that said its agents had obtained personal information that they were not entitled to have. It was one of at least half a dozen reports of legal or procedural violations that Gonzales received in the three months before he made his statement to the Senate intelligence committee, according to internal FBI documents released under the Freedom of Information Act.

Every time I think the Current Federal Administration has plumbed the depths of sleaze, they have a new attack of creativity.

Have these people no sense of decency? No concept of right and wrong? No moral anchor? No–oh, never mind.

I shouldn’t ask questions to which I already know the answers.

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What Digby Said 0

This has been another episode of what Digby said, Pine View Farm Edition.

(With apologies to Duncan, who I think has trademarked that title, but he doesn’t read me anyway.)

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Michael Moore Calls Out CNN 1

This is a hoot:

Via Susie. You can go to her place to get the background information.

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Not Everything Should Be for Sale (Updated) 0

Brendan has a good post up about net neutrality.

You can act now.

Here is a copy of the email that I sent to the Chairman of the FCC. and, slightly reworked, to my elected representatives incongruously assembled.

Feel free to plagiarize it to your heart’s desire:

This is to express my opposition to proposals to allow Internet Service Providers to allow favored access for some websites over others.

It is not true or right that everything in this nation should be for sale.

When I pay my not insubstantial fee to my ISP, I should have access to the entire internet on the same level playing field.

It is true that there is such a thing as the public good. Making everything for sale is not in the public good.

Addendum, 7/11/2007:

Here’s my gracious response, received today at 8:12 a. ET:

Dear Consumer,

Thank you for contacting the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). This is an automated message to confirm that we have received your correspondence. We will review your information to determine how we can best serve you.

If you need to send additional information, you may reply back with this email, leaving the case number (example: . . . .) in the subject line, or contact us at our toll free phone number 1-888-Call-FCC (1-888-225-5332) and reference the case number.

The Federal Communications Commission

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Drinking Liberally 0

Tomorrow, Tangier Restaurant, 18th and Lombard, Philadelphia. In the heart of Center City, just behind Jeff.

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Melissa Etheridge, Live Earth 0

Part 1: What’s Happened to Us?

Part 2: If Not Now, When . . .

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Samuel Johnson Was Wrong 0

Patriotism is not the last refuge of a scoundrel.

Executive privilege is.

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Fantasy 0

Amy Polumbo, the 22-year-old beauty queen from Howell, was still holding onto her crown and her honor despite an anonymous threat – which some are calling blackmail – to publicly release certain photographs if she had not given up her title by yesterday.

Meanwhile, her lawyer, Anthony Caruso, was “working furiously” with law enforcement, he said, to find out if a crime had been committed against his client. He also was working with Facebook to see if it could help determine who might have taken photos from Polumbo’s site. He met with the state attorney general yesterday.

The genesis of this blackmail or whatever is the fantasy.

The Miss American Pageant has always been about fantasy. For a long time it claimed it celebrated the “girl next door,” while, at the same time, the linchpin of the pageant was looking at pretty ladies.

Reacting to complaints of feminists that the bathing suit competition objectified the contestants, the Pageant deemphasized the bathing suit competition.

(Speaking as a guy type person, I will say this: Damn straight Miss America objectifies the contestants. Isn’t the whole point of beauty pageants scholarship competitions to look at good-looking young ladies? Whether or not this is a right or good thing to do is a whole nother issue. The difference between Miss American and p0rn, in my opinion, is that p0rn, at least, is honest about the objectification.)

Miss America patted itself on the back that it was presenting the vision of the All-American Girl Next Door.

Then came Hef.

He presented his own version of the Girl Next Door.

And Hef did not try to cover up his vision of the Girl Next Door with any sanctimonious hypocrisy. He said, out and out, “Looking at pretty ladies is fun.”

But the Miss American Pageant couldn’t deal with being honest. As the times changed, they continually looked for ways to prove that they were not about looking at pretty ladies.

They were about talent.

They were about causes.

They were about–oh, never mind.

So, when they discovered that certain Miss Americas were real human beings (remember Vanessa Williams? She has a star on the Walk of Fame now), they crucified them on the cross of hypocrisy. (Aside: Wonder if they are Republicans?

And now comes Miss New Jersey 2007, threatened with some kind of exposure of something if she does not release her crown.

And underlying it all is a big fiction–the big fiction that, somehow, 20 year old (or so) women in A. D. 2007 are virginal little girls in an time when, by age 20, there is, frankly, no such thing.

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Wedding Weekend 3

My brother got married yesterday. The ceremony was at the marina where he keeps his boat.

We collected some pictures on the way.

Here is a duckblind adjacent to the marina:

Duckblind

And here’s the neat bumper sticker we found while shopping, at the last minute, of course, for a wedding gift:

Duckblind

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Romney’s Got Problems 3

He’s lost the doggy vote.

Dogs Against Romney

Via Balloon Juice.

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Drumbeats 0

If one phony war doesn’t work out, why not try two?

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Which War Is It? 1

Upyernoz poses the question (by the way, he doesn’t like Upper Case):

bush has now compared the iraq war to the revolutionary war, the spanish american war, world war one, world war two, the cold war, the korean war, and the vietnam war. i think we can also throw in the gulf war since the iraq war is arguably just a continuation of that war.

I will hazard an answer.

He’s floundering around because things didn’t turn out the way he expected them to, and now he doesn’t have a clue.

Poor ‘ittle Bushie. Someone broke ‘oo’s ‘ittle toy.

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Another One Bites the Dust 1

Or is that “sees the light”?

Sen. Pete Domenici (N.M.), a 36-year Republican veteran of the Senate, abandoned President Bush’s Iraq war policy today by publicly endorsing legislation designed to withdraw nearly all U.S. troops from Iraq by March 2008.

Domenici, a member of the defense appropriations subcommittee, is the fourth senior Senate Republican to sharply criticize Bush’s war strategy in the past two weeks. He announced during a press conference in Albuquerque that he was co-sponsoring legislation that would embrace the recommendations of the Iraq Study Group, which called for a major redeployment that would leave only a limited number of troops in Iraq to focus on counter-terror operations and securing the border.

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Yes, Living in the Future Is a Lot Like Having Bees Live in Your Head 2

One of my bogging colleagues has closely followed the die-off of honey-bees.

The bees that are dying off are not native American bees. According to Mike McGraff of You Bet Your Garden, the bees that are dying are imported European honeybees, many of which are carted from farm to farm during the spring and summer to fertilize crops.

You see the You Bet Your Garden archives here. You can listen to the show in question here.

Here are some pictures of the hives of European bees that are used to fertilize crops for money.

Beehives

Beehives

Looks like a wonderful life, carted around the country on carts, and not even getting a commission.

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