From Pine View Farm

April, 2011 archive

Twits on Twitter 0

OMG it’s tribal:

Following pop stars on Twitter is clearly a brilliant way to pass the time. How else are we supposed to know that Craig David is off to the gym to “fine tune the physique … lol” or that Taio Cruz has “had a couple weeks of no shades wearing”? It collapses the barrier between pop star and pop fan, encouraging dialogue (mainly things like, “@onedirection OMG Harry if you don’t follow me back I’ll cry 4ever, plz RT”) and gives the pop star (or his/her record label) access to millions of fans that can be crowd-sourced in no more than 140 characters.

Recently, that dialogue has been enhanced by the creation of so-called Twitter tribes, a way for fans to pledge allegiance to their favourite pop star and feel part of their world without having to part with a £30 annual fee for a badge and photocopied autograph. Nowadays, it’s all about deciding whose side you’re on, and hashtagging like your life depends on it.

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One Born Every Minute Dept. 0

Seen at my local apothecary:

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God Spake in Elizabethan English 0

John Timpane, writing at Philly dot com, considers the influence of the King James Version of the Bible in a fascinating little column. I didn’t know, for example, that, despite its introduction, it was never actually “authorized” by King James, though he “commissioned” the project.

A nugget:

We human beings often use our most beautiful things to poison our world. I hope we are not doing that now. Think of the KJV, created as a compromise between tradition and the needs of a young faith. Its creators, wary and weary of sectarian strife, hoped it could bring peace, lead the faithful to the God they sought.

It has done that in millions of lives – and in some of the most sublime English ever written. But a particular way of reading it has been made into ground zero by those who can’t stand others not belonging to their church. Or party.

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Contract on America 0

In the Chicago Tribune, Megan Crepeau describes the Republican bait-and-switch:

For example, the 2010 Republican “Pledge to America,” the standard with which all Republican candidates marketed themselves, is conspicuously absent of the big two hot-button social issues: gay rights and abortion. Apart from two vague references to “life,” nothing in their agenda indicated the current onslaught on women’s health. Never mind that direct federal intervention in women’s lives — and raising taxes along the way — goes directly against the kind of limited government principles that got them elected. This was a sneak attack, and a hypocritical one at that.

Read the whole thing.

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Clip Joint 0

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QOTD 0

Napoleon Hill, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):

The path of least resistance makes all rivers, and some men, crooked.

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Seen on the Street 0

Perry class frigate heading to sea on a gray day.

Read more »

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Another Dose of Koch 0

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Facebook Frolics 0

The internet is a public place, even in north Jersey:

The Record newspaper reports that the teacher wrote about feeling like “a warden” and referred to her 6- and 7-year-old students as future criminals.

The teacher, whose name was not disclosed, was removed from the classroom this week after several parents who saw the posts came to Paterson School 21 and asked that their children be removed from her class.

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Twits on Twitter 0

Not so much social as celeb-gazing?

Researchers found that a staggering 50% of all content consumed via Twitter is generated by only 20,000 “elite” Twitter users, such as well known journalists, celebrities, and formal representatives of established organizations. So basically, any link you click on from your Twitter feed was most likely originally generated by @BarackObama, @SportsGuy33, or @Sn00ki, which is probably most fitting for where we are as a society in 2011.

The study looked at roughly 260 million tweets generated between July 28, 2009 and March 8, 2010 found some other striking revelations. Such as the fact that only about 20% of Twitter users reciprocate follows that they receive from other users. This of course is in stark contrast to Facebook’s near total reciprocal rate, wherein all “friendships” are mutually held. Plainly said, only about 1/5th of all Twitter users will bother to “follow” someone who follows them…well thanks A LOT Snooki!

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What Happens When a Congressman Tries To Tell the Truth? 0

This has been simmering all week.

A teabagging Wisconsin Congressman admitted in front of a town hall meeting that his $174,000 Congressional salary doesn’t go very far, even with allowances. He’s not independently wealthy; his pay his all he has.

I believe him and can’t bring myself to throw snark at him.

Congresspersons generally maintain two residences (some of them sleep on the floors of their offices in Washington) and Washington is an expensive city. It was expensive when I lived in Northern Virginia and is many times worse now.

But honesty has no place in politics.

The Wisconsin Republican Party has spent all week trying to censor the news of his statement (that link leads to more links so you can walk backwards through the events).

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QOTD 0

Mark Twain:

The old saw says, “Let a sleeping dog lie.” Right. . . . Still, when there is so much at stake, it is better to get a newspaper to do it.

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Corporate Personhoodlums 0

Barbara Ehrenreich, writing at the Guardian, considers the personhood of Walmart in the light of the sex discrimination lawsuit against Walmart:

But Walmart’s defence against a class action charging the company with discrimination against its female employees – Dukes v Walmart – throws a new light on the biology of large corporations. The company argues that with “seven divisions, 41 regions, 3,400 stores and over one million employees”, the experiences of individual employees are just too variable to allow for a “class” in the legal sense to arise. Walmart, in other words, is too big, too multifaceted and too diverse to be sued.

So if Walmart is indeed a person, it is a person without a central nervous system, or at least without central control of its various body parts. There exist such persons, I admit, but surely, when the supreme court declared that corporations were persons, it did not mean to say “persons with advanced neuromuscular degenerative diseases”.

(snip)

So if Walmart is a life form, it is an unclassifiable one. It eats, devouring town after town. It grows without limit, sometimes assuming new names – Walmex in Mexico, Asda in the UK. Yet in its defence in the Dukes v Walmart suit, Walmart claims to have no idea what it’s doing. This could be a metaphor for capitalism or a sign that a successful alien invasion is in progress. The only thing that’s for sure is, should the supreme court decide in favour of Walmart, we’ll have a lot more of these creatures running around: monstrously oversized “persons” who insist that they can’t control their own actions.

In the article, the writer shares some of experience in working for Walmart for a few months.

Apparently, Walmart is a shape-shifter.

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Facebook Frolics 0

Facebookers goes through a rough spell.

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Driving while Brown 0

Earlier this week, I linked to a Chicago Tribune story police in McHenry County, Illinois, falsely classify Hispanic drivers stopped for traffic violations are “white”; the implication was that this was done to avoid charges of profiling.

Today the Tribune has more. A nugget:

In McHenry, the Tribune uncovered a troubling pattern of Hispanics being stopped for traffic offenses by sheriff’s deputies, who then labeled them as “white.” By 2009, 1 of 3 traffic stops of Hispanics were being misreported by race.

There is another twist to this story. McHenry houses one of two county jails in Illinois under contract with the federal government to hold immigrant detainees, at a rate of $85 a night. Up to 300 detainees, most from other counties, are housed nightly in the McHenry jail, and the federal contract is worth some $$10.5 million a year to the county. Hispanics arrested in McHenry for a traffic violation and who are subsequently held in jail as immigration detainees have become an important source of income for the sheriff’s office.

Interesting. From traffic to trafficking.

Taking the profit motive out of incarceration is essential.

The impetus for incarceration really should not be based on a balance sheet.

The agency–state, federal, or local–that imprisons someone should be directly responsible for providing and paying for the imprisonment, without involving third parties; criminal justice is a function of government, not an engine of economic growth.

We have seen what putting profit first does to justice.

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Lines of Koch, Reprise 0

“those poor, thin-skinned billionaires . . .”

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Bachmann Spinner Overdrive and April Fools’ Day Year ‘Round 0

Dick Polman shines the light (sorry, couldn’t resist) on Michelle Backmann’s crusade against CFLs* (follow the link for the complete article):

Michele Bachmann, who is basically Sarah Palin with better articulation, appears to be mapping a 2012 Republican presidential bid. Swell. This means we’ll be hearing a lot more about how the socialists are coming to take away our incandescent lightbulbs.

Seriously, this is one of Bachmann’s big causes. She happens to be flat wrong on the facts, but people who pay attention to facts probably wouldn’t vote for her anyway. Besides, she’s interested in being visceral, not empirical, and the lightbulb shtick is a wonderful way to quicken tea party pulses.

The last sentence of the excerpt above does not go far enough.

Bachmann, Palin, and, indeed much of the Republican Party don’t care for or about facts–consider Newt the Gingrinch’s flippity flops on intervention in Libya.

They say today whatever they think will get attention, feed the base, and fool the middle, then say the opposite tomorrow, if they think it will get attention, feed the base, and fool the middle.

Republicans don’t have positions.

They have press releases.
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*The bill requiring more efficient light bulbs was passed under George Bush with support from his administration.

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Republican Draft 0

Non Sequitur
Click for a larger image.

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Nothing To Do, Nowhere To Go 0

I missed the weekly unemployment figures, having spent most of the last two days on the road, and I haven’t looked them up yet.

The monthly figures are slightly encouraging in a lukewarm king of way. From Bloomberg:

Payrolls increased by 216,000 workers last month after a revised 194,000 gain the prior month, the Labor Department said today in Washington. Economists projected a March gain of 190,000, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. The jobless rate dropped from 8.9 percent in February (to 8.8 percent–ed.), the fourth straight decrease.

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Weakening Tea? 0

Shaun Mullen thinks the tea bags are going limp.

Look no further than Michele Bachmann to understand why.

The wingnut from Minnesota is likely to be the Tea Party’s standard bearer through the early 2012 primaries, stealing attention from serious candidates with her attention-grabbing obfuscations and conspiracy theories.

When Bachmann brands Democrats as being anti-American, Obama an Islamofascist socialist and that the Serve America Act will lead to reeducation camps many of us roll our eyes, but it is talk like this that makes her so popular with the loony toon brigade in the sort of all-important Iowa primary if unpalatable to voters at large.

Follow the link to follow his reasoning.

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