From Pine View Farm

August, 2010 archive

QOTD 0

Hubert Humphrey, the Happy Warrior, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):

In all intellectual debates, both sides tend to be correct in what they affirm, and wrong in what they deny.

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Rich Cordoban Lather III 0

Fred Clark reaches the logical conclusion.

Also, this.

Via Thoreau.

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Six Degrees . . . 0

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
Extremist Makeover – Homeland Edition
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Tea Party

Via TPM.

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Spill Here, Spill Now, There Ain’t No Filter Big Enough Dept. 0

Out of sight, out of mind:

A massive, 22-mile-long underwater plume of oil droplets flowed to the southwest of the BP’s failed Macondo well at the end of June, and the threat it poses to natural resources of the Gulf of Mexico remains uncertain, scientists who mapped the plume said.

The finding confirms that plumes of oil from the failed well have existed deep beneath the surface, and that the oil is not seeping from natural fissures on the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, according to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute scientists who authored the peer-reviewed article published Thursday in the online research magazine ScienceXpress.

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The Internet Is a Public Place 0

Listen up This is essential reading for anyone who has ever visited a website. I just double-checked my Opera browser settings–yup, I turned off third-party cookies a long time ago:

In a recent conversation with Fresh Air contributor Dave Davies, Angwin explains how consumer surveillance works, how users can disable the tracking software — and how advertisers are continually evolving to keep up with the data they receive. She notes that many Internet users are unaware that their information is being tracked and then traded.

“Most people that we have heard from since writing these stories did not know what was going on,” Angwin explains. “So when you go to a website, you’re not thinking about the fact that they might have relationships with all different types of monitoring firms, and those firms are installing things that are invisible to you on your computer.”

Follow the link to listen to the show or read the transcript.

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The Candidates Debate (Updated) 0

2nd District Virginia House of Representatives. The preliminaries and introductions take the first ten minutes or so.

There was a story in today’s paper about it, but it doesn’t seem to be the website as I draft this. Found it.

Via Vivian Paige.

Addendum:

Vivian Paige analyzes the debate.

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The Fee Hand of the Market 0

In the old days, it would be called a “Trust.” Bloomberg analyses the effects of overpowering market share in health care:

Sutter’s price for the knee scan was $1,271, payable by Logsdon and his insurer. Exactly the same MRI at one of the local imaging centers owned by Radiological Associates of Sacramento would have cost $696 — 45 percent less.

It turns out that Logsdon didn’t know something that his insurance company does: Sutter Health Co., the nonprofit that owns Sutter Davis, has market power that commands prices 40 to 70 percent higher than its rivals per typical procedure — and pacts with insurers that keep those prices secret.

Sutter can charge these prices because it has acquired more than a third of the market in the San Francisco-to-Sacramento region through more than 20 hospital takeovers in the last 30 years, according to executives of Aetna Inc., Health Net Inc. and Blue Shield of California, who asked not to be named because their agreements with Sutter ban disclosure of prices.

Read the whole thing.

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Rand Illusions 0

Roy Edroso dissects right-wing worship of Ayn Rand, prophetess of greed.

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QOTD 0

Bernard Baruch, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):

There is something about inside information which seems to paralyse a man’s reasoning powers.

Afterthought:

This accounts for much of the Washington punditocracy’s fascination with itself.

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Lawn Ranger 0

Coming soon on Speeders:

In Boulder, Colorado, riding a lawn mower on a street or bike path is illegal. When citizens called to complain about a speeding lawn mower running wild on the streets, police were obligated to respond:

Police caught up with the mower – a black Yard Machines unit with a 21 horsepower engine – at the intersection of Harvard Lane and Auburn Street.

Reichenbach said the driver told officers that he was trying to donate the lawn equipment to Fairview High School and was riding it to the school to drop off.

. . . officers chose not to ticket the man because he wasn’t causing a problem.

“He was trying to be a good guy,” Reichenbach said. “We think his heart was certainly in the right place.”

They told him to park it and arrange for a truck.

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Estate Planning 0

Warning: Mild (well, these days it’s mild) language.

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Prospects 0

Bloomberg News takes a look at Glenn Nye’s and Tom Perriello’s reelection prospects.

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Nothing To Do, Nowhere To Go 0

Back up to half a mil.

We don’t need no stinkin’ stimulus:

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits increased 12,000 to a seasonally adjusted 500,000 in the week ended August 14, the highest since mid-November, the Labor Department said on Thursday.

Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast claims slipping to 476,000 from the previously reported 484,000 the prior week, which was revised up to 488,000 in Thursday’s report.

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The New Dominoes 0

Chalmers Johnson considers the parallels between contemporary American foreign policy orthodoxy and the Domino Theory used to support the Viet Namese War, and tries to peer into the future. A nugget:

Let me begin by asking: What harm would befall the United States if we actually decided, against all odds, to close those hundreds and hundreds of bases, large and small, that we garrison around the world? What if we actually dismantled our empire, and came home? Would Genghis Khan-like hordes descend on us? Not likely. Neither a land nor a sea invasion of the US is even conceivable.

Would 9/11-type attacks accelerate? It seems far likelier to me that, as our overseas profile shrank, the possibility of such attacks would shrink with it.

Worth a read.

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Foreclosed, then Re-Possessed 1

“Sovereign citizens,” members of an anarchist branch of extreme wingnuttery (I know that sounds redundant), are moving into foreclosed houses and filing false deeds claiming ownership of them. From the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

Prosecutors say the $1 million brick home next to the Goddards’ farmhouse is one of at least 19 properties that have been taken over by a sect of anti-government extremists involved in criminal behavior.

They call themselves “sovereign citizens” and believe they are immune to state and federal laws. They assert, among other things, that banks can’t own land and that any home owned by a bank – including the thousands throughout Georgia – is free for the taking.

Police and prosecutors take a different view. The FBI has listed them on the domestic terrorist list, saying their crime of choice is paper terrorism and attempting to disrupt the U.S. economy.

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Lessons Learned 0

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Rich Cordoban Lather, III 0

Report from the Field.

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Burglar on Call 0

Bad career choices ‘r us.

Police were able to call the “Ma” of a man accused of breaking into an elementary school because he left his cell phone behind, the Athens Banner-News reported.

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QOTD 0

Emile Durkheim:

Reality seems valueless by comparison with the dreams of fevered imaginations; reality is therefore abandoned.

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A Surplus . . . of Trickery 0

Hey, Rocky! Watch me pull a surplus out of my–er–hat!

Shhhhh. We won’t talk about stiffin’ that there pension fund.

Via VB Progressives.

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