2010 archive
Olympia Dreams 0

But the Penn’s Landing attraction will not close as originally planned Monday after the Independence Seaport Museum’s decision, announced late Wednesday, to fund interim repairs.
The Olympia will continue its daily visiting hours through Dec. 31, then move to a three-day schedule through March 31 while its fate is pondered.
This would be a good target for some stimulus money.
Let’s Just Strip Search Everyone (Updated) 0
Brendan writes a letter.
Addendum:
Pat-Down Put-Down
By Madeleine Begun KaneYou’re a teen and can’t get to first base?
You’re a fondler, but fearful of Mace?
Well a pat-down career
Can be yours. (Front and rear.)
Be a TSA Feel-Her-Up Ace.
Nothing To Do, Nowhere To Go 0
It may be “less than forecast,” but it’s more than last week. That the forecasters (who go eerily unnamed in news story after story, though one suspects that someone knows who they are) were wrong–again–is not a cause for optimism.
I emphasize that I am not arguing that things are not getting a little better; trends do seem to be inching positively, though not quickly nor signicantly enough to rescue many from Wall Street’s three card monte hell.
I am arguing that the media and economists should reconsider basing conclusions about how things are going today on how well these “forecasters” did at forecast roulette yesterday or last week. Judging by their record, I wouldn’t trust them to predict the winner in a race between a Lamborghini and a Ford Escort.
Applications for unemployment insurance payments rose by 2,000 to 439,000 in the week ended Nov. 13, Labor Department figures showed today in Washington. The total number of people collecting unemployment insurance dropped to the lowest level in two years, while those receiving extended payments climbed.
Furrfu.
QOTD 0
Jan L. A. van de Snepscheut, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. But, in practice, there is.
Spill Here, Spill Now, Eyes Wide Shut Dept. 0
Surprise, surprise.
In a 28-page report released late Tuesday night, an independent panel convened by the National Academy of Engineering said that the companies failed to learn from “near misses” and that neither BP, its contractors nor federal regulators caught or corrected flawed decisions that contributed to the blowout.
Those failures would be unacceptable in companies that work with nuclear power or aviation, said Donald Winter, a professor of engineering practice at the University of Michigan and chairman of the 15-member study committee.
In other news, the sun rises in the east.
Facebook Frolics 0
As murder mystery writers are fond of pointing out just before the Great Detective solves the case, a crime requires means, motive, and opportunity.
All Facebook provides is opportunty.
Miller, senior pastor at Living Word Christian Fellowship Church, the popular interdenominational and evangelical church on Route 35 (in Neptune, N. J.–ed.), said a large percentage of his counseling over the past year and a half has been for marital problems, including infidelity, stemming from Facebook.
We Need Single Payer 0
Anti-health care reform wingnut Congressman throws fit because it’s going to be a month before his government health care benefits kick in.
Meanwhile, back in the real world, The Chicago Tribune reminds us that the American health care insurance industry has cake, eats it too. From the Chicago Tribune:
The findings are similar to those of a 2009 report by the National Women’s Law Center that examined 3,600 individual policies across the country and found that only 13 percent provided maternity coverage.
The problems don’t stop there. If a woman is pregnant and applies for coverage in the individual market, insurers generally consider her pregnancy a preexisting medical condition and deny coverage.
Figs 0
In an ideal world, this would have happened in Newton.
Surgical Sledgehammers 0
In the Guardian, Patrick Porter considers the likely effects of trying to be the MPs for the world. He writes from a UK perspective, but his thoughts are worth considering.
Part of the mythology that feeds the idea of being using, or “projecting,” as its proponents like to say, military around the world to control what persons in other countries do, is the myth of the “surgical strike.”
Mr. Porter argues that both the costs and the likely effects of these projects are frequently misstated:
And there are other dangers. What if, in appointing ourselves as world police, we are agents of chaos rather than order? Our activism will probably have perverse results, unintended consequences and blowback. It could create accidental guerrillas. It could drive neighbouring countries into new confrontations with us. Democracy promotion can promote communal violence or unwelcome new regimes. Evidence of these dangers litters the decade.
Confident activism carries an added danger of moral hazards. Adroit armed groups can exploit and escalate conflicts to draw us in, using their victimhood strategically to wag the dog.
The column is worth a read.
A drone is not a scalpel. It is a flying bomb, and all the false analogies in the world will not make it anything other than a flying bomb.
And war is not a game. Unlike in games, players in wars get only one life.
Let’s Just Strip Search Everyone 0
Barry R. comments on TSA’s security theatre.
Twits on Twitter 0
On the rampage edition.
Virginia Beach Democratic Committee Third Thursday Dinner 0
- What: Virginia Beach Democratic Committee Third Thursday Dinner
- When: November 18th, 6:00 PM
- Where: Kelly’s Hilltop Tavern, 1936 Laskin Road, Virginia Beach, VA 23454 (map), in the nonsmoking section.
Show up, order off the menu (separate checks), socialize, and talk politics–or whatever else interests you.
I have attended several of these. They tend to be smaller gatherings, highly informal, and a lot of fun.
For more information, email VaBeachBoy@aol.com
The World Is Going to Pot 0
The Philadelphia Inquirer reports on World Toilet Day.








