From Pine View Farm

October, 2011 archive

Update from the Foreclosure-Based Economy 0

Whoops.

The highest court in Massachusetts ruled that a homeowner who bought a foreclosure that hadn’t been properly conducted by the foreclosing bank in 2006 didn’t have legal ownership of the property.

By all rights, when banksters steal something, it’s supposed to stay stolen, dammit.

Via Atrios.

Share

Melted Pot 0

It must be tough for Republicans to love America so much but hate almost three-quarters of the people living in it.

Share

Cell Cell 0

’nuff said.

Lake Stevens (Washington–ed.) police say officers arrested the 35-year-old man earlier this month after he tried to break into a home for a second time to retrieve the cell phone he left the first time he broke in.

Share

The Voter Fraud Fraud 0

LOVE=Likely Obama Voter Extraction
CLick for a larger image.

Share

The Galt and the Lamers 0

Teabaggers going Galt to fight the Red Menace.

Tea Party Nation sent to their members today a message from activist Melissa Brookstone urging businesspeople to “not hire a single person” to protest the Obama administration’s supposed “war against business and my country.”

Words fail me.

Via the Bob and Chez Show.

Share

The Ultimate Herman Cain Ad 0

From Peter Bergman.

Share

Cantor’s Cant, Occupy Wall Street Dept. 0

Share

Mitt the Flip: No There There 0

One thing is certain:

Mitt cannot be accused of selling out.

To sell out, one must have a principle to put on the market.

Share

Everybody Must Get Fracked 1

Three years after residents first noticed something wrong with their drinking-water wells, tanker trucks still rumble daily through this rural northeastern Pennsylvania village where methane gas courses through the aquifer and homeowners can light their water on fire.

One of the trucks stops at Ron and Jean Carter’s home and refills a 550-gallon plastic “water buffalo” container that supplies the couple with water for bathing, cleaning clothes and washing dishes. A loud hissing noise emanates from the vent stack that was connected to the Carters’ water well to prevent an explosion Ñ an indication, they say, the well is still laced with dangerous levels of methane.

Recent testing confirms that gas continues to lurk in Dimock’s aquifer.

Pennsylvania has started monitoring their gas Galtian overlords more closely, despite the best efforts of their wingnut governor, because the public demands it.

The industry continues to claim it saw nothing, it was not there, it did not even get up that morning.

Share

QOTD 0

Xenophon:

Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything.

Share

The Swipe Generation 0

And I don’t mean “swipe” as in “bankster”:

Via El Reg.

Share

Stray Thought 0

I cannot help but wonder whether these folks could have found work with a Wall Street bank.

Share

In an Age of an Age . . . 0

Given that one’s date of birth is likely a matter of public record, this would seem rather frivolous.

An actress is suing Amazon.com in federal court in Seattle for more than $1 million for revealing her age on its Internet Movie Database website and refusing to remove the reference when asked.

The actress is not named in the lawsuit filed Thursday that refers to her as Jane Doe. It says she lives in Texas and is of Asian descent and has an Americanized stage name.

I’m certain that the lawyers will make out all right.

Share

. . . and Hands in the Pot 0

Share

Hands across the Sea . . . 0

Right wing hands, that is.

Share

Update from the Foreclosure-Based Economy 0

Banks were giving short shrift to short sales.

Now there’s a drift to a shift in the shrift to short sales.

This may give the market a lift.

There has been a “dramatic shift” in banks’ willingness sell a property for less than the mortgage balance to avoid foreclosing, said Ron Peltier, chairman and chief executive officer of HomeServices of America Inc., the second-biggest U.S. residential brokerage.

The transactions, known as short sales, typically change hands at a discount of about 20 percent to homes not in financial distress, compared with a 40 percent price cut for bank-owned homes, according to RealtyTrac Inc. Short sales jumped 19 percent in the second quarter from the prior three months while foreclosure sales were flat, the data seller said.

Share

A Modest Proposal 0

Barbara Brotman, writing at the Chicago Trib, suggests a strategy for keeping debit card charges in check.

Paying by check.

She describes the experience:

How special it makes me feel. When I take out that little case holding my checks and check register, that quaint handwritten tally reminiscent of Bob Cratchit with a quill, I get serious attention.

Clerks fall silent, perplexed. They summon supervisors to ask what they should do.

At one store, I was escorted to a special register staffed by someone who still knew the ancient ways: The taking of the driver’s license, the request for the home phone number, the electronic petitioning of the check approval gods.

It won’t work, of course. If persons start writing checks for $0.79 cups of coffee, merchants will refuse them (as well they should–remember “minimum check payment” signs?) and banks will levy fees on them.

Flash from the Past:

When I got my first checking account, back before banks discovered that composing seductive deceptive fine print paid better dealing above the board, there was a 10 cent fee per check.

No one thought twice about it.

The bank was providing a service and deserved reasonable remuneration.

It’s when they went after unreasonable remuneration that they turned down the wrong path.

Share

Facebook Frolics 0

It’s a frolicking federal case:

Anthony Douglas Elonis, 28, was charged in January with interstate communication of threats.

When federal defender Benjamin Brait Cooper asked agent Denise Stevens if she could explain “disclaimers” that Elonis made with the alleged threats, she said she didn’t know how to. Later, she said the disclaimers “actually made [the posts] seem more threatening to me.”

For example, in a Nov. 6, 2010, post about his estranged wife, Tara, Elonis wrote: “Did you know that it’s illegal for me to say I want to kill my wife? . . . Now, it was OK for me to say it right then because I was just telling you that it’s illegal for me to say I want to kill my wife. I’m not actually saying it.”

Share

QOTD 0

Eleanor Roosevelt, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):

To handle yourself, use your head; to handle others, use your heart.

Share

Occupy Hallowe’en 0

Mike Gruss, writing in the local rag, conjures up the scariest costume of all: Dress as a Occupy Wall Street protestor:

A warning: If you do this act too well, people might become so scared that they’ll start yelling irrational things. They’ll shout “Get a job,” even if you have a job or even if you have two jobs, like many of the Occupy Norfolk organizers. They’ll point and mock. “Looks like somebody lost their Xbox,” even though no one’s really played Xbox in years.

This is what makes this, the protester, such a hideously frightening Halloween costume. People don’t like to be told by scary ordinary folks that things aren’t going well. They want politicians to tell them things aren’t going well. Otherwise, it’s eerie.

Follow the link for costume hints (and an exceptionally good Gruss column).

Share
From Pine View Farm
Privacy Policy

This website does not track you.

It contains no private information. It does not drop persistent cookies, does not collect data other than incoming ip addresses and page views (the internet is a public place), and certainly does not collect and sell your information to others.

Some sites that I link to may try to track you, but that's between you and them, not you and me.

I do collect statistics, but I use a simple stand-alone Wordpress plugin, not third-party services such as Google Analitics over which I have no control.

Finally, this is website is a hobby. It's a hobby in which I am deeply invested, about which I care deeply, and which has enabled me to learn a lot about computers and computing, but it is still ultimately an avocation, not a vocation; it is certainly not a money-making enterprise (unless you click the "Donate" button--go ahead, you can be the first!).

I appreciate your visiting this site, and I desire not to violate your trust.