From Pine View Farm

October, 2011 archive

Heartland Family Values 0

In Shawnee County, Kansas, you can’t have a same-sex spouse, but you can beat your other-sex spouse.

Such nice people.

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Cantor’s Cant 0

The Commander Guy explains.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Even though you may feel road rage, remain polite:

The victim reported she was talking to a friend in her vehicle, which was parked in a prohibited area, when another driver blew her horn several times, according to police.

The second driver, Wyche, stopped her vehicle, got out and allegedly started yelling and walking toward the victim, according to police interviews.

After Wyche told her to move her vehicle, the victim got out of her vehicle to confront her.

“(The victim) stated that Wyche removed the handgun from her purse and stated, ‘I can handle this myself. I can handle it, I can handle it now,’ ” wrote Officer Matthew Thompsen of the Salisbury Police Department.

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Llamas and Tigers and Bears, Oh My 0

A woman in northern New Jersey saved one of her llamas from a bear attack.

Lydia Chiappini was asleep in her Blairstown home when she awoke to the screams of her llama “Gus” being mauled.

She stood the bear down.

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The Internet Is a Public Place 0

And strong passwords won’t help with this. El Reg reports:

Home Depot, The Wall Street Journal, Photobucket, and hundreds of other websites share visitor’s names, usernames, or other personal information with advertisers or other third parties, often without disclosing the practice in privacy policies, academic researchers said.

Sixty-one percent of websites tested by researchers from Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society leaked the personal information, sometimes to dozens of third-party partners. Home Depot, for example, disclosed the first names and email addresses of visitors who clicked on an ad to 13 companies. The Wall Street Journal divulged to seven of its partners the email address of users who enter the wrong password. And Photobucket handed over the usernames of those who use the site to share images with their friends.

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Street Theatre 0

Leonard Pitts, Jr., considers Occupy Wall Street. A nugget:

Some observers dismiss the protests as “street theater,” an easy charge, given the loopy eccentrics who have been attracted to the movement like iron shavings to electromagnets. On the other hand, much of the antiwar movement, the women’s movement and the civil rights movement (rest in peace, Fred Shuttlesworth) also was street theater, and those seem to have turned out fairly well.

Nothing wrong with street theatre. It gets the attention of the audience.

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QOTD 0

Havelock Ellis, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):

The place where optimism flourishes most is the lunatic asylum.

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Tremble, O Ye Innerwebs 0

Mr. Feastingonroadkill is back.

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All the News That Fits (None That Doesn’t) 0

News Announcers Unable To Hear Protestor Saying He is Protesting
CLick for a larger image.

In a related story, Shaun Mullen considers Occupy Wall Street. A nugget:

Cantor (R, Tool–ed.) has joined the chorus in denouncing the Occupy Wall Street “mobs” that have taken over Zuccotti Park in Manhattan and city halls and malls elsewhere, accusing them of . . . are you ready for this? Class warfare.

The House majority leader symbolizes more than any other Republican the moral rot at the heart of today’s GOP.

President Obama has sent up to Capitol Hill a jobs creation bill that by any measure is modest but at least begins to address the major reason that the aftereffects of the Bush Recession linger, but Cantor says he won’t even allow the bill to come up for a vote.

Main Street is in deep distress, Wall Street is sipping the champagne of record profits and it still is more important to Cantor and his ilk to be obstructionist than actually help the president govern, a tactical decision that they will come to regret next November 6 when the votes are counted.

This is because while there is anger out there toward Obama, the contrast between the party’s stances on helping the middle class, not to mention the poor, elderly and infirm, could not be more striking, and while a lot of us are pissed off even more of us have retained some perspective. And compassion.

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Thom Hartmann’s Mail Bag 0

It’s rambling, and it’s funny; The bit on the voter fraud fraud is definitely worth a listen–it lasts for the first two minutes or so:

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Droning On, Sauce for the Goose Dept. 0

Jennifer Abel asks the question:

So: if the United States claims the right to use robotic attack drones to kill American citizens in foreign countries, does that mean we’ll say nothing when China inevitably uses drones to kill dissidents who have gone into exile?

Follow the link for her answer.

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Koching Is Hazardous to Your Health 0

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The Entitlement Society 0

Bank of America’s CEO defended his bank’s new $5 fee on debit cards on Wednesday, saying that customers and shareholders understand the bank has a “right to make a profit.”

No, they don’t.

They have a right to compete in the market place by providing a competitive product at a fair price.

If they fail, they have a right to go out of business.

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Walking behind Elephants 0

The mind-twisting thing is that Hartman said,

. . . stepping away from the absurd for a moment

then proceeded to discuss Rick Perry.

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QOTD 0

Niels Bohr, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):

The meaning of life consists in the fact that it makes no sense to say that life has no meaning.

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Drinking Liberally Norfolk Wednesday 0

Drinking Liberally is a support group for liberals, where you can realize you are not alone.

We are still looking for a (semi-)permanent home.

Our chapter host tried to call the scheduled location repeatedly today and no one answered the telly phone. That and the Madoff film triggered the next to next to next to last minute change in location.

When: 6 p., Wednesday, October 12.

Where:
The Green Onion
1603 Colley Ave.(map)
Followed by the 7:15 show
Chasing Madoff
Naro Expanded Cinema
1507 Colley (map)

Details here.

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Flying while Brown, Common Carrier Dept. 0

According to the complaint, Abbassi “was readily identifiable as Muslim by what she wore: a long shirt, pants, sweater and hijab, or Islamic headscarf.” She was detained at security for a second screening, but was allowed to board.

When boarding, Abbassi says she was on the phone with a Verizon representative in order to activate her smartphone. When the plane was getting ready to depart, Abbassi alleges she told the representative “I’ve got to go.”

Soon after, there was an announcement that an “administrative delay” would hold up the flight, at which point a TSA agent came on board and asked Abbassi to get off.

TSA took her off the plane, then cleared her to travel, but the pilot refused her admittance, claiming the crew was not “comfortable” with her on board.

And bigotry flew the skies.

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Double Standards 0

Jon Stewart examines the coverage of Occupy Wall Street vs. the coverage of Teabaggery.

Via Bob Cesca’s Awsome Blog.

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Bushonomics Is Da Bomb 0

It blows up the economy.

Consider this from Asia Times:

Consider this statistic: between 1999 and 2009, the net jobs gain in the American workforce was zero. In the six previous decades, the number of jobs added rose by at least 20% per decade.

Then there’s income. In 2010, the average middle-class family took home US$49,445, a drop of $3,719 or 7%, in yearly earnings from 10 years earlier. In other words, that family now earns the same amount as in 1996. After peaking in 1999, middle-class income dwindled through the early years of the George W Bush presidency, climbing briefly during the housing boom, then nosediving in its aftermath.

In this lost decade, according to economist Jared Bernstein, poor families watched their income shrivel by 12%, falling from $13,538 to $11,904. Even families in the 90th percentile of earners suffered a 1% percent hit, dropping on average from $141,032 to $138,923. Only among the staggeringly wealthy was this not a lost decade: the top 1% of earners enjoyed 65% of all income growth in America for much of the decade, one hell of a run, only briefly interrupted by the financial meltdown of 2008 and now, by the look of things, back on track.

The swelling ranks of the American poor tell an even more dismal story. In September, the Census Bureau rolled out its latest snapshot of poverty in the United States, counting more than 46 million men, women, and children among this country’s poor. In other words, 15.1% of all Americans are now living in officially defined poverty, the most since 1993. (Last year, the poverty line for a family of four was set at $22,113; for a single working-age person, $11,334.) Unlike in the lost decade, the poverty rate decreased for much of the 1990s, and in 2000 was at about 11%.

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The Fee Hand of the Market 0

This does not affect me.

I don’t use my debit card to buy things. I use either a credit card or that green stuff, whadyyacallit, oh, yeah, cash (emphasis added):

The thought of another bank fee really bothers Whitney Chitwood.

“It’s our money that we work hard for, and they’re just taking it from us,” said Chitwood, 22, who has a Bank of America checking account.

Next year, Bank of America Corp. plans to impose a $5 a month fee when customers use their debit cards for a purchase, whether they punch in a personal identification number or sign a receipt. Other banks, including Wells Fargo and SunTrust, are initiating similar fees in some markets.

The banks began initiating the fees in response to federal legislation, which took effect Oct. 1, that limits the “swipe” fees they can charge merchants for debit-card transactions. Bank officials say the fees will help offset the billions in revenue they expect to lose as a result of the new ceiling.

(Much more at the link.)

When I see persons whipping out the plastic to buy a 79-cent cup of coffee, I always wonder how they keep up with their checkbooks. (Then, when I read about the outrageous overdraft fees, I realized that they don’t.)

It highlights the larger issue, though: a change in the nature of banking as an industry over the past three decades. It has moved from valuing honest stewardship of customer accounts and secure, though not spectacular, profits from sound loans to high-stakes casino gambling.

Banks became gambling addicts, but, since they were the house and the house always wins, they guaranteed their winnings, changing the rules of the game to suit their greed need and burying those changes in unreadable “terms of service” notices that no one read because they were designed to be unreadable. Collectively, we now have the First National Bank of Rocky and Mugsy.

Now that reforms are mandating that they fix the wheel so it isn’t quite so crooked, banksters are looking for new ways to fix the wheel.

My father was a banker. He would be ashamed to admit that today.

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