From Pine View Farm

July, 2014 archive

QOTD 0

Samuel Johnson:

No matter how dull, or how mean, or how wise a man is, he feels that happiness is his indisputable right.

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Dustbiter 0

Another bank gets blanked. Bank no more on

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“I’ll Know One When I See One” 0

Zandar explains how to spot a terrorist.

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News, Ripped from the Ticker 0

I have a quibble with the T-Mobile story. (Full Disclosure: I’ve been a satisfied T-Mobile customer since it was VoiceStream.)

Several years ago, I noticed that someone had “crammed” my T-Mobile bill with a $10.00 a month charge for something I didn’t want and hadn’t signed up for; the billing had appeared three months earlier. It appeared to be the result of my visiting a third-party ring-tone website and their using that visit to “make representions” to my carrier that I had purchased a subscription.

When I called T-Mobile, the customer service rep told me that there was indeed a problem with third parties’ fraudulently billing customers and volunteered to remove the charge retroactively without question.

Policing your finances isn’t a one-way street. Customers need to take some responsibility.

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WSIWYG 0

The Rude One explains that, as a nation, we are what we are, and it’s not pretty (emphasis added):

Here on the left, we like to think that because we believe in the better angels of humanity, that people aren’t as vile as they so often seem. We can find peace, we like to think, in places where there will never be peace. Or we think we can find compromise with people who would rather plunge off a cliff than take our hand. “We are better than that,” we say, referring to how people behave in certain situations, thinking that their initial reactions will not be borne out by their further actions.

It is the foolish net that we trap ourselves in time and again when the truth of the matter is that, as a nation, not on an individual basis, but as a conglomerate of the whole, no, we are not better than that. At best, we are exactly what we are.

Follow the link for the evidence.

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Con Con 0

See DashCon’s official statement, claiming that, no indeedy-do, nothing like that happened.

Aside:

All I know about Tumblr is that it is a very strange internet place where stuff that is worth your while (like, for example, PoliticalProf) is rare indeed.

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All about Us 0

PoliticalProf. Read it.

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No Place To Hide 0

From the ACLU (much more at the link):

Forbes reported last week that the crowdsourced mapping location service Waze is beginning to share bulk location data with government bodies—with Rio de Janeiro since 2013, and soon with the state of Florida. The cycling app Strava is also in talks to begin selling its data to urban planners, and the public-transportation app Moovit is already selling data to multiple cities.

We are not to worry about our privacy, a Waze spokesperson tells us, because the company replaces the names that accompany driving data with an alias.

The problem is, your location history IS your identity.

One of the reasons I use the bike app that I do is that it doesn’t report anything to anybody. It doesn’t require me to join a website to see the results. It doesn’t prompt me to “share” my rides with a bunch of persons who neither care nor need to know about when, where, and how fast I peddle about.

It requires only the permissions it needs to do what it promises to do, and it does that very well.

Many apps make Facebook look like a community of hermits. Be very careful to check the permission when you install an app to your phone. If they look hinky, just say “No.”

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What Was Old Is New Again, Suffer the Children Dept. 2

Picture of Statue of Liberty wearing shades crouching behind barricade holding sign reading

Werner Herzog’s Bear, writing at Notes from the Ironbound, sees echoes of the past in the current wingnut hysteria about an influx of brown children at the border. A nugget–follow the link for the rest:

When I hear the screaming mobs spewing hatred clothed in the fig leaf of “protecting the border” I hear the echoes of the 1850s and the Know-Nothings, the first major anti-immigrant group in American history. It came in response the massive waves of migrant from Germany and Ireland, mostly directed against Irish Catholics. . . . If those children in Murrieta today did not have protection I fear that the blood would flow.

The Republican Party has become a vile and loathsome thing. (Ask me nicely, I’ll tell you what I really think.)

Image via Balloon Juice.

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QOTD 0

Charles Darwin:

If the misery of the poor be caused not by the laws of nature, but by our institutions, great is our sin.

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Republican Outreach HOWTO 0

They’ve figured it out. To attract women voters, they need to be more lowfalutin.

er, yeah.

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Colorado Kookade 0

Warning: Tasteless, just like the original.

Read more »

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Stolen Basics (Updated, Kicked to the Top) 0

A while ago, I expressed my skepticism about the wisdom of turning to gambling as a way to raise funds. Today’s local rag has a long story that feeds my skepticism. A nugget (emphasis added):

Aragona-Pembroke makes more money from bingo and pull-tab gambling cards than any other Little League in the country, bringing in about $800,000 per year after paying out winnings, according to its most recent tax returns.

But the windfall hasn’t trickled down to the players, a Virginian-Pilot investigation shows.

In 2012, Aragona-Pembroke spent $150,000 on baseball operations, including uniforms, field maintenance and umpire salaries. That is about the same amount shown in the league’s 2009 tax filing, one year before it bought Witchduck Hall (a bingo hall–ed.).

What has changed are the league’s expenses.

More than $500,000 of the bingo hall revenue winds up in private hands, according to tax returns, property records, sales contracts and a deed of trust filed with the city.

The league paid $251,000 in salaries in 2012, including a combined $136,000 to Lou and Cheryl Mazza. Lou Mazza is apparently the only Little League president in the country receiving a salary, according to a review of Internal Revenue Service returns and the national Little League office. The national organization’s rules prohibit league officers from receiving money for their baseball service. Such an arrangement would inspire a “thorough, lengthy internal review,” national Little League spokesman Brian McClintock said in an email.

I have driven past that little bingo parlor many times and wondered what was going on in there.

I rest my case.

Addendum, a Few Days Later:

Shake up.

The longtime president of the Aragona-Pembroke Little League and his wife are out as officers, but the league won’t say whether they resigned voluntarily or whether they will continue running the league’s gambling hall.

They were involved in the organization for two decades. I suspect that, after a while, they begin to think of it as their own, rather than of thinking of themselves as its stewards.

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God, Inc. 0

Satire:  Quotes from the Bible citing corporate religiousness, including two corporate headquarters on the Ark, etc.


Click for a larger image.

Via Kos.

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American Taliban: Politicians in Robes 0

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We’re Talking about Good Vibrators Ammosexuals Need Their Toys 0

Honest to Pete, you can’t make this stuff up.

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Nothing To Do, Nowhere To Go 0

For all practical purposes, no change: Still above 300k.

Jobless claims declined by 3,000 to 302,000 in the week ended July 12, a Labor Department report showed today in Washington.

(snip)

The number of people continuing to receive jobless benefits dropped by 79,000 to 2.51 million in the week ended July 5, the fewest since June 2007. The unemployment rate among people eligible for benefits fell to 1.9 percent from 2 percent, today’s report showed.

Bloomberg is all a-twitter with optimism because it was lower than their experts predicted, forgetting that that is ultimately a meaningless observation.

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Clown Suit, Clown Car 0

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Brotherly politeness.

The brother told investigators they were at home on Hillcrest School Road when he asked his younger brother to go get his pistol from the car, Sgt. Dale Phillips said.

The older brother said he heard a single shot and then saw his younger brother on the sidewalk.

But after interviewing family members and examining the scene, investigators determined that the 21-year-old actually fired the shot the hit the 16-year-old victim.

“This incident, at this time, appears to have been an accident. No determination has been made, as to what, if any, charges will be filed,” Sgt. Phillips said.

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QOTD 0

Ambrose Bierce:

The money-getter who pleads his love of work has a lame defense, for love of work at money-getting is a lower taste than love of money.

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