Blog Catalog

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Quote of the day--on poverty

"But I think everyone must realize unless one deals with the question of poorest people of the world, it will not be safe.  It cannot be safe.  Apart from the humanitarian and the moral issue, you cannot have 2 billion people who are trailing the rest of the world so substantially.

--James Wolfehsohn, KBE AO, American financial executive, former, 9th president of the World Bank Group, nominated by then-President Bill Clinton

The next iPad: "Flatter back panel" and "improved speaker"??

There's an article out right now that says the conjecture on the next, new iPad will be that it has, as said above, a flatter back panel and an improved speaker.

WTH?

You gotta' be kidding me.

A flatter back panel and improved speaker?

That's it?

I don't own one of these yet--and yes, I want to--but I'll tell you what, I know what it should have---the next iPad should have two far more important things than that.

They should absolutely have an additional, 2nd camera---one for front and back, like the first one should have had--and then it better have phone capability in it.

But it won't.

Steve Jobs, needs to stop stringing us along.  It's not like he created the Model T and it's 1910.  He and Apple should stop teasing us with products that aren't fully developed, just so they can keep bringing out newer and newer models of these things slowly and can milk us for all the bucks they can get.

Besides ripping us off, it's horrible for the environment.

Do the right thing--make the next iPad full-blown and fully developed, Mr. Jobs.

Stop jerking us around.

Link:  http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20101223/tc_yblog_technews/next-ipad-to-boast-flatter-back-panel-improved-speaker;_ylt=ApPuKvdz8KSv3XVNqXGHmhb9xg8F;_ylu=X3oDMTViYWMwbnZnBGFzc2V0Ay9zL3libG9nX3RlY2huZXdzLzIwMTAxMjIzL3RjX3libG9nX3RlY2huZXdzL25leHQtaXBhZC10by1ib2FzdC1mbGF0dGVyLWJhY2stcGFuZWwtaW1wcm92ZWQtc3BlYWtlcgRjY29kZQNtcF9lY184XzEwBGNwb3MDOQRwb3MDOQRzZWMDeW5fdG9wX3N0b3JpZXMEc2xrA25leHRpcGFkdG9ibw--

A case of not wanting to be correct

What'd I say?

A couple of days ago I wrote how it maybe didn't make sense to be doing "war games" right next to those literally poor, delusional psychos over in North Korea.

So what happens?

Today's news:


War rhetoric rises between North and South Korea


SEOUL, South Korea – One month after a deadly exchange of artillery fire, the two Koreas ramped up their rhetoric Thursday, with South Korea's president pledging unsparing retaliation if attacked again and a top North Korean official threatening a "sacred" nuclear war if provoked.

South Korean troops, tanks and fighter jets put on a thundering display of force as President Lee Myung-bak visited with soldiers at a base near the border, while North Korea's elite marked a key military anniversary by lashing out at the South for encouraging war.
For both countries, the rallying cries and military maneuvers mainly seemed designed to build support at home. But they raised fears anew of all-out war on a peninsula that New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson called a "tinderbox" after returning from a visit to the North Koreancapital this week.
I hope we can scale back from this lunacy.
Enough saber-rattling, guys.
Men.  Men and their testosterone.
Let's hope it's a "merry little Christmas" and a very happy new year.

I'm so old...

I remember when ALL videos from YouTube that were put on Facebook automatically worked.  Yeah.  You'd just click them and they played.  All of them.  Every time.  No exceptions.

I don't ask a lot for Christmas...


                       Merry Christmas, everyone

Sufjan Steven II: Chicago (I made a lot of mistakes)


                                     I can relate

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Sufjan Stevens


If you're not familiar with Sufjan (pron. soof' yahn) Stevens, you maybe ought to check him out.  He's a very individualistic, unique and talented writer, singer and performer.

This clip is from a few years ago when he performed on PBS' Austin City Limits.  All the pieces he and the group did were very pleasant, catchy and enjoyable.  He's originally from Detroit, apparently.  His Catholic background also comes out, it seems.

If you'd like to see more, check out "Casimir Pulaski Day" and on you tube and there are more videos at the link below.

Just a thought.

Link:  http://www.google.com/search?q=sufjan+stevens+austin+city+limits&tbo=p&tbs=vid:1&source=vgc&hl=en&aq=f

"You can't handle the truth!"


We really don't know--or care to know--what's going on in our country--or what our country is doing in the world.

Do we?

We're in 6 wars?

From Senator Arlen Specter: What we've become?


What kills me is that so many people, time and again, keep asking why and how we've gotten to where we've gotten when it seems so obvious it's from having killed the "Fairness Doctrine" and because we don't get and keep money--big money--out of our government, most specifically with true, thorough federal campaign financing.

But it won't happen.

Quote of the day--on traditions, holiday and otherwise

Professor Gurland (see here) once commented that one of man's problems was looking for stability in a world of change. Perhaps he was right and this is the reason we find such tremendous comfort in those few enduring icons, legacy businesses, products and annual holidays and celebrations. And why nostalgia is so strong that we build bridges in our minds between past memories and present experiences with connections as cables.


Link:  http://newyorkdailyphoto.blogspot.com/2010/12/stability-in-world-of-change.html

Petty people---and their ignorance---in our political system

I have two quotes for you today:

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY):  “There’s much for them" (the Democrats) to be angst-ridden about,” McConnell said with a chuckle. “If they think it’s bad now, wait till next year.”

Way to think about what's best for the country, Senator.

Not.

And number two, from Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele, ever the fount of wisdom, intelligence and maturity:

During an appearance on WBAL radio last week, Steele was asked to address a concern from Indiana Committeeman Jim Bopp, Jr., who had claimed that the RNC chairman played the race card in framing his own reelection fight as a test that will "speak volumes about our willingness to truly be the party of Lincoln."
"Well, Mr. Bopp is an idiot," Steele responded on WBAL. "If he took that away from, and I don't want to be crass, and I don't want to throw stones at him, but I just think that's an idiotic statement to make."

We--the US--are better than this.

And we deserve better than this--from our legislators and everyone in and associated with our government.

Links: http://thinkprogress.org/2010/12/21/mcconnell-dems/
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/12/21/michael-steele-collins-idiot_n_799653.html

Hallmark--and one of their artists--in NY Times

From the article:  Mary Hamilton, 74, who is one of the few Hallmark greeting card artists whose work bears her name, is known as “Hallmark’s Cher.”


The company has been selling cards for 100 years now and for more than half that time--55 years to be exact--the works of Ms. Hamilton have been among them.  Now 74 and widowed, she continues to work four days a week designing cards.  She said she was the longest tenured of Hallmark's 13,400 employees--except for the chairman, Donald J. Hall--and had produced more than 3,000 designs.


So, good on you, Ms. Hamilton.  Keep up the great work.


And happy holidays!

Link:  http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/22/us/22hallmark.html?hp

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Angelina Jolie as Cleopatra?

Heck yeah.  I say bring it on.


And for once, finally, she won't be playing a black-clad, mysterious temptress/provocateur that beats the asses of all the men who come at her.  In short, it will be a new, fresh role for her.

Maybe, just maybe, if we're lucky, we can see if she can act or if she's just another John Wayne type (who can only play who she is already).

Link:  http://www.firstshowing.net/2010/10/14/james-cameron-considering-directing-angelina-jolies-cleopatra/
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/12/07/angelina-jolie-cleopatra-_n_793386.html

KCMO Police Dept: Credit where it's due

So many times, with so many things, if something is done badly, everyone screams bloody murder about it.  Right?

You bet.

But done right, done correctly?

Virtually no matter what it is, with too few exceptions, certainly, you don't hear a thing.

That seems especially true with any government office, in general, but police departments, perhaps, particularly.

So when I saw an article at the Star about how the KCMO Police Department apprehended and arrested 3 men for a "robbery attempt" ahead of the robbery---before it even happened, I had questions.

The biggest question was how did they do that?

How did they arrest 3 men for a robbery attempt BEFORE it happenend?

It sounded like something out of Tom Cruise's "Minority Report" movie, of course, with the police arresting people prior to an act.  Again, how could and did they do that?

So it was an interesting article to read (see link below) and I have to say, kudos, salutations and congratulations to these officers and the Kansas City, Missouri Police Department for a terrific job, extremely well done.

If you read the article--as everyone in KCMO should--you can see it took some homework and at least 3 mornings in a row of extremely early wakeup calls.  (Wanna' deride it?  YOU get yer butt outta' bed 3 days in a row at about 4 am to catch some would-be thieves, try to remain anonymous and be successful in catching the clowns.  See if you like it or it's easy.)

Just don't forget:  "Let's be careful out there."

Links:  http://www.kansascity.com/2010/12/20/2533968/robbery-attempt-allegedly-thwarted.html
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0181689/

Quote of the day--what Capitalism and corporations do badly

"Your water, your health care, your kids' schools, they shouldn't be profit based. They should be community based. If, for example, a private enterprise takes over a prison, it will have to show growth from one year to the next. In other words, next year it will have to either have more prisoners or give the existing ones even worse services. Ditto for schools; ditto for hospitals. This is a major reason why the US has 5-10-50 times more domestic incarcerations than any other country that calls itself civilized. Profit."  


Yes, government-run institutions are often poorly-run. But you still have no choice but to re-organize them, since the only alternative is to lose control of what you really can't afford to lose control of. I don’t want to cover all services right here and now, but you don’t for instance want to let some private company uphold and police the law in your community. After all, what would be next? Let them make the laws too? What, we’re not close enough to exactly that yet? Really, you tell me, what's the difference between making the laws on the one hand versus interpreting the existing ones on the other? Blackwater, anyone?

"Outsource every public sector job possible", Mish? I don't think so. It's the road to hell, because the Carlyle Group and Blackrock and a bunch of Chinese and Arab multi-billion dollar enterprises and sovereign wealth funds will wind up telling you what you can do and say, what health care you can get, and whether or not you’ll have clean water in the morning. And the decisions between these options will be based on profit, not on whether your kids get a good education, or a good doctor, or whether they can drink their tap water or not. "Sorry, no profit in that."



--The Automatic Earth Blog, "The United States of Disintegration


You really should read about the debt and debts of states in the country and what it portends for the coming year.


That said, Merry Christmas


Link:  http://theautomaticearth.blogspot.com/2010/12/december-20-2010-united-states-of.html

Steve Kraske on--gulp---President Palin

Steve Kraske wrote in his column Sunday a fascinating, if scary to the point of threatening bit about Sarah Palin having a better than average possibility of becoming the next president of the United States.

"If Palin runs and beats a beleaguered Obama",--heaven forbid--he writes, we will, most surely, be going straight to hell, handbasket or no.

That is the only person I can think of who could both have a shot at being president AND do a worse--much worse--job at it than George W. Bush did.

And that's saying a great, great deal.

God--if there is one--help us.

Link:  http://www.kansascity.com/2010/12/11/2513968/should-we-take-palin-seriously.html

Monday, December 20, 2010

Another view--below--of the flash mob at Crown Center Sunday


Very, very cool.

Not really a true "flash mob", but what they hey.    I hope it becomes an annual tradition in town.

Quote of the day--on fairness

"At the heart of this discussion is the issue of fairness. Are we willing to continue consuming now at the expense of our children and grandchildren's welfare? Are we really willing to see ordinary people without jobs and losing their homes at the same time that we preserve lower taxes for the wealthy?"  


--Linda J. Bilmes, The Los Angeles Times

Link:  http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/12/19/105395/commentary-us-budget-woes-more.html#storylink=omni_popular

Our local video is one of the top viral videos of the year! Yeehaw!


Number 9 of the top 10 viral videos of the year!  We're on the map!

South Carolina: Amazingly still fighting the Civil War (that they lost)

I don't suppose you saw this, did you?  South Carolina is--yes--actually going to celebrate, yes, celebrate the beginning of the Civil War.

That is some stunning ignorance.

Check this out:


COLUMBIA, S.C. — Starting Monday, South Carolina will commemorate the 150th anniversary of the start of the Civil War with a series of events that underscore the state's central role in that titanic, tragic struggle.

Two of the first events scheduled to mark the anniversary — a privately sponsored secession ball Monday in Charleston and an effort to display the original Ordinance of Secession — show just how divisive the Civil War remains.

There is some internal protest against it, thank goodness, and they see it for what it is, at least in part, and that is that it is a "a celebration of treason and slavery."

If it's not that, it's nothing.

But hey, what the heck, this way a whole lotta' white people can get together and have lots of big parties.

For a whole year.

That is some kind of twisted sick.

Party on, South Carolina.

Read more: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/12/19/105532/150-years-later-s-carolina-celebration.html#ixzz18cfMz749

Does anyone else think this a fairly stupid idea?

South Korea to conduct firing drills from border island



With the tensions running so high in the Koreas, especially after North Korea attacked and bombed South Korea's island town not that many weeks ago, doesn't it seem that South Korea maybe ought not have firing drills right now?


Link:   http://www.kansascity.com/2010/12/19/2530489/security-council-to-meet-as-skorea.html

Thomas McClanahan: wrong in so many ways

In yesterday's Star, Thomas E. McClanahan--the paper's resident Conservative--outlined more of his reasons for being against the Health Care Reform Act passed earlier this year.

Naturally, he utterly ignored the fact that US District Court Judge Henry Hudson's ruling against the reform was highly biased and should have been dismissed since Judge Hudson is a part owner of a company, apparently, that worked openly and against this same reform.  Recusing, anyone?

But no, Mr. McClanahan didn't address that issue.

We'll go on from there.

Next, he says "At issue is the personal mandate, the part of the law that says everyone must buy health insurance or pay a penalty."


Okay, so if this is an issue, then how can government tell us to buy car insurance, then?  How is this a problem?
No one gets the connection?  One is allowable but the other isn't?  How wouldyou explain that?


But here's what he says is the crux of his issue with the health care reform:


During the health care debate, it was common to hear people piously assert that health care should be a right, perhaps unaware of the full implications. The ongoing strikes and riots in Europe, however, represent the long-term risks of the progressive vision, in which government-delivered social benefits are portrayed as personal rights.

No wonder they’re rioting in Europe. They believe their personal rights are being violated by budget cuts brought on by the sovereign debt crisis.
Well, okay, right, the people are rioting---actually it's the university students because their costs have been rumored that they are to, I believe, double.  That's not a health care problem, for one.  
Secondly, not all of Europe is rioting, for sure. 
Third, Europe is decidedly, absolutely not rioting on or about health care in any way.  The societies over there wisely decided, decades ago, that health care is, indeed, a "right" and that it shouldn't be tied, endlessly, as we have, to profit and profits, ad infinitum.  That our system has is true lunacy.  It's indecent.  It's obscene.
The fact is, the claims Mr. McClanahan makes in his column yesterday are the same, old and very tired claims that are virtually always made about progessive policies, politics and laws, be it Social Security or Medicare or whatever.  It's always "the end of the world" with these people.  In this case, Mr. McClanahan claims that "The problem is that elevating benefits to the level of rights confers an unlimited grant of power to the government. In the legislative process..."
Right.  If this passes, the sky is definitely going to fall.  You know we'll all turn Communist, don't you?
He goes on:  "From government’s point of view, positive rights are marching orders. Heaven and earth must be moved to deliver the promises. The state grows rapidly and ultimately it outruns the capacity of the tax base to pay for it all, endangering the financial security of everyone."
The fact is, Mr. McClanahan, if the "public option" had also been included in this health care reform, all it would do is give the insurance agencies some competition, in a direct effort to help keep insurance costs down.  More than anything, that's what's killing our health care system--the costs, the high, high costs.  
So there's the rebuttal to the column and that's all well and good.
But the fact is, our health care system is utterly, completely, totally broken.  More than 50 million of us here in the US have no health care coverage.
It's clear Mr. McClanahan and lots of Conservatives and Republicans are against what he derides as "Obamacare" but which is really the Health Care Reform Act of 2010 and it's for the people of the US, of America.
Fine, they're all against it.
What would you, Mr. McClanahan, and all your kind who are so against this, do FOR the American people, to help fix our health care system?
No one on the other side has offered any solutions yet.
And of it--the system, our costs and our individual and collective health--just keep getting worse, in the meantime.

Link:  http://www.kansascity.com/2010/12/18/2529544/obamacare-and-the-risk-of-positive.html

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Man, I wish I had been there


                                Merry Christmas, y'all

Link:  http://www.kansascity.com/2010/12/19/2531136/random-act-of-culture-strikes.html

I'm so old...

I remember when the embed information of any and every video from YouTube--or any and every other source--was always, always a good, long paragraph's worth of symbols and NEVER, EVER only 2 lines long (as they are now).

Merry Christmas films (ruined) :)


                               Merry Christmas, y'all

The UN regulating the internet?

I first heard about this yesterday on NPR (naturally).

And my first thought was:

Uh.....  right.   Why?

Why would the UN, of all groups--other than their international reach--be chosen to "regulate" the internet?

Talk about "one-world government".  (And I'm actually all for one-world government, to be completely honest.  It's not a problem for me, thanks very much.)

Check it out:

"At a meeting in New York on Wednesday, representatives from Brazil called for an international body made up of Government representatives that would attempt to create global standards for policing the internet - specifically in reaction to challenges such as WikiLeaks," wrote IT News.


The UN has announced that a "Working Group on Internet Governance," made up solely of member states (governments), will consider changes to the Internet Governance Forum (IGF), a "forum for multi-stakeholder dialogue on public policy related to Internet governance issues, such as the Internet's sustainability, robustness, security, stability and development."

Talk about "Big Brother" watching over us.

Who thought or thinks this is a good idea?  I mean, besides China and all other totalitarian governments that don't want good, open communication between all their citizens.

And since when is the internet "broken"?  What about it isn't working, exactly?  Well, except for that rather obvious Wikileaks thing, of course.

I mean, other than the fact that governments can't control what you and I are putting on it right now and the fact that business on it, in most places, isn't taxed which are, in my view, both good things, right?

I think this may be a hugely overlooked story, too.

With the "shape of things to come" being, undoubtedly, online and on the internet, what's the one body looking at shaping and regulating and ruling, if you will, the internet?

Yeah, the UN.  The United Nations.  Wow.  What a change.

Usually the average schmoe on the street doesn't pay the UN much attention.

And he/she still might not.

But with this?  With the UN looking at making international rules for the internet and the World Wide Web?

I think, suddenly, they may get the attention of the average person---all around the world.

I don't think this can go anywhere good.  At least, it will go nowhere good for the citizens of the world.  It will or would only benefit governments in the world and their goals and attempts at stifling free speech.

I don't know much about imprisoned Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo, but I'd be willing to bet he'd be one who sees this for what it is.


And he'd be against it.

Links:http://www.npr.org/2010/12/17/132144972/U-N-Delegates-Debate-Control-Of-Internet
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/12/17/un-internet-regulation_n_798457.html

Go here: http://isoc.org/wp/newsletter/?p=2710
Please sign the petition. Help keep the UN from regulating the internet. It will only lead to an infringement of free speech rights--around the world.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

169 North Shutdown at Municipal Airport---once more, with feeling

From The Star online today:

Authorities are getting ready to close the southbound lanes U.S. 169 after the water pipe that burst last week started leaking again today.

The closure will be from Missouri 9 south across the Missouri River. Authorities were not sure how long it would take to get the road reopened.


Drivers should consider Highway 9 across the Heart of America Bridge or the new Christopher S. Bond Bridge as alternatives.



Another day in paradise.

Enjoy your weekend---and be safe out there, folks!

Link:  http://www.kansascity.com/2010/12/18/2529209/us-169-closing-again.html

Is no one going to challenge the judge's partiality on his ruling??

This US District Judge Henry Hudson, who ruled that the Health Care Reform Act is unconstitutional this past week is a) a Republican (though I'll discount that) and b) the part-owner of a company that paid solid money for and fought health care reform this last Summer.

Can you say "highly biased"?

So I ask you, is no one, ahead of time, going to challenge this very partial clown on the fact that he should have recused himself from this case, since he was and is so clearly against health care reform and because he has "money in the game", so to speak, against there being any health care reform in this city? 

Is this ruling going to go on of it's own weight, without being questioned?

Does fairness play any role in this man's court?

Our courts?  Our judicial system?

Link:  http://www.bizjournals.com/kansascity/news/2010/12/13/judge-health-care-reforms-coverage.html?ed=2010-12-13&s=article_du&ana=e_du_pub

A big fix for the economy

I saw the basis for this earlier, on Facebook, frankly, and tweaked it a bit (shortened it) but it seems like these few moves by our Congress would go a long way to helping the country with jobs and taxes, both:

* End off-shoring jobs.  Repeal all taxes that benefit companies to take manufacturing offshore.  A seeming "no-brainer";

* End offshore banking of corporate profits and their tax evasion via the Cayman Islands or anywhere else.  Don't make this "okay" any longer.  It should never have been "okay."  Another "no-brainer", don't you think?;

* Get manufacturing for export back as the American staple of business and wealth-generation;

* Get American & US-based foreign corporations to actually pay their actual tax obligations;

*  Establish a minimum corporate tax of at least 10%, minimum, that ALL foreign companies must pay in order to do business in and with America.  End the ability to pay zero taxes for corporations

It seems to make so much sense and it's simple.  Everyone but the corporations, their lobbyists and the Congressmen they "buy" would be for it, too.

I'm not saying or suggesting this would solve all our problems, economically and financially, by any means, but I do think this would go a long way to repairing the damage done to our manufacturing base and so, again, our economy, if these few things were put in place.

Hey, we can hope, can't we?

More than hope, we can push our legislators in Washington.  These are long overdue.

Enjoy your weekend, y'all.

Opposition to Health Law Is Steeped in Tradition

The quote:

“We are against forcing all citizens, regardless of need, into a compulsory government program,” said one prominent critic of the new health care law. It is socialized medicine, he argued. If it stands,he said, “one of these days, you and I are going to spend our sunset years telling our children, and our children’s children, what it once was like in America when men were free.”

The health care law in question was Medicare, and the critic was Ronald Reagan.   (by David Leonhardt, The New York Times, 12/14/2010)

We’ve lived through a version of this story before, and not just with Medicare. Nearly every time this country has expanded its social safety net or tried to guarantee civil rights, passionate opposition has followed.


The opposition stems from the tension between two competing traditions in the American economy. One is the laissez-faire tradition that celebrates individuality and risk-taking. The other is the progressive tradition that says people have a right to a minimum standard of living — time off from work, education and the like.
The federal income tax, a senator from New York said a century ago, might mean the end of “our distinctively American experiment of individual freedom.” Social Security was actually a plan “to Sovietize America,” a previous head of the Chamber of Commerce said in 1935. The minimum wage and mandated overtime pay were steps “in the direction of Communism, Bolshevism, fascism and Nazism,” theNational Association of Manufacturers charged in 1938.



After Brown v. Board of Education outlawed school segregation in 1954, 101 members of Congress signed a statement calling the ruling an instance of “naked judicial power” that would sow “chaos and confusion” and diminish American greatness. A decade later, The Wall Street Journal editorial board described civil rights marchers as “asking for trouble” and civil rights laws as being on “the outer edge of constitutionality, if not more.”
Really, people, this is tiresome.

More than 50 million of us have no health care insurance at all.  Millions of us have insurance but can't truly afford to have any services because the cost, first, of our insurance premiums are too high and then the cost of the care is also too high.

We need the Health Care Reform Act that passed this year.

Actually, we need even more than that but for right now, we're not going to get it.


Enjoy your weekend, y'all.