Friday, September 19, 2008

Wake up! You're in the presence of your future


From XinJua

From Alaska's biggest-ever protest rally. Thanks Jeannette!!



Yes, thanks! she said.


McCain's pants catch fire

National health care is not about you, or me, or our taxes. It's a matter of the public health. Think of it this way: If your neighbor is sick, you are more likely to get sick, yourself. If that homeless guy you pass on your way to work gets sick, then everyone he's exposed to is more likely to get sick. Maybe it's not a nightmare if all they have is a cold, but what happens when Ebola crosses the Atlantic? It's a small world- given time, it's inevitable. It seems so obvious to me... how can people continue to think that they live in a safe little bubble? We all need health care. When one of us is sick, all of us are sick.

Plants and pain. Careful with that sprout, vegans!

Things that make you go "hmm..."

On this day in 1783, the first hot air balloon passengers were sent aloft, at Versailles: a sheep, a rooster, and a duck. Science! And in 1959, Soviet Premier Nikita Krushchev was denied entrance to Disneyland. Damn commies.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Let's make happy time

Great picture It's good to see a genuinely smiling face.

I'm tired of harping on Republicans John "W" McCain and Sarah Palin. Yawn. So, what happens when a nation's economy collapses? I guess we'll find out. I suspect we'll lose credibility on the international scene- not only economically, but also politically, militarily (because we can hardly afford what we've got goin on already, if at all), and -worst of all-- culturally.

I say 'worst of all' because culture is the only thing we really export in mass these days. Movies, TV and music. Why will this suffer as the result of electing Republican John McCain? Because we will be trying so hard to keep our little fantasy-world inflated that nothing of any value or relevance will come out. Conducting diplomacy with America will be like trying to have a conversation with a sweaty child molester in a Barney costume.

The rest of the world will shortly become just as disaffected with our political system as we already are. In other words, no one will care about the US. The eyes of the rest of the world will stop caring about what we do; they'll turn to other channels, for the same reasons we don't care about what our country does, either: because we don't feel that our voices count. And that's voter apathy.

I'm still holding to my prediction that the Republican party is coming apart. McCain will take the election, but it'll be dubious at best, and hopefully contested, but the truth of the matter will be that economic conservatives will split their votes between Ron Paul and Bob Barr, while evangelicals will split theirs between dinner at home (not voting) and Sarah Palin. It's conceivable that Palin could be the last Republican president, if she follows McCain.

Her presidency will be largely ineffectual, though, because the voting public won't elect another Republican majority in congress for a while, even if the party doesn't disintegrate, so congress won't be the lap-dog that it has been of late. I hope.

Today is the Feast Day of St Joseph of Cupertino. Joseph (1603-63) was barred by his Franciscan superiors from public worship due to his habit of levitating, utterly disrupting the service and distracting the congregation. Once, according to a witness, he 'flew like a bird on the high altar, where he embraced the tabernacle.' On another occasion, he flew into an olive tree and remained kneeling on a branch for half an hour.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Why I make shoes

Not my work- the photo is from Jill Greenberg, who's having some difficulties with The Atlantic right now, apparently (I'm not sure if she added the text or not, but it's true). Give 'em hell, Jill.


I make shoes because I saw this economic collapse coming 25 years ago. No lie: ask my friends from then if they remember (are you guys out there?)- during Reagan's first term, I said that if things continued as they were going (de-regulation was becoming very fashionable, which I saw then and still see as nepotistic Authority-encouraged selfishness), that eventually people would get carried away with the greed and the screwing of each other, and then we'd all be fucked. I wasn't sure how exactly it would happen, but I knew that you can't screw your neighbor without getting screwed yourself, eventually.

And I was right: We're fucked.

And there's more to it than the authorities are letting on, because they're not ready to let go of their control yet. This is not just a liquidity crisis, not just a stock market crisis- this won't be fixed by financial instruments alone, kids. We won't see our way out of this mess until Americans are making things for themselves again. Even if it's infrastructure; even it it's being done on assembly lines in factories: a purely service economy is not viable, especially when the society in question is based on disposability. Why pay your neighbor to fix [that thing] when you can just go out and buy a new one (made in China) for less? Well, because your neighbor needs that money, so that one day he can in turn patronize your business. Dumbass.

I quit a good job back then, cold. I was a retail marketing agent, it was a total cake job: sweet, easy, completely unfulfilling. Just walked away from my desk; I was disgusted, I didn't even wave. It took me a few years to find my calling, but I listened to my heart (and to the people who saw me trying it and wanted me to do it for them, too), and I found myself.

I make shoes because I wanted to be able to put my hands on what I do and say "this is how I contribute to the betterment of my society." I could not -can not-- bring myself to sell something I don't believe in, or work for a company so big that the owner can't recognize his employees. I wanted to contribute to society creatively, but constructively- art for art's sake is a luxury of wealth. I wanted a job I could not lose to outsourcing, a company that would not lay me off in hard times, an occupation that would still be viable after the fall. We all need shoes. We'll always need shoes. And I make them, myself.

Microbusiness is the way of the future.

On this day in 1179, Hildegard von Bingen merged with the infinite.
In 1859, Norton I proclaimed himself Emperor of the United States and Protector of Mexico, in his capital, San Francisco.
In 1862, the battle of Antietam commenced. It would be the bloodiest day of the war; roughly 25,000 dead today alone. Sgt. William McKinley and a single volunteer drove a wagon of hot coffee and warm food through Confederate fire to the men of the 23rd Ohio regiment. Col. Rutherford B. Hayes promoted him to lieutenant for his bravery and initiative.
In 1964, the Beatles played in Kansas City, for a then-record $150,000.00.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Memory banking

I love election politics. I hate loving election politics. I love the hating. I hate that loving....

Gutter Politics: McCain Campaign Called Out For Half-Truths
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/09/10/gutter-politics-mccain-ca_n_125291.html

McCain Interview On Palin Riddled With Errors
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/09/11/mccain-interview-on-palin_n_125743.html

Palin leaves open option of war with Russia
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Palin_leaves_open_option_of_war_with_Russia_/articleshow/3473711.cms

In a protocol breach, Brown backs Obama
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/In_a_protocol_breach_Brown_backs_Obama/articleshow/3468913.cms

Palin's ABC Interview: Stumped On Bush Doctrine, Seems To Contradict McCain On Pakistan (VIDEO)
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/09/11/palins-abc-interview-stum_n_125818.html

Palin Drops Reference To "Bridge To Nowhere" In Speech
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/09/11/palin-drops-reference-to_n_125786.html

Defense

We need to talk about that word. It's being horribly abused.

Defense is not offense.
Do I really need to explain? I certainly don't need to define the terms, but it appears that I certainly do need to differentiate between the two. Defense is a response to an Offense-ive action. Unprovoked attacks, like ours upon Iraq, can not be said to be "defensive." As noble as our soldiers' intentions may be, we are not defending anything with our occupation. The invasion itself was offensive. In both senses.

Guns are not defensive.
Guns are a deterrent, not a defense. The gun is not going to block the incoming bullet, or the sucker punch, or the knife, unless you are extremely lucky. Rather, you pull it or carry it in the hope that you will be able to use it to either deter/intimidate or deter/kill your opponent. There is, therefore, no sensible or logical argument for concealing a gun on your person. As a deterrent, it is only effective if the rest of us know it's there. Oh hell, I'm starting to sound like Dr. Strangelove...

secrets


Lies, doublespeak and more lies from the Campaign to Nowhere

On this day in 1866, the first musical theater show ("...that conforms to the notion of a ...book musical" -wiki) opened in New York City, a four-act performance titled “The Black Crook.” It ran for 474 performances.
In 1940, four teens followed their dog down a hole near Lascaux, France, and found a gallery of 17,000+ year-old cave paintings.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Campaign to Nowhere


Interesting day in history today. Verrrrry interesting. Follow me...

In 1297, William Wallace defeated the English at Stirling Bridge.
In 1609, Henry Hudson began the colonization of the island of Manhattan.
In 1857, 120 men, women and children –all settlers-- were massacred by Mormons at Mountain Meadows, Utah. The Mormons, led by Brigham Young’s adopted son John Doyle Lee, were under the impression that these families represented an impending invasion by the U.S. Army. He offered them safe passage if they would leave their horses, wagons and weapons, and then killed all but seventeen children under the age of seven.
In 1941, ground was broken on the new Pentagon office building.
In 1973, democratically-elected Chilean President Salvador Allende shot himself after CIA-aided troops of Augusto Pinochet surrounded his fortress of La Moneda in Santiago,
Chile.
In 1990, George H. W. Bush first intoned the phrase "New World Order."

Sunday, September 07, 2008

It's not the war anymore,

It's the economy, stupid. McSame has no plan, and "Dickless Cheney" won't be much help either. Are you better off now than you were eight years ago?

Palin's not qualified to be in charge of trash pickup in DC, and I don't think any thinking person in this country would dispute that. She's a vindictive game-player who thinks that political power comes from "God;" who thinks that 'creationism' should be taught in schools; and that abstinence-only education will prevent out-of-wedlock pregnancies (in spite of all the evidence to the contrary, including her own daughter!).

In short, she's a high-functioning idiot.

Was anyone else surprised when the RNC crowd started shouting "Drill! Drill! Drill!" during her speech? They weren't talking about oil, folks: this was a crowd of 80% white adult males, and the speaker was a beauty queen. Think about it.

I don't think evidence is going to be much good in this contest, but what the heck, here's some against her if you want it:
A letter from someone who has known Sarah Palin since 1992
The lie she told about the plane she "sold on eBay"
Stalling the "Troopergate" investigation
Palin's pastor
Shocking Open Microphone Comments about Sarah Palin (scroll down a bit for the video)
Karl Rove explaining just how unqualified she really is (thanks Jon Stewart!)

And for those of you really interested in real issues, here's the motherlode

Friday, September 05, 2008

Sonny & Cher?

No, Johnny and Sarah! John, the sad little old guy who tries -and fails- to tell jokes and lead the show, while his trophy wife -er, trophy beauty queen- --oops sorry, trophy VP candidate-- bests him with her outrageously expensive designer outfits ...and better lines.

Written lines I mean, geez -not lines of coke. As far as I know, anyway. They do have a lot of snow in Alaska though.

Are you better off now than you were eight years ago? Gas prices are way up. Food prices are way up, and rising. Property values are down, but rent and mortgage costs keep going up....

I hear she's Commander of the Alaska National Guard. Though that's not a thing to brag about right now.

As Mayor of Wasilla, Sarah was all about reform. Re-forming the city with federal money, that is. In her own words: "We did well!" I'll say. You don't get to be a VP nominee without having a few friends in DC. Only two steps away from ex-powerhouse lobbyist Jack Abramoff!

And who knew there was more than one Bridge to Nowhere?! This one has her full support. Those kooky Alaskans...

One last thing. Y'know, our Founding Fathers were community organizers. We'd have had no revolution without organization at the community level. Jeezus, are you people even thinking? And speaking of Jesus, He was a community organizer, too. Watch your step there, folks- you might step on some unintended toes....

That girl can shop!

I didn't make that- I just thought it was funny. I don't like her one bit, and don't trust her at all.

Wasilla: Meth capitol of Alaska
And if that wasn't enough, after taking office as Mayor with a budget surplus, she left her town of 6000 people $22,000,000.00 in debt. Twenty-two million dollars! Yowza, that girl can shop! And that's to say nothing of the many millions in congressional pork that she landed, thanks to her good friendship with disgraced Senator Ted Stevens, currently under indictment on seven charges of taking bribes.

Lipstick on a pitbull-

What this guy really means is "I can't believe I got caught!"

Sorry about the short political posts lately. I have been extraordinarily busy of late, happily, blissfully working on a big huge project. (I'm drafting patterns for pre-sized shoes, if you must know. Yes, I do it by hand. No, I don't use a *@#%ing computer; computers have no sense of style.)

I've also been dealing with money problems and more relevantly, people problems. And when I have intractable problems, especially people problems, I tend to get a little introspective, just in order to make sure that it's not all me.

It's not. But I'm not sure I'm done introspecting; it's kinda nice in here.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Sara Porkbarrelin

Wow, this is fun!

Dirty girl

Dirty girl
She knows nothing about Foreign Policy - YOU know more about Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, North Korea, Russia and Pakistan than she does!!

She thinks Alaska should secede from the “union”

She was FOR the Bridge to Nowhere until she was against it

She campaigned for indicted Senator Ted Stevens

She knows nothing the American Credit Crisis, Free Trade, Immigration, Economics, Foreign Policy, National Security, Education, Health Care, Iraq, Iran, Russia, Pakistan, Afghanistan, North Korea or China.

She is under investigation for abuse of power (she had her brother in law State Trooper Wooten fired during a custody battle with her sister)

She was a sportscaster, a city councilwoman and mayor of a town with fewer than 6,000 people before she was elected Governor, almost by default. She now claims “13 years of Elected Experience” because she's counting time spent on the city council.

This is her claim to "more experience" than Barack Obama and Joe Biden, though she still didn't know what the VP does.

She has served less than 2 years as Governor of one of the smallest states in terms of population.

She did not campaign with John McCain.

She did not know John McCain.

She hunts from airplanes.

She is a radical Christian who obviously does believe in choice: “Bristol CHOSE to have her baby”

She thinks the Pledge of Allegiance was written by the Founding Fathers. Francis Bellamy (1855 - 1931), a Baptist minister, wrote the original Pledge in August 1892. He was a Christian Socialist. The Founding Fathers were -almost to a man-- deists, not Christians.

She brought the issue of abortion into the Wasilla’s “Mayor” race (a non-partisan job that pays $68K/year)

Her mother in law won’t vote for her.

She doesn’t know what the Vice President “does all day.”

She stayed in Texas determined to “give a speech” at the Governors Conference AFTER her water broke prematurely with a high risk pregnancy. This is after flying all the way from Anchorage, while in her third trimester (which, incidentally, is not only a health risk to mother and child, but also expressly prohibited by most major airlines, and therefore possibly fraud on the part of Gov. Palin)

She is married to a guy who had a DUI.

She doesn’t believe Global Warming is real.

She doesn’t believe in Evolution.

Oh, and lest we forget the big guy too soon, there's this.

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

What kind of judgment is that?

On this day in 911, Prince Oleg –a Viking Rus-- signed a treaty with the Byzantines.

Winter Patriot summarizes my own thinking on something largely unrelated to Oleg, here.

Sara Palin? Are you kidding? I couldn't be happier. While being vetted for the nomination, she asked, "could someone please tell me exactly what the VP does?" Do I need to go on?

Consider this: she has a 7-month-old baby with Down syndrome. You'd think that might take priority in your life as a Mother, but I guess that's a personal judgment call. The story goes that she had the baby on a Friday, and was back at work the following Monday. What kind of judgment is that?

It's also been suggested that the Down syndrome baby isn't hers at all, but is rather the first child of her 17-year-old daughter, who -if this is true-- would now be pregnant with her second child. NOTE: THE CHILDREN ARE NOT THE ISSUE. The lies are.

It's really beyond my ability to understand how she can still stand behind 'creation science,' when she is personally confronted with the truth of genetics, in the form of Down syndrome. Again, I have to ask, what kind of judgment is that?

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Haven't we had enough?

Not my photo (duh?); just great art.

My suspicions about our foreign-policy waltz-on-the-razor's-edge with Russia: confirmed.

On this day in 55 bce, Roman forces, under Julius Caesar, invaded Britain.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Nihilism

Nihilism is a sickness, not a philosophy. Of course it's boring; there's nothing to look at but yourself, and you're not that interesting. Get over it.

Seriously: nihilism is the very essence of monomania. It is the notion that nothing matters, that there is no more to life than what you can grasp with your grubby little fingers. Think about that: are you really surprised that it's a depressing dead end? That it leaves you feeling empty and lonely? Get this now: life goes on without you. Life goes on, and it's more fun when it matters.

Take that, F.N.


Then she appeared...

Big boy.


On this day in 1530, Tsar Ivan IV (
Ivan Grozny, "the Terrible," though "the Fearsome" seems like a better translation) was born. Russia would never be the same. And in 1918, Leonard Bernstein was born. After West Side Story, American music would never be the same. If you're unfortunate enough to have not seen this movie yet, what the hell are you waiting for? I don't have much room to talk- I just saw it for the first time a couple of years ago, but holy bujeezus, it's THAT GOOD. Seriously. Looks -and sounds-- like it could have been made yesterday. I am still amazed.

It's probably not my favorite musical, though, all things considered. But it's a really good film, a great story, utterly iconic, and still fresh and original. (My favorite musical? I'll get into that later).

I'm watching a very tense situation unfold. We just sent a warship into the region. We won't win a war with Russia. I'm not sure anyone will.

Friday, August 22, 2008

We hurt too

On this day in 565 CE, St. Columba made the first documented sighting of the Loch Ness monster. Though technically it wasn't documented for another couple-hundred years.

And in 1862, Claude Debussy was born. He is not known to have seen Nessie.

And here's some important (no, really) news you're probably not getting on TV. And she doesn't even flirt with talking about our impending war with Russia (over our support of Georgia, and our infiltration of Poland- this is easily as confrontational as Soviet missiles in Cuba). Many news organizations won't even cover stories relating to 911 anymore, allowing a massive crime to go uninvestigated and unpunished, which I think is a crime in itself. Building 7 -like the others-- was demolished intentionally, it did not collapse as the result of "thermal expansion," which would have been a completely unique event in all of History (that would be called "Catastrophism," and that notion is so silly that debunking isn't even necessary). The timing of the release of that story is also worth noting. It's all part of the big electioneering dance...

Wednesday, August 06, 2008

John Dubya McRove

On this day in 1972, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police were called in to investigate a creature which had appeared on the surface of Thetis Lake, British Columbia, and chased two boys, Gordon Pile and Robin Flewellyn, up the beach. It was about five feet tall, silver-coloured, and shaped like a human being apart from enormous ears, scaly skin and 'a monster face'. Flewellyn was cut on the hand by six razor-sharp points on the creature's head. Two other witnesses saw it four days later. A similar monster had been seen climbing up a riverbank in Saginaw, Michigan, in 1937.

Wild dolphin teaches its peers a trick

Magpies recognize themselves in mirrors

Remember all of those microbiologists who were killed, or died under mysterious circumstances, starting shortly after 911? Ivins was just one of many. Creepy.

Random prognostication: John 'Dubya' McRove is going to "win" in a contested election. We will be paying $7/gallon this time next year.

I don't have any real problems with Obama. I'd have preferred Richardson (or hell, while I'm dreaming: Gore), but I think Obama's got his heart in the right place, even though he's bound to make some mis-steps. But I think all we really need to know about McCain is this: that, on returning from VietNam to find his until-then devoted wife severely "damaged" in a hospital as the result of a car accident, he had an affair with a younger and wealthier woman. And then dumped the wife for the mistress.

Really now, do we need any more information than that?

Saturday, August 02, 2008

No motive + no note = no suicide

No motive given, either for his 'suicide' (has anyone seen a suicide note? or read about one? I have not heard a thing-), or for the initial crime in which he's now being implicated. What does that tell us? He is (erm, was) a Patsy.

Cryptic post today: do the math yourself. I'm afraid of naming names and pointing too directly.

I'll tell you what's going on here: Certain powers-that-be want a President McCain, so certain "loose ends" are going to be tied up over the course of the next few months. This one's clearly first, but look for a captive Osama bin Laden soon. It's too bad they suicided the wrong guy though.

Anonymity and secrecy help no one. An attempt was made to erase this interesting article from history. Interesting.

Don't forget that George and Dick started taking Cipro (the anthrax vaccine) the night of 911. That's right: long before any anthrax threat had been sent, or any threats made public.

Some posit that it was a threatening gesture toward a counter-coup in Washington, as per this entry on a blog I read:
My take on the anthrax episode was that a certain faction felt left out and were kind of hurt by that. Sort of like, "hey, i thought when the coup went down i was going to get to be a part of it! waaah!!"
When a group pulls off a coup, the first thing they want to do after is restore order, their order , as soon as possible. It always felt like the anthrax episode was one group telling the coup group, "we know who you are, and we want in, now, otherwise chaos might continue for a while. and who really wants that?"

But maybe i have been watching too much "Sopranos"...


Last thing I'd say about this today: There is still no coherent chronology of the WTC disaster. That is NOT ok.

Secrets

FORMER NASA astronaut and moon-walker Dr Edgar Mitchell - a veteran of the Apollo 14 mission - makes a startling claim.

On August 1 in 1291, the Everlasting League was formed, later to become the Swiss Confederation.

And in 1972, the Washington Post published the first of Bernstein and Woodward’s stories about a break-in at Democratic National Headquarters in the Watergate Hotel. If you haven't seen "All the President's Men," I highly recommend it. Excellent film, and a very interesting version of What Happened. Follow that up with Oliver Stone's "Nixon" for a really interesting picture of American politics. Anthony Hopkins is nothing short of amazing as Nixon.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Spider mandala

Spider mandala.

Oh no, spiders don't have consciousness. Don't be silly. These items just arranged themselves on its web. Of course. Of course.

Not.

The extraordinary artist is the second 'unit' from the top. Kinda hard to see, because like most of us he's a bit shy and, naturally, afraid of creatures more than 100x his own size.

Consciousness. We humans believed for the longest time that we were the only ones with 'it,' but I disagree, and none too respectfully either. I see evidence of consciousness almost everywhere, and yeah, I'm prepared to argue with you about it if you don't. It is imperative that we treat the rest of the world -all of it-- as conscious. And consciousness deserves a little respect. It's not an easy ride, as you know.

What is consciousness? If you make a decision, you are experiencing it. If you're aware -of anything-- then you're experiencing it. Beyond that, it's difficult to define. That bug you see crawling around- it's making decisions about where to best find food, a mate, or shelter (just like you). Conscious, deliberate decisions. Sure, maybe they're bad decisions, maybe they don't get him anywhere, maybe he even forgets them ten milliseconds after he makes them, but I assure you, he is conscious. If he wasn't -if he was just crawling around randomly responding to random stimuli-- evolution simply would not favor his species' reproduction unless food and population density was so high that reproduction was inevitable (which is not the case for any species of any kind of which I am aware). And even if food and population density was that high, he'd still have to be aware enough not to eat his own kind (i.e. cause his own extinction) before mating (i.e. providing for his own replacement). He is here: he is conscious.

It seems funny to me that Scientific Materialists -those people who believe that Everything That Is, Can Be Measured-- are often the first to dismiss the idea of Consciousness in non-humans. They will assert that even we humans are nothing but the sum total of our physical parts + electricity generated by chemical reactions within us, and that our Consciousness is a special result of -or even a by-product of-- intelligence.

The Null Hypothesis here is illustrative: if Consciousness is the result of intelligence, then it follows that the unintelligent are not Conscious. Some humans, therefore, are not Conscious. This is an unacceptable conclusion in the international Scientific community, so their hypothesis, that Consciousness is the result or by-product of intelligence, is void. The narrowest possible conclusion to draw from this is that Consciousness is not solely a human experience.

So this being the case then, all living things share consciousness -not just us "higher" animals-- because all living things operate more or less the same way: on the basis of these electrochemical impulses. You see something funny, and you smile, though you don't know why or how it happened. In the exact same way, the sunflower experiences sunlight and turns to face it, though it doesn't know how, or why. It just "likes" the sun, in the same sense that you like to laugh or smile or eat donuts.

One conclusion is inescapable: Consciousness is everywhere, though nowhere quite the same. Embrace it -embrace yourself- in all its -all of your-- forms.

On this day in 1942, American musicians went on strike, in a struggle with record companies over royalties. Contractual obligations would keep the then-very-popular big bands off the road (and out of the studios) effectively stopping the Big Band era in its tracks, until Columbia and Victor records succumbed more than two years later. Musicians got around their band contracts by playing in small ensembles in small clubs. This intimacy encouraged self-expression, in contrast to a big band setting with a conductor, and thus be-bop was born.

GOP: rotten to the core.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Froggie went a-courtin'

Cascades Frog. Phil spotted him on the trail the other day. I stopped to take a pic, but Phil was in a better position, so he got this one. Amphibian population are in sharp decline all over the world, so I always get excited when I see one in the wild. I was never the frog-catching kind of kid, but I liked watching them whenever I was near a pond, creek or river, and now they're increasingly hard to find. Not too long ago, apparently, the tree frog population in this area was as loud on summer nights as the cicadas are in the midwest, but we've been here two years now and I have yet to hear one.

McCain on health care: Go to the doctor. Never mind how to pay for it, right Senator?

Orang-utans on health care: Do it yourself. Raises one of my favorite unanswered questions: How do we know what plants are good for us, and how to use them? Or maybe, "how did we know, in the first place?" If these orangs found this plant by trial and error, then that says a LOT about their ability to observe and reason (and that's pretty damn significant). If we found it first that way, and they found it by observing us using it, then we have even more questions: how did the humans know about the plant in the first place? How did the very reclusive and solitary orangs observe them? How did the orangs know that the humans were treating pain? And if the orangs knew that the humans were treating pain, then that implies that the orangs enjoy the knowledge that other things are sentient as well. And Established Science doesn't really accept that possibility, at this point. In other words: if the easy answer is right, then we have to answer the even-harder questions.

This tells me, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that we humans are not the only sentient critters on the planet. The only significant difference between us and anything else, is procedural: at a molecular level, we're all the same. The differences only appear as a result of following different instructions from the same DNA.

Me on health care: If my neighbor is sick with something contagious, then I am at risk too, no matter how good my doctor is. In a sense: if one of us is sick, we are all sick. The public health is as much an element of the Public Good as a police force, fire department, and usable roads. Medicare for all is essential.

Healthy individuals make a healthy society.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Flying


On this day in 1977, two giant birds swooped down on Lawndale, Illinois, and one seized 10-year-old Marlon Lowe and carried him about 30 feet before releasing him. Marlon weighed 65 pounds. The birds were dark with white rings around their long necks, curled beaks and a wingspan of around eight feet.

Videogames cost a bit more than you know....

Obama vs McCain: a side-by-side comparison from Council for a Livable World

That does it! I'm done with flying. Amtrak here I come.