‘Miracle fruit’ turns sour things sweet – CNN.com.
Interesting!
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March 26th, 2009 [Food & Cooking, General, Health & Wellness]
‘Miracle fruit’ turns sour things sweet – CNN.com.
Interesting!
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March 23rd, 2009 [Civil Rights, General, Marriage Equality]
Leaked memos: Gay rights group make new charges over LDS Prop 8 role – Salt Lake Tribune.
No surprises here. Well, a few – turns out they were deeper in than anybody imagined.
But then again, why should we be surprised?
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March 22nd, 2009 [General]
Plea resolves Torrance Prop. 8 attack case – The Daily Breeze.
According to Deputy District Attorney Tim Hu, Storm must also write an essay by Sept. 16 explaining what he’s learned from his classes and counseling. Failure to do so could result in a probation violation, Hu added.
I think I’d like to read that essay…
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March 19th, 2009 [Banking, Civil Rights, Financial, General]
The belief that the wealthy are worthy is waning – Los Angeles Times.
That the point is even open for discussion suggests that a sea change is taking place on the American political scene. For decades, the wealthy have been held up as people to be admired, victors in the Darwinian economic struggle by virtue of their personal ingenuity and hard work.
Americans consistently supported fiscal policies that undermined middle- and working-class interests partially because they saw themselves as rich-people-in-waiting: Given time, toil and the magic of compound interest, anyone could retire a millionaire.
That mind-set has all but been eradicated by the damage sustained by the average worker's nest egg, combined with the spectacle of bankers and financial engineers maintaining their lifestyles with multimillion-dollar bonuses while the submerged 99% struggle for oxygen.
(emphasis added)
I hope his predictions are right. For FAR too long we’ve been living in an a faux democracy where 1% of the people own more than a third of the wealth, and the top 20% own more than 80% of it. The purpose of income tax was to raise revenue for the government, but it was mostly to prevent an aristocracy from forming. Are we there yet?
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March 18th, 2009 [General, Health & Wellness, Patient's Rights]
Attorney general signals shift in marijuana policy.
I wonder how this will affect people who are serving time for complying with state medical marijuana laws, e.g. Charles Lynch.
According to the government's sentencing recommendation for Lynch, which says the five-year mandatory minimum prison term is an appropriate one, Lynch had violated California state law because his "operation was rife with activities having more to do with business and casual drug distribution than anything medical."
Well, obviously. The federal government had refused to acknowledge any medicinal properties of cannabis in the first place, so obviously they were going to say he was operating in casual drug distribution. They also claimed that Lynch was distributing marijuana to children, failing to mention that the minors involved were teenaged cancer patients whose parents had initiated contact with Lynch because pharmaceutical appetite stimulants had proved ineffective.
Time shall tell, I guess.
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March 18th, 2009 [Arts & Entertainment, General]
Natasha Richardson dies after ski fall – CNN.com.
So sad – she was so young.
Yet another celebrity taken by the ski slopes… what’s so odd is that she didn’t seem to have any injuries after she fell – but I kind of had a bad feeling when I saw she’d been hospitalized, I don’t know why.
So sorry for her family. 🙁
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March 17th, 2009 [General, Health & Wellness]
Senators want to fight Mexican drug cartels’ expanding influence – CNN.com.
Anthony Placido of the Drug Enforcement Administration said the DEA does not believe "that in the near term the cartels will deliberately target U.S. government personnel or interests or intentionally target U.S. civilians in the United States."
Yeah, well. We all know how much the DEA is to be trusted. They would just as soon ignore the cartels and stick to the far safer job of taking medicine from cancer patients and uprooting big mean plants.
Here’s hoping Obama’s DEA is different.
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March 16th, 2009 [Civil Rights, General, News]
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March 15th, 2009 [Financial, General]
Commentary: We owe oldest Americans an apology – CNN.com.
Not to mention those who should be on the brink of retirement right now, but for the fact that their entire retirement fund has been wiped out because they had the misfortune to work for 30+ years for one of the big companies currently going under or being nationalized…
1 Comment » | |
March 14th, 2009 [Banking, Financial, General]
Madoff worth more than $820 million, document says – CNN.com.
All the reason to liquidate his estate and divvy it up among his victims.
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March 14th, 2009 [Financial, General]
Family caught in Madoff swindle forced to sell Jewish heirlooms – CNN.com.
This just makes me so sick, and horrified, and disappointed in humanity, that it can produce somebody like Madoff. But not to worry. There’s a backhanded Jewish blessing for every occasion.
I hope to god the government seizes his entire estate – wherever it may be hiding – and redistributes it to his victims. There is no justification for what he did. There is no explaining the damage. Many of his victims were philanthropic groups or nonprofit organizations, or were benefactors to such groups. Without those contributions, how many more will suffer?
Frankly I think the government ought to bear some of the responsibility here anyway. They have oversight over situations like this, and they knew something was wrong – but they failed miserably in their investigations, despite multiple warnings that something was amiss. It makes me think of children who die at the hands of abusive parents, and then after the fact we find out that child protection agencies had investigated multiple times and refused to take the child out of the home, or found “no evidence” of abuse.
This is that serious. This man was chairman of the NASDAQ. Investors are not in a position to know whether securities fraud is taking place. This is why we have the SEC. Or at least, so we thought.
Most of all, it pisses me off that this was a Jewish guy swindling so many people, especially so many who were also Jews or Jewish charities. First, I hate to see Jewish people involved in anything so shameful. Just… as a Jew, it pisses me off that he would do that. He should know better. He should be a better person than that. Second, you know that anti-Semites all over the country are going, “Well, it figures. Never let a Jew touch your money.” Because we all know that what one Jew does wrong gets attributed to the whole of us. But third, it kills me because he went beyond mere financial scamming and exploited a familial trust. It’s hard to explain if you’re not Jewish; it’ll just sound like I’m endorsing the Jewish mafia or something. That’s not what I mean. What I mean is… just think about it. So many of his victims were elderly Ashkenazi Jews, many of them Holocaust survivors. These are the people whose parents and grandparents came over here on ships to escape pogroms, died in the Nazi camps, etc. These are the people who stood together at Mount Sinai (or so it goes, in Jewish theology). Point being: we’ve been through so much as a people – why would we do that to each other?
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March 13th, 2009 [Financial, General, Television]
On “Mad Money,” Cramer back to normal – War Room – Salon.com.
Most disturbing:
The man himself wasn’t the only one trying to minimize the “Daily Show” interview on Friday. TVNewser reports that producers at Cramer’s sister network MSNBC were asked not to cover it during their own shows.
Uh, isn’t this similar to the very bullshit Jon Stewart was criticizing? This is news. Sorry, but it is. You don’t get to suppress it just because you’re a little embarrassed that it took a cable comedian to call your network to task for its role in the current economic meltdown.
1 Comment » | |
March 13th, 2009 [General]
Joe. My. God.: That’s Life: Board Games Make You Gay!.
Hey, numb-skulls… you realize the original board game let you do that too, right?
Next thing you know they’ll be petitioning the makers of the board game to create different holes for pink and blue pegs, and only allow one of each in the front seat. Oh, and the blue peg will ALWAYS be the in the driver’s seat.
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March 13th, 2009 [General, News]
Dad marries girlfriend, 17, to ‘fulfill a wish for Haleigh’ – CNN.com.
Creepy, yes. But a little less creepy once you do some digging into past stories and realize that “Dad” is only 25 years old. Aged 17 and 25, and getting married? My eyebrows are raised very, very high. But it’s still not quite as scummy as it seems at first glance.
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March 13th, 2009 [Banking, Financial, General, Television]
Stewart seen as winner in showdown with Cramer – CNN.com.
I don’t know why anybody is surprised by this – Jon Stewart always takes his guests to task when he doesn’t agree with them.
In any event, I (and most people I know) have been saying all along that Jon Stewart provides the best news/commentary on TV right now… glad to see he’s still going strong post-election. His coverage of the 2008 election was the only thing that kept me sane throughout the whole ordeal, even as it drove me crazy to see what was going on. The man deserves a prize.
Watch the full episode of The Daily Show with guest Jim Cramer.
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March 13th, 2009 [Banking, Financial, General]
Another twist for the unemployed: Debit card fees – CNN.com.
According to the U.S. Department of Labor, 30 states offer direct deposit cards to the unemployed. Many of the nation’s biggest banks have contracts with the individual states. JP Morgan Chase, for instance, has contracts with seven states and has pending deals with two others, according to Chase spokesman John T. Murray. About 10 states, the Labor Department says, pay by check only.
The National Consumer Law Center says fees range from 40 cents to a high of $3 per transaction, if the debit card is used at an out-of-network ATM. Most banks give jobless debit card users one free withdrawal per deposit period, which averages every other week in most states. But consumer advocates, including the Law Center, say the unemployed “should be able to obtain cash and perform basic functions with no fees.”
Yeah – um, aren’t the banks getting enough taxpayer money without gunning for a share of unemployment funds, too? Next thing you know, they’ll be pulling this same shady business with Social Security checks.
9 Comments » | |
March 12th, 2009 [General, News, US]
Shooter planned ‘to go out in grand style,’ investigator says – CNN.com.
Call me heartless, but why can’t these people just KILL THEMSELVES FIRST instead of taking out so many people on the way? They always die in the end anyway. Not that I wish them dead, but if they’re going to kill themselves anyway, can’t they just skip right to the big finish instead of tearing families apart and slaughtering people who didn’t want to die?
I edited this from the original post to include my comment to the person who commented below, because I think it’s important to address this issue.
I understand that people “made fun of him” and that this may have contributed to his actions. I really do. I don’t condone it, but I understand it. That said, much of the time, the people who get killed are not the people who were responsible for creating a monster. Look at Columbine. Yes, some of the people killed were athletes who had tormented Harris and Klebold. But many of them were not. In this case a baby was shot, and a toddler killed. Did these children participate in any behavior that warranted a bullet? Really?
I don’t think mockery warrants capital punishment. And believe me – I know what it’s like to be made fun of by a lot of people, and I know what it’s like to be the target of everybody’s negative attention. But wouldn’t it be just as effective to go on to be more successful than the people who mocked you? Or take them to court for harassment? Or just tell them to fuck off? Why is killing them the logical answer? What is so fragile about the male ego that injuring it warrants capital punishment? You’re talking about the same sort of “shame” that makes men in Muslim countries throw acid on the faces of women who reject their marriage proposals. And god forbid a gay man should accidentally mistake a straight man for gay and say something even remotely suggestive – suddenly the gay man finds himself dead on a fence post. Why is it that men think they can excuse murderous behavior by saying they did it because their feelings were hurt?
In any event, killing people does not teach anybody to be nicer. It just gives people more reason to ostracize and avoid those who seem like they might “snap.” These people do worse for the fate of all outcasts than any athlete or smartass could possibly do, by becoming what everybody fears. You think things got any better for high school outcasts after Columbine? Fuck that. They got worse. The same will happen for people like this guy. People hate what they fear, and they oppress what they hate. This man just made things a lot worse for everybody else like him.
2 Comments » | |
March 12th, 2009 [General, Middle East, News]
Ex-president of Israel blasts legal ‘lynching’ after rape indictment – CNN.com.
“The attorney general, the state prosecutor’s office, the police, politicians and journalists have shed my blood daily. For 32 months my rights and my honor have been trampled on and the lynching will not stop.”
K, I don’t know much about this guy, but it seems to me that a right-wing Israeli politician being accused of rape does not get to speak in lynching metaphors or claim his “blood” is being spilled by the press. Nuh uh.
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March 11th, 2009 [General, Health & Wellness]
K, remember how I raved yesterday about iHerb.com and their prices and cheap shipping? Well, add another thing to the list: My order ARRIVED TODAY. Of course it helps that we’re located in the same region, but still, I’m IMPRESSED.
Go to iHerb.com and check out their stock; they have a pretty broad selection. Don’t forget to use code COF922 to get $5 off your first order!
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March 11th, 2009 [General, News]
The girl in the window – St. Petersburg Times.
Give yourself a little time to read this one.
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March 10th, 2009 [Financial, General]
Lawyer: Madoff to plead guilty, faces 150 years – CNN.com.
While I sincerely doubt it is feasible, I hope that at least some of the investors are able to recover some of their losses. This was horrible.
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March 10th, 2009 [General, News, US]
War message found inside Lincoln’s watch – CNN.com.
I love random history articles. At least we know what he meant by his inscription, thanks to his interview! (or at least, what he wanted people to think he meant)
2 Comments » | |
March 10th, 2009 [Coupons & Discounts, General, Health & Wellness]
iHerb.com: Use the code COF922 at checkout and receive $5 off your first purchase!
I bought this really amazing elderberry syrup while I was in Seattle – not syrup for pancakes, but tonic-type syrup that you take to boost your immune system when you’re sick or getting sick. I went to restock my supply online, but discovered that the company that makes the product wanted nearly $15 in SHIPPING for one 4oz bottle! I’m all for supporting small businesses, but not when the shipping costs more then the product! So I did what any self-respecting ‘net junkie would do: I Googled the stuff.
That’s how I found iHerb.com. Not only did they sell the bottles at a discount, but Priority shipping was less than $3 (I think they deliberately take a hit on shipping to encourage people to shop there) even though I bought 2 small bottles and two large bottles! Not only that, but I was able to find a code for $5 off. So four bottles of product – the equivalent of six, in volume – cost me the same ($30) as a single small bottle + shipping would have cost elsewhere. Can’t beat that.
iHerb.com has lots of popular natural products at discount prices. Use the code COF922 at checkout and receive $5 off your first purchase!
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March 10th, 2009 [General, News, World]
Exxon Valdez oil could persist for ‘decades and possibly centuries’ | Greenspace | Los Angeles Times.
The “stunning” legacy of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska is the persistence of oil along the beaches of Prince William Sound that in places is “nearly as toxic as it was the first few weeks after the spill,” says a new report from the group charged with monitoring the cleanup.
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March 9th, 2009 [Arts & Entertainment, Books, Computers, General, Technology]
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