Wednesday, March 29, 2006

War on Terror II

Pentagon plans cyber-insect army
By Gary Kitchener BBC News

The Pentagon's defence scientists want to create an army of cyber-insects that can be remotely controlled to check out explosives and send transmissions.

The idea is to insert micro-systems at the pupa stage, when the insects can integrate them into their body, so they can be remotely controlled later.
Experts told the BBC some ideas were feasible but others seemed "ludicrous".

A similar scheme aimed at manipulating wasps failed when they flew off to feed and mate.

The new scheme is a brainwave of the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa), which is tasked with maintaining the technological superiority of the US military.

It has asked for "innovative" bids on the insect project from interested parties.

For GK aka IB

Question I

“Why does President Bush focus only on the negative things that happened on Sept. 11, 2001, instead of all the good things that happened in our country that day?”
Zing! column in the Tallahassee (Florida) Democrat

Doctor's Day Contest-March 30

#1: Name the artist: Frida Kahlo
#2: Name the characters: Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson


#3: Name the Doctor: Dr. Who
#4: Name the Artist: Norman Rockwell
#5: Name the artist: El Greco

The Constable got all 5 correct! He has earned another 5 points and has won the quickie round!

Carry-over points for Round 3:
The Constable = .5 PsychGuy = 3 Europa =1

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

In the Creep Zone





Whoever has been turning over rocks, please stop!

World View V


Please, no!

Sunday, March 26, 2006

Persons of the Week 3/25/06

Cecelia Fire Thunder, President of the Ogala Sioux in South Dakota: “I will personally establish a Planned Parenthood clinic on my own land which is within the boundaries of the Pine Ridge Reservation where the State of South Dakota has absolutely no jurisdiction.”

Want to help? Oglala Sioux Tribe ATTN: President Fire Thunder P. O. Box 2070Pine Ridge, SD 57770 or ATTN: PRESIDENT FIRE THUNDER PO BOX 990 Martin, SD 57751 For donations specifically for the Planned Parenthood clinic, make checks out to OST Planned Parenthood Cecelia Fire Thunder. General donations may be made out to the Oglala Sioux Tribe.

Helen Thomas: "Mr. President, your decision to invade Iraq has caused the deaths of thousands of Americans and Iraqis, wounds of Americans and Iraqis for a lifetime. Every reason given, publicly at least, has turned out not to be true. My question is, why did you really want to go to war? From the moment you stepped into the White House, from your Cabinet -- your Cabinet officers, intelligence people, and so forth -- what was your real reason? You have said it wasn't oil -- quest for oil, it hasn't been Israel, or anything else. What was it?"

As part of his meandering answer to the question above, Bush said (lied):
"...when [Saddam Hussein] chose to deny inspectors, when he chose not to disclose, then I had the difficult decision to make to remove him. And we did, and the world is safer for it."

Creekstone Farms Premium Beef: The Kansas meatpacker that wants to test every animal it slaughters for mad cow disease is suing the government for allegedly saying no and threatening criminal prosecution if the tests are done. The federal lawsuit says the Agriculture Department threatened criminal prosecution if Creekstone did the tests. U.S. testing for mad cow disease is controlled by the Agriculture Department, which tests about one percent of the 35 (m) million cattle that are slaughtered each year. The department is planning to scale back testing.

Bob Herbert: Bush's Trillion Dollar War - In an interview, Mr. Stiglitz [Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning economist at Columbia University] said that about $560 billion, which is a little more than half of the study's conservative estimate of the cost of the war, would have been enough to "fix" Social Security for the next 75 years. If one were thinking in terms of promoting democracy in the Middle East, he said, the money being spent on the war would have been enough to finance a "mega-mega-mega-Marshall Plan," which would have been "so much more" effective than the invasion of Iraq.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

One Word Descriptions of GWBush


Pew Research Center took a poll which asked people to think of one word to describe the president. Here are the results for March 2006, compared to the same poll taken in July 2005 and scientifically extrapolated projected results for the same poll if it is taken again in October this year.


from Earl G, Democratic Underground

Maryland Day Contest- 3/25

Name the artist!

The artist is: Charles Willson Peale

Correct Answers from:

The Constable & PsychGuy

The Constable wins Round One with 5 points.

See calculations here.

Too Cute II

Geoffrey Chaucer

hath a blog!

Sample post:


Top X searches in myne networke:
10. John Gowere swyving a donkey
9. woolen hose
8. discounte ale
7. Kent
6. Macrobius for dummyes
5. howe to thinly veil acquaintences as fictional characteres
4. arabic numerals
3. readynge %(%(%ing chancerye hand
2. Sheene palace dynnere guest listes
1. Katharyne Swinford nude

Monday, March 20, 2006

International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination Contest


Name the photographer and the work.

The answer is:
American Gothic by Gordon Parks;
subject is Ella Watson, D.C Government Charwoman

Correct answers from The Constable and Europa

Cumulative Results:
The Constable: 4.5
Psychguy: 2
Europa: 1


E-mail answers to:

natasha.coureaux@gmail.com

Can it be that it was all so simple then?

***“Iraq Is All but Won; Now What?”(Los Angeles Times headline, 4/10/03)

***“Tommy Franks and the coalition forces have demonstrated the old axiom that boldness on the battlefield produces swift and relatively bloodless victory. The three-week swing through Iraq has utterly shattered skeptics’ complaints.”(Fox News Channel’s Tony Snow, 4/13/03)

***“The war was the hard part. The hard part was putting together a coalition, getting 300,000 troops over there and all their equipment and winning. And it gets easier. I mean, setting up a democracy is hard, but it is not as hard as winning a war.”(Fox News Channel’s Fred Barnes, 4/10/03)

***“If image is everything, how can the Democratic presidential hopefuls compete with a president fresh from a war victory?”(CNN’s Judy Woodruff, 5/5/03)

For David: Happy Birthday

World View IV

War Against Terror I

An Inspector General's report criticized the Department of Homeland Security, for spending over $15-million to commission "Mermaid Statues" that were be placed in U.S. Ports "as a security deterrent" to would-be terrorists.

The report goes on to say that, rather then beefing up security, it's costing the department another $5-Million to maintenance the statues, which have become a landing and nesting spot for sea gulls.

from The Garlic

Kansas History Textbook Illustration


#8: God creates Pork and Beans











credit to: neilshakespeare

Question for Chrissy:


Can you do this?

Persons of the Week 3/18/06

Sen. Russ Feingold: "I’m amazed at Democrats, cowering with this president’s numbers so low. The administration just has to raise the specter of the war and the Democrats run and hide…too many Democrats are going to do the same thing they did in 2000 and 2004. In the face of this, they’ll say we’d better just focus on domestic issues…[Democrats shouldn’t] cower to the argument, that whatever you do, if you question administration, you’re helping the terrorists"

Garrison Keillor: "Over the course of time, the Chief Occupant has been cruelly exposed over and over. He sat and was briefed on the danger of a hurricane wiping out a major American city, and without asking a single question, he got up from the table and walked away and resumed his vacation. He played guitar as New Orleans was flooded. It took him four days to realize his responsibility to do something. When the tsunami killed a hundred thousand people in Southeast Asia, he was on vacation and it took him 72 hours to issue a statement of sympathy.
"The Republicans tied their wagon to him and, as a result, their revolution is bankrupt. He has played the terrorism card for all it is worth... ... and co-opted whole vast flocks of Christians, but he is done now, kaput, out of gas, for one simple reason. He doesn't represent the best that is our country. Not even close.
"

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Too Good to wait 'til Sunday

Enough of the D.C. Dems
By Molly Ivins March 2006 Issue of The Progressive

Mah fellow progressives, now is the time for all good men and women to come to the aid of the party. I don’t know about you, but I have had it with the D.C. Democrats, had it with the DLC Democrats, had it with every calculating, equivocating, triangulating, straddling, hair-splitting son of a bitch up there, and that includes Hillary Rodham Clinton.

I will not be supporting Senator Clinton because: a) she has no clear stand on the war and b) Terri Schiavo and flag-burning are not issues where you reach out to the other side and try to split the difference. You want to talk about lowering abortion rates through cooperation on sex education and contraception, fine, but don’t jack with stuff that is pure rightwing firewater.
I can’t see a damn soul in D.C. except Russ Feingold who is even worth considering for President. The rest of them seem to me so poisonously in hock to this system of legalized bribery they can’t even see straight.

Look at their reaction to this Abramoff scandal. They’re talking about “a lobby reform package.” We don’t need a lobby reform package, you dimwits, we need full public financing of campaigns, and every single one of you who spends half your time whoring after special interest contributions knows it. The Abramoff scandal is a once in a lifetime gift—a perfect lesson on what’s wrong with the system being laid out for people to see. Run with it, don’t mess around with little patches, and fix the system.

As usual, the Democrats have forty good issues on their side and want to run on thirty-nine of them. Here are three they should stick to:

1) Iraq is making terrorism worse; it’s a breeding ground. We need to extricate ourselves as soon as possible. We are not helping the Iraqis by staying.

2) Full public financing of campaigns so as to drive the moneylenders from the halls of Washington.

3) Single-payer health insurance.

Every Democrat I talk to is appalled at the sheer gutlessness and spinelessness of the Democratic performance. The party is still cringing at the thought of being called, ooh-ooh, “unpatriotic” by a bunch of rightwingers.

Take “unpatriotic” and shove it. How dare they do this to our country? “Unpatriotic”? These people have ruined the American military! Not to mention the economy, the middle class, and our reputation in the world. Everything they touch turns to dirt, including Medicare prescription drugs and hurricane relief.

This is not a time for a candidate who will offend no one; it is time for a candidate who takes clear stands and kicks ass.

Who are these idiots talking about Warner of Virginia? Being anodyne is not sufficient qualification for being President. And if there’s nobody in Washington and we can’t find a Democratic governor, let’s run Bill Moyers, or Oprah, or some university president with ethics and charisma.

What happens now is not up to the has-beens in Washington who run this party. It is up to us. So let’s get off our butts and start building a progressive movement that can block the nomination of Hillary Clinton or any other candidate who supposedly has “all the money sewed up.”

I am tired of having the party nomination decided before the first primary vote is cast, tired of having the party beholden to the same old Establishment money.

We can raise our own money on the Internet, and we know it. Howard Dean raised $42 million, largely on the web, with a late start when he was running for President, and that ain’t chicken feed. If we double it, it gives us the lock on the nomination. So let’s go find a good candidate early and organize the shit out of our side.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

World View III


This Tom Tomorrow cartoon was originally published on 4/2/03.

From the NY Times on 3/15/06: Saddam Hussein was a tyrant, but he was also just about the only thing holding Iraq together. The people planning this war should have foreseen that once the repressive lid of Baathist rule was lifted, just about everything would be up for grabs in Iraq, including national unity and the balance of power among Sunni Arabs, Shiites and Kurds. Mr. Hussein had spent much of the preceding 35 years systematically reshaping Iraq and its institutions around his personal will. No one who had bothered to look at and understood that history could have seriously imagined that things would have fallen simply and peacefully into place by merely removing him and dissolving his army.

Einstein's Birthday Contest


It's not only National Pi Day, it's also Einstein's birthday.


And this piece is "Thinking" by ???


Psychguy had the first correct answer!
Cumulative results:
The Constable: 3.5
Psychguy: 2

Monday, March 13, 2006

National Pi Day




http://www.hetemeel.com/einsteinform.php

Sunday, March 12, 2006

MIT Origami


Those engineers and mathmaticians really know how to fold!

See a few more examples here:http://mhom30ii.blogspot.com/2006/03/mit-origami.html

For Linda (and maybe someone else...)

Persons of the Week 3/11/06

Mike Stark and Tim Grieve of Salon for their confrontation this week with "conservative" talk show host. Read all about it here: http://mhom30ii.blogspot.com/2006/03/baby-and-petri-dish.html

Nicholas Kristoff: He collected pledges to send Bill O'Reilly to Darfur... Here is an update: Bill O'Reilly refused to join me on this trip, passing up the $727,000 that my readers had pledged to sponsor his trip to Darfur. But Ann Curry of the "Today" show and a top-notch NBC crew did travel with me on this trip. Unlike Bill, Ann didn't flinch at traveling in janjaweed-infested areas or at staying in a primitive $4-a-night "hotel" with no plumbing. (O.K., she did shudder just a little at the wildlife in the hotel's outhouse.) If you want to break your heart, watch her reports beginning tomorrow — and ABC and CBS, where are you?

Go to www.millionvoicesfordarfur.org and send a postcard to President Bush, encouraging him to do more.

Juliette Low: because it's Girl Scout Sunday!

Friday, March 10, 2006

Kansas History Textbook Illustration


#4: God Creates Hole In Ozone Layer





credit to:
neilshakespeare

Thursday, March 09, 2006

No Rice Come With

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

For David

Let them eat cake...


The White House would not confirm that Vice President Dick Cheney's schedule has been loaded with birthday and anniversary events, as a means to keep him busy and away from hunting and guns. Reportedly, there was some worry but security experts assured the White House that Cheney would be easier to disarm with a knife in hand, as opposed to a shotgun. To date, in over two-dozen cake-cuttings, there have been no incidents reported.

credit to: puregarlic.blogspot.com

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

International Women's Day Contest



Name the artist and title!

We have a winner: PsychGuy called it... "Lysistrata" by Picasso

Cumulative results:

Constable: 3
PsychGuy: 1
All others: 0

Monday, March 06, 2006

For Thom

Taxonomic Classification of very small objects

For example:

Neliwhol Housedisgups grenecruncunlik

This translates to a never-living whole individual entity, found inside a house to disgust or upset, predominately green crunchy resembling nothing but itself.

I disagree with this taxonomy as it appears to me to be a onlifrag pockedi grenecircucruncunlik or in layman's terms, a partially eaten m&m found in a coat pocket. Perhaps you have mice.

Visited States




create your own visited states map

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Too Cute

Bush in India

For Chrissy

Persons of the Week 3/4/06

Cardinal Roger Mahony of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles: who urged parishioners on Ash Wednesday to devote the 40 days of Lent to fasting, prayer and reflection on the need for humane reform of immigration laws. If current efforts in Congress make it a felony to shield or offer support to illegal immigrants, Cardinal Mahony said, he will instruct his priests — and faithful lay Catholics — to defy the law. The cardinal's focus of concern is H.R. 4437, a grab bag legislation, which was recently passed by the House, would expand the definition of "alien smuggling" in a way that could theoretically include working in a soup kitchen, driving a friend to a bus stop or caring for a neighbor's baby. Similar language appears in legislation being considered by the Senate this week... ... Through Catholic Charities and local parishes, the church is frequently the help of last resort for illegal immigrants in need. It should not be made an arm of the immigration police as well. Cardinal Mahony's declaration of solidarity with illegal immigrants, for whom Lent is every day, is a startling call to civil disobedience, as courageous as it is timely. We hope it forestalls the day when works of mercy become a federal crime. (from the NY Times)

Fred Kaplan writes the "war stories"column for Slate. Just looking at headlines this week would lead one to believe that GW Bush had achieved a diplomatic victory in India this week. Here is an excerpt from Kaplan's column "The President's Indian Fantasy" referring to Bush's promise to sell nuclear technology to India:

One could make a case that the trade-off is worth it—that the benefits of a grand alliance with India more than compensate for the costs of exempting India from the NPT's restraint clauses. India is not going to disarm, anyway; it has agreed, as part of the deal, to open its civilian reactors (though not its military ones) to international inspectors and safeguards; it's better, one could say, to impose some controls than none at all.
But a few things are worth noting. First, the United States has no authority to grant such an exemption on its own. The NPT is a treaty signed by 187 nations; it is enforced by the International Atomic Energy Agency; and it is, in effect, administered by the five nations that the treaty recognizes as nuclear powers (the United States, Russia, China, Britain, and France). This point is not a legal nicety. If the United States can cut a separate deal with India, what is to prevent China or Russia from doing the same with Pakistan or Iran? If India demands special treatment on the grounds that it's a stable democracy, what is to keep Japan, Brazil, or Germany from picking up on the precedent?


Second, the India deal would violate not just international agreements but also several U.S. laws regulating the export of nuclear materials.

In other words, an American president who sought to make this deal would, or should, detect a myriad of political actors that might protest or block it—mainly the U.N. Security Council, the Nuclear Suppliers' Group, and the U.S. Congress. Not just as a legal principle but also as a practical consideration, these actors must be notified, cajoled, mollified, or otherwise bargained with if the deal has a chance of coming to life.

The amazing thing is, President Bush just went ahead and made the pledge, without so much as the pretense of consultation—as if all these actors, with their prerogatives over treaties and laws (to say nothing of their concerns for very real dilemmas), didn't exist.

Hooray for Hollywood: 25 VIPs are participating in the fourth annual "Red Carpet, Green Cars" event sponsored by Toyota Motor Corp. and the environmental organization Global Green USA. Frances McDormand, Joaquin Phoenix, Jake Gyllenhaal, Jennifer Aniston and George Clooney are all expected to arrive at the Oscars in Toyota or Lexus hybrids, including the Toyota Prius, Lexus RX crossover and a hybrid version of the Toyota Camry, which goes on sale in May.

Saturday, March 04, 2006

Am weary...

Friday, March 03, 2006

Too Cool: the I/O Paint Brush

Check it out!-- the video

For more info on how it works, click here.

Thursday, March 02, 2006

We report; you decide II


Why did the Pharaohs wear atef crowns?

left: Nazcan skull
right: Is someone hiding something?

Gardens-in-a-Petri



Gardens in a petri dish! Check them out at pruned.blogspot.com

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

World View II