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Burning irony

So, today’s Gospel, from the standard Lectionary, was Luke 18:9-14: To some who were confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everybody else, Jesus told this parable: “Two…

So, today’s Gospel, from the standard Lectionary, was Luke 18:9-14:

To some who were confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everybody else, Jesus told this parable: “Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee stood up and prayed about himself: ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other men — robbers, evildoers, adulterers — or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get.’

 “But the tax collector stood at a distance. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, ‘God, have mercy on me, a sinner.’

 “I tell you that this man, rather than the other, went home justified before God. For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted.”

And then we have this guy ranting about God’s wrath on the folks he considers ungodly.

They shook their fists at God and said, “We don’t care what God says, we will issue our legal brief to support gay marriage in San Diego!” Then Mayor Jerry Sanders mocked the Christian vote and signed off on this rebellious legal document to support same-sex marriage.  And then the streets of La Jolla under the Mt. Soledad Cross began to cave in.

They shook their fists at God and said, “We don’t care what the Bible says, We want the California school children indoctrinated into homosexuality!” And then Governor Schwarzenegger signed into law the heinous SB777 which bans the use of “mom” and “dad” in the text books and promotes homosexuality to all school children in California.

And then the wildfires of Southern California engulfed the land like a raging judgment against the radicalized anti-christian California rebels.

Hmmm.  Let’s see — the Gospel talks in unfavorable terms about those who condemn others, who declare themselves holy because they are not like those, and who rest comfortable in assurance that they are saved, while others dwell in darkness and condemnation, who spend more time pointing out the flaws in others seemingly to build up their own self-apparent righteousness.

And here in this post (and in the comments, and the biographical sidebar) we have someone condemning others, making it clear how he is not like those, resting comfortable it seems in an assurance of being saved, with all those others dwelling in darkness and condemnation, and who spends more time pointing out the flaws in others than in being concerned about their own shortcomings (including tooting his own horn in the sidebar, demonstrating how .

Though, of course, I suppose this post could qualify as doing the same myself.

(via DOF)

“Jurassic Park is frightning in the dark …”

So, in keeping with Katherine’s dinosaur enthusiasm, and her fondness for T-Rex, we watched Jurassic Park this afternoon. Hrm. She did pretty well.  She handled the initial “dude gets…

So, in keeping with Katherine’s dinosaur enthusiasm, and her fondness for T-Rex, we watched Jurassic Park this afternoon.

Hrm.

She did pretty well.  She handled the initial “dude gets eaten by a velociraptor in a box” scene okay.  She handled “feeding the velociraptors” scene okay.  Things began to get a bit dicey when T-Rex was escaping, but she did okay there …

Things started to cascade from there, and she found the v’raptors particularly troublesome.  We ended up FFing through a few scenes later on — Crocodile Dundee gets ambushed, the Kitchen scene — and Kitten did okay with the final “T-Rex charges in and ‘saves the day'” scene.

She opined at the end that she’d been okay — it had been a little scary, but she’d sat through a whole PG-13 film before (Stardust), so she was okay.

Later, she was most jinky about the little fin-backed poison-spitting guys, and we’ll see how things go overnight.

(As a side note, the movie holds up pretty well — the fx are still quite nice, the music triffic, the 1993 dialog and plotting a bit 1993 Spielbergian, but still overall enjoyable.)

UPDATE:  After some (not unusual) trouble getting to sleep, she slept the night through just fine.

California Fire Victim Assistance

The immediate crisis in California from the wildfires is largely dealt with, but there’s much to be done to help folks who’ve lost their houses, and are trying to pick…

The immediate crisis in California from the wildfires is largely dealt with, but there’s much to be done to help folks who’ve lost their houses, and are trying to pick back up their lives.

In addition to what I earlier posted, Margie forwarded me some info from her employer with some relief fund info.

During the days immediately after a disaster, financial contributions are the ones most welcome and can be put to immediate use for the people in the most need. Below is a list of organizations collecting donations specifically for Southern California wildfires.

Note: The Better Business Bureau Wise Giving Guide, through the website give.org, is a valuable resource for employees and physicians who want to better understand the organizations to which they donate.

  • American Red Cross/Disaster Relief Fund-Southern California Wildfires | 800-733-2767 or 800-257-7575 (Español)
  • The Salvation Army – US West Region (In the field marked “Specific Use,” type “Southern California Wildfires”) | 800-725-2769

  • California Community Foundation | 213-413-4130
    The CCF has established the Southern California Wildfire Relief Fund to receive contributions from donors in support of immediate recovery needs with a particular focus on needy populations, those in need of affordable housing, and nonprofits serving the affected areas. The foundation will match the first $250,000 in contributions received.

  • The Community Foundation (Riverside and San Bernardino counties) | 951-684-4194
    A Fire Relief Fund has been established to help sustain operations of non-profit organizations and to assist people affected by the fires.

  • San Diego Foundation | 619-235-2300
    The foundation has established three funds responding to the fires:
    • The After the Fires Fund. Similar to the fund’s effort following the 2003 San Diego fires, this fund will support first-response efforts, but the primary focus will be ongoing recovery and rebuilding throughout the San Diego region.
    • The Fire Relief Biotech Immediate Response Fund will provide grants to nonprofits that provide immediate relief to residents affected by the wildfires.
    • The Fire Relief Biotech Recovery Fund will provide grants to non-profits working in the weeks, months, and years ahead to help with rebuilding efforts.

 

I note that my favorite charity, the Episcopal Relief & Development Fund, is also providing emergency assistance for those who need it.  Online donation can be done here.

Sounds like Someone wants us to celebrate or something

In the last week, two wine deliveries, one from Four Vines, today from Hansen.  Yum….

In the last week, two wine deliveries, one from Four Vines, today from Hansen.  Yum.

Comic book quickies

The Authority: Prime #1:  Ugly art, dull story.  How the Authority (and Stormwatch) have fallen. Hellblazer #237:  The plot nearly squeezes out the title character, who comes across not all that…

kidscomics

The Authority: Prime #1:  Ugly art, dull story.  How the Authority (and Stormwatch) have fallen. 

Hellblazer #237:  The plot nearly squeezes out the title character, who comes across not all that well.

Death of the New Gods #1 of 8: Why is Jim Starlin drawing people with such oddly long necks.  And why the hell did they kill my favorite New God?

Justice League of America #14:  Image-like art, Image-like big battles.  Whatever.

The Sword #1:  Okay, I begin to see why the Luna Bros. have such a good rep. New series, good stuff.

The Mighty Avengers #9:  Pretty Cho, but Bendis’ story will work better in a trade paperback.

The Brave and the Bold #7:  George Perez manages to give us a busty PG who doesn’t look like a freak.  And WW and Supes look pretty good, too.

Powers #26:  Good as usual, but still too small a chunk of too busy a tale.

Action #857:  If there is a God, this will be the last Bizarro story for, oh, a decade or two.  ‘Nuff said.

Teen Titans #52:  A nice, if busy plot, and attractive art.  A bit too much sound and fury.

Black Panther #31:  More FF-era action (new and old),with the annoying Golden Frogs.  Still, not bad.

Thunderbolts #117:  The grim, gritty, nasty, human bits of the Initiative/Civil War.  Good Warren Ellis stuff.

She-Hulk #22:  Peter David takes over.  A decent first ish of an intentionally different era.

Countdown #27:  Still interested, but the independent bits aren’t nearly as good or interesting as 52.

X-Men #204:  How could Mike Carey be so good on Lucifer and so bad on this?  On the other hand, I don’t think anyone can do much with the X-Men any more …

Supeman #669:  The “third Kryptonian” arc reveals its titular character.  Not bad, aside from further diluting the uniqueness of Superman.

I am in serious trouble

So one of my managers is hiring a new person who’s name sounds a lot like “G’kar,” a major Babylon 5 character.  I am going to be very hard-pressed to not…

So one of my managers is hiring a new person who’s name sounds a lot like “G’kar,” a major Babylon 5 character. 

I am going to be very hard-pressed to not instinctively do a Londo imitation when talking to (or about) him.

“I have a little list …”

How can anyone think that the anti-terrorist “watch list” can be at all helpful, useful, or manageable when a name is added every three minutes, ever hour, every day? …

How can anyone think that the anti-terrorist “watch list” can be at all helpful, useful, or manageable when a name is added every three minutes, ever hour, every day?  As of May, the list was over 750,000 names long, growing from 285,000 only two years earlier.

The exact number of people on the list, compiled after 9/11 to help government agents keep terrorists out of the country, is unclear, according to the report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO). Some people may be on the list more than once because they are listed under multiple spellings.

Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., who plans a hearing on the report today, says “serious hurdles remain if (the list) is to be as effective as we need it to be. Some of the concerns stem from its rapid growth, which could call into question the quality of the list itself.”

Ya think? 

Ironically, the GAO report on the list also urges that the list be used more for vetting employees in the private sector, in positions where someone could “carry out attacks on our critical infrastructure that could harm large numbers of persons or cause immense economic damage.”  On the one hand, this makes tremendous sense if carefully targeted and well-managed.  On the other hand, “carefully targeted” and “well-managed” sound nothing like any of our “homeland security” measures, so expect seriously bollixed processes and problems to ensue. 

(via BoingBoing)

Maybe not quite that big …

According to Randy, tonight will be the biggest/closest full moon of the year….

According to Randy, tonight will be the biggest/closest full moon of the year.

Comments for the Gallery

The picture gallery, that is. I detailed last month my irk at Adobe Photoshop Elements 5.0 and the way it dropped straightforward HTML online galleries for fancy-shmancy Flash-based galleries (about…

The picture gallery, that is.

I detailed last month my irk at Adobe Photoshop Elements 5.0 and the way it dropped straightforward HTML online galleries for fancy-shmancy Flash-based galleries (about which I’ve seen not a single encouraging word on the Adobe forums, and much lamentation similar to mine).

Two further developments.

First, Adobe has released PSE 6.0.  Early reviews indicate (a) lots of bugs, (b) some performance improvements, (c) a lot of unhappiness with the interface, (d) not much meat to justify the upgrade.  Oh, and, as far as I can tell, the same Flash issue.  So I’m not going to be upgrading any time soon.

Second, I’ve dropped back and punted slightly.  Following some advice I read, I’ve re-downloaded JAlbum — a very nice, very free web album/gallery generating tool.  I actually used this for a while a couple of years ago, but then gave it up in favor of PSE (largely because PSE does a good job of managing the photo portfolio).  So now I’m using PSE 5.0 to manage, edit, and export the photos, and JAlbum to collect them together for our web site.

All of which is a Good Thing, because it means I can finally get back to the job of cataloging and posting photos for the amusement of family and friends.

Using two tools for this purpose is a bit clumsy (especially if I have to add to or otherwise revise a gallery), but the results are a lot more to my liking, so I’m willing to take the slight extra effort.

How many ways is this wrong?

Received as a Yahoo Instant Messenger spam: andry_bcobetty21: whatz up myuserid, man its awhile LOL,  Hey you have to check out this Adult dating site i found yesterday, it’s amazing!!!…

Received as a Yahoo Instant Messenger spam:

andry_bcobetty21: whatz up myuserid, man its awhile LOL,  Hey you have to check out this Adult dating site i found yesterday, it’s amazing!!! check it out, http://www.ohboysexypersonalads.com

To summarize:

  1. I don’t know anyone named andry-bcobetty21.  Since I reported them as ignore/spam, I never will.
  2. My userid (redacted) is, amazingly, not how friends refer to me.
  3. I don’t “hang” in “the hood” with folks who write like this (syntax, grammar, punctuation, spelling, what have you).
  4. I don’t know anyone who goes to “Adult dating sites” with that sort of name, let alone anyone who would recommend such a site to me (with three! exclamation! points! no less).  Especially since I am happily married.

I don’t know if this is particularly lame, or if Real People actually respond to this sort of thing.

Yeesh.

The Sky is Falling!

Katherine as Chicken Little in “Lemonade.” UPDATE: The big Second Grade Drama Program. Katherine played Chicken Little — top billing (first line of the play — guess what it…

Katherine as Chicken Little in “Lemonade.”

UPDATE: The big Second Grade Drama Program. Katherine played Chicken Little — top billing (first line of the play — guess what it is), last solo line, and one of the largest speaking roles.

She did, of course, great — excellent enunciation, good projection, fine gestures, and very, um, helpful as a stage manager telling each person when they needed to go up to the mic for their lines. I have the whole thing on video tape if anyone wants to see it … 🙂

Great job, Kitten!

Potpourri for the Feast of St Cadfarch

Who was St Cadfarch? Historical anatomical drawings.  Cool. It’s amusingly recursive to go on the Internet to see a map of the Internet. Kottke asks, what order should you…

  1. Who was St Cadfarch?
  2. Historical anatomical drawings.  Cool.
  3. It’s amusingly recursive to go on the Internet to see a map of the Internet.
  4. Kottke asks, what order should you show the Star Wars movies to your kids?  In release order (IV-VI, I-III), or in chronological order (I-VI)?  I, like most of the respondents, go with release order (and consider I-III optional), but there are some interesting counter-arguments (and the suggestion of IV-V, I-III, VI is kind of intriguing).
  5. Waiting to hear that Bill Murray et al. are suing the CIA.
  6. Lap dancers in heat?  Sounds like something that demands more scientific investigation!
  7. The Church of Google.  Don’t bother searching your pockets for the offering.
  8. The Treasure of Oak Island!  I remember reading about this as a kid in an Ripley’s book.
  9. Monkey attacks!  So let’s deal with it by bringing in bigger, more aggressive monkeys to scare them off.  Then we can bring in kudzu to trap all the bigger, more aggressive monkeys.  Then we’ll building independently intelligent robots with saw-blade hands to deal with the kudzu.  What can go wrong?
  10. I think I’ve read about this study on deja vu before.

Darth Vader, Man of Many Talents

Indeed. (via Lee)…

Indeed.

(via Lee)

No! You don’t say!

Rev. Don Armstrong has been exonerated by an audit — paid for by his congregation. The Rev. Don Armstrong was found innocent today of misusing funds at Grace Church…

Rev. Don Armstrong has been exonerated by an audit — paid for by his congregation.

The Rev. Don Armstrong was found innocent today of misusing funds at Grace Church and St. Stephens, according to an independent audit arranged by the parish.

Forensic auditor Robert Johnson’s findings refuted allegations that were first raised by the Episcopal Diocese of Colorado.

The diocese began investigating Armstrong in 2006 and found that Armstrong had engaged in fraud and theft of more than $500,000 in parish money over the past 10 years.

Note that this is another Jean Torkelson opus, so he’s “found innocent,” and the findings “refuted allegations.”  (Note that the allegations were backed up by a separate audit, and he was found guilty by an elected board that’s hardly a rubber stamp for anyone.  So more properly, the findings “disagreed with another audit performed by the Episcopal Diocese of Colorado.”)

Johnson is certified as a public accountant, a fraud examiner and a valuation analyst, according to his office. Crippen said he hasn’t any ties to the parish.

Well, aside from being hired by them.  I’d have been more convinced if they’d had a neutral third party arrange for the audit.

And, of course, there’s the matter of what documents and records the parish provided for this audit.

According to Johnson’s audit, the Grace Church vestry hadn’t been properly advised by church auditors on regulatory issues and “certain accounting functions.”

The audit blamed much of the financial problems on an incompetent bookkeeper who was later fired. It found that Armstrong relied for his own decisionmaking on professional tax preparers as well as the church treasurer and vestry members.

So it was all other folks’ fault.   Lack of “proper advice” from the church, an “incompetent bookkeeper” — and if Armstrong did anything, it was (unlike all the tales that have prevoiusly been told) with full consultatoin from the church treasurer, the vestry, and “professional tax preparers.”

What about the ongoing criminal investigation?

This summer, a diocesan panel, aided by the firm of Denver attorney Hal Haddon, used its fraud and theft findings to launch a separate criminal investigation by the financial crimes unit of the Colorado Springs Police Department. That investigation is continuing.

Get that?  The police investigation was somehow “launched” by the diocese.  Wow — such power they have over the Colorado Springs PD!

“We fully expect that Robert Johnson’s report will put that (criminal) issue to bed quickly,” said Alan Crippen, who is Armstrong’s spokesman.

Because, of course, the police always cancel criminal investigations when the accused hires someone who says he didn’t do it.

Once regarded as one of the diocese’s most prominent priests, Armstrong resigned from the Episcopal Church in March after years of battling with O’Neill over doctrinal issues and the future of the Episcopal Church. Nationally, more than 30 conservative parishes, clergy and lay members have broken away because of the church’s departure from traditional teachings on marriage, sexuality and scripture.

Rev. Armstrong was “prominent” because he set himself up as the “shadow bishop” of the diocese. 

The “years of battling with O’Neill” is from late 2003 to late 2006.   Hardly the Hatfield/McCoy feud implied.

30 parishes?  There are over 100 dioceses, each with dozens to hundreds of parishes.  It’s hardly the massive movement Torkelson spins it as.

Included in the news release is a statement by Armstrong which expresses relief for Johnson’s findings but also says, “For the suffering, embarrassment, and division my own missteps and faulty decisions have caused those committed to my own priestly pastoral care, I humbly apologize.”

Relief?  That’s an odd emotion for an innocent man waiting for the conclusions of a hired auditor.

The official parish news release is here.  Aside from places where Jean’s text mirrors that of the of the press release, it’s largely “no, really, everything was approved by the wardens and treasurers, the vestry rubber-stamped the budget but that still counts, the parish auditors never said anything, the book keeper was a dolt and was fired, and it was all on the up and up, and boy the Bishop is a mean and nasty guy, isn’t he?”

The official diocesan response is here.

That conviction followed an extensive investigation into charges of serious financial wrongdoing. As part of the established disciplinary process in the Episcopal Church, two elected diocesan bodies composed of clergy and lay people, acting independently of the Bishop – the Diocesan Review Committee and the Ecclesiastical Court – reviewed the evidence compiled by an outside forensic auditor and former IRS fraud investigator and a nationally renowned criminal defense attorney who were retained by the diocese. The Diocesan Review Committee found unanimously that there was adequate evidence to take the case to ecclesiastical trial, and the Ecclesiastical Court found unanimously that Armstrong is guilty of the offenses with which he has been charged.

Throughout the investigation, Armstrong has refused to answer the charges in front of these elected bodies or to present evidence on his own behalf in direct response to the specific charges, in spite of the multiple formal and informal opportunities and invitations he has had to do so. According to the procedures laid out in the canons of the Church, the Bishop will formally pronounce sentence on Armstrong next week; the Ecclesiastical Court recommended the most severe sentence available to them – deposition from the priesthood in the Episcopal Church.

The Bishop has reported the results of the Diocese’s investigation to the appropriate legal authorities, has turned over all documents related to the investigation, and is cooperating fully with law enforcement officials. Bishop Robert O’Neill today expressed his confidence that the criminal justice system will respond appropriately.

Not quite as lovingly spun as Jean’s prose, but perhaps more credible because of it.

(via BD)

Sales calls are sales calls …

… even if you support the organization making them. So tonight, around 8:30 p.m., I get a sales call from a group that I belong to and support.  Let’s call…

… even if you support the organization making them.

So tonight, around 8:30 p.m., I get a sales call from a group that I belong to and support.  Let’s call them Group X.

And it was nearly as obnoxious and annoying as if it had been a group I opposed — say, Group Not-X.

  1. Don’t preach to the choir.  If I belong to Group X, you can probably assume that (a) I know what Group X stands for, (b) I know that they are busy fighting the Tyrannical Evils of Group Not-X, and (c) I most likely read that monthly newsletter you send out,  So it’s not necessary to launch into a long litany of how Group X Bravely Fights the Nasty Predations of Group Not-X.
  2. Don’t make “Wouldn’t you rather send us a regular contribution each month through automatic withdrawal from your checking account?” sound like an offer of membership in Something Really Select and Special and Elite.
  3.  When I say not to #2, don’t remind me you also take one-time gifts as well.
  4. When I say I’ll keep that in mind, don’t keep nattering on about how only my money can Ward Off The Evils of Group Not-X.

It’s not enough to make me no longer support Group X — but it does tell me I need to be more careful about giving a real phone number to those guys.

Fire! (Again!)

Mary writes to let us know that she’s safe (the Harris Fire is closest to her, but she’s not in the fire’s path and it’s still some distance).  Her dad’s…

Mary writes to let us know that she’s safe (the Harris Fire is closest to her, but she’s not in the fire’s path and it’s still some distance).  Her dad’s evacuated (though his neighborhood is not under evacuation order), at least for the day.

In general, over 300,000 people have been evacuated from their homes and are being sheltered around the county. If you want to help, please consider making a donation to one of the following:

She then passes on the following info:

Salvation Army

As wildfires sweep across our county, The Salvation Army is supporting the firefighters who are battling the blaze.  Mobile feeding units are on the scene to bring water and food to firefighters and police and The Salvation Army is bringing in additional canteens/ mobile kitchens from El Centro and Perris.

To donate to help firefighters and those being evacuated, please call 1 866 I’LL HELP or donate on-line

Red Cross

 All American Red Cross disaster assistance is free, made possible by voluntary donations of time and money from the American people. You can help the victims of thousands of disasters across the country each year by making a financial gift to the American Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund, which enables the Red Cross to provide shelter, food, counseling and other assistance to victims of disaster.

Making a financial contribution is the best way to help. To make a donation:  call 1-800-RED CROSS or 1-800-257-7575 (Spanish) or make at secure, online donation.

Mail a Donation to:  American Red Cross, PO Box 4002018, Des Moines, IA 50340-2018

The American Red Cross honors donor intent. If you wish to designate a donation for a specific disaster, please do so at the time of donation.

San Diego County Wildfire Relief

Volunteer San Diego’s Disaster Program is made possible by donations of time and money. Below is a list of the ways you can help.

Make a donation:  Money collected will first go towards supporting the disaster volunteer recruitment efforts for the wildfires. Additional funds will support year-round disaster preparedness and volunteer programs. You can donate online here or mail your donation to: Volunteer San Diego, 4699 Murphy Canyon Road, San Diego, CA 92123 (http://www.active.com/donate/wildfires07).

 

Fly the Friendly Skies

A bizarre story going on here.  A few years back, NASA (which does do research into air safety in its “aeronautic” capacity) started a survey of pilots that came back with…

A bizarre story going on here.  A few years back, NASA (which does do research into air safety in its “aeronautic” capacity) started a survey of pilots that came back with some very disturbing results, indicating that flight safety incidents were much more frequent than other data from the FAA showed.

NASA’s survey, known officially as the National Aviation Operations Monitoring Service, started after a White House commission in 1997 proposed reducing fatal air crashes by 80 percent as of this year. Crashes have dropped 65 percent,  with a rate of about 1 fatality in about 4.5 million departures.

Officials involved in the survey touted the unusually high response rate among pilots, 80 percent, and said they believe it is more reliable than reporting systems that rely on pilots to report incidents voluntarily.   “The data is strong,” said Robert Dodd, an aviation safety expert hired by NASA to manage the survey. “Our process was very meticulously designed and very thorough. It was very scientific.”

[…] Pilot interviews lasted about 30 minutes, with standardized questions about how frequently they encountered equipment problems, smoke or fire, engine failure, passenger disturbances, severe turbulence, collisions with birds or inadequate tower communication, according to documents obtained by the AP.

Pilots also were asked about last-minute changes in landing instructions, flying too close to other planes, near collisions with ground vehicles or buildings, overweight takeoffs or occasions when pilots left the cockpit.

[…] Among other results, the pilots reported at least twice as many bird strikes, near mid-air collisions and runway incursions as other government monitoring systems show, according to a person familiar with the results who was not authorized to discuss them publicly.

The survey also revealed higher-than-expected numbers of pilots who experienced “in-close approach changes” — potentially dangerous, last-minute instructions to alter landing plans.

Though the survey was supposed to be expanded from pilots to air traffic and ground crew personnel, NASA pulled the plug on the project (ostensibly because of budget shifts to the Mars program), and sat on the data for the last year.  The AP — which heard about the results — tried to get the study  released under the Freedom of Information Act, but NASA refused, citing this odd reason:

A senior NASA official, associate administrator Thomas S. Luedtke, said earlier that revealing the findings could damage the public’s confidence in airlines and affect airline profits. Luedtke acknowledged that the survey results “present a comprehensive picture of certain aspects of the U.S. commercial aviation industry.”

“Release of the requested data, which are sensitive and safety-related, could materially affect the public confidence in, and the commercial welfare of, the air carriers and general aviation companies whose pilots participated in the survey,” Luedtke wrote in a final denial letter to the AP. NASA also cited pilot confidentiality as a reason, although no airlines were identified in the survey, nor were the identities of pilots, all of whom were promised anonymity.

NASA then went further to make sure nobody would see it.

NASA had directed its contractor Battelle Memorial Institute, along with subcontractors, on Thursday to return any project information and then purge it from their computers before October 30. […] Congress intervened Monday, saying it will launch a formal investigation and instruct NASA to keep all its data. [NASA [Administrator Michael] Griffin said he already was ordering that all survey data be preserved.

“People might get worried, and that would hurt the airline industry.”  A fine reason to suppress safety findings.  Yeesh.

Priorities

It’s remarkable that spending $35 billion more to expand health insurance to more uncovered kids, for fear that a few extra might sneak into a “federalized” medical program, is deemed…

It’s remarkable that spending $35 billion more to expand health insurance to more uncovered kids, for fear that a few extra might sneak into a “federalized” medical program, is deemed by the White House an utterly unacceptable throwing away of money.  But making an “oops, we forgot to ask for this before, but we need to spend an additional $46 billion beyond what we asked for earlier in order to keep our troops in Iraq from going naked” request, on top of $147 billion already requested, is sound policy and doing what America needs to protect its people.

Bush said the money will cover basic operating expenses, plus additional armored vehicles and countermeasures designed to protect U.S. troops from roadside bombs.  “Congress should not go home for the holidays while our troops are still waiting for the funds they need,” he said.

I have to wonder what my boss would say if I turned around and told him that in addition to the budget I already requested for FY08, I needed a 30% increase for “basic operating expenses” that I somehow forgot to ask for.during the budget cycle.

 

Fire!

LA Times coverage of the fires in Southern California. Mary’s okay down in San Diego for the moment. No family close to the LA area fires, mercifully. My boss got…

LA Times coverage of the fires in Southern California.

Mary’s okay down in San Diego for the moment.

No family close to the LA area fires, mercifully.

My boss got evacuated from his house (where we’ve had business meetings in the past) in the Santa Clarita area, though he expects to be able to get back there today.

BD pointed to some keen Google Maps about the fires: 1 2 3

It’s all Doyce’s fault …

… that we (Kitten and I (and Margie, too, I suspect)) have reached the end of the second season DVD of Avatar: The Last Airbender, and … … cannot…

… that we (Kitten and I (and Margie, too, I suspect)) have reached the end of the second season DVD of Avatar: The Last Airbender, and …

… cannot bear the thought that the third season will not be out on DVD until next Fall.

No, really, it’s that good.  Great art, fine music, an rich and intricate plot and backstory, entertaining characters … I can’t recommend it highly enough.  We all loved it.

And, no, we’re not recording Season 3 on the DVR.  That would just feel wrong.

Rent, buy, or borrow it.  Watch it.  You won’t be sorry.*

* Note: Blog writer does not take responsibility for any sorrow you may feel for renting, buying, or borrowing it.  There’s no accounting for taste.