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Unblogged Bits (Thu. 4-Aug-11 1731)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. NYT: Only ‘Liberal Critics’ Call AFA A Hate Group – But remember, we all know we have a “liberal media” …
  2. Reid Raises Prospect Of Not Appointing Anyone To Super Committee If Republicans Remain Intransigent – I still predict we’ll end up with three no-taxes Republicans, two moderate Dems, and one Blue-Dog Dem. So the GOP will win. Again.
  3. Scientists confirm evidence of liquid water on the surface of Mars – Cool!
  4. 10 Things You Probably Didn’t Know About the Original Star Trek – Okay, I admit, I actually didn’t know a couple of these items (but knew several of them).
  5. No, Peter Parker Isn’t Dead, Black, Or Gay: Media Blatantly Attempts To Gin Up Outrage Over ‘New Spider-Man’ – Yeesh.
  6. Pelosi: Republicans Aren’t Interested In Deficit Reduction, They Are Interested In Destroying Government | ThinkProgress – “Kill the Beast.” What’s remarkable is how much they’ve progressed in that goal in just a couple of years.
  7. Cantor: Entitlement Promises ‘Frankly, Are Not Going To Be Kept For Many’ | ThinkProgress – Except, of course, for ExxonMobil, et al.
  8. Color video from Hiroshima – Boing Boing – “The US Military may have successfully covered up video that showed the brutality of atomic warfare, but, in the intervening years, we saw the brutality of war (in general) in Vietnam and we saw what acute radiation poisoning can do the human body in Chernobyl. Secrets don’t stay buried even when secrets stay buried.”
  9. mental_floss Blog » Who Was General Tso? – He was certainly no chicken.

Tweets from 2011-07-13

  • Make it so! RT @pourmecoffee: Patrick Stewart turns 71 today. Link #
  • Rain and hail. Woot. #
  • Sat in on a G+ “Hangout” with @hijinksenue while he drew. The Hangout tech is very cool, very easy. You could do some gaming that way. #
  • Thunder, lightning, downpour has arrived down here. Indy is not amused, esp. by the last. #

Tweets from 2011-06-11

  • After reading the Star Trek New Frontier novels, amusing to actually watch an TNG episode with Admiral Jellico in it (“Chain of Command”). #
  • On the other hand, less amusing to be reminded of the days when torture / “enhanced interrogation” was what the Bad Guys did. #
  • 4 of 5 stars to Too Much Tuscan Sun by Dario Castagno Link #

Unblogged Bits (Tue. 17-May-11 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. A celebration of the sci-fi ray gun – Pew-pew-pew!
  2. ThinkProgress » Ben Stein Responds To IMF Chief’s Arrest By Blaming The Alleged Victim – Stay classy, Ben!
  3. So This Happened – Topless Robot – HA!
  4. Apparently Star Trek Killed Osama Bin Laden – Heh.
  5. Baby We Were Born To Run For The Border – While I have, in fact, read about less-than-polite Canadian border guards (esp. if they think someone’s actually trying to sneak in to get a job), in general when someone contrasts border guards going one direction or the other, it’s nearly always the US side that gets the frowny-face.
  6. Rick Santorum doesn’t think John McCain understands how enhanced interrogation works – Actually, he says about eleventy-dozen pretty stupid things, but this is one fr the more stupid.
  7. Real Housewives
  8. Wonder Woman taking a break circa 1920. – Lovely.

Scriptural Maunderings for the Fourth Sunday of Easter

A fragment from the Dead Sea ScrollsThis is an occasional series of posts about the scripture read at our church and what it means to me. I attend an Episcopal service, and we are in Year A of the Revised Common Lectionary.

This week’s readings are particularly meaningful, as my parish church is named after the Good Shepherd, and it is readings about Jesus as the Good Shepherd that are the focus today.

First Reading: Acts 2:42-47

This being the post-Easter period, the lectionary uses readings from the Acts of the Apostles rather than the Old Testament for the first reading.  This one is popular among “liberal” congregations (emphasis mine):

Those who had been baptized devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers. Awe came upon everyone, because many wonders and signs were being done by the apostles. All who believed were together and had all things in common; they would sell their possessions and goods and distribute the proceeds to all, as any had need. Day by day, as they spent much time together in the temple, they broke bread at home and ate their food with glad and generous hearts, praising God and having the goodwill of all the people. And day by day the Lord added to their number those who were being saved.

Damned commie hippies!

I’ve long believed that the worst thing that ever happened to Christianity was its adoption by Constantine as the state religion of the Empire.  Once the religion became inextricably linked to the civil authorities and the power of the state, it could only become, itself, more temporal, more material, more officious and power-hungry.  While I think separation of Church and State is good for the State, I also think it’s even better for the Church.  Once God and Caesar are conjoined, it’s difficult to tell what to render to whom.

Anyway, it’s worth reading what those early Christians did, and how they lived.  They were together, commune-like, and “had all things in common.”  Those who had any wealth pooled it together, selling their possessions, and giving to those who were in need.

This,  then, is a key message of Jesus, and one that those with a stake in material goods tend to quickly gloss over.  Jesus was not about Religious Rules (indeed, he railed against the Law).  He called for us to love God, and to love our neighbors.  Loving God is relatively easy, in some ways — loving our neighbors as ourselves, to the point of giving up our worldly possessions for them as they are needed, and to even give up our lives as necessary, is quite a different thing, and much harder in many ways.

Indeed, I don’t claim any special virtue here. Yeah, I give to a number of charitable concerns, but I’m also about to take a very nice vacation to Italy, and not as some sort of pilgrimage.  I’m bound up on the love of the world as much as anyone else — but I try to at least recognize the obligations Jesus places on me to care for my fellows.

Second Reading: 1 Peter 2:19-25

After a reading of Psalm 23 (the quintessential Good Shepherd verse), we get into something that seems much darker and more stereotypically ashes-and-sackcloth — but which really follows the same thread as the reading from Acts.

It is a credit to you if, being aware of God, you endure pain while suffering unjustly. If you endure when you are beaten for doing wrong, what credit is that? But if you endure when you do right and suffer for it, you have God’s approval. For to this you have been called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, so that you should follow in his steps.

“He committed no sin, and no deceit was found in his mouth.”

When he was abused, he did not return abuse; when he suffered, he did not threaten; but he entrusted himself to the one who judges justly. He himself bore our sins in his body on the cross, so that, free from sins, we might live for righteousness; by his wounds you have been healed. For you were going astray like sheep, but now you have returned to the shepherd and guardian of your souls.

Martyrdom is not easy to talk about these days, but it’s simply the ultimate expression of that self-sacrificing spirit discussed in the previous reading, as exemplified by Jesus.

What’s remarkable is how, in juxtaposition to this, we have Christians today getting the self-righteous vapors because some people have the nerve to publicly disagree with them. Imagine!

  1. Some Christian says, “Gays are sick, twisted, evil, perverted, sub-humans who ought to be locked up, deported, reprogrammed, or, even possibly, stoned to death.”
  2. Someone else says, “I believe you are trying to impose your religious faith upon our legal system.
  3. Said Christian replies, “I’M BEING OPPRESSED! SOON, EASTER AND CHRISTMAS WILL BE ILLEGAL! JUST SEND MONEY!”

Really?

“When he was abused, he did not return abuse; when he suffered, he did not threaten; but he entrusted himself to the one who judges justly.” Granted, that’s easier said than done, but one would expect Christians to at least recognize the way they should be reacting to those who abuse them (even leaving aside that “disagreement” is not “abuse”).

Gospel Reading: John 10:1-10

I’m not going to quote this one at length because John is sometimes a bit zany.  Basically, Jesus riffs on the faithful-as-sheep motif, with religious leaders as the folks trying to lead the sheep. But there are lots of illegitimate would-be shepherds who jump the fence into the sheepfold to steal the sheep that are there, even though they don’t recognize the false shepherd’s voices.

Jesus, though, proclaims himself  “the gate,” through which all legit shepherds will pass into and out of the sheepfold:

Whoever enters by me will be saved, and will come in and go out and find pasture. The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.

There’s an old set of jokes that notes that shepherds are just raising sheep to be “fleeced,” or slaughtered.  But the folks of Judea would have recognized the metaphor — whatever the ultimate fate of the sheep, the immediate need and duty of the shepherd was for them to be fed and watered and protected from thieves and predators.  That’s what the good shepherd does, even at sacrifice to himself.  That’s the rule for looking for a good shepherd to follow — the extent to which he actually emulates the self-sacrificing and caring  nature of Christ for the entire flock.

The false shepherds who seek to steal the sheep, to exploit them rather than keep them well, to prey upon them in fact, are to be rejected. The metaphorical resemblance to “just send money!” televangelists and similar Internet sharks is to me, far too obvious — especially when the message from those false shepherds is less about care of the flock (even its weakest and most vulnerable members), but about keeping the sheep afraid. Which any livestock specialist will tell you is a way to make the animals stressed and thus less healthy and robust and capable of facing the world and surviving on their own.

The Good Shepherd seeks sheep that “have life, and have it abundantly.” The false shepherds seek sheep that tremble and shy away from life.  I know which I choose to follow.

(There is an understandable rejection of the idea of equating people to sheep — though usually more along the lines of individual rejection — “I am not a sheep” — than rejection of the idea of other people being sheep.  I’m willing to include myself in the metaphor, if only because I know I resemble silly sheep as often as not, and am just as likely to go astray.)

Tweets from 2011-05-11

  • It’s only Tuesday? Rats. #
  • Not quite sure how I managed to walk out the door without my watch, but there it is. Or isn’t, as the case may be. #
  • Man, I hate people having long cell phone conversations on the train. I hate being one of them even more. #
  • On the other hand, how AMAZINGLY COOL is it that my boss can call from a pub in the UK and chat with me on a train in the US? #jetpacks #
  • Tomorrow is The Day at Kay’s school … they’ve been learning all the body’s systems, so now it’s … SEX ED TIME! Eek! Not My Baby! #
  • 4 of 5 stars to Treason by Peter David Link #
  • 4 of 5 stars to Star Trek by Peter David Link #
  • The new Hawaii Five-0: Beautiful visuals, entertaining character interaction, stone-stupid plots. I can undevotedly live with that. #
  • “That guy’s dropped more pills than a three-fingered pharmacist.” #castle #

Wrapping up my “Star Trek: New Frontier” marathon

I’ve been playing catch-up on Peter David’s Star Trek: New Frontier series.  Here are the last two book reviews, for books 16 and 17 of the series.

Treason (Star Trek: New Frontier)Treason by Peter David

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Rather than “Treason,” the better title here might be “Madness.” It seems, at times, like everyone is going insane-mad, or is deeply depressed, or possibly possessed, or is simply getting really, really *angry* mad. And given that one of the insane-mad types is potentially the most powerful beings in the universe, things are even more dire … and that’s before some Grand Guignol ship-board battling that manage to kill of a number of supporting cast members, and a climax that sees yet another original player in the series die.

For all of that winnowing of the overly-large cast — and for all that the new galactic antagonists feel a bit much like an attempt to come up with some even more powerful (if demonstrably mortal) bad guys — this is still a fun book. After criticizing the past few volumes in the series with focusing on cast I didn’t care for, that’s turned right around here, as Burgy, Soleta, Selar, even (oddly enough) Si Cwan all step into the limelight (even if not all of them are in their right minds, or bodies). Amidst rampant paranoia of conniving conspiracies, shadowy aliens, omniscient computers, and secrets than you can shake a stick at, and a final scene to ramp things up still further …it’s a book that grabbed me for all 436 (large-type, wide-spaced) pages.

Star Trek: New Frontier: Blind Man's Bluff (No. 17) Blind Man’s Bluff by Peter David

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

In keeping with the previous volume, Treason, this is a book of plots and paranoia, of battles and betrayals, of vengeance and counter-vengeance, of the meaning of power and of life, and … all sorts of other good stuff.

We also end up losing yet another long-time cast member (or perhaps two, and a third is comatose). Given the past several novels, one might almost think David were trying to wrap things up, Hamlet-style. In some ways, this book even provides a nice book-case to the story of Mackenzie Calhoun, bringing him back to Xenex at both the beginning and the end. There’s a chance that this will be the New Frontier novel (Pocket has not re-upped David’s contract), which would be a heck of away to end things, given the plot hooks dangling at the end …

In addition to the huge (if dwindling) cast, we get guest appearances from some (very appropriate) Voyager alumni, which David handles with his usual aplomb (demonstrating once again his ability to handle other folks’ characters with a remarkably spot-on voice).

If I have a criticism of the book, it’s that it’s just too short. The 344 pages sounds decent enough, but I’ve seen smaller text and line space in some of Kay’s old chapter books. I’m glad to get what I can from David, and I enjoyed it all, but being able to plow through a new book in about 4 hours is a bit sketchy as far as value for the dollar.

That said, I’m still hoping for more in the series, and sad I’ve reached the end of this re-read and new-read of the New Frontier series. Not that I’m running low on other things to read …

View all my reviews

Book Review: “Star Trek New Frontier: Missing in Action” by Peter David (2006)

Missing in Action (Star Trek: New Frontier)Missing in Action by Peter David

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I’ve been plowing through the last several New Frontier novels to get to the most recent three — ones that I’ve bought but never got around to reading (because I hadn’t had a chance to plow through the previous books recently). This is the first of those, a sequel to the “only okay” After the Fall.

Somebody dies in this one. Somebody major to the series. And, ironically (and intentionally), it happens completely offstage, making for a particularly gruesome reveal.

I offer that up in as non-spoilery a fashion as I can because it points out an ongoing difficulty or two of the series. It’s become so complex and character-ridden that it’s practically impossible to deal adequately with the secondary characters, while at the same time, the leads (including Mackenzie Calhoun himself) are forced to spend increasing time outside of the limelight. The fact is, I’m much more interested in some folks (Calhoun, Shelby, Burgoyne, Soleta, Cwan) than others (Mueller, Lefler, Xyon/Xyon/Moke, Kalinda) (and we’ll leave the New, Improved Zak Kebron aside), but with the tale including so many folks onstage, plus incidental characters from the immediate plot lines themselves, nobody here gets enough stage time (save, perhaps, Soleta) to satisfy me.

The New Frontier series has drifted from being highly personal tales to being “merely” intricate plots, with motivations presented in a sketchy fashion so we can quickly move on to the next scene, the next ship / base / planet. Enjoyable, but not as much as earlier. And it turns that death I mentioned above into a simple dramatic trick, designed to impel some future actions and close out another story line.

While this book resolves the second half of the tale started with After the Fall, and sets up the potential for some future conflicts, it’s not as much fun (or as interesting) as it feels like it should be. Still looking forward to the next.

Recommended for Peter David and New Frontier completists. Not a good hopping-on point. But still more enjoyment (for the long-time series reader) than a lot of books out there.

View all my reviews

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 25-Apr-11 1130)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Star Trek Peter David Takes Fans Down Blind Man’s Bluff – Pleased to see the next “New Frontiers” series coming out — and sad to hear it may be the last.
  2. BREAKING: John Boehner’s $5 Million Attorney Drops DOMA Defense – I’m sure this will be spun as gay thugs intimidating the law.
  3. Rules for golfing during the blitz – I suspect this is bogus, but it’s funny nonetheless.
  4. Bible-Quoting Billboards for the Atheist Crowd – Actually, I think it would be worthwhile to have these sorts of billboards up. It might actually engender some conversation about what folks accept or reject from the Bible, why, and how that might apply to other subjects.
  5. All Trump Everything – “Mounting a presidential campaign has always been a great way get pet issues into the media spotlight. That works especially well when your pet issue is yourself being in the media spolight.”
  6. When Officials Consider Democracy a Problematic Inconvenience – The Washington Monthly – Remember how the Right used to claim that local control of things was the true American way?

Tweets from 2011-02-11

  • RT @SmileySaidSo: Barbara C. Harris was ordained the first woman Bishop in the Episcopal Church on this date in 1989. #BlackHistoryFact #
  • Between an hour-and-half contract review and a tonne of critical email, I am now finally able to start on my work for the day. Yeesh. #
  • Y’know, if it weren’t for that awful already-dated rock anthem, the Star Trek: Enterprise main titles could have been among the best. #
  • RT @mhegi: Uninstalling dictator COMPLETE – installing now: egypt 2.0: █░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░ #egypt #jan25 #tahrir #
  • Note to self: After knocking over your beer bottle, picking it up and slamming in anger on the table is … counter-productive. Also foamy. #
  • Off to downtown for a boxes, cake, kisses, and slices of meat, not necessarily in that order. #
  • ME: How many more years will I have to put up with having fun with you? KAY: You’ll just have to get used to it! #

Unblogged Bits (Tue. 8-Feb-11 1630)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Food Network Comment Trolling – This one’s for Margie.
  2. So a geek walks into a bar… Science Jokes! – The last (non-science) one is for my mom and dad.
  3. Red-Shirt vs. Stormtrooper [Cartoon] – Heh.
  4. Being Smart Without a License : Dispatches from the Culture Wars – Never rile the bureaucracy!
  5. If You Cheat in… [Pic] – Quite possibly true (I say, speaking from working with a lot of engineers, and seeing the stuff they work on that could, in fact, kill people if poorly designed).
  6. US Army warns: Tweet with care – Loose Tweets Sink Fleets!
  7. The potential impact of corporate tax reform – “Arguably, the United States now has a corporate tax code that’s the worst of all worlds. The official rate is higher than in almost any other country, which forces companies to devote enormous time and effort to finding loopholes. Yet the government raises less money in corporate taxes than it once did, because of all the loopholes that have been added in recent decades.”
  8. Teen’s medical marijuana fight escalates as school says he cannot come back to class after going home for medicine | Colorado Independent – Stupid asshat zero tolerance policies. Never mind about the person involved, we have rules to follow! Yeesh.

Unblogged Bits (Sat. 29-Jan-11 1630)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. GOP Conference Chair Thaddeus McCotter Says ‘America Must Stand’ With Mubarak Dictatorship – “An imperfect government capable of reform”? Really? Yeesh.
  2. The Truth About Facebook – Um … yeah.
  3. Job Interview – Man, I wish it were that easy.
  4. MAD – SMBC January 29, 2011 – Heh. Fortunately, for some, after the Apocalypse can come an unexpected Golden Age …
  5. Give ’em the Axe – Zits for 1/29/2011 – While there is many the fashion faux pas in my own teen past, I have to believe (and, indeed, hope) that the current trend for heavy cologne (excuse me, “body spray”) is a short-lived one, and that the purveyors of fashion/cosmetics have not implemented a permanent change in male society.
  6. The pressing need for a ‘spudnut moment’ – Sarah Palin is, of course, a dolt.
  7. Still waiting for that ‘zero tolerance’ policy to kick in: Steve Benen
  8. Paul Ryan and his media base: Steve Benen
  9. The anti-science party – Sad, but true. I have to wonder, though, how much of the anti-science (evolution, climate change, basic research, etc.) bent of many prominent GOP leaders is because it’s to their political benefit (anti-science = anti-regulatory = pro-business = contributions!) and how much of it is the other way around (business contributions go to those who are anti-science = anti-regulatory). In either case, too many people are fiddling while Rome burns, either for profit, power, or just intentional ignorance.
  10. Read the first draft of Gene Roddenberry’s Star Trek pitch, starring “Captain April” and the “S.S. Yorktown” [Television] – Interesting seeing which pitched plots eventually saw light of day, which didn’t.
  11. Revolver that fires shotgun shells – Have to wonder what the kick on that would be. Btw, the BATFE had Taurus pull it after deeming it not a pistol but a short-barreled shotgun, which are illegal. (And which points out how firearm definitions, for legal purposes, can be very slippery things.)
  12. No Longer Caring About Democracy, Bolton Disparages Egypt Protests And Defends Mubarak – While Bolton’s expressed concern about Islamicist radicals taking the reins of the revolt and possible follow-on government are legit, the idea that we should reflexively back Mubarak because of that is as shortsighted as our backing of every other strongman we’ve done for the last sixty years — little of which as ever ended well for the countries in question or US security.

Unblogged Bits (Thu. 27-Jan-11 0430)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Rep. Paul Broun To Obama: “You Don’t Believe In The Constitution. You Believe In Socialism” – Rep. Paul Broun is also a dolt.
  2. Arkansas Supermarket Covers Up Magazine with Photo of Gay Family – Yeesh.
  3. First Look at the Anime-style Thundercats UPDATED: New Image! – Fairly cool looking — though Cheetara looks way to wimpy-elfin, and I’m very sorry to hear that the Kits and Snarf are included in the package.
  4. Mom Convicted of Felony, Jailed for Fraudulently Sending Kids to Safer School – Well, we certainly can’t have have-nots hobnobbing with the haves, can we? What else is the law there to do but protect us from such a state?
  5. The original Battlestar Galactica series bible is Ron Moore’s rebuke to Star Trek – Avoiding “the usual stories about parallel universes, time-travel, mind-control, evil twins, God-like powers and all the other cliches.” But we will have prophecies and flashbacks and future histories, humans who turn out to be programmed robots compelled to do things, multiple versions of the same people with different personalities, and some divine spirit who’s pulling the strings of destiny somewhere. I’m not quite sure where the vision here went off the rails. (I speak half in jest — BSG did some remarkable and stunning things, esp. toward the beginning of the series — but half in truth.)
  6. Is It An Underage Sex Slave Ring, Or A Hoax? Either Way, Planned Parenthood Calls The FBI – As presented, I vote sleazy, video-trolling, ACORN-bashing-style hoax.
  7. Barton: “I Guarantee You They Are Getting Homosexual Indoctrination” in Public Schools – The crazy! It burns!
  8. Rep. Peter King: ‘80 Percent Of Mosques In This Country Are Controlled By Radical Imams’ – Rep. Peter King is a dolt.
  9. House GOP wants to monitor what you are doing online – Not that the Dems have been all that impressive with privacy issues, but the GOP’s willingness to go all Big Brother Police State with information gathering on the off chance that it will protect Law & Order is a lovely juxtaposition to the quasi-libertarianism of the Tea Parties that brought them to power.
  10. Facebook Turns Friend Activity Into New Ad Format – Yet another reason to minimize Facebook usage.
  11. Voyager and the Will to Explore – “Long-term projects are guided by the decisions and the will of those who conceive and nurture them. The question now is whether we have the will to keep pushing, Voyager style, into the dark.”
  12. Bush Aides Violated Federal Law – I wouldn’t hold my breath as to any criminal charges being filed.
  13. Michele Bachmann Erroneously Gives Our Founders Credit For Ending Slavery – … for certain broad values of “Founders” …
  14. Turn of fortune for NASA as solar sail successfully deploys – Cool!
  15. Congress.org – News : More troops lost to suicide – “The belief in the possibility of a short decisive war appears to be one of the most ancient and dangerous of human illusions.” — Robert Wilson Lynd

Unblogged Bits (Wed. 27-Oct-10 1130)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. The Ken Buck Rape Case | Mother Jones – This wasn’t a “she-said, he-said” case. It was a “she-accused, he-confessed” case, and Buck still didn’t prosecute. The other factors mentioned are interesting, but fail to address this core fact.
  2. Rand Paul Head-Stomper To Victim: ‘I Would Like For Her To Apologize To Me’ – The last refuge of the bully: playing the victim.
  3. Asked If Being Gay Is A Choice, Joe Miller Dodges And Says ‘It Really Is A State Issue’ – It’s a state choice! Except when the states choose wrong! Then it’s a federal choice! Except when the feds choose wrong! Then it’s a state choice! Except …
  4. Nook Deletes All Your Files, Barnes & Nobles Shrugs – I have not updated my bookshelves in a while, but, mercifully, the used books I have there have not vanished. Except the ones I chose to give away.
  5. Arkansas School Board Member Says He’ll Only Wear Purple If “Queers” “Commit Suicide” – Stay classy, Arkansas!
  6. Alaska GOP Senate Nominee Joe Miller Admitted Lying About After Being Caught In Ethics Violation – Note this is all of two years ago.
  7. The Hobbit Shall Not Pass… Out of New Zealand After All – Huzzah!
  8. Is Downward Dog The Path to Hell? – Yes, because once you start taking yoga, “loneliness, alcoholism, and promiscuity” are the well-known, inevitable results …
  9. The US Religious Right and the LGBT Crisis In Uganda – And they’ll know we are Christians by our love …
  10. Viagra for convicted rapists?: Bizarre false claim gets anti-Ed Perlmutter ad yanked (VIDEO) – Denver News – The Latest Word – I’m finding it interesting the number of stations that are (belatedly) fact-checking and yanking some of these ads.
  11. The New No. 2 – Wow — some pretty massive changes to Disney California Adventures. Kind of glad I finally got a chance to see the “before,” so I can hopefully appreciate the “after” …
  12. Calvin and Hobbes for October 27, 2010
  13. Dudes At Yale Pick Knuckles Up Off the Ground Just Long Enough to Type Some Nonsense [On Becoming a Domestic and Laboratory Goddess] – Translated: “Well, yes, they went too far with their little button-pushing shenanigans, but boys will be boys and no harm, no foul, right? Lighten up, ladies! Come on over for a brewski or two!”
  14. U.S. College Degrees by County – The concentration of higher education in urban areas is much greater than I’d expected – and rather disturbing, too. Compare the “reddest” areas with the “red states,” too.
  15. Cookie – strip for October / 26 / 2010 – This is why I don’t keep cookies around me. Well, not for long, anyway.
  16. BBC News – US mid-term election spending nears $2bn mark – The best government money (er, “corporate free speech!”) can buy.
  17. San Francisco Earthquake & Fire – Remarkable post-Fire films. Devastated landscapes, still-smoldering ruins, building demolitions, tent cities … but also, a lot of folks still carrying out life and living as before.
  18. San Diego Zoo Gets Funky – Cool.
  19. Star Trek cited by Texas Supreme Court – Not sure if I should be amused, or make a snarky comment about the uproar from some quarters if the same lines had been attributed to a European court.

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 25-Oct-10 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Sharron Angle Pits Brown Against White In Anti-Immigrant Attack Ad – I’d dearly love to have Sharron Angle lose because she intentionally torqued off a portion of the electorate this way.
  2. Amazon’s New Sale-Stealing Book Scanner Is Great for Cheapskates, Bad for Bookstores, Worse for Me – I confess I’ve done this, though only at “big box” stores.
  3. Go To This Site When You Can’t Find Your Phone [Web] – Cool …
  4. Wi-Fi Direct certification begins today, device-to-device transmission starting soon – Cool. And WiFi’s a lot better for a lot of purposes than the range-constrained Bluetooth.
  5. Fake TV for fooling burglars – That’s actually pretty clever. And at $35, not wildly outrageous.
  6. Self-appointed guardians of TV decency fall on hard times – Couldn’t happen to a bunch of nicer folks.
  7. YouTube – The Mighty Hercules-Kids Cartoon Theme Song-Johnny Nash – This one’s for Mom & Dad.
  8. Brand-new Batmobiles – Wow. Wish I had a LOT more disposable income.
  9. “Bound for Glory”: America in Color from 1939-1943 – Glimpse into another world, but one so close.
  10. World’s tallest buildings c.1884 – Amazing how quickly things change. That, and the value of steel-reinforced concrete.
  11. Star Trek Re-watch: “Spock’s Brain” – Okay, I don’t care what hesitations the review writer (and commenters) have, this is, IMO, the Worst. TOS. Episode. Ever. Yeah, there are plenty of other bad, awful, wretched, improbable S.3 eps, but this one is unrelentingly awful, except where it’s unintentionally hysterical, except where it’s both.
  12. Paul Tobin Counts Down the 40 Greatest Comic Cover Artists – I don’t necessarily agree with all his choices, but it’s an interesting collection and an intriguing premise — not necessarily best artists, but best artists at making covers.

Tweets from 2010-09-28

  • Oh, goody, I get to try and convince the immovable object it’d best move before the irresistible force mushes me against it. #
  • Irked that Southern California’s 110s temps make me feel petty complainimg about our 90s today. #
  • RT @hijinksensue, @bergopolis: Star Trek: The Next Generation premiered 23 years ago today. Holy shit. We are all old. #
  • RT @denverpost: Denver has set a new record high today: 90 degrees, breaking the previous record of 89 set in 1994: http://dpo.st/9yMbqE #
  • Cool that murdered psychic on #Castle was played by actress who played a psychic on another famous geek sf show. #

Tweets from 2010-08-27

  • RT @bpeace69: Drop Fox News. Just watch Jon Stewart and read ***Dave. You’re welcome. http://bit.ly/dpNasw #
  • Wow. Star Trek TNG was damn frickin’ preachy. Entertaining, when character-driven, but relentlessly moralistic. #
  • I’ve been pretty good about taking walks at lunch time this week, but, oddly enough, the burbs feel a lot hotter than downtown usually does. #
  • Star Trek TNG first aired … 23 years ago? Crikey. That’s longer than it was from when TOS first aired. #

Unblogged Bits (Tue. 4-May-10 2000)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Jim Hill : “The Art of How to Train Your Dragon” reveals the film that DreamWorks Animation almost made – Fascinating look at the creative changes that went into the movie (which is excellent).
  2. A Miracle! – SMBC May 04, 2010 – And thus the course of religion and mythology were changed forever …
  3. The True Facts about Bottled Water that Science doesn’t want you to know | – Is it evil of me that I want to see this widely distributed?
  4. The Impact and Consequence of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell | Gay Rights | Change.org – The idea that our own troops are less disciplined, less flexible, and less willing to stand by their comrades in arms than the Israelis or the Brits should be offensive to anyone who supports the US military.
  5. How Capt. Kirk Changed the World – NASA Science – I’d feel better if the quote used as a photo caption weren’t from the World’s Worst Star Trek Episode Ever.
  6. Police barred from penis enlargement | Reuters – For that, you have to hire private dicks …
  7. Disparate Trends in Permissiveness: Homosexuality and Prostitution: lisa
  8. Around The Interwebs – Pop-O-Matic Kitteh!!!!
  9. Terry Pratchett: Doctor Who isn’t science fiction – Classic Doctor Who was, at best, space opera of the sophistication, physics, and often special effects of the old Buck Rogers serials. Current Doctor Who is, honestly, fantasy with (usually) SF trappings (space ships, time travel, robots). That’s not necessarily a bad thing — in fact, it’s damned entertaining. It’s not SF in terms of “speculative fiction” — the Doctor demonstrates that sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
  10. Matt Gertz: Fox hammers White House for not insulting Jewish Americans – Fox continues to totter on the verge of self-parody. What a bunch of maroons.
  11. ‘Teabaggers’ discover political correctness – Ha!
  12. CWA Pre-Emptively Declares They Cannot Support Obama’s SCOTUS Nomination – Money graf: “So CWA urged President Bush to ignore any requests that he consult with anyone before making any nomination, because they were just going to oppose the nominee anyway and the president has the constitutional power to name any candidate he chooses … and now CWA is writing to President Obama, demanding that he listen to them and put forth a nominee that they can support, threatening that if he doesn’t, they will be left with no option but to oppose his choice?”
  13. FRC Founding Board Member Discovered Traveling With “Rent Boy” – Reading about the virulently anti-gay pol or religious leader (or both) who turns out to be gay (and covertly and actively so) is almost becoming cliche. If I weren’t so angry about their hateful and harmful hypocrisy, I’d feel very sorry for their clear self-loathing and fear.
  14. Health Supplement Guru Nearly Dies After Ingesting Own Product – HA!
  15. Color Survey Results – This is really interesting stuff, looking at how people (including some gender differences) refer to colors.
  16. Could a Mini Horse Be Bred Small Enough to Fit in Your Palm? – I have an uncomfortable feeling about breeding animals to such extremes (yes, I feel the same about, say, dogs), but … it is cute.

Unblogged Bits for Thu, 22 Apr 2010, 2:01AM

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Leonard Nimoy Retiring, Won’t Star in ‘Trek’ Sequel – I’ve very much enjoyed the voice-overs he’s done for Star Trek Online.
  2. Dem. Sen. Carper: Dems should drop areas of disagreement from Wall St. reform bill – So the way to move forward is to let the minority dictate to the majority what should or shouldn’t be in a bill. Um … right.
  3. Price of Ignoring ToS Details: Your Soul – Not at all surprising. What percentage of people (my guess: low single digits) actually read all the EULA information during an installation? (And, no, I don’t, either.)
  4. Facebook Used To Make Partners Delete Your Data After 24 Hrs. No Longer. – I don’t have anything on Facebook that worries me, and I decline to join in any games or applications that want to access my profile. That said, I’d never dream of making it my primary social platform.
  5. Glenn Beck, the IMF, and the “Global V-A-T” “prison” conspiracy | Media Matters for America – The Rodeo Clown meets Global Financial Policy. Hilarity ensues.
  6. Pope Urban Novak II – Right! We must protect the site of the Sermon on the Mount, and act as Blessed Peacemakers by BOMBING THE SNOT OUT OF IRAN! Just like Jesus would do!
  7. Army considers rescinding invitation to evangelist – Yahoo! News – It’s highly inappropriate to invite a speaker to the Pentagon who refers to Islam as “a very evil and wicked religion” — not least of which because (a) Muslims serve in the military, and (b) we have military posted in (and ostensibly in service to the people of) Muslim countries. That’s not censorship — that’s common sense. (Plus: why the hell does the Pentagon have a guest speaker for the National Day of Prayer in the first place?)
  8. Jeffrey Scott Shapiro is on a mission to rehabilitate George W. Bush’s reputation. – By Jordan Michael Smith – Slate Magazine – Money quote of Mr Scott: “Bush is clearly very smart. And you don’t need to be a genius to be president — you need good leadership skills and good instincts.”
  9. Barbershop Ewoks – I love Barbershop. I love Star Wars. I love … well, I appreciate Star Wars Barbershop.

Unblogged Bits for Fri, 2 Apr 2010, 8:00PM

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. 5 Ways The Google Book Settlement Will Change The Future of Reading [Publishing]: Annalee Newitz
  2. Preacher Compares Attacks on Pope to Anti – Semitism – NYTimes.com – The more the Vatican criticizes the attacks being made — painting itself as victim instead of the children who were abused — the more credibility and sympathy it loses. And, on another note, hiding behind what your aide did on your behalf is hardly a substantive defense. “The buck stops here,” as Truman put it.
  3. Michele Bachmann: Nancy Pelosi Tried To Incite Something By The Way She Crossed The Street – “And if she’d been raped it would have been her fault, too.”
  4. KFC’s Bacon Sandwich On Fried Chicken “Bread” Starts Killing People Nationwide April 12 – The O.R. one is the same calories and fat as a Big Mac (but twice the sodium). Maybe too much of a good thing.
  5. Star Trek Re-Watch: “What Men Dare Do” – One of the lengthiest and most nicely done April Fool bits I saw all day: part of Tor’s ST:TOS retrospective, in this case a fake TOS episode review. Brilliant.
  6. Obama admin: time to make radio pay for its music – I would rather eat broken glass than fill the coffers of the RIAA … unless, of course, if it were at the expense of ClearChannel. Hrm. While this will likely hurt small broadcast stations (and public radio) more than Big Broadcasting, it’s also clearly a case where something needs to be done to rationalize both the domestic and international markets.
  7. Wes Anderson Is the Hipstery Lord of the Rings – Amazing what a different sound track and some clever cuts will do to a trailer. Amusing.
  8. Topless Robot – The 8 Most Common Ways D&D Characters Die – That’s pretty much the gamut all right.
  9. Improved comment collapsing for Google Buzz posts – Nice. I’m still not settled in my use of Buzz, as it falls sort of between GReader and Twitter without really replacing either. But for what I do use it for, this will be helpful.
  10. Pineberry to Make Debut in U.K. Stores – Hmmmm … need to keep my eyes open for these here in the States. Though I’m generally not a big fan of fresh fruit.
  11. RNC’s Filings Reveal Creative Definitions Of ‘Office Supplies’ – Okay, okay, it’s probably (maybe) just expenses entered under the wrong account code (as someone who both does expense reports and tries to reconcile departmental expenses vs. budgets, I’ve seen this happen a zillion times). That said, it’s still damned funny.
  12. Palin’s 20 House Dem Targets Use Her As A Fundraising Ploy – I suspect her involvement will get more traction from Democrats than Republicans.
  13. Indiana Threatened By Giant Poop Bubbles, For Realsies
  14. Northeast Hit With Devastating Floods, As Federal Flood Insurance Expires Due To GOP Obstruction – Well played, GOP! Let’s all remember this next fall!
  15. Erickson: I’ll ‘pull out my wife’s shotgun’ if someone comes to my door for the American Community Survey. – To summarize: “I’m not advocating killing census workers. I’m advocating threatening to kill them with a shotgun if they come onto my property.” That’s a remarkably nuanced approach for a Erickson.
  16. Scott Roeder gets Hard 50 in murder of abortion provider George Tiller | Featured Story | Wichita Eagle
  17. Can Animals Be Gay? – NYTimes.com – An interesting (and long) article on same-sex mating and social behavior in a remarkably lengthy list of species. That complicates the “‘Tain’t Natural!” argument (though it can still be noted that it’s less usual than male-female activity), but, then, that’s never been the point, to me, of why we should (or shouldn’t) accept homosexual behavior in humans, which boils down to, “Why the heck shouldn’t we? Where’s the harm?” (Note: “I think it’s icky” is not an actual harm.)