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“Because Joe Miklosi LOVES MURDERERS … especially YOURS!”

Continuing the pretty consistent peppering of flyers (and, apparently, broadcast ads, though I don’t listen/watch those) from a worried Mike Coffman against his Democratic challenger Joe Miklosi, we get a doozy here, as a follow-up to previous ad campaigns:

JOE MIKLOSI
VOTED AGAINST KATIE’S LAW.

Sometimes, a single strand of evidence stands between justice serviced and a criminal set free.

[…] Miklosi voted against Katie’s Law, which expands the use of DNA to arrest and convict criminals, including rapists, murderers, and child predators.

Victims deserve justice — these violent criminals deserve punishment.

Miklosi voted against helping law enforcement solve violent and sexual assault crimes in Colorado.

JOE MIKLOSI.

Leaving dangerous criminals on our streets.
Denying justice to victims of violent crimes.

Why, Joe?! WHYYYYY???!!!

There’s also a Mike Coffman TV ad on the theme.

Why, Joe?! WHY DID YOU SIDE WITH THE PREDATORS? AND (just as bad, apparently) THEIR LAWYERS?

Or, more importantly, what’s this really all about?

Katie’s Law style bills (no, it’s not original to Colorado — it’s named after Katie Sepich) encourage building up DNA sample libraries, to be used to catch criminals when they later commit a crime. Not a bad idea, on the face of it. Laws like this do have some use. They have been used to find guilty parties of later crimes who may not have been found.

The particular version of Katie’s Law that came up for a vote, Senate Bill 09-241, and which Miklosi voted against in 2009 would have called for anyone arrested for, or arrested in investigation for, a felony in Colorado to submit a DNA sample, to be used in later crime enforcement.

Not anyone convicted of a felony, mind you.  Not anyone apprehended by the police, tried, and found to be a felon.

Just anyone picked up and arrested on a felony charge, or in investigation of a felony charge.

People not convicted of any crime.

So, is that a good idea?  If so, then why not have every Colorado citizen be required to submit a DNA sample. After all, that would provide the maximum protection for people in case of even first-time crimes.  And since we’re already talking about requiring samples from folks not yet convicted of a crime, let’s just make it everyone?

I’m not saying that’s necessarily a bad idea, though I suspect net-net it probably is.  It’s just that there’s very little ethical difference in doing it, and all the outraged huffing and puffing that some would do over the proposal, while not seeing that anyone, innocent or guilty, can be arrested, strikes me as more than a little hypocritical.

Note that the proposal did provide for DNA records to be expunged if all the felony charges were dropped or the presumed-innocent accused was acquitted. Of course, they would have to actually apply to have the records expunged. I feel, myself, uncomfortable with collecting such samples upon arrest (when a person is still presumed innocent) than after conviction (when he or she is not).

Miklosi doesn’t directly address that in explaining his vote against the final version of the bill (which eventually passed).  He says he felt the law couldn’t stand up to constitutional scrutiny. While normally one might argue that it’s up to the courts to decide that (and it is), that could mean that someone arrested and convicted based on Katie’s Law evidence could have their conviction overturned and be set free on the “technicality.”  Y’know, the way the “predators and their lawyers” prefer.

He did vote in favor of a different form of the SB 09-241 the day before (he was one of four legislators to change their vote between the two).

(A federal appeals court, two weeks later, did uphold the constitutionality of such laws, but that sort of precedent had not yet been set.)

Miklosi also points out that Coffman himself voted against a federal Katie’s Law bill, which would have provided federal assistance to states to help them set up a DNA registry.  He was one of 32 Republicans to vote Nay; the bill ended up passing on a large bipartisan vote. Apparently, to use the same argument as the ad, Coffman would rather “leave dangerous criminals on our streets” if the alternatives will cost federal taxpayer money.

My bottom line: I understand Miklosi’s concerns over this particular law, esp. since it hadn’t been tested in a federal court yet. One might criticize that judgment call, but to paint it all in these sorts of apocalyptic “MIKLOSI WANTS YOUR LOVED ONES DEAD AND THEIR KILLER TO GO FREE AND DANCE ON THEIR GRAVES!” tones is utterly ludicrous, and reflects more on Coffman than on Miklosi.

Bits and Bobs from 2012-08-12

Miscellany from over the weekend.

Serious stuff

  1. Illegal but not punishable – If there’s no accountability for breaking the law, then there is no law.

Family stuff

  1. At the concert – Kay’s band concert, that is.
  2. She will control the horizontal – And her posture was a lot more vertical than the other kids, too.
  3. Ivy at the Glenn – We ate there Saturday night.  A mixed experience.

Fun stuff

  1. Cat being a cat – I’ve actually watched one of ours do this.
  2. Ninja convention! – Lurking Room Only.
  3. Whedon’s Master Plan for the Avengers Revealed! – Heh.
  4. The mundane is marvelous – A picture of dirt and rocks. From Mars, fergoshsakes.

No more secrets, Marty

If an employer were to insist on being able to come to your house, read your love letters to your SO, browse through your bills, search your night stand, scope out what books you read and what food you eat and then plant bugs to listen in on any conversations you had from then on out …

… you'd probably tell them to go to hell. And rightfully so.

So why do some folks think it's okay to get access to people's social media accounts as part of the interview process, or to be accepted on a school team.

Yeah, I understand what they say they're trying to look for and monitor. But if it would be improper in the real world, it's improper in the virtual one. #ddtb

Embedded Link

Govt. agencies, colleges demand applicants' Facebook passwords
If you think privacy settings on your Facebook and Twitter accounts guarantee future employers or schools can't see your private posts, guess again.
Employers and colleges find the treasure-trove of p…

If you're worried about Google Search History and its privacy settings …

If you're worried about Google Search History and its privacy settings …

… then here are some ways you can clear it (and leave it turned off). Personally, I'm not going to bother, but if it's something that concerns you, here you go. #ddtb

Embedded Link

How to Remove Your Google Search History Before Google's New Privacy Policy Takes Effect | Electronic Frontier Foundation
On March 1st, Google will implement its new, unified privacy policy, which will affect data Google has collected on you prior to March 1st as well as data it collects on you in the future. Until now, …

Voter suppression conviction nets a whole thirty days of home detention

Whoop-di-doo.

Imagine the vitriol and outrage and demands for a multi-year sentence if this guy had been, say, a former ACORN member who cast a single vote fraudulently. Instead, at this guys behest, 110K mostly-black voters got a call saying that they didn't need to go out and vote, the Democratic candidate had won, relax and "congratulations". And he gets 30 days at home, 500 hours of community service, and a one year suspended sentence.

The article does not note if this was a felony charge or a misdemeanor. It would be ironic (and wholly just) were it a felony charge and Maryland were one of the states that disenfranchises its former felons. #ddtb

Embedded Link

STLtoday – Associated Press – News
BALTIMORE (AP) — A political aide to Maryland's former Republican governor was sentenced to 30 days of home detention Thursday for an Election Day robocall conspiracy that prosecutors cast as an …

Target knows if you''ve been bad or good

.. or if you're pregnant

I can see where this could cause some major problems, but it's also a fascinating look at human behavior and the issues involved in commercially tracking said behavior.

My mom said to me on the phone today, "I guess nothing we do is private any more." To some degree, what she's saying is right. Even as the Internet and computers in general make us a global community, aspects of that community take on those of the small town, where everyone knows each other's secrets, and privacy becomes increasingly scarce.

We can discuss whether that's a good thing or a bad thing, or whether there are measures we can take to mitigate it, but it's real and it's not going away any time soon. Which means we're either moving toward an era of tolerance and "live and let live," or else an era of forced conformity because people can learn so easily when you step out of line. #ddtb

Reshared post from +Terrence Lui

You Are Being "Targeted"

Not sure why anyone in this day and age would be surprised that companies like Target are data mining things like your shopping habits. Every time you hand over that loyalty card to the supermarket, you are allowing them to do the exact same thing.

I agree that this clearly crosses the line of "creepy". But even if Target stops sending out coupons and deals to people who have not self identified as being pregnant, I highly doubt the creepiness will stop. I believe most of this stuff is completely unintentional. Many companies who do this are just looking for patterns not specific demographics. Computers are crunching huge amounts of data and trying to find correlations. Maybe one day they find that there is a very tight correlation between people who buy grapes and people who use fabric softener. It might not make any sense to a human looking at the data, it might not even be real, (remember correlation does not imply causation) but that's the correlation that the computer finds.

I've developed programs that "automagically" find these types of correlations and promote specific actions over others to test it can illicit other behavior. The stuff I worked on was a lot more harmless than digging into someone's shopping or other personal behaviors but many of the same principles apply.

If this type of thing really creeps you out you could always move to a system to really hide your identity. Pay in cash, Make sure you use icognito mode, have many many e-mail addresses, etc. I'm not sure the inconvenience is worth it given I don't really think most of the data that is being amassed is all that dangerous to me.

Do you disagree? Are you worried about data mining like this?

http://www.forbes.com/sites/kashmirhill/2012/02/16/how-target-figured-out-a-teen-girl-was-pregnant-before-her-father-did/

Embedded Link

How Target Figured Out A Teen Girl Was Pregnant Before Her Father Did – Forbes
Target has perfected the technique of analyzing consumers' shopping habits to figure out who's pregnant. How can they send customers congratulatory coupons without freaking them out?

Timeless pictures

as in pictures that stay online for a seeming eternityYou can delete a Facebook picture from the main interface … but if you still have a link to it, the picture probably can still be accessed that way. As some folks have learned to their dismay. Facebook has said they're working on it … and have been, for years. Yeesh. #ddtb

Embedded Link

Over 3 years later, "deleted" Facebook photos are still online
Photos that you think you're deleting from Facebook are remaining on their servers years later. Ars has been following this story for nearly three years now; Facebook says it's still working on fixin…

Google's Privacy Policy Change Is Freaking Me Out

The more I read and think about this, the more I'm convinced it's a "Slow News Day Tempest in a Teapot". #ddtb

Unblogged Bits (Tue. 25-Oct-11 1130)

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

  1. What people do when it snows – Bah! It’s usually Twitter, unless I decided to upload a picture to Flickr …
  2. Market Instability and the Plight of the Rich by David Atkins – Eek! The ultra-mega-rich are sometimes dropping down into being only mega-rich because they own so much on the stock market! Sometime they even have to sell their private jets! Weep, my nation!
  3. High-speed videography reveals how mosquitoes fly in the rain [Video] – Fascinating.
  4. Science proves that getting silicone injected directly into your body is a bad idea [Plastic Surgery] – “If you really, really want cosmetic surgery, don’t get it done on the cheap.” Words to (literally) live by.
  5. Thermostat Automagically Learns Your Heating Habits [Video] – Cool! And … um, warm! No, I’m all in favor of inductive learning by devices, vs deductive rules that users have to key in (and, often, don’t).
  6. Jan Eberly: Is Regulatory Uncertainty a Major Impediment to Job Growth? NO! – Don’t get your facts in the way of my talking point!
  7. Warner Bros Steals A Move From Disney, Will Pull ‘Harry Potter’ DVDs Out Of Circulation December 29 – Warner Bros doesn’t consider there is an active market in used DVDs out there. And I don’t think they are going to have the Disneyesque patience to restrict availability in the vault for that long.
  8. Slaughtering horses for meat is banned in the U.S. Why? – Slate Magazine – I don’t think I’ve ever eaten horse meat, but I don’t think I could muster a reason not to given the other critters I’m willing (and often eager) to consume.
  9. Del Taco – I’m not a fan of the “before” logo, but the “after” one strikes me as anything but an improvement.
  10. Thanks to anti-vaxers like Jenny McCarthy, measles outbreaks on the increase. – Dolts. Idiots. And, potentially, killers.
  11. Our Tax Money Funds A Government Surveillance Center In Lower Manhattan — And Wall Street Is Part of It. Why? – Best city government money can buy!
  12. Northern lights go way, way south – Hmmm … thinking we should be able to see this, maybe, from the Denver area (except for the city lights).
  13. Rick Green: Drug-sniffing dogs come to Wolcott High School, with a twist. – Hartford Courant – Endless weasel-words here from the superintendent, all of which boil down to, “We thought lying to the kids in a scary way was a cool idea, no harm, no foul.” Great lesson plan.
  14. Officials use ruse at high school to clear halls for drug search – Actually, a valuable lesson served up to the kids here: some authorities will, in fact, lie to you and play on your fears in order to get away with what they want. Not a nice message, but a useful one. Of course, now I expect to hear about some kid being hurt in a real intruder incident because they thought it was just more administration drug-searching bullshit.
  15. HOWTO take over your neighbor’s stereo: Cory Doctorow
  16. Gatwick airport took away my belt buckle: “I stick to what they’ve told me. I’m not going to speak to you anymore. Not if you’re going to publish it. I’m not speaking to you.” – Security Theater: It’s not just an American production.
  17. NPR finds GOP Sen. Marco Rubio misinforming about his family history again: John Aravosis (DC)
  18. Consumers shifting money from big banks – It would be nice were it so. I suspect there will be a substantial bump, but not enough to change the big banks’ behavior (except, perhaps, to “force” them to raise fees further because of some loss of business).

Unblogged Bits (Thu. 1-Sep-11 1730)

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

  1. Sun over the yardarm – Wikipedia – For some reason, this topic just came up …
  2. Sears To Start Selling Craftsman Tools Through Costco – A smart move on their part, as I doubt it will hurt sales at Sears stores.
  3. COBRA Subsidies Expire, Leaving Unemployed To Scramble For Healthcare – Well, obviously, now that the COBRA money has run out, these slackers will get motivated and find jobs again!
  4. Man faces 75 years for recording police – Hopefully the judge is reading his legal newspapers. And, dear Illinois Attorney General, please get stuffed.
  5. Feeble President, Feeble PlansSigh.
  6. First Grader handcuffed for misbehaving in class – Yeesh.
  7. The 5 Most Depraved Sex Scenes Implied by ‘Harry Potter’ | Cracked.com – Heh.
  8. Why won’t the government tell us the truth? PROOF OF A COVER UP! « Stupid Evil Bastard – Those who deny the conspiracy … are obviously part of the conspiracy!
  9. Banks Still Fabricating Documents One Year After Robo-Signing Scandal Broke | ThinkProgress – What these guys fail to understand is that society (and property, and business) only exist in a civil fashion if everyone trusts the process and the documents that back up claims. If they squander too much of that trust, then they have the most to lose.
  10. WikiLeaks: Iraqi children in U.S. raid shot in head, U.N. says | McClatchy – “At the time, American military officials in Iraq said the accounts of townspeople who witnessed the events were highly unlikely to be true, and they later said the incident didn’t warrant further investigation. Military officials also refused to reveal which units might have been involved in the incident.”
  11. Florida sued for ticketing motorists who warn others of speed traps – Here’s hoping for a big win against the state. I have no problems with highway speed enforcement; in fact, I am in favor of it. Abuse of power and violating First Amendment rights, though? Especially when the courts have already ruled against it? Nuh-uh.
  12. Alex Brant-Zawadzki: Pima County Repubs Raffle Glock As Fundraiser; Same Gun Type Used In Tucson Shooting – Stay classy, Arizona GOP!

Unblogged Bits (Wed. 17-Aug-11 1731)

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

  1. First Glimpses inside J.K. Rowling’s Magical Online World of Pottermore – Hmmmm. Not sure it’s my cuppa, but it could be fun.
  2. Palin tour comes to abrupt halt – POLITICO.com – Again? Ho-hum.
  3. POTUS Addresses ObamaCare: ‘If the Other Side Wants to be the Folks Who Don’t Care – Fine With Me’ – That’s moderately clever of him. If he sticks to it.
  4. Dogmatic Arrogance: The Picture of the 2012 Presidential Elections – “The vice of refusing to compromise is the vice of arrogance.”
  5. Eric Boehlert: Did News Corp. Cover Up U.S. Computer Hacking? – I certainly wouldn’t be surprised.
  6. What does Android, iOS say about you? [Infographic] – One of the attendees at our meeting pulled this infographic out, which raises a fair amount of discussion between Android owners like me and Those Other People.
  7. Big Tobacco Sues FDA Over Ghastly Warning Photos – While I have a small amount of appreciation for the cigarette companies’ argument here — the fact is, they are cigarette companies and deserve anything that comes to them. That’s not a reasoned response, but it’s mine nonetheless.
  8. Disney Exec Says Tentpole Movies are About Spectacle, Not Story. Is He Right? – The list indicates to me that spectacle might get the first weekend or two into the theaters, but story on top of spectacle are what drive subsequent weekends, repeat viewings, video purchases, etc.
  9. ‘Lone Ranger’ May Not Be Dead Yet – Still shaking my head over Depp as Tonto.
  10. Missouri School Sued For Allegedly Making Special Ed Student Write Apology Letter To Her Rapist – (Grinds teeth …)
  11. TOM THE DANCING BUG: Hey, Kids! The World You’re On… has CORPORATIONS! – HA!
  12. Improved dating process upsets timeline of Moon formation – See? This is the cool thing about SCIENCE: it keeps looking for answers, even if it knocks down previously accepted answers in the process.
  13. Obama NM campaign manager publicly blasts Krugman, liberal blogs, insinuates comparison with Teabaggers: John Aravosis (DC)
  14. When Rick Perry Badmouths The Stimlulus Package Remember That He Benfited From It – Actions speak louder than ugly words.
  15. Airman Goes AWOL In Germany Because Internet Says Obama’s Birth Certificate Is Fake (VIDEO) – Regardless of whether he’s AWOL or not, I’m glad he’s no longer authorized to bear firearms in defense of the country.
  16. The Daily Mail knowingly and commercially used my photos despite my denying them permission. – Stay classy, Daily Mail!
  17. Geller: Republicans Allied With Norquist Are Tied To The Muslim Brotherhood – Aw, c’mon, Pam, do NOT make me actually say something in defense of Rick Perry …
  18. Homeopathy multinational sues blogger over statements that its mythological curative had “no active ingredient” – Homeopathy strikes me as one of the biggest scams of all time.

Unblogged Bits (Wed. 18-May-11 1130)

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

  1. Anonymizing data is hard-verging-on-impossible — what do we do about it? – Something to remember when someone promises your data will only be used anonymously. That’s fine for that one data set, but combine it with another and …
  2. Like a Virgin – I actually liked the old V Australia decor, though I’m glad they are retaining “Mustang Sally.”
  3. Debunking the Mythical “Sharia Threat” to Our Judicial System – But! But! They’re Scary Others! We have to be afraid of SOMEONE, don’t we?!
  4. AMERICAblog Elections: Santorum: torture victim John McCain doesn’t understand torture – “Ron Paul may be the wackiest candidate in the GOP field. But for pure, blind stupidity nobody beats Santorum.”
  5. The post-PC era is happening, but not yet at the expense of PCs – I’m sure I could find use for a tablet, but a huge amount of my computer activity requires a keyboard — and not a virtual one on a tablet. What I think the “Post-PC Era” means that that a PC is not the only choice you have for computing and communication — and, yes, as suggested, people are likely to have multiple devices they use for different circumstances.
  6. Senate bill would require warrant for e-mail, cloud searches – A fine idea, that is very unlikely to get anywhere.
  7. Gingrich: If Democrats Make An Ad Quoting What I Said, It’s False – Newt’s self-destructing before our eyes.
  8. Camel Thorn Trees – Very, very cool.
  9. Veteran U.S. Diplomat: We Are Becoming the USSR – Battleland – TIME.com – Complete with a war in Afghanistan, too.
  10. Your Body is Obscene if You’re a Woman, or Look Like One – “Pejic isn’t being censored because he’s skinny. He’s being censored because he is styled like a woman, and women’s torsos are sexualized to the point that we consider them obscene while men’s are not.” Which is what makes this so sad and so hysterical. Is the fear that someone will be offended by a bare woman’s torso without anyone having the chance to explain it’s actually a man? Or that some guy will get all lustful over it, thinking it’s a woman, then fly into a rage when they realize it’s not? It’s just plain crazy. Granted, I have a vested interest in wanting to see pictures of women’s torsos, but frankly our sexually schizophrenic American society is just plain crazy-making.
  11. ginandtacos.com » Blog Archive » PROHIBITION – “The purpose of the War on Drugs is not to keep people safe or healthy. The purpose of the War on Drugs is to put people in prison, and from that perspective it has been a smashing success.”
  12. Inspirational pro-book poster – Man, I’d buy that poster, too.
  13. Palestine – “Or will it turn out that our paeans to non-violence were just cynical tactics in an amoral international power contest staged by militaristic Israeli and American right-wing groups whose elective affinities lead them to shape a common narrative of the alien Arab/Muslim threat?”

Unblogged Bits (Wed. 11-May-11 1130)

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

  1. Med. Marijuana: Another Broken Promise : Dispatches from the Culture Wars – And where, I might ask, are all those anti-Obama states-rights crusaders on the Right, protesting the DoJ crackdown on a state-allowed and regulated activity?
  2. Obama’s Communist Nightmare Continues – “Clearly, Obama’s plan to turn the United States into a Marxist — not to mention Muslim and atheist — workers paradise is working like a charm.”
  3. Single Ladies–Ruining It For Everyone – Actually, I’d raise the question of what the heck “Household Headed By Women” really means … as opposed to the “default” of headed by men?
  4. National Jukebox: public domain music archive from the Library of Congress – Sweet. Need to check that out. And, of course, “with less and less material entering the public domain the jukebox’s contents will probably stay static for at least our lifetimes.”
  5. GOP House Has Time To Honor George W. Bush, But Not Troops Who Caught Bin Laden – Yes, well, if you honor the troops, you might, just be sheerest accident, honor their Commander in Chief … and we certainly can’t have THAT, now, can we?
  6. Facebook caught exposing millions of user credentials • The Register – That’s just peachy. As always, regular recycling of passwords for sites like Facebook is recommended.

Unblogged Bits (Thu. 21-Apr-11 2330)

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

  1. Beck Calls Huck “Progressive,” Huck Calls Beck An Idiot – See, it’s moments like these when I say, “Hey, Huckabee is actually a pretty rational, all-right king of guy.” Then he turns around and pals up with (also-Beck-friend) David Barton.
  2. David Barton Refuses To Debate His Bogus History – Ah, how wonderful it must be to be so certain of your truth that you refuse to discuss it with anyone who might disagree …
  3. Have a happy Zombie Weekend – Heh. Yeah, I noticed that passage whilst doing the Passion reading on Palm Sunday. That particular aspect of the Crucifixion doesn’t usually make it into the movies.
  4. Gruber: iOS location storing is a bug, getting fixed in future iOS update – That’s certainly possible (I’ve seen crazier bugs), but Apple’s silence on the matter is not doing it any favors.
  5. Raising The Sunken Swifboats – Anyone who’d pay any attention to something coming out of WorldNutDaily is beyond cognitive redemption anyway. Yeesh.
  6. GIF: Platypus on the Prowl – Oh, there you are, Perry …
  7. Why Are Tech Founders Such Assholes? [Startups] – “What is it about computers and money that instills villainy?” Computers have nothing to do with it. Power (and money) corrupt … and, really, the folks most likely to strive to achieve either are most likely to be corrupted by them (or by their pursuit). I mean, really, is Gates any worse than Carnegie, or Zuckerberg than Rockefeller?
  8. Hubble Comes of Age With Dramatic New Image [Space Porn] – Oh, come on –that’s gotta be fake. It’s too gorgeous. (Plus, the Hubble is 21 years old! Eek!)
  9. The thing I don’t understand is why so often one hears discussion of the fruits of human labor as if it’s all the creation of some alien race – Lovely. Islamic art, usually eschewing depictions of objects and people, makes up for it with remarkable patterns.
  10. Maundy Thursday – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia – There are times that it is so cool to belong to an Anglican denomination.
  11. Super Google Reader Converts All Partial RSS Feeds into Full Feeds [Downloads] – Sweet. Now if only GReader on Chrome weren’t having a Note in Reader problem with YouTube, it would be perfect.
  12. Small Screw Encyclopedia
  13. Senator questions Apple over iPhone tracking – Good questions all. Thanks, Sen Franken.
  14. Wonkette Thinks It’s Okay To Mock Trig Palin. Bulletin: It’s Not – Making an ass of yourself in the name of snark knows no political boundaries, unfortunately. This kind of humor (even its marginally weaker form that Wonkette is so infamous for) is one reason why I don’t read her.
  15. Paul Ryan Collected Social Security Entitlements Until Age 18 – I’m sure Ayn Rand would approve — take what you can get away with, then make sure nobody else can take more.
  16. Astoundingly Detailed LEGO Serenity – Shiny!
  17. The Post Office Railway (Mail Rail) | Silent UK – Urban & Underground Photography – Awesome. A modern-day dungeon-crawl.

Unblogged Bits (Tue. 12-Apr-11 1730)

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

  1. Newly-released FBI memo from 1950 confirms “flying saucers” crashing in New Mexico [Mysteries] – Well, the memo confirms something — now, who’s confirming the memo (and its writer, and his sources)?
  2. Rand And The Conservatism Of Doubt – Ah, Ayn Rand — is there anything more you can get wrong with your crazy philosophy?
  3. Stop Being The “Annoying Phone Guy” During Meetings With BusyMe for Android – Seriously checking this out.
  4. Senator To Propose New Internet Sales Tax – Certainly people (cough) are more likely in many circumstances to purchase something tax-free through Amazon than taxed from their local bricks-and-mortar store (unless they want it in their hands RIGHT NOW). On the other hand, the taxpayer “impact” of Amazon, vs. Best Buy, is much lower. So the only issue is the “fairness” of states getting or not getting money for what I buy. Let’s not make it any more noble than that.
  5. 150 Years Later, Tea Partiers Still Aren’t Over The Civil War: Travis Waldron
  6. Religious Right Ramps Up Attacks on Judicial Nominee Goodwin Liu – Thanks goodness — we’d almost forgotten all about the GOP zaniness in the Senate …
  7. Fischer Likens Boehner To Pontius Pilate Over Planned Parenthood Compromise – Dolt.
  8. Liberty U Blocks Access To Local Paper – Liberty? You keep using that word. I don’t think it means what you think it means …
  9. Robertson On Burqa Ban: Don’t Like It? Go Back To Africa – Religious freedom for me, but not for thee.
  10. Scientist accidentally experiments on himself, wife – Not now, honey — you’re not out of quarantine yet!
  11. Kindle now available for $114 — with on-screen ads – And now we know why Kindle hasn’t offered folks (since very early days) the easy ability to load their own screen savers. Ugh.
  12. $39bn budget cuts also target safe drinking water and heating subsidies. So where are cuts to GOP programs? – What did the Republicans want that got cut? The amount of budget money they (eventually) said wanted cut. “We really wanted $100B!” they claim, “And that got cut to only $40B! So, see? We’re cutting, too!” Yeesh.
  13. Huckabee/Trump 2012? Former Gov. Open To Sharing Ticket With Birther Mogul – I’m trying to figure out if Huckabee is following the McCain “I’ll say anything to get a vote” course, or if he’s always been as flaky as he’s seemed of late.
  14. Why Does it Take so Much Less Milk to Lighten Iced Coffee? [Giz Explains] – And knowing’s half the battle!
  15. Private Records of 3.5 Million Texans Were Mistakenly Leaked by the State [Wtf] – Okay, let’s just assume, from now on, that any record kept about you, whether governmental or private, can and will, eventually, be leaked. How do we, as a society, mitigate that?
  16. If a Byte Were a Gram a Floppy Disk Would Weigh 10 Cats [Factoid] – A pint’s a pound the world around!
  17. Meet the Man Who Invented the Digital Camera [Video] – It’s amazing to think of how much photography has changed with the advent of digital — for the vast part the better, I think.
  18. Why Everyone Loves Yuri Gagarin, the First Human to Reach Space [Video] – “The Earth is blue. How wonderful. It is amazing.” Lovely. There are times when I wish spending time in orbit was a requirement for every one of our Congresscritters.
  19. Peter Jackson Explains Why He’s Shooting ‘The Hobbit’ at 48 Frames Per Second – An interesting technological push — and, to my mind, probably a bigger difference than 3D (though it goes hand-in-hand with it).

Unblogged Bits (Thu. 7-Apr-11 1730)

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

  1. Pandora sends user GPS, sex, birthdate, other data to ad servers – Naughty-naughty …
  2. Krugman Exposes GOP Ryan’s Unicorn Budget, Catches Heritage Burying Number – The series as a whole is worth reviewing. “This isn’t a serious proposal; it’s a strange combination of cruelty and insanely wishful thinking.”
  3. What would you do? – Actually it seems perfectly convenient. Ayn Rand wasn’t against exploiting altruism and “handouts” that she could get; she just condemned having to pay for them for others. Paul Ryan is being a loyal minion to the cause.

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. 15-Dec-10 2230)

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

  1. Topless Robot – 5 Good Things and 5 Exceedingly Bad Things about the Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark Musical – Page 1 – Oh … my ….
  2. The Pros and Cons of Pirates of the Caribbean 4, as Evidenced by the Trailer – Here’s the problem (as I see it): what made PotC 1 so good was that it was not about Cap’n Jack Sparrow. It was about Will and Elizabeth. As the series progressed, it became less about them and more about Cap’n Jack hijinx. Now that it’s just about Cap’n Jack … meh.
  3. I Gotta Give Fox This One – Well I have to say, they’re at least being up-front about it.
  4. BBC News – How the ancient Welsh language helped shape English – Cwl!
  5. Not lost in translation: dictionary traces English words’ Irish roots – The Irish Times – Wed, Dec 01, 2010
  6. When will English come to a full stop? | Books | The Observer – I don’t see any reason why English shouldn’t continue on as an (already-established) lingua franca for centuries, if not longer — but I strongly suspect America’s dominance over it will wane, just as England’s did before it.
  7. Top 10 Reasons Why I Should Direct “Iron Man III” – I’d buy a ticket.
  8. Self-Depritweeting – You’re not here for the hunting, are ya, Tim?
  9. The culture of conspiracy, the conspiracy of culture – Quoting Teresa Nielsen Hayden on WikiLeaks: “Two or three million people had unchecked access to this material, but my government is outraged that I can read it? What am I now, a peasant?”
  10. React Like It’s 1805 – ” People who claim to be “originalists” without expressing concern about the effect of a standing army on democracy are either disingenuous or uninformed, or both.” Having a large standing army (and, arguably, some need for same) is not only not in keeping with what the Founders (in general) wanted, but has had a significant distortion on our government and taxation from what those Founders — or their succeeding generations — intended. But I don’t think you’re going to hear Scalia or Thomas (let alone McConnell or Gingrich or Hannity) going on about that.
  11. How the Republican Party broke up with Science – Yes.
  12. The Reign of Witches Has Not Passed – “The treatment of Bradley Manning is microcosmic of a broader trend that does not speak well for the degree of civilization in our society. And yet we continue to lecture the world as if we were somehow exceptional.”
  13. What Jim DeMint considers ‘sacrilegious’ – Worth reading just for the “update” at the end.
  14. An unexpected moment of candor – Candor? From a GOP Senator? Inconceivable!
  15. Gohmert: Without DADT, Military Stands to Lose Thousands and US Will Reach the “End of its Existence as a Great Nation” – So, according to Rep Gohmert (R-TX, natch) we can’t let gays openly serve in the military because the military is already restricted in its freedom, so we can’t give any freedom to the gays there. Um … right. Bottom line, Rep. Gohmert demeans the patriotism and professionalism of our soldiers by suggesting that they’ll run, screaming to the hills, if it turns out that the guy the next foxhole over is (eek!) gay.
  16. Allow Me To Quote Bryan Fischer Verbatim: “That’s Not Misrepresentation, That’s Quotation.” – Bryan Fischer is a … well, I repeat myself.
  17. Conservatives Seeks To Reform Justice System To Lock Up Fewer Criminals – But the driver here is not, of course, justice, but (a) saving money, and (b) victim (consumer) satisfaction. And, honestly, I suspect they are more concerned about (a).
  18. Religious Right Keeps Fighting Losing Battle Against DADT – Quoth Liberty Counsel: “I am incensed that these lame duck demagogues refuse to accept the fact that Americans do not want open homosexuality in our armed forces!” Quoth I, I am incensed that these totally lame demagogues refuse to accept the fact that Americans DO want open homosexuality in our armed forces. Or, at least, they don’t think it’s right to kick open homosexuals out.

Unblogged Bits (Tue. 7-Dec-10 2230)

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

  1. Report: Wikileaks cables show Texas company “helped pimp little boys to stoned Afghan cops” – Boing Boing – But we should, of course, ignore this and obsess instead about Assange’s sex life.
  2. Cynical-C | College For Ayn Rand Devotees Closes Due to Financial Problems – The irony! It BURNS!
  3. ‘Will my phone get Gingerbread?’ Here’s our official unofficial upgrade list | Android Central – Well, promising that someone thinks the Incredible will get it.
  4. A horrifying breast cancer “testimonial” for “holistic” treatment, finale : Respectful Insolence – Sad. And maddening.
  5. Don’t shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths | The Australian – A essay in the Australian media from Julian Assange himself. Worth reading.
  6. Many Opportunities for Corporations at the Court This Term | People For the American Way Blog – I suspect not much good will come from this …
  7. In Latest Compromise with GOP, Obama Agrees He is a Muslim « Borowitz Report
  8. Intrepid Media: Column: publishing and the princess bride – Love this movie (and, for that matter, the book).
  9. What the deal does (and what it could have done): Steve Benen
  10. Let Oprah know that Kim Tinkham is dying of cancer : Respectful Insolence
  11. Right goes after Obama over national motto – At the very least, they are demonstrating that the old motto does’t apply any more. Idjits.
  12. WikiLeaks Releases Secret List of Critical Infrastructure Sites – Good Lord! The Straits of Hormuz are a Super-Secret Area of Security Concern? Who’d’ve thunk it?
  13. U.S. Celebrates Wikileaks Arrest By Announcing Press Freedom Day – Timing is everything.
  14. Tracing the Spark of Creative Problem-Solving – This one’s for Margie.
  15. Consumer Reports Breaks A Lot Of Glass Investigating Shattering Pyrex Bakeware – Ah. The current generation of Pyrex isn’t what the old generation used to be. I’m sure it makes them an additional ten cents per 9×13 pan.
  16. Lieberman: New York Times may be investigated for espionage – Thank you, Joe, for restoring my lack of faith in you.
  17. Democratic Components Of Tax Deal Benefit More People Than Republican Parts Of The Plan – But the benefit per person is waaaaay lopsided.
  18. The War on Cameras – “Those of us who are public officials and are entrusted with the power of the state are ultimately accountable to the public. When we exercise that power in public fora, we should not expect our actions to be shielded from public observation. ‘Sed quis custodiet ipsos cutodes’ (‘Who watches the watchmen?’).” Indeed. And remember, when security cameras and other privacy intrusions are put into the public square, the answer from authorities is always, “The innocent have nothing to hide.” Strangely enough, they stop saying that when the cameras are turned on them.
  19. While we’re busy playing in the Creationist Theme Park…sigh

Unblogged Bits (Fri. 29-Oct-10 1130)

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

  1. Barber Wants Obama Investigated for “High Crimes and Misdemeanors” – And if the GOP takes one or both houses of Congress next week, I’m sure there will be just enough Republicans to go along with Mr Barber’s suggestion.
  2. Barton: God Will Hold You Accountable For How You Vote – “For Christians, voting is not a right, it’s a duty. It’s a stewardship that we owe to God and it’s a stewardship for which we’ll answer directly to him. One day we’ll stand before him and he’ll say ‘what did you do with that vote I gave you?’ And we’ll have to answer.” Actually, I agree with him fully on that one. Voting is an act of engagement with the people around us, and we are called to the touchstones of loving God and loving our neighbors through voting as much as with any other action. Of course, I suspect my conclusions of how my religious values guides me to vote will be a bit different from Barton’s.
  3. Ohio McDonald’s Tells Employees To Vote Republican If They Want To Continue Receiving Raises And Benefits: Tanya Somanader
  4. Relatives Says Man Arrested For Threatening Democratic Senator Was ‘Under The Spell That Glenn Beck Cast’ – Is Beck legally culpable? No, and I’d defend him against any such charge. Is he ethically culpable, though? That’s another question.
  5. What Conservatives Have Taught Me This Election Season: James Frye
  6. Stranded, Stubborn Mars Rover Actually Makes a Big Discovery [MarsRover] – Go, Spirit, go! (In a metaphorical, “do great stuff” sense, of course.)
  7. Southwest Airlines $5 Bucks for WiFi onboard Flights – A price I would very seriously consider indulging in on some flights.
  8. Watch Five Minutes of ‘The Walking Dead’ and the Real Opening Title Sequence – Everything I’ve seen and heard about this indicates it’s going to be awesome.
  9. The boiling, erupting Sun – “… The mornin’ sun is shinin’ like a red rubber ball …”
  10. Drug Wars – While there’s certainly cocaine involved, note the several pictures of hundreds of metric TONS of marijuana. That’s a huge cash crop for the drug lords, reason enough for all the violence, and it’s something we could trivially deprive them of if US drug policy were rationally administered.
  11. Indiana suggests leaving disabled family members at homeless shelters – “Are there no workhouses …?” Welcome to yet another face of cheap-labor conservatism and taxed-enough-already partygoing. Is this the America the electorate is looking for? Because it’s where we’re headed.
  12. Karl Rove And Sarah Palin Going To War? – Given the number of comments Rove has had to dial back in the past months, I don’t see him standing up to much criticism if Palin and her variety of supporters decide to fire back.
  13. Dean Kamen unveils revamped bionic arm and water machine, LED light bulb powered by Cree – Many levels of coolness here.
  14. Government Withholds Records on Need for Expanded Surveillance Law – “A mandate requiring an easy-to-open ‘back door’ to electronic communications is an idea that was proposed and rejected over fifteen years ago because it would be ineffective, cause security vulnerabilities, and hurt American business — on top of the damage it would do to Americans’ privacy and free speech rights. Any attempt to require the same mandate today should start with a concrete and realistic evaluation of how often the government investigations are stymied by the lack of a ‘back door.’ Anything less than that is asking the public to blindly rubber stamp a flawed plan at a very high cost to Americans and American business.”
  15. The Message of Firesheep: “Baaaad Websites, Implement Sitewide HTTPS Now!” – Unfortunately, per EFF’s efforts, there’s not a trivial way to do this for IE or Chrome. I have implemented this on my various machine this week (esp. ones I travel with) with, so far, no harm.
  16. Climate change facts, for what that’s worth – “But do not always expect facts to convince. Someone who has arrived at their current stance due to something other than facts will not likely be persuaded to budge from it due to the facts. Some small percentage, some few, are honestly misinformed, and for them facts and information will be persuasive and liberating. They will be grateful for the link. But for most the problem is not simply one of a lack of accurate information. For them, finding their way back to the truth will require retracing the steps that led them away from it — a path that had little to do with information or facts.”