December 31, 2007Happy 2008.
HAPPY FUCKING NEW YEAR!
This year... I'll accomplish something huge. Fuck yeah.
Posted on 12/31/2007 10:22 PM Comments (0)
November 12, 2007The USD Is DeadEveryone probably already knows about the fall of the US dollar, but I felt the need to post this anyway.
From Yahoo! Finance Dollar Sinks to New Low Against Euro Friday November 9, 5:36 pm ET Dollar Hits New Low Against Euro, but Strengthens Against Pound
NEW YORK (AP) -- The dollar sank to a new low against the euro on Friday but recovered some ground against the British pound even as Wall Street ended a turbulent week down sharply.
The euro rose to a record high of $1.4752 in European trading before falling back to $1.4673 in the late afternoon, above the $1.4667 it bought Thursday. Its previous trading high was $1.4730 on Wednesday. The dollar is down nearly 12 percent against the euro since the start of the year. The dollar gained on the euro after the European Union, blaming oil prices and market turmoil, cut its economic forecasts for the next two years, with growth now expected to slow to 2.4 percent in 2008 and 2009. Britain's pound went as high as $2.1161 before falling to $2.0909, below the $2.1087 it bought Thursday. The dollar weakened against many of the European currencies and the yen on Thursday after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said economic growth would slow noticeably in the United States in the coming months while rising oil costs would increase inflation pressures. ... Although lower interest rates can jump-start an economy, they can also weaken a currency as investors transfer funds to countries where they can earn higher returns. ... The Canadian dollar has risen almost 20 percent in value against the U.S. dollar this year, achieving one-to-one parity for the first time since 1976. On Wednesday, the Canadian dollar was worth $1.1039, its highest level in the post-1950 era of Canadian floating exchange rates. The "loonie" has taken flight as prices of Canada's major exports, including oil and gold, have surged.
Full story: http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/071109/dollar.html?.v=4
And I'm sure no one will see this as a reason to cut down on oil consumption.
Posted on 11/12/2007 12:10 AM Comments (1)
November 10, 2007Buried evidence revealed in Guantanamo trialI have a million things to blog about, but wasn't actually going to do so until fully over my cold. But... this can't wait. Guantanamo. The Nazi-esque concentration camp (that's what I refer to it as anyway) in Cuba. I can't for the life of me understand why/how the US has a camp in one of the countries it hates the most. Oh wait, maybe because not many Americans can travel over and inspect the camp, since it's difficult to get back into the States after visiting Cuba (on a US passport). Well nevertheless, news! From Cuba! That I just found out about! Yahoo! News reported Thursday that The U.S. government has for years had secret evidence that could help a 21-year old Canadian prisoner defend himself in the Guantanamo war crimes tribunals. Yeah, they've had evidence for years and didn't release it until now. Good one ol' gov't! Canadian citizen Omar Khadr is the son of an alleged al Qaeda financier and was 15 when he was captured after a firefight at a suspected al Qaeda compound in Afghanistan in 2002. He is accused of throwing grenades that killed a U.S. Army Sgt. and wounded other coalition soldiers. (Don't you love all the 'maybes' ?) "Prosecutors notified prisoner Omar Khadr's military lawyer two days ago of the existence of "potentially exculpatory evidence" from a U.S. government eyewitness to the battle in Afghanistan that resulted in Khadr's capture in 2002, Navy Lt. Cmdr. William Kuebler said. "It's an eyewitness the government has always known about," Kuebler told reporters after Khadr was arraigned for the third time on charges of killing a U.S. soldier. "This is something that was buried because nobody ever looked." It was unclear when military prosecutors learned about that witness and they declined to speak to reporters at the U.S. naval base in southeastern Cuba. The evidence is secret and Kuebler would not say which government entity employed the witness." ... "He is charged with murder, attempted murder, conspiring with al Qaeda, providing material support for terrorism and spying by conducting surveillance of U.S. military convoys in Afghanistan. He faces life in prison if convicted. The charges were dismissed when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2006 that President George W. Bush lacked authority to create the alternate legal system at Guantanamo. The charges were refiled after Congress authorized a new tribunal system last year but a military judge, Army Col. Peter Brownback, dismissed them in June. He said he lacked jurisdiction because Khadr had not been designated as an "unlawful enemy combatant" as the new law required for those tried at Guantanamo. Brownback said the distinction was crucial because international law requires other types of trial for lawful combatants. A newly convened military appeals court reinstated the charges and ruled that Brownback himself had authority to decide whether Khadr was an "unlawful" combatant."
The entire Yahoo article: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071108/ts_nm/guantanamo_canadian_dc
Posted on 11/10/2007 1:29 PM Comments (1)
November 2, 2007Circa Survive - On Letting Go tour 2007HOLYFUCK. I saw Circa Survive last night. Sure, I saw them at Warped Tour, but they sure as hell weren't headlining. Dear And The Headlights opened up, they put on a great show and their stuff is actually really good so I'll be checking it out. Unfortunately, last night's crowd was the lamest I had ever seen in my life. These kids looked dead. Or stoned. Someone forgot to give them the memo that ROCK SHOWS ARE FOR ROCKING OUT, not stand still and slightly bobbing your head. People should've been dancing. Next out was Fear Before The March Of Flames. They kicked so much ass, I have got to go see them again! I had honestly forgotten how much I used to like them. Man they were awesome. Third band on stage was OURS. Eh... I must say I was not impressed. They sound like the illegitimate child of Muse, Radiohead and Scott Stapp of Creed. But not in a good way! I swear they ripped off Muse, which was really sad because the singer kept inserting Christianity references in every other line, which I sure didn't appreciate. But I must say, the end of their set was BRILLIANT! It consisted of an epic 12-minute instrumental jam straight out of Mars Volta land. And then Circa took the stage. Holy fucking hell. I've never seen rowdier, more violent crowds than at Circa Survive shows. Which is kind of odd, seeing as none of their songs are very fast or, uh, angry. The same thing goes for their Warped Tour performance (where I couldn't even breathe). The audience decided to cram, shove and maul their way to the front of the stage. Luckily I had managed to get their just minutes before the battle began. About 5 minutes into the set two blonde, wasted chicks decided it would be a good idea to cram their way up next to me. BAD IDEA. The girl who made it the farthest proceeded to kick, shove and squeeze me up against the barricade, thoroughly bruising my ribs. She also managed to spill BEER all over my shirt. But the ironic part was that she kept saying "I don't want to hurt you, I'm here for peace. Peace." Fucking hippie, go drink somewhere else. I will never understand those who get drunk at shows they'd like to remember. Those people do not deserve to be up front. Unfortunately the small girl on the other side of the blonde couldn't take it after a while and had to leave. I yelled at the bitch, used a few choice words and called over a guard who finally pulled the drunk chick and her friend away from the barricade. Finally, she was gone and I could enjoy the last third of the show, undisturbed. God I love Circa Survive. Anthony Green is a motherfucking lyrical genious. When they played Act Appalled, everyone LOST it. It was sheer brillance. During their last song, Dear And The Headlights, whose last show it was, came out on stage with their instruments and rocked it with Circa. The lights, giant balloons and confetti were definitely a nice touch too, I dare say. Afterwards, we left the venue and hunted down the tourbus. We waited for about 30 minutes and then finally got to meet the band. I think we met Colin first. He was so incredibly cool. We talked a little bit, he signed my stuff and took a picture with me and actually complimented my Deftones shirt. Totally incredible. And I got to hold his can of Coke. Then we met Nick, who was ironically eating cake a fan had brought for the band. Awesome. He's so insanely funny. I don't remember what all we talked about, but whatever it was, it kicked. He signed my stuff (for Jarrett) and I got a picture with him. He actually had me feed him cake for the picture. Seriously, and I have proof. That wasn't even a fangirl moment, I mentioned nothing of the cake. We met Brendan next, which was equally awesome. My mind must have blacked out or something, because I hardly remember meeting him. Hmm... I got a picture and stuff signed anyway. ANTHONY GREEN. This guy is definitely one of my heroes, and I got to meet him. He's the coolest person, and so... real. It's really nice when bands aren't assholes who don't give a shit about their fans. We talked for quite a while, and he kept saying "Thanks", when he signed my stuff, so I was like "For what, letting you sign my stuff?", and he said "Yeah, and for being so cool." Anthony fucking Green said I was cool. Yeah. I totally hugged him. Did I mention he's even awesome while relatively coked out and covered in sweat? Well, he is. I SAW CIRCA SURVIVE. Anthony also told me that their should be a new record out next year. I simply cannot wait. Circa, I love you more than I could ever explain. Fucking right.
Posted on 11/02/2007 12:31 PM Comments (0)
November 1, 2007HAPPY WORLD VEGAN DAY!Woohoo! Man, I'm happy to be vegan. And tonight I'm going to see Circa Survive with the only other vegan I know around here.
Veganism isn't just great for our animals and our bodies, it's also essential to protecting the environment, due to enormous amounts of pollution caused by the animal product industry. Why would you want to consume dairy when it contains such a high pus cell count that it wouldn't be allowed in Europe? And why eat chicken when it's known to contain arsenic (poison!!!)?! Give that shit up and go vegan today. Check it: http://www.worldveganday.org.uk/
Posted on 11/01/2007 11:52 AM Comments (0)
October 31, 2007House Passes Thought Crime Prevention BillHouse Passes Thought Crime Prevention Bill
by Jefferson (A)bbey Thursday Oct 25th, 2007 3:51 PM
Link to the full text of the bill and other information:
The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed HR 1955 titled the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act of 2007. This bill is one of the most blatant attacks against the Constitution yet and actually defines thought crimes as homegrown terrorism.
The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed HR 1955 titled the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act of 2007.
This bill is one of the most blatant attacks against the Constitution yet and actually defines thought crimes as homegrown terrorism.
If passed into law, it will also establish a commission and a Center of Excellence to study and defeat so called thought criminals. Unlike previous anti-terror legislation, this bill specifically targets the civilian population of the United States and uses vague language to define homegrown terrorism. Amazingly, 404 of our elected representatives from both the Democrat and Republican parties voted in favor of this bill.
There is little doubt that this bill is specifically targeting the growing patriot community that is demanding the restoration of the Constitution.
First let’s take a look at the definitions of violent radicalization and homegrown terrorism as defined in Section 899A of the bill.
The definition of violent radicalization uses vague language to define this term of promoting any belief system that the government considers to be an extremist agenda.
Since the bill doesn’t specifically define what an extremist belief system is, it is entirely up to the interpretation of the government.
Considering how much the government has done to destroy the Constitution they could even define Ron Paul supporters as promoting an extremist belief system.
Literally, the government according to this definition can define whatever they want as an extremist belief system. Essentially they have defined violent radicalization as thought crime."
Follow the links to read the entire story. This is in no way legal. It goes against the Constitution and our rights as citizens of a supposed democracy.
READ 1984 AND YOU WILL UNDERSTAND.
1984 was written by George Orwell in the 1930's. The contents of that book are now becoming a truly frightening reality.
Posted on 10/31/2007 3:07 PM Comments (3)
October 26, 2007Still want that flesh rotting in your colon?This is something everyone should already be aware of. But if not...
Superbugs are the new Martians "The news is abuzz lately with stories of the "superbug," partly because we need to be scared at all times of all things, except for buying newspapers and watching the news, but also because it's pretty scary - for instance, a Brooklyn middle school student died on the 14th from methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA. That's a big set of words or a smaller but confusing acronym for antibiotic-resistant bacteria. (Thank you tastebetter.com!)
Oh, and by the way, dairy cows are fed antibiotics in order to combat the infections they develop from carrying abnormal amounts of milk. You know, the infections that ooze the pus that ends up in your milk.
Posted on 10/26/2007 9:12 PM Comments (0)
October 25, 2007Boycott Walmart. Fersher.
I wish they would air this on TV. Oh my god, I love it.
Posted on 10/25/2007 1:31 PM Comments (0)
October 23, 2007The Big Brother society is nigh.Don't know what I'm talking about? Read 1984 and The Handmaid's Tale. Anyways. So far, 2,000 people have computer chips implanted in their bodies. For "security" and "medical" reasons. O-kay. First they'll 'tag' medical patients. Then prisoners. Then newborns and the elderly. And juvenile delinquents. Oh wait, that doesn't leave out very many people, does it? Good thing storing your identity on a microchip in your body can lead theifs to cut open your arm and steal it. But whatever. I mean, who cares if "spoof" scanners can be set up to track your every move, because no one would ever want to harm us, right? Nevermind that the company issuing these devices is a surveillance provider. RIGHT?! Fuck that shit. Why didn't I find out about this until now? I mean, I new a few people had "experimental" chips, and that tracking devices would be put in people sometime. Like... in the distant future, or so I thought. Don't do it. The cons far outweigh the pros. Go re-read 1984. WHY DID I JUST FIND OUT ABOUT THIS? Did Mark post about it and I just happened to miss it? Huh?! Read it: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19904543/
Yeah, I'm paranoid. You should be too. Revolution? I think so, yes.
Posted on 10/23/2007 10:38 AM Comments (2)
October 22, 2007Why the T in LGBT(Q) is here to stay.(Because it matters, and Susan Stryker outlines this important issue marvelously.) Transgender people are not beggars at the civil rights table set by gay and lesbian activists. They are integral to the struggle for gender freedom for all. Pity poor John Aravosis, the gay rights crusader from AmericaBlog whose "How Did the T Get in LGBT?" essay, in reference to the controversy over gender identity protections in the pending Employment Non-Discrimination Act, was published on Salon a few days ago. To hear Aravosis tell it, he and multitudes of like-minded gay souls have been sitting at the civil rights table for more than 30 years, waiting to be served. Now, after many years of blood, sweat, toil and tears, a feast in the form of federal protection against sexual orientation discrimination in the workplace has finally been prepared. Lips are being licked, chops smacked, saliva salivated, when -- WTF!?! -- a gaunt figure lurches through the door. It is a transgender person, cupped hands extended, begging for food. Seems somebody on the guest list -- maybe a lot of somebodies -- let this stranger in off the streets without consulting everyone else beforehand, claiming he-she-it-or-whatever was a relative of some sort. Suddenly, what was supposed to be a fabulous dinner party starts surreally morphing into one of those OxFam fundraisers dramatizing third-world hunger whose sole function is to make the "haves" feel guilty for the plight of the "have-nots." Maitre d' Barney Frank offers an elegant pretext for throwing the bum out. The establishment's new management, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, is caught off-guard by the awkward turn of events, but deftly shuffles the hubbub into the wings and starts working the room, all smiles, to reassure the assembled guests that a somber and long-sought civil rights victory will be celebrated in short order. Aravosis and those who share his me-first perspective are not so sure. Seeing half a loaf of civil rights protection on the table before them, and sensing that the soirée might come to a premature and unexpected denouement, they make a grab, elbows akimbo, for said truncated loaf. This is, after all, their party. In my line of work -- teaching history and theory of sexuality and gender -- we've invented a polysyllabic technical term applicable to Aravosis & Co., which is homocentric, whose definition Aravosis supplies when he asserts, as he did in his recent essay, that gay is the term around which the GLBT universe revolves. By gay he means gay men like himself, to which is added (in descending order of importance), lesbian, bisexual and transgender, beyond which lies an even more obscure region of poorly understood and infrequently observed identities. Aravosis isn't questioning the place of the T in the GLBT batting order; he's just concerned with properly marking the distinction between "enough like me" and "too different from me" to merit inclusion in the categories with which he identifies. His position is a bit like those kerfuffled astronomers not too long ago, scratching their noggins over how to define Pluto's place in the conceptual scheme of the solar system. Sure, we've been calling it a planet for a good number of years because it's round and orbits the sun just like our Earth, but now it appears that if we keep doing so we'll have to let a bunch of the bigger asteroids into the planet category, as well as some other weird faraway stuff we only recently learned about, which stretches the definition of "planet" into a name for things we don't really think of as being much like good ol' Earth, so let's just demote Pluto instead. In Aravosis' homocentric cosmology, men may not be from Mars, nor women from Venus, but transgender people are definitely from Pluto. It's OK to be gay, but don't be a fag ... Transgender people have become this political season's version of the unisex-toilet issue that helped scuttle passage of the Equal Rights Amendment back in the 1970s, of Willie Horton's role in bringing the first Bush presidency to the White House in the 1980s, and of the "Don't bend over to pick up the soap in the barracks shower room" argument against gays in the military in the 1990s -- a false issue that panders to the basest and most ignorant of fears. This is unfortunate because protecting the rights of transgender people specifically is just one welcome byproduct of the version of ENDA that forbids discrimination based on both sexual orientation and gender expression or identity. This full version of ENDA, rather than the nearly introduced one that stripped away previously agreed-upon protections against gender-based discrimination and would protect only sexual orientation, is the one that is of potential benefit to all Americans, and not just to a narrow demographic slice of straight-looking, straight-acting gays and lesbians. It doesn't really even do that much good for this group, as Lambda Legal points out, because of a loophole big enough to drive a truck through. Aravosis, not being one to mince words when it comes to mincing meat, wants to know what he, as a gay man, has "in common with a man who wants to cut off his penis, surgically construct a vagina, and become a woman." The answer is "gender." The last time I checked my dictionary, homosexuality had something to do with people of one gender tending to fall in love with people of the same gender. The meaning of homosexuality thus depends on the definition of gender. However much Aravosis might wish to cut the trannies away from the rest of his herd, thereby preserving a place free of gender trouble for just plain gay guys such as himself, that operation isn't conceptually possible. Gender and sexuality are like two lines intersecting on a graph, and trying to make them parallel undoes the very notion of homo-, hetero- or bisexuality. Now here's the rub -- but it requires another of those fancy words my academic colleagues and I like to throw around: heteronormativity, the idea that whatever straight people do is really what's what, and that whatever anybody else does is deviant to some degree. To want to have sex with somebody of the same gender violates heteronormative expectations of gender behavior as much as it does heteronormative expectations of sexual behavior. Simply put: Real men don't suck cock. Nor do they use the word "fabulous" when describing a pair of women's shoes. Nor do they keep a picture of their husband pinned to the wall of their office cubicle. All of the above violates conventional or stereotypical expectations of proper masculine gender, and as Lambda Legal's preliminary analysis of ENDA makes clear, none would be protected under the rubric of sexual orientation alone. It's OK to be gay, in other words, just so long as you don't act like a fag. Without solid theoretical ground to stand on, Aravosis resorts to flights of rhetorical fancy in lieu of an argument against gender protections. He characterizes the more than 300 GLBT organizations nationwide now on record as supporting a gender-inclusive ENDA, which collectively speak on behalf of hundreds of thousands if not millions of people, as plotting something of a palace coup. They attempt, he claims, to force the gay movement -- along with the country that is poised to embrace them -- to crawl unwillingly into bed with a big bunch of tranny whatevers. Aravosis positions himself as a man giving voice to an oppressed silent majority, a majority too cowed by their fear of appearing "politically incorrect" to express their true feelings, in order to proclaim "that over the past decade the trans revolution was imposed on the gay community from outside, or at least above." This coming from an ex-Republican, former congressional aide, Georgetown-educated, inside-the-Beltway lawyer who studied under Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, and who has spent the past decade working his political connections in order to hold corporate America's feet to the fire on gay rights? Puh. Leeze. John Aravosis is in the nosebleed section of the social hierarchy; if he gets any higher up the food chain he should be issued an oxygen mask. Where, pray tell, is this "above" whereof he speaks, peopled with radical transgender revolutionaries? Somewhere in the vicinity of the Jewish international bankers, or the Trilateral Commission? Transgender activism predates gay and lesbian activism Aravosis wants to know how the T came to be added to GLB. Here's how: It started happening in the mid-1990s, in response to the queer movement of the early 1990s, and in response to a decade of radical AIDS activism. Fighting to end the epidemic required, from a public health point of view, getting past the squabbles of homosexual identity politics left over from the 1960s, '70s and '80s. The Reaganite right wanted to label AIDS "gay-related immune deficiency," even though viruses are no respecters of identity. AIDS was not a gay disease, but convincing others of that fact required a transformation of sexual politics. It fostered political alliances between lots of different kinds of people who all shared the common goal of ending the epidemic -- and sometimes precious little else. What does Aravosis, as a gay man, have in common with a little girl whose mother gave her HIV in utero, or a heterosexual African man who contracted HIV from a female prostitute, or a junkie living on the streets of Bangkok, Thailand? Presumably, a common interest in ending AIDS. And what might he have in common with transgender people? Some sense that a person's suitability for employment had something to do with their ability to do the job? Transgender people have their own history of civil rights activism in the United States, one that is in fact older, though smaller and less consequential, than the gay civil rights movement. In 1895, a group of self-described "androgynes" in New York organized a "little club" called the Cercle Hermaphroditos, based on their self-perceived need "to unite for defense against the world's bitter persecution." Half a century later, at the same time some gay and lesbian people were forming the Mattachine Society and the Daughters of Bilitis, transgender people were forming the Society for Equality in Dress. When gay and lesbian people were fighting for social justice in the militant heyday of the 1960s, transgender people were conducting sit-in protests at Dewey's lunch counter in Philadelphia, fighting in the streets with cops from hell outside Compton's Cafeteria in San Francisco's Tenderloin, and mixing it up at Stonewall along with lots of other folks. There was a vibrant history of transgender activism and movement building through the 1970s, when it suddenly became fashionable on the left to think of transgender people as antigay and antifeminist. Gay people were seen as freeing themselves from the straitjacket of psychopathology, while transgender people were clamoring to get into the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association; feminists were seen as freeing themselves from the oppressiveness of patriarchal gender, while transgender people were perpetuating worn-out stereotypes of men and women. It's a familiar refrain, even now. Transgender arguments for access to appropriate healthcare, or observations that no one is ever free from being gendered, fell on deaf ears. Until the early 1990s, that is, when a new generation of queer kids, the post-baby boomers whose political sensibilities had been forged in the context of the AIDS crisis, started coming into adulthood. They were receptive to transgender issues in a new way -- and that more-inclusive understanding has been steadily building for nearly two decades. Aravosis and those who agree with him think that the "trans revolution" has come from outside, or from above, the rank-and-file gay movement. No -- it comes from below, and from within. The outrage that many people in the queer, trans, LGBT or whatever-you-want-to-call-it community feel over how a gender-inclusive ENDA has been torpedoed from within is directed at so-called leaders who are out of touch with social reality. It has to do with a generation of effort directed toward building an inclusive movement being pissed away by the clueless and the phobic. That's why every single GLBT organization of any size at the national and state levels -- with the sole exception of the spineless Human Rights Campaign -- has unequivocally come out in support of gender protections within ENDA, and has opposed the effort to pass legislation protecting only sexual orientation. What happens in Congress in the weeks ahead on this historic issue is anybody's guess. I urge all of you who support the vision of an inclusive ENDA to contact your representatives in government and let your views be known. Entire article here: http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2007/10/11/transgender/index1.html
Posted on 10/22/2007 11:58 AM Comments (0)
October 16, 2007My breath smells like garlic.Ah, my mom is awesome. She brought home a gigantic 100% vegan burrito wrapped in a spinach tortilla. Oh man, she hthe jackpot. I want to eat one of these daily for the rest of my life. Fuuuuck. So lately I've been thoroughly researching colleges and universities. So far my top picks are UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, UCLA, Penn State, Trent University, University of Iowa, University of Chicago, Yale, Cornell, University of Toronto, Princeton and the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
Wish me luck. I want to go to Trent soooo badly.
Posted on 10/16/2007 5:31 PM Comments (2)
October 15, 2007Baltimore animal rights activists ARRESTED for legal protestNo, "law enforcement" is not your friend. Members of the Baltimore Animal Rights Coalition (BARC) were arrested the evening of Friday the 12th of October for doing nothing more than standing on a public sidewalk and holding a sign. These arrests represent a clear violation of BARC’s First Amendment rights to free speech and peaceful assembly. For a detailed account of exactly what occurred at Salt Tavern on the evening of Friday, October 12, 2007, check out the following link to an Associated Content article: All three activists were charged with “Willfully Failing to Obey a Reasonable & Lawful Order of a Law Enforcement Officer” for asserting their legal right to stand on the sidewalk in front of Salt Tavern. Preliminary court dates are set for the end of the month, and currently BARC is working with both a private attorney and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) to determine our legal “next steps.” Get involved with the ACLU. WE CANNOT LET THIS CONTINUE.
Here's a video from the protest:
Now, go watch the rest of them on YouTube!
Posted on 10/15/2007 12:31 PM Comments (0)
Yuck.So here's another rant regarding a pet peeve.
Right now, my mom is eating apple slices off of a toothpick, chewing it with her mouth open and cleaning her teeth with her tongue and the toothpick. I'm going to barf, unless i grab my iPod this second. I can literally feel the acid making its way up my throat. GROSS. Doesn't this make everyone else sick too? Why me?
Posted on 10/15/2007 11:45 AM Comments (0)
October 14, 2007Peacetime KillingRead this and then tell me the second amendment does more good than harm.
"Most people are aware of the terrible loss of life occasioned by war but what is not so well known is the carnage during "peacetime". From the Socialist Courier.
Guns are bad, m'dears. In any way, shape or form. And if you think we need arms for retaliation against the government, you're sorely mistaken. They'll take your weapons before you have a chance at self-defense. Now go read It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis and The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood.
Posted on 10/14/2007 2:47 PM Comments (2)
October 12, 2007Big Brother has you in its sights!Not that I haven't known the government has been spying on us for quite some time. This is just somehow so much more 1984-esque because someone actually reported on it. They're spying on us with robot dragonflies. Freaky shit. Follow the link:
Posted on 10/12/2007 10:00 PM Comments (2)
October 5, 2007What the fork are you eating?
Oscar Mayer Cotto Salami Mechanically separated chicken
Jimmy Dea(d)n Original Fresh Pork Sausage Links... Pork
GROSS. I think I'll go throw up now...
Posted on 10/05/2007 11:17 AM Comments (0)
LondonI miss London to death. Take me back! I miss Pieter and Caroline. I miss Haileybury. I miss Hyde Park, Trafalgar Square, Oxford Street and Soho. And I miss Bayswater and Camden. I miss the fucking tube and that "Mind the gap" recording. I could cry. Ugh. Londres, je t'aime.
Posted on 10/05/2007 10:57 AM Comments (0)
October 3, 2007Emptiness is lonliness and lonliness is cleanliness and cleanliness is godliness and God is empty, just like me.Head Like A Hole - Nine Inch Nails
Posted on 10/03/2007 4:53 PM Comments (0)
An omnivorous president?So I've been thinking... I wonder if people would vote for a vegetarian or vegan president? I'm sorry to say I doubt it. This country is to concerned with politicians' personal lives, as opposed to what they believe politically.
Again, I hate humanity.
Posted on 10/03/2007 3:57 PM Comments (0)
That robot in office? Yeah... not my president.This just in: President Bush is still a heartless douche.
Bush vetoes child health insurance plan "WASHINGTON - President Bush, in a sharp confrontation with Congress, on Wednesday vetoed a bipartisan bill that would have dramatically expanded children's health insurance. It was only the fourth veto of Bush's presidency, and one that some Republicans feared could carry steep risks for their party in next year's elections. The Senate approved the bill with enough votes to override the veto, but the margin in the House fell short of the required number. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., decried Bush's action as a "heartless veto."
No fucking kidding. Heartless indeed. I mean, nevermind the fact that this bill would help provide healthcare for 1 in 4 American kids. Yeah. Kids don't matter... they don't make money, pay taxes or feed the corporate "fucks us over everytime" rollercoaster. And therefore, Bush doesn't care. But honestly, what IS his reason for vetoing the plan? What the hell? Although, I would be quite surprised if that moron ever did anything good for this country... I'd throw a party and invite the world. Ok... maybe not. But still.
Oh, and why aren't we a modern country where parliament votes through bills? WHY IS THE PRESIDENT ALLOWED TO VETO ANYTHING IN THE FIRST PLACE? And why are we still, in 2007, voting for a person instead of a party (like the rest of the civilized world)? This country is completely screwed. Hey Bush! Thanks for flushing half the value of US currency down the hole! I can't believe people even voted for that loser. I really cannot believe it. I bet the twins love having the entire world hate their dad.
Posted on 10/03/2007 9:25 AM Comments (4)
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