April 30, 2005
Tag I'm It.
Rosemary tagged me with the
If I could be.... meme. I promise I'll get to it tomorrow. Too busy today to think
In the mean time, go see Kung Fu Hustle. It rocked.
With great power comes great responsibility.... Why don't you speak Chinese???
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I enjoyed the hell out of that movie.... I'd of liked to have seen more of the axe dancing, but spread out in the movie....
But there is something about looney tunes style pain that is just so funny.
Posted by: Bill at May 01, 2005 01:38 AM (xhohP)
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No Sh*t
Especially that last bit.....
Your Birthdate: November 10 |
Your birth on the 10th day of the month adds a tone of independence and extra energy to your life.
The number 1 energy suggest more executive ability and leadership qualities than you path may have indicated.
A birthday on the 10th of any month gives greater will power and self-confidence, and very often a rather original approach.
This 1 energy may diminish your ability and desire to handle details, preferring instead to paint with a broad brush.
You are sensitive, but your feeling stay somewhat repressed.
You have a compelling manner that can be dominating in many situations. |
DH's is not quite as accurate....
Your Birthdate: November 15 |
With a birthday on the 15th of any month, you are apt to have really strong attachments to home, family and domestic scene.
The 1 and 5 equaling 6, provide the sort of energy that makes you an excellent parent or teacher.
You are very responsible and capable.
This is an attractive and an attracting influence.
You like harmony in your environment and strive to maintain it.
You tend to learn by observation rather than study and research.
You may like to cook, but you probably don't follow recipes.
This number shows artistic leanings and would certainly support an talents that may be otherwise in your makeup.
You're a very generous and giving person, but perhaps a bit stubborn in ways. |
from Christina
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Being born on the 4th day of the month should help make you a better manager and organizer.
You may be more responsible and self-disciplined than you realize. Sincere and honest, you are a serious and hard working individual. (Oh I like this statement!)
Blah blah blah (stuff said which was pretty close to true, but I had to get to this point ->)There is a good deal of rigidity and stubbornness associated with the number 4.
AAAAAAAHhhhhhhhhhhhh how very true!
Posted by: vw bug at April 30, 2005 06:10 PM (mPRqC)
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Hold on...two Scorpios having a successful marriage with each other?
The rest of your charts must be fascinating.
Posted by: Deb at April 30, 2005 07:40 PM (hAPdw)
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Me crab, you scorpion...no wonder we get along...
; )
Posted by: Christina at April 30, 2005 08:32 PM (zJsUT)
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Only 3/4??
How Republican are you?
I am: 74% Republican. | "To you, Fox News really is 'Fair and Balanced'." |
Are You A Republican?
From SWWBO
Update: My DH took the quiz and, well, it's pretty right on (much to his parent's liberal chagrin....):
I am: 41% Republican. | "Congratulations, you're a swing voter. When they say 'Soccer Mom', they mean you. Every Democratic ad on the TV set was made just for your viewing enjoyment. Don't you feel special?" |
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What Fox News is NOT "Fair and Balanced?"
That Bill O'Reilly seems like such a nice guy.
; P
Posted by: Christina at April 30, 2005 08:33 PM (zJsUT)
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I only got 76% I think that quiz is wrong. Oh and good luck on your thesis!
Posted by: oddybobo at May 01, 2005 09:17 PM (/Q7KN)
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April 29, 2005
Bracing....For...Instalanche
The link went up at 10:23... Let's see what happens....
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It'll be interesting to follow. From my perspective, a little after 9:00 central time I began getting visitors clicking in from your site, now totalling an extra 80+ and counting over my normal traffic (such as it is) *s*
There
are a lot of good recipes to check out this time (as usual), so it will take a while before secondary sites can report back to you what the ripple effect is.
Posted by: David at April 29, 2005 04:31 PM (ACL5/)
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I saw a spike in my tiny traffic yesterday, starting shortly after the 'Lanche... from avg. 37 unique hits/day to 94 unique yesterday. No way to tell how much of that is Carnival regulars clicking thru, how much is secondary 'Lanche ripple effect, since the page referrals come from here in either case.
Posted by: Ponytailed Conservative at April 30, 2005 03:44 PM (Mu8gg)
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April 26, 2005
Roy Hallums interview part 3
Rusty Shackelford is back with
Part III of his interview with the family of American hostage (currently being held in Iraq) Roy Hallums.
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April 25, 2005
Do me a favor...
It is in fact painless.
Go over to Ben's place and tell him to get off his lazy butt and write something. Tell him I sent you.
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WooHoo!!!!
Visitor # 25,000 dropped in to the blogsplat page at 4:21:51 EDT from the
MUSCTigers!
Yay!
Go on over there and meet Jeremy, Katie, and Jenks, three students at the Medical University of South Carolina, and enjoy a different perspective!
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Different, huh? What are you trying to say? Huh? Huh? ;-)
I'm honored ::sniff sniff:: to have been a part ::sniff sniff:: of this wonderful occassion ::choked up::
By the way, I like the non-blogger site--I don't think I've said that yet. Nice work.
Posted by: Jeremy at April 25, 2005 05:59 PM (/U19w)
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April 20, 2005
Links for you, time to read a book for me
These should keep you busy:
It's the Queen's blogiversary! Drop by and wish her well!
Fat: Bad or not? Wizbang, McGehee and the MUSC Tigers weigh in.
Middle East:
1. The Carnival of the Liberated was held yesterday at Dean's. Drop by for your weekly Iraq/Afghanistan blog update
2. Michael Totten and Spirit of America, live from Lebanon
3. Rusty Shackelford blogs part 2 of his interview with Susan Hallums (part 1 here)
Babalu contributor Julio Zangroniz has exciting news about a new park in Miami and a memorial to those who have lost their lives fighting communism in Cuba.
The Paladin's got Mexican Food on the brain (constantly)
Mrs. SMASH is back at it, at least, in a limited way. Yay!!
Humor for Dreaded Wednesdays from VW Bug. While you're there, check out the Karnival of the Kidz.
Speaking of Kids, check out Sadie's new talents: Splashing and Standing
Idol Chatter from Marie
Shocking News from the Laughing Wolf..... Congrats LW and Bou!
That's the lot for now. I'm going to go read my book and rest.
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Hmmm. I see you get around. Where do you find the time? GRIN. And thanks for the links!
Posted by: vw bug at April 20, 2005 04:08 PM (atmrq)
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April 18, 2005
April 15, 2005
an interesting quiz, for a change.
What kind of American English do you speak?
Your Linguistic Profile:
|
65% General American English |
15% Dixie |
15% Yankee |
5% Upper Midwestern |
0% Midwestern |
(h/t Jay and Deb)
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50% General American English
30% Yankee
20% Dixie
0% Midwestern
0% Upper Midwestern
And here I didn't even know I spoke American English!!
Posted by: Amanda at April 18, 2005 02:52 AM (yQjzp)
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Not far off, FWIW.
65% General American English
25% Dixie
10% Yankee
0% Midwestern
0% Upper Midwestern
Posted by: Paladin at April 18, 2005 02:54 PM (Rfqkp)
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April 13, 2005
today's stupid quiz
Today's stupid quiz:

Which Website are You?
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It said I'm fracking E-Bay!!
Stupid quiz....
OT: Congrats on becomging a Munuvian!! Had I known you were looking to escape BlogSpot, I'd have nominated you.
Posted by: Mad Mikey at April 13, 2005 07:53 PM (xGZ+b)
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Yahoo - You adapt slowly, but many still rely on you. You like to organize things. You are very popular. You like to yodel.
Posted by: vw bug at April 13, 2005 08:50 PM (rhlNH)
3
"You are cnn.com - You like to tell people what's going on in the world. People accuse you of being biased. You have a deep voice."
Posted by: Amanda at April 14, 2005 02:51 AM (qLjc5)
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April 09, 2005
South Park Republicans
Beth of
My VRWC has begun a gallery of the real South Park Republicans.
Here's me:

To make your own South Park character go here.
To see the gallery, go here
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You don't look very happy for someone in Heaven. And if you're in Heaven, shouldn't you have a PSP instead of a lightsaber???
Posted by: Ben at April 09, 2005 08:03 PM (0ypJF)
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April 08, 2005
It's Friday
And I need to let people know I've moved over here, so here are 10 yummy links:
1. I love Rachel Lucas. This is exactly why I have a dog.
2. Dean's World turns 3 today. Pretty good longevity for the b'sphere. I wonder where I'll be at 2.5 years from now....
3. Blogbuddies the California Mafia are wondering who drops by their site. If you've been there before, drop by and leave a note telling them where you're at.
4. Speaking of blogbuddies, Da Goddess had a steroid injection to her spine (ouch, epidural steroids!) yesterday, and is slowly improving from the side effects of the treatment. Drop by and offer her some good wishes! While you're visiting in San Diego, go here and leave your best for Mrs. SMASH, who is recuperating from a serious back injury after being thrown from a horse earlier this week.
5. Cobb cartoons the MJ trial. I'll never see the glove the same way again.
6. Acidman has the winners of the annual Bulwer-Lytton "dark and stormy night" contest.
7. Gir is cat-blogging again.
8. Jay at Wizbang! has a new hood ornament...
9. Friday Wolf-blogging from the Laughing Wolf
10. Daisychick Angela has quite a shopping trip ahead of her.....
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April 07, 2005
This is why I will never be more than a Large Mammal
If you haven't been there yet, you really should drop by
Captain's Quarters and bear witness to Ed Morrisey's
own version of the South Park movie, starring in the real life role of Kyle's mom (but he's no b*tch!).
Update: looks like Kyle's Mom
wins in this one!
Ed is single-handedly taking on the nation of Canada and their idiotic law which allows them to keep the proceedings of public hearings out of the media. How ironic it is that Canadians can't report the goings on, but an American can.
more...
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Normally, I'd be keeping my little Canuck fingers offa the keyboard on this, but I'd just like to point out a couple of things:
1) When the ban was imposed, Gomery made it clear that
it was a temporary measure. All the testmony given still remains part of the public record. No rights have been taken away.
2) You
are correct that the hearings are not
in camera; the Commission in fact has a small conference room (about 200 seats) available where interested citizens can go to view the testimony - including the testimony covered by the publication ban (this, of course, is only really useful if one lives in Montréal; and according to our MSM, the room has been at near-capacity since the start of the inquiry. Québecer's are quite passionate about their politics - and their scandals). Nothing in the ban prevents the viewers from relaying any information learned to others
by private means (including e-mail; I have a friend in Montréal who e-mailed me some of the choice bits from the first couple of days of Brault's testimony. I'd discussed them privately with a couple of my friends here on the West Coast, but I did
not publish that info on
my blog. I may not exactly agree with the ban, but I am
not stupid.), but we Canadians also know that any testimony given under the ban will be released to the media with a reasonable degree of dispatch (as has been the case with this), and our "right to know" has never been taken away from us (unless, of course, by "right to know" you mean "right to know, RIGHT NOW!!!").
I agree that the publication ban is a bit stupid in this modern age of the internet, but I truly wonder if your outrage is, shall we say, for real.
If such publication bans abridge the people's (in your words) "right to know what their government is doing and what the truth is in this matter", I'd really like to know your own opinion of your government's ban on the photos of the coffins returning from Iraq (which is still in force). The dead (honoured or otherwise) are a sad fact of war, so why should that fact be kept from the American public?
Or are such bans only considered good when they are covering the ass of the faction you support?
While I agree with the fundamental stupidity of the ban (in this case, at least), I know how our system of public inquiry works, and I know that it
does work (quite well, thank you, and it's done so since 1867). I also know it's an historic given that any Federal scandal involving Québec is going to a) be nasty; b) probably involve some sort of criminal wrong-doing; and, c) reflect badly on both sides in the mess (and this goes all the way back to the Pacific Scandal of 1873 - for which a Conservative government was responsible, I might add).
We Canadians have our system, and we are quite comfortable with it, thank you very much (despite what people in your country might think about it).
Ta.
Posted by: Doug McKay at April 08, 2005 08:05 PM (Cp5LT)
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The dead deserve respect in death. I don't mind when our national news shows their pictures every night as they were in life. The current policy has been in place since WWII and was implemented not to cover the government's ass, since most people supported that war, but to spare the feelings of the families who had lost their loved ones.
All of the network news programs show the service photos and on occasion, family photos, of the recently dead. I'm not real thrilled with all of the media coverage of JPII's dead body on display either.
Does all the "banned" information really come out? Or does it get sanitized by holding it? Why is the Canadian government afraid of letting people know what's going on in a timely manner? It seems designed to cover the ruling party at the expense of the citizens. I don't doubt that the system works, per se, probably better than ours in some cases, but this kind of policy is ridiculous in a free society.
Posted by: caltechgirl at April 08, 2005 09:06 PM (iCaDI)
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Hi there, Ctg! Sorry I'm late getting back to you on this (see last para).
Fair comment on the coffin issue. Well put (and I'll consider myself justly - and politely - slapped for the CYA comment). I wasn't aware the policy dated from WWII; I've only been aware of in in the context of Vietnam and television coverage.
As for the "banned" information coming out: I believe it does. Because it's a public inquiry, it's a pretty fair bet that both sides will have people in the audience taking notes, for eventual comparison with what comes out in the published reports. I can say this with a high degree of certainty, as I ended up doing that - even though I'm not the greatest at shorthand - during the Vancouver hearings of the Krever inquiry (that was our Red Cross/Health Canada tainted blood scandal). Given that the published testimony from these kinds of hearings can run into the thousands of pages, I will grant that some things can be missed (and probably are - there's only so much legalese and bureaucratese you can wade through before the circuit breakers in your brain start demanding anaesthesia). I can't really give you an exact percentage for all inquiries, but from my experience with the Krever commission, there was (I'd say) about a 95% accuracy/disclosure rate on that one (and that was a scandal that encompassed 4 governments - 2 Liberal, 2 Conservative). It is really tough to judge just how accurate these sorts of commissions are (think of how many questions the Warren commission left in it's wake).
As for your sanitising question; I suppose it can be regarded as an expanded version of the common governmental practice of releasing controversial press notices late on Friday afternoons, hoping that some of the controversy will slip through the cracks (but I'm not sure that's the right context to put it in, so that's the best thought I have on the subject). Besides, a scandal of this magnitude tends to make a mere rat's nest look like the winner of the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval, so trying to "sanitise" any information is pretty much a dead issue right off the bat.
Now we get to your
really tough question (
Why is the Canadian government afraid of letting people know what's going on in a timely manner?), and I'll answer as best as I can.
The core of the whole mess is the Québec sovereignty/separation issue, which has been running at a good simmer (with occasional outbreaks of high-rolling boil) for forty-plus years (the best, if inexact, analogy for you would be your Civil War. We're just fighting our version via Parliament, the courts, and public-relations firms rather than grabbing the weapons and having at it - although I've always been afraid it could come down to "seeing the whites of their eyes'). We still haven't solved it. I don't think we will ever
really solve it. I sometimes think the only reason Canada has remained whole is because of the sheer ineptitude that the players on both sides of the issue have displayed over the years.
Right now the government fear about AdScam is driven more by the realities of being a minority government, and I'll try and summarise as best I can.
Our parliament has 308 seats (we can ignore our Senate for now...but then again, most of we Canadians tend to ignore our Senate anyways, as the Senate tends to be mostly harmless). As a result of the June '04 election the Liberals (135 seats) and NDP (19 seats) - these two parties are reasonably natural, if uneasy, allies - hold half the seats in the House. The Conservatives (99 seats), the Bloc Québecois (54 seats) and one independent make up the other half.
Small (but pertinent) digression: Our Liberals are analagous to your Democrats (mostly); our Conservatives are analagous to your Republicans; the NDP is social-ist (originally rising out the philosophy of the Methodist Social Gospel, rather than Debsian-type social-ism) with Naderist leanings (60's Nader rather than the Nader of last year); the Bloc is mixed-bag (left, right, whatever), but their main mantra is "Québec first". The independent is a wild card. He was the incumbent candidate (for the Conservatives) in his riding (re-nominated unopposed), but the party brass disallowed his candidacy and replaced him with someone more "acceptable". He ran as an independent and still won the seat.
Back to the mess. This is all complicated by the fact that the Speaker (who cannot normally vote, except to maintain the status quo in the event of a tie vote on the floor of the House) is a sitting Liberal. This leaves the Liberals with 134 voting members. The government is on an incredibly thin footing. If the government falls (by a vote of non-conference), our Governor-General
could ask the Conservatives to form a minority government with the Bloc. That alliance is about as likely as a mongoose making friends with a cobra, as the Conservatives have a very large anti-Québec streak running through the party, so the likely outcome of a Liberal defeat.
Historically, the party who makes a successful non-confidence motion so soon (ie. within two years) after the previous election has been slaughtered in the election they triggered. The Conservatives could trigger the vote mostly because they hate the Liberals (but they might bank on gaining enough votes from disaffected Liberals - in Ontario, mostly - to make the exercise worth it). The NDP could trigger the vote on principle. Up to the partial lift of the publication ban, the Bloc could have triggered a non-confidence vote without doing themselves any damage. Now that they are implicated in AdScam they may have second thoughts about bringing down the govenment.
I have no idea how this is going to play out (the minority government situation is the one time I start thinking that your two party system is better, but I console myself with the fact that our minority parliaments are nowhere near as bad as Italy's or France's), but I do know it's going to get a lot uglier before it gets better.
Sorry for this being so long (I tried avoiding writing a poli-sci textbook), but I hope this all makes sense and answers your questions (I've been fighting a nasty sinus infection, and the antibiotics - and pain - don't necessarily contribute to coherence).
Posted by: Doug McKay at April 11, 2005 03:09 PM (Cp5LT)
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