Thursday, July 05, 2007
Tommy Chong once again talks horse sense
Wednesday, July 04, 2007
Cindy Sheehan Rides Again: She's back after five weeks of retirement

...Click Cindy to enlarge...
I know it's not popular among my liberal pals, but I do not like Cindy Sheehan's approach. I do not believe in calling conservatives fascists. Using that word for a group of clowns like the ones Bush has assembled is off the mark. Cindy--if you want to know about Fascists, read a biography of Himmler or Goebbels or Goering.
She vehemently denies it, but Cindi's five weeks of retirement gave her a severe case of limelight fever. She's back!

Her shrill posturings do nothing to advance the cause. She mentiones over sand over how her "enemies" call her an "attention whore." I don't object to anyone seeking attention, but seeking attention AND annopinting yourself our self-appointed moral executioner. . .that's another story. To top it off, her prose sucks. Long-time reader Dogbowl seems to agree: "She wore out her welcome a long time ago. She makes us look bad now. If we want to win we can't have loopy people like that be our public face."
A taste of her rant on the Daily Kos:
It is about time us “peasants” (in the eyes of the Fascist Ruling Elite) march on DC with our “pitchforks” of righteous anger and our “torches” of truth to demand the ouster of BushCo. I have a dream of the detention centers that George has built and filled being instead filled with Orange Clad neo-cons and neo-connettes.
---o0o---
Tuesday, July 03, 2007
An open letter to Grist on the propriety and greenness of urination
It may not be "cool," but what do you think about urinating in the great outdoors? Say it's 12:30 AM and nature calls. Rather than go to the bathroom, you slip outside in your backyard and relieve yourself there? Discretely, of course, and perhaps shifting the target area nightly to prevent nitrogen burn?
Certainly you've saved at the least 1 gallon of water. Or is there some kind of enviro blowback from depositing urine with its various chemicals, untreated, onto the earth, where it will inevitably end up, in my case, in Puget Sound? Over the course of a year, you may well save, say, 500 gallons of water. Or is that 500 gallons nothing compared to the impact on the earth of performing this act?
Anxiously awaiting your word, I am
Holding It In Ballard,
Jack Brummet
Seattle, Wash.
President Bush succumbs to blackmail and commutes Scooter Libby's prison term


President Bush today commuted Scooter Libby's multi-year sentence to time served (that is, zero days). While I suspect Bush will wait to actually pardon Libby until his last day in office, January 20, 2009, this is just about as good. Bush seems to have waited until the last minute. The court had just ruled that Libby must begin his sentence while his appeal winds it way through the court system. This meant Libby would go to prison in the next couple of weeks.
It seems like The President let Libby sweat it out until the very last moment, possibly in hopes he would actually be clipped, or to let him stew on it so long that when it actually came, he had Libby in his pocket forevermore.
Bush Spares Libby From Prison...Grant of Executive Clemency...Statement by
President...Special prosecutor challenges Bush assertion...
Obama: 'This is exactly the kind of politics we must change'
Fred Thompson: 'I am very happy for Scooter Libby'
Pelosi: 'The president shows his word is not to be
believed'Statement From Libby's Attorney...
Hillary: 'In this administration, cronyism and ideology trump competence and justice'
Why did the President exercise executive clemency to protect Libby? Obviously one reason is to protect the shadow president, VP Dick Cheney. As you know, All This Is That has speculated over the last year or so on other possible reasons, including various blackmail schemes involving variously, the Attorney General Roberto Gonzales, the Vice-President, and Donald Runmsfeld, among others. Recent All This Is That articles on the events and personalities surrounding the Scoter Libby fiasco and sentence commutation:
Monday, July 02, 2007
Ann Coulter and a love-letter from Henry Rollins

Since I was on vacation, I didn't want to spend a lot of time thinking about Ann Coulter or her latest hate-gaffe. Thankfully, Henry Rollins did, and composed one of the periodic letters he writes, and created a video. It probably captures what a lot of us think about Ann.
Other recent posts on Anne Coulter on All This Is That:
Caption of the week: "Coulter's Ugly Crack"
Ann Coulter calls Presidential Candidate Edwards A "Faggot" & Howard Dean Fights Back
Ann Coulter: Justice John Paul Stevens Should Be Poisoned
Ann Coulter Says POTUS Picked The Wrong Guy
$25,000 Worth of Ann Coulter
---o0o---
Sunday, July 01, 2007
Word about Dean Ericksen Spreads Around The Internet

click images to enlarge....
Since publishing our expose of Dean Ericksen's activities, we have been innundated with horror stories, photos and other examples of his degenerate lifestyle as well as the development of his nefarious cult. Dean Ericksen Must Be Stopped seems to be leading the charge.

Click to enlarge - Ericksen enjoying drinks with an old friend
---o0o---
Saturday, June 30, 2007
Paris Hilton's Prison Self-portrait
Poem: Bible Stories 3/Babylon and the unfinished tower
1
The ark stopped bobbing and settled in the mud
Earth began her long drying
Noah popped the hatch
And the animals charged out of the ark
Behind Noah's wife sons and daughters-in-law
Earth began to fill once more
The begetting began again and the earth blossomed
With Noah's grandchildren and the birds and beasts
(The Bible doesn’t mention what became of the fish)
2
The corner of the world
Near the Tigris and Euphrates filled with people
But none crossed the eastern mountains
Or the desert to the west
The great world beyond was without people
After the flood families sought new homes
A group of people who wanted to serve God
Decided to build a city to rule all people
From bricks with walls of stone
3
The people said let us build a tower
Reaching to the sky so we stand as one
And not scatter across the earth
So they built a great tower from bricks
One story rising above another
But God did not want people all living together
If they stayed together
The wicked would lead the good
Into evil and away from their God
4
God began to change their language
So families and tribes by degrees all spoke
In different tongues now
Families and tribes stayed together
The men building the great tower
No longer knew each other's speech
And abandoned the tower for the faraway lands
Nineveh Assyria Egypt Sidon and Tyre
And the earth had many people in many lands
---o0o---
Friday, June 29, 2007
Thursday, June 28, 2007
The Gathering Storm Around Dean Ericksen

click to enlarge
It looks like a storm has erupted over Dean Ericksen's entry into the world of blogging. Unfortunately for Dean, the moment he hit the net a firestorm over his character erupted.
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Time Magazine Goes Metric? - The U.S. Is 40 Years Behind Going Metric - Correlatives With The JFK Fitness Program & The Move Toward Total Hydration
Much is made of the imperial system's basis of the size of a foot, or the distance between your knuckles. And yet the metric system is based on the speed of an electron, I think. That makes more sense than the distance between some emperor's knuckles?
If the metric system is so wonderful, why then have we not converted to metric for our measure of years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds? Why was it so important to convert linear measures, but not the temporal ones?
As far as I can tell, some foods and fluids are sold my metric measure, but not much else. Except:::::::::::::::::::::::::Hootch! Whiz! Wine! Whiskey! Beer is sold by the fluid ounce, but whiskey and wine: totally metric. The formerly beloved fifth of whiskey is now the slightly smaller 3/4 of a litre bottle. Those little bottles of wine you buy on the airplane: 187.5 millilitres (or, 1/4 of a 750 millilitre bottle [the "new fifth"]. So, we may have really sucked on our adoption of metric measures, but the drunks have it down pat, at least on the fluid measures.
'Time' Switches To The Metric System - Time managing editor Rick Stengel is attempting to force the U.S. towards the metric system? A new memo yesterday told writers and editors that from now on, all measurements will be expressed in "both imperial and metric equivalents." Clearly, this is a losing battle Stengel is waging.
Here is Stengel's memo on taking Time metric:
Time is going global. And metric. Starting with the next issue, we will provide both imperial and metric equivalents for distance, weight, volume and temperature. (We've been doing this for some time in our graphics. Now we'll extend this to the general text as well.) This will help ensure that one text works for all of our international editions.
In most cases, we'll use the imperial measure first and then show the metric equivalent in parentheses: five ft. (1.5 m); 170 lbs. (77 kg); 5 gallons (19 liters); 98.6 degrees F (37 degrees Celsius).
Tuesday, June 26, 2007
Meet the Thompson Twins: Fred Thompson's wife, Jeri Kehn (with photos)


Photograph: Chicken Love Tragedy - A Cautionary Tale of Beastiality in Iberia
Americans actually do seem to care, and the frogs appear to be sitting on their wallets

According to the Associated Press, Americans gave nearly $300 billion to charitable causes last year, even beating the 2005 total was swollen by the of aid to victims of hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma and the devastating Asian tsunami.
"What people find especially interesting about this, and it's true year after year, that such a high percentage comes from individual donors," Giving USA Chairman Richard Jolly said. Individuals gave a combined 75.6% of the total.
The biggest piece of the donations, $96.82 billion or 32.8%, went to religious organizations. The second largest donations, $40.98 billion or 13.9%, went to education, including gifts to colleges, universities and libraries.
The report showed that about 65% of households earning under $100,000 give to charity, "It tells you something about American culture that is unlike any other country," said Claire Gaudiani, a professor at NYU's Heyman Center for Philanthropy and author of The Greater Good: How Philanthropy Drives the American Economy and Can Save Capitalism. .
Gaudiani said Americans give more than double the next most charitable nation--Great Britain, who gave roughly 0.73%. Not surprisingly, the frogs a/k/a France, kicked in at a 0.14% rate, far far behind countries like South Africa, Singapore, Turkey and Germany.


















