Warning: Constant ABSPATH already defined in /home/public/wp-config.php on line 27
Uncategorized — Why Now?
On-line Opinion Magazine…OK, it's a blog
Random header image... Refresh for more!

Category — Uncategorized

Making the switch

I’m not advocating anyone switch, because each of us has different needs and expectations. If Blogger and BlogSpot fill your needs, there’s no reason to switch.

If you like the look and feel of Blogger, you can still use it to publish at your own site, rather than BlogSpot. This is useful if you want your own URL, or don’t want to be associated with BlogSpot. Anya does this at Out, Standing in Her Field.

If you’ve had it with Google/Blogger but still want a free blog, you could move to WordPress.com as Steve Bates has done with The Yellow Doggerelist. He uses the site to host his G-rated verse and cat pictures for friends and family who wouldn’t appreciate his writing at his main site.

If you want the ability to kvetch you could move to the Six Apart blogging empire for pricing starting at $4.95/month for the equivalent of a BlogSpot blog but the right to complain because you are paying something.

Six Apart now hosts TypePad and LiveJournal blogs with several levels of sites. Michael at Musing’s musings has a TypePad site, and Julia at Sisyphus Shrugged is on LiveJournal.

Six Apart also owns Movable Type blogging software that you use on your own server space, like Guy does at Rook’s Rant.

It’s a brave person indeed, who hand codes their blog, like Steve does at The Yellow Doggerel Democrat.

[The ghastly geek details below the fold]
[Read more →]

March 26, 2006   4 Comments

Waist Deep In The Big Muddy

John wondered why I didn’t print the lyrics to Waist Deep In The Big Muddy if I was going to use a Pete Seeger song. I thought of Flowers first is the simple answer.

But since it is a pointed reference to the current “unpleasantness”, here’s a link to the lyrics at the University of San Diego, a Catholic institution and home of the Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice.

Go by and check out their news section on the main page. Mrs. Kroc would be proud.

March 26, 2006   5 Comments

Where have all the flowers gone?

Where have all the flowers gone?
Long time passing
Where have all the flowers gone?
Long time ago
Where have all the flowers gone?
Girls have picked them every one
When will they ever learn?
When will they ever learn?

Where have all the young girls gone?
Long time passing
Where have all the young girls gone?
Long time ago
Where have all the young girls gone?
Taken husbands every one
When will they ever learn?
When will they ever learn?

Where have all the young men gone?
Long time passing
Where have all the young men gone?
Long time ago
Where have all the young men gone?
Gone for soldiers every one
When will they ever learn?
When will they ever learn?

Where have all the soldiers gone?
Long time passing
Where have all the soldiers gone?
Long time ago
Where have all the soldiers gone?
Gone to graveyards every one
When will they ever learn?
When will they ever learn?

Where have all the graveyards gone?
Long time passing
Where have all the graveyards gone?
Long time ago
Where have all the graveyards gone?
Covered with flowers every one
When will we ever learn?
When will we ever learn?

Pete Seeger

March 25, 2006   2 Comments

This Sounds Familiar

Local Australian officials report that rain and sightseers are hampering cyclone relief.

Forget looters, sightseers should be shot on sight. They aren’t helping; they are clogging up the roads; they are using things that are needed; and nobody needs strangers showing up to gawk – that’s the media’s job.

Ergon Energy is the local power company and they are amazing. They have delivered generators to supermarkets to get them back up, while they go about repairing the grid. That is an obvious move, but I don’t know of a single utility on the Gulf Coast that has ever suggested doing it.

March 25, 2006   2 Comments

Around the coast in 30 days

Warren “Sharkchow” Richey won the 1,200 mile Around the coast in 30 days paddling in a kayak. The Christian Science Monitor reporter finished at 1:48pm on Thursday, March 23, with a time of 19 days, 6 hours, and 48 minutes. He finished the race by paddling for 30 hours straight.

March 25, 2006   Comments Off on Around the coast in 30 days

Internet Neutrality

The Christian Science Monitor wants to know: Whose Internet is it, anyway?

“Net neutrality” simply means that data – a phone call, an e-mail, a video – can travel freely over the Internet without the interference of those who own parts of the pipeline. Those transmitting it shouldn’t discriminate as long as the content is legal and doesn’t damage the system.

The phone companies argue that competition between carriers will prevent abuses. If customers feel unfairly treated by one provider, they can switch to another.

But no such competition exists. A handful of cable TV and phone companies control the lion’s share of US broadband Internet access. Many consumers have no choice among broadband providers. The acquisition of Bell South by AT&T, now under way, shows that competition is shrinking, not expanding.

The so-called competition in my area is between Sprint and Cox Cable. No one should be surprised that both market TV, telephone & Internet packages with a total price difference wouldn’t buy a pack of gum.

March 25, 2006   10 Comments

The Friday Dump?

The Federal Elections Commission has the new Internet rules on the agenda for its meeting on Monday.

CNet is reporting that the Election commission takes light touch with Net regs. It doesn’t look that onerous, but there really hasn’t been an explanation for the need.

The ‘Net is generally self-regulating. If you do something that a consensus feels is beyond the pale, you will receive punishment as soon as you are found out. No one has forgiven the “hired bloggers” that Thune used, and he will be punished for that. The “hive memory” is never wiped and anyone can find the relevant information with a search engine.

March 25, 2006   Comments Off on The Friday Dump?

Belarus Update

First, when John IV took the title of Caesar [Tsar] it was “of all the Russias” because there are three. Russia, Belarus, and the Ukraine are the three Russias. Belarus is not some modern construct, it is a very ancient nation that has connected then disconnected from Russia multiple times over the centuries.

The government of the modern version has more in common with The Sopranos than The West Wing, although I admit that the president’s son hasn’t gunned down anyone else in a bar recently.

As predicted, Lukashchenko was reelected in a process that no one believes was free or fair. There are a lot of people in rural areas who haven’t quite accepted the fact that they are no longer in the Soviet Union and would have automatically voted for the current officials because that is what they had always done, and it is possible that Lukashchenko could have won if the election had been free, but he didn’t want to chance it.

As occurred in the flawed election in the Ukraine, people camped out in a main square of the capital city, Minsk in this case, to protest the result and there is a major protest scheduled for tomorrow, but the security forces, still called the KGB in Belarus, swept up all of the protestors in the middle of the night.

Don’t look for a fairy tale ending. This is going to be nasty.

March 24, 2006   4 Comments

Testing For Thee, But Not For Me

R. Neal at Facing South writes about one of the many Republican hypocrisies concerning education: Florida double standard for voucher students.

Florida voters have been forced for years to get the Republicans to adequately fund public schools, to adequately staff public schools, and to offer pre-school through the initiative process.

Consider this logic: we need to make tax cuts because we have a surplus, but we can’t implement the “class size initiative” because we have no money.

Left on their own, the only thing the Republicans have done is institute a testing regimen, the FCAT, which they can use to justify a voucher system. The vouchers keep getting thrown out by the Florida Supreme Court, and the Republicans keep coming up with new versions.

Since they are not allowed to directly fund the Christianist madrassas for their fundamentalist masters, they indirectly fund them with vouchers. As R. Neal points out there is no oversight at all for these schools, but they are receiving tax money.

March 24, 2006   4 Comments

The Season Of Love

The Alligator Crawl Season has begun, and all of those fools who thought it was “cute” to feed ‘gators in a local waterway are going to find out which ones are male.

When in the “mood”, male ‘gators climb out of the water and crawl about looking for love. It’s a lot of work, and they really need the extra calories.

March 24, 2006   6 Comments

Cognitive Dissonance

It was alright for the UAE to operate our ports, but an Israeli company, Check Point, should not be allowed to buy a security software company used by the Federal government?

Actually, foreign companies should not be allowed to own any of our security infrastructure, and the best way to prevent that is to stop privatizing these functions and bring them back into Federal ownership.

The defense of the nation is one of the few things that the Constitution lists as a function of the government.

March 24, 2006   Comments Off on Cognitive Dissonance

How’s The Democracy In The Middle East Going?

Abdul Rahman has to be executed according to the US approved Afghan constitution. He has to be executed according to the fundamentalist Islamic Afghan judiciary. He has to be executed according to the conservative Islamic electorate.

There is a very fine line between democracy and mob rule. It takes experience and peace to see it, but only a loud and persuasive voice to make it disappear.

Another slipshod, half-finished job by the Shrubbery and his cronies.

March 24, 2006   Comments Off on How’s The Democracy In The Middle East Going?

A Missed Opportunity

The Washington Post just blew it. They had an opportunity to generate some more traffic to their site and receive the benefits of those increased ad revenues and they blew it.

At the end of 60 Minutes in the 1970s you didn’t see Andy Rooney, you saw Shana Alexander and James J. Kilpatrick in verbal combat in the Point-Counterpoint segment. That segment became such an icon that it was parodied on Saturday Night Live‘s fake news Weekend Update by Jane Curtin and Dan Aykroyd.

The Post could have provided the same dynamics with a red state versus blue state version. Two bloggers , one from each side, going after each other on one site. They could have staged occasional grudge matches featuring guest bloggers on a single topic with a on-line poll tied in to determine the winner, like Oxford debates. That would generate traffic. That would generate income.

There are real writers with genuine ability and strong political beliefs who would have willingly accepted the offer. People with authentic credentials and portfolios to prove they know how to write to deadline. A salary and passwords would be the expense, as blogging is an obvious telecommuting job.

What they did was hire a hapless kid who tried to bluster his way through a job he wasn’t qualified to do. The Post lost massive amounts of credibility for their attempt, which was already in short supply after the Howell incident.

If the Post thinks the Stalinist red state bloggers are going to appreciate the effort, they haven’t been reading the blogs. The red staters are already spreading the meme that the Post did this on purpose to damage their standing as part of a liberal plot.

Welcome to the grassy knoll, Mr. Brady.

March 24, 2006   Comments Off on A Missed Opportunity

A Collection

Steve Bates of The Yellow Doggerel Democrat is moving his doggerel to a separate site: The Yellow Doggerelist.

There is also cat blogging, so you can get CATS and DOGgerel in one place.

March 23, 2006   3 Comments