Monday, August 7

Churches Putting Town Out of Business

Quotable

"I don't hate God. I'm not against America and apple pie. We just have to protect what's left for commercial development."
--Cecil Willis, a city councilman in Stafford, TX. The town of 19,227 people has 51 churches.

source: Joe Carter WorldViews.com

'Girls Gone Wired'


Diamonds may no longer be a girl's best friend. According to a survey conducted by the Oxygen Network, more women would choose a plasma TV over a diamond solitaire necklace, a top-of-the-line cellphone instead of designer shoes, and an iPod before a little black dress. The results of the Girls Gone Wired survey indicate that advertisers need to address a broader audience when it comes to technological gadgets.

hat tip to Chapman at WorldViews.com

Monday, July 31

RIP, Monopoly money?

This is wrong on more levels than I can articulate.
While Monopoly is the paragon of good 'ole fashioned board game fun, the "old fashioned" part had to go. Parker Brothers is phasing out the cash-based version's funmoney and replacing it with an "Electronic Banking" flavor that could leave Mr. Moneybags turning his pockets inside out as his stash is replaced by a magnetic strip. New kits are completely devoid of the famous multi-colored bills; instead, you'll find phoney Visa debit cards and a calculator / reader which keeps a running tabulation of your riches -- or lack thereof. A deal was struck with Visa to design the mock cards and readers, presumably after surveys showed that 70% of adults used cash less often now than they did a decade ago (no surprise there). When asked about the dramatic change, Parker said replacing cash with plastic "showed the game was moving with the times."
Yet another cultural metaphor of my youth going down the tubes. Is nothing sacred?

Via Fighting Jay Lee (none more surly than he), who notes that the old-fogey cash-enabled game will still be available "while supplies last". Get 'em while you can, kids.

Posted by Charles Kuffner to Society and cultcha

Thursday, July 20

Can one person make a difference?

The Plan: Target one or more people for today's quest.

1. How can I make this person's day? Plan it.
2. Execute your plan
3. Write back here and let us in on the results using the comments section.
4. Reward yourself for making a difference.

Ideas:
1. Drop them a line and encourage them.
2. Help out a stranger.
3. Compliment someone you don't like and be sincere.
4. Buy a card and mail it.
5. Send an arrangement or flowers.

Good fortune and God bless!

Idea from: Baytown Bert's Blog and Thoughts

Bad Penny?


To make a penny, it costs the U.S. Mint 1.4 cents. Multiply that by 7 or 8 billion pennies made each year and it comes to a $20 million loss. Since the mint is a money-making operation (it made a $730 million profit in 2005), rising copper prices have Congress considering scrapping the penny altogether. That would force retailers to round prices to the nearest nickel. But the price of nickel is going up, too. What's your solution?

Source: WorldViews blog

Bush - This is our President




Really.

The man has acted like a drunken frat president / cheerleader all of his life.

He's not changing. If his mother couldn't teach him any manners, if turning 60 hasn't given him any temperance, then really nothing will.

Hat tip to Brains & Eggs for the pics.

Tuesday, July 11

Crashing the Ken Lay funeral?


Overall, the Houston Chronicle's coverage of the Enron case has been excellent. But was it really necessary for the hometown newspaper to have society columnist Shelby Hodge attempt to crash the funeral of Ken Lay in Aspen on Sunday?

hat tip to: Tom of Houston Clear thinkers

Quotable

"Detective Bart Lasiter was in his office studying the light from his one small window falling on his super burrito when the door swung open to reveal a woman whose body said you've had your last burrito for a while, whose face said angels did exist, and whose eyes said she could make you dig your own grave and lick the shovel clean."
--Jim Guigli's award-winning sentence, which took top honors in San Jose State University's annual Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest for bad writing.

hat tip to: Joe Carter on WorldViews

Thursday, July 6

It's official: Google's a verb

Here's a geek-culture milestone.

Google has been added to the Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary as a verb.

Respectful of the trademark, Merriam-Webster lowercases the entry but maintains the capitalization while explaining that the verb means "to use the Google search engine" to retrieve online information.

"We're defining a trademark as a verb, just like we did with the word xerox," [Merriam-Webster President John] Morse said.

The entry has already been added to the online version, along with newcomers bling, bird flu and biodiesel, as well as my personal favorite: mouse potato.

Source: Dwight siverman - TechBlog

Maek speling eezy


"It's a very difficult thing to get something accepted like this," says Alan Mole, president of the American Literacy Council, an organization which favors an end to "illogical spelling." The group says English has 42 sounds spelled in a bewildering 400 ways and believes that simplified spelling would help children learn faster and lead to reductions in illiteracy rates. Some advocates of “simplified spelling” even picket the national spelling bee finals, held every year in Washington, costumed as bumble bees and hoisting signs that say "Enuf is enuf but enough is too much" or "I'm thru with through."

Source: WorldViews

The $50,000 Laptop




So some bloke just walks into their local FBI office, and they cut him/her a check for 50 grand?




"[Veterans Affairs Secretary Jim] Nicholson said the laptop and hard drive were turned in Wednesday to the FBI by an unidentified person in response to the $50,000 reward offer. No suspects were in custody."
This could be a good story-line for one of those VISA commercials...

- Total earned panhandling today: $3.20
- Price of hammer to bust into car and steal a laptop to pawn: $1.25
- Giving stolen item back to owner for 50,000 dollars: Priceless

Source: Laurence Martin

Thursday, June 29

Secondhand opinion

According to a new U.S. surgeon general's report, no amount of air filtration can eliminate the health hazards of secondhand smoke. The report surveyed 20 years of scientific evidence about the effects of secondhand smoke and found that even trace amounts cause immediate and damaging effects in non-smokers. "The debate is over as far as I'm concerned," said Surgeon General Richard Carmona. "Based on the science I wouldn't allow anyone in my family to stand in a room with someone smoking."

Tuesday, June 27

Marriage medicine


New York Times advice for small marital difficulties: Act like an animal trainer.
It's a funny article, but I think everyone that is married, has kids or even just has co-workers should read the article....



nod to: WorldViews Blog

Monday, June 26

Southwest to try out brilliant “New Coke” ploy


If I were Herb Kelleher, I’d be smacking my dumbass subordinates upside the head. Despite...protest, Southwest is trying out assigned seating.
Southwest Airlines will test assigning seats to travelers, another indication the maverick carrier may get in line with other U.S. airlines by junking its first-come, first-served seating system.

Passengers will be assigned seats on about 200 flights from San Diego starting July 10 and continuing for several weeks, an airline spokesman said on Tuesday.

The airline wants to know if assigning seats will slow Southwest’s ability to unload incoming planes and board passengers for the next flight.
Yes, you dumbasses, it will.

[source: Mattsapundit]

3 cheers for The State of Louisiana.


George Brown is a lobbyist for the liquor industry in the state of Louisiana. He convinced the legislature of that fine state to include the following in its open-container law:
“Open alcoholic beverage container” shall not mean any bottle, can, or other receptacle that contains any amount of frozen alcoholic beverage unless the lid is removed or a straw protrudes through the lid...."
That’s right: daiquiris are effectively exempt from the open-container law. Excellent.

[source: Mattsapundit]

Stupid Quotes of the Week

"We have found weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, chemical weapons ..." - Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA)

and ...

"I don't think we have racial bias in Texas anymore" - Congressman John Carter (R-TX)

Friday, June 16

THE POST TURTLE


A 70-year-old Texas Rancher got his hand caught in a gate while working cattle. He wrapped the hand in his bandana and drove his pickup to the doctor. While suturing the cut the doctor struck up a conversation with the old man. Eventually the topic got around to former Texas Governor George W. Bush and his elevation to the White House.

The old Texan said, "Well, ya know, Bush is a 'Post Turtle.'"

Not knowing what the old man meant, the doctor asked what a Post Turtle was.

The old man looked at him and drawled, "When you're driving down a country road and you come across a fence post with a turtle balanced on top, that's a Post Turtle."

The old man saw a puzzled look on the doctor's face, so he continued to explain:

"You know he didn't get there by himself, he doesn't belong there, he can't get anything done while he's up there, and you just want to help the poor dumb bastard get down."

Have you shared your $.02-cents with the Gov.?

Courtesy today’s San Antonio Express-News and the Lone Star Times blog:
Some longtime Texas Republicans are expressing displeasure with Gov. Rick Perry by literally giving him their 2 cents’ worth in campaign contributions.

More than a dozen have opened their checkbooks to make contributions of less than a nickel and in some cases, only a penny.

They want their small donations to make a big statement.

"The whole country is waking up. I really think there’s going to be a revolution because people are sick and tired," Mary Bean of Rosenberg said. "People are sick and tired of all this bickering and not getting a damn thing done."

Perry did push a school funding reform bill through the Legislature last month that kept the Texas Supreme Court from closing public schools after June 1. But some of Perry’s fellow Republicans are miffed he supported a new business tax to make it happen.

"I was really mad that he started this new business tax," Bean said after sending a contribution check for 1 cent.

A lifelong Republican, Bean said she’ll vote for maverick independent Kinky Friedman.
Here’s the funny part.
Perry’s latest campaign contribution report filed this week listed 15 Houston-area donors who gave 5 cents or less. Some said they got the idea from radio talk show host Edd Hendee, who is part of KSEV’s lineup. The station owner is Dan Patrick, who also has fired up listeners against the governor’s school and tax reform plan. Patrick won the GOP nomination this spring for a Houston-area state Senate seat.

Perry’s campaign put the best possible spin on the unusual political contributions.

"The governor appreciates every contribution — large and small," Perry spokesman Robert Black said, declining further comment.

The minuscule protest contributions will end up costing the Perry campaign as those checks have automatically landed the contributors on a mailing list for campaign literature they’re now receiving.
So the grassroots gets to express their frustration, and the Perry campaign is grateful to lose money?

Sounds like a win-win situation.

Texans for Rick Perry
PMB 217, P.O. Box 2013
Austin, TX 78768

Bill White sells Katrina evacuees to Calgary

One of my favorite bloggers, Lou Minatti, has shared the following interesting comments from our Mayor Bill.......

The other day, Mayor Bill asked Alberta companies to open their doors to Katrina evacuees looking for work.
Houston, we have a labour problem -- and the mayor of the Texas city says he can help.

During a speech at the Global Petroleum Show yesterday, Houston Mayor Bill White said Alberta should look to his city to cope with severe labour shortages.

"There is a labour pool in Houston," said White.

"I'm not saying they're all model employees ... but I tell you what, there are a lot of people just looking to get back on their feet again."

I am making no editorial comments here.
I too decline to make an editorial comment.

Which movies have inspired you?

The American Film Institute yesterday announced that Frank Capra's "It's a Wonderful Life" is #1 on its list of inspirational films. Others in the top ten, in order of finish: "To Kill a Mockingbird," "Schindler's List," "Rocky," "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial," "The Grapes of Wrath," "Breaking Away," "Miracle on 34th Street," and "Saving Private Ryan."

My favorite inspirational move is "Life is Beautiful." Robert Benigni uses laughter to fight the horrors of the Holocaust. The courage and strength he shows really touches me.

What is your favorite inspirational move?

Take up your CAPE and follow Me


The BBC reports that The Chronicles of Narnia are, shockingly, about Jesus. Some Christians, though, see the need to move beyond Aslan to another "Christ-figure": Superman. In attempting to be relevant, are Christians downplaying the divine? Or is this following Paul's example of using popular culture to reach people for Christ?

White men can’t hear


Black adults hear better than white adults and women hear better than men, claims a new government report. Scientists suspect melanin plays a role in how the body removes harmful chemical compounds that damage the ear’s hair cells and that genetics or the amount of noise exposure may explain the difference between women and men. The new study by scientists with the federal National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health also found that overall, hearing in the United States is about the same as it was 35 years ago, despite the use of Walkmans and iPods.

POPE (JPII): "[Scientists] should not inquire into the beginning [of the the universe]"


World-renowned astrophysicist Stephen Hawking is claiming that at a cosmology conference held at the Vatican the late Pope John Paul II told a group of scientists, “It’s OK to study the universe and where it began. But [scientists] should not inquire into the beginning itself because that was the moment of creation and the work of God.” One wonders whether the Pope actually recommended that scientists “should not inquire” about the beginning of the universe or rather cautioned that they would not figure out the beginning because it was accomplished through God’s miraculous work.

Thursday, June 15

"arguably the most shocking event in comic book history."


Spiderman does the unthinkable and removes his Spidey mask to publicly reveal his hidden identity.

"I'm proud of who I am, and I'm here right now to prove it," the legendary webslinger tells a press conference called in New York's Times Square, before pulling off his mask and standing before the massed ranks of reporters as newspaper photographer Peter Parker.

Immigration Cartoon

Mexico Officially Thanks Bush


Face on Zero Peso Note......Thanks for Nothing!

Wednesday, June 14

Editorial Livejournalists suffer River Walk envy


The Chronicle's Editorial LiveJournalists seem to have gotten a little too much sun. Here's their conclusion to a utopian editorial about the splendor of Buffalo Bayou (still a muddy, nasty little creek-like thing last time we checked):

San Antonio residents are debating a proposal to limit the number of chain restaurants that can share in the multibillion-dollar bounty that attends the small artificial channel that runs through their downtown. Houston's bayou is much more attractive. When its beautification and development is complete, perhaps it will be as well-attended as the Riverwalk.
Umm, no and no.

Soak the rich, cut their taxes


Investor’s Business Daily notes that surging tax receipts could help President Bush make good on his pledge to cut the deficit in half in 2006, three years earlier than he proposed. Tax revenues are running $176 billion, or 12.9%, over last year, and the Congressional Budget Office said receipts have risen faster over the first eight months of fiscal '06 than in any other such period over the past 25 years — except for last year's 15.5% jump. Despite Bush's tax cuts—or perhaps because of them--those making over $200,000 now pay 46.6% of total income taxes, an increase of 6.1%. Before Bush took office, a couple earning $1 million a year paid 33 times as much as the couple making $60,000. Today they are paying 38 times as much. (HT: Instapundit)

Tuesday, June 13

Clueless Coulter


In Ann Coulter's new book Godless: The Church of Liberalism, she includes a bizarre footnote on Page 3: "Throughout this book, I often refer to Christians and Christianity because I am a Christian and I have a fairly good idea of what they believe, but the term is intended to include anyone who subscribes to the Bible of the God of Abraham, including Jews and others." If Coulter thinks followers of Judaism are Christians then, contrary to what she might think, she doesn't have a "fairly good idea" what Christians believe.

Tone deaf teachers

In order to evade rules against using cell-phones in class, some students are downloading a ring tone off the Internet that is too high-pitched to be heard by most adults. The tone allows high school students to receive text message alerts on their cell phones without the teacher knowing. A teacher in New York City says her colleague played the ring for a classroom of first-graders — and all of them could hear it, while the adults couldn't hear anything.

Beer and pizza prevent cancer


Researchers at Oregon State University say that a compound found in beer inhibits a protein in the cells along the surface of the prostate gland, preventing prostate cancer. Dr. Richard N. Atkins, CEO of the National Prostate Cancer Coalition, notes that an ingredient in tomatoes, lycopene, has previously been linked to prostate cancer prevention. "It's every man's dream to hear that beer and pizza can prevent cancer," said Atkins. "However, the 17 beers and four large pizzas needed to get enough xanthohumol and lycopene to help prevent prostate cancer is unfortunately not advised.

Monday, June 12

Soccer cleats cause toxic shock syndrome




Yet another reason not to play sports — It can kill you:







Blisters caused by wearing new football boots can lead to a dangerous fever called toxic shock syndrome, a study published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) says.

In a paper timed to coincide with the start of the World Cup finals, doctors in Birmingham, central England, report the case of two youngsters who became sick with a fever after friction blisters on their Achilles’ heels, caused by new football boots, became infected.

They suffered from fever, lethargy, vomiting, diarrhoea and a rash that spread over their torso and arms. The pus in the blisters was found to contain the well-known bacterium Staphylococcus aureus.
Love yourself. Don't play sports!.

Fresh from the Garden


Not to be outdone by the new McFungus Asian Salad, Burger King unveiled its newest all-natural garden salad this week in the Netherlands.
A woman eating at a Burger King restaurant in the Netherlands found a live frog in her salad, the company confirmed Sunday. [snip]
Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad quoted the customer, identified as 23-year-old Astrid Roek, as saying "it was a big black thing, a frog or a toad."
There is no news yet as to when the new menu item will be featured in the Houston area. When it is, expect to hear that old familiar question: "Do you want flies with that?"

Complaint Department Is Now Open


Please take a number. Your concerns will be addressed in the order they are received.

More details emerge on Duke rape accuser

Call me crazy, but I doubt the credibility of the alleged rape victim. Here’s why:

DURHAM — The exotic dancer who has accused three Duke lacrosse players of gang-raping her was drinking while taking medication that night, and had sex with at least four men and a sexual device in the days immediately leading up to the off-campus party, according to court papers filed Thursday.

And she told one medical staffer she drank at least 44 ounces of beer, and told another she took a powerful muscle relaxant and drank beer before going to the party at 610 N. Buchanan Blvd. on March 13.
Hey, if you can’t trust the word of a drunk, drug-addled stripper, who can you trust these days?

Praise the Lord and pass the ammo!

I voted for George W twice, but I'm beginning to wish we could see some positive from his election. Each President faces different challenges and I think we can all agree this administration has faced its share of conundrums. In the name of securing our country, we have seen many freedoms removed and like the majority, I went with it peacefully and in full agreement. However, maybe we are losing stuff we won’t get back. Civil rights are civil rights and if Israel has taught us anything, it’s we can’t stop terrorism if the bad guys are bent on delivering it.

With all the talk of national security, I’m also thinking its high time we backed off on the paranoia and since everyone agrees we cant stop both well meaning and bad people from crossing our borders, we might as well form local militias and arm each of us Veterans with M-16’s with M-79 grenade launchers attached in case the fricken Commies come over….%$#@ oops, wrong era! But you get the point. Maybe we do need to activate the Civil Defense forces instead of taking away our rights. I’m game.

This blog is humorous because I don’t have the answers to our problems, but I do see trouble ahead if we keep tightening up in the name of security.

USOC Visits Houston As Possible 2016 Site


For the Olympics that is. KRIV-26 got a quote from Mayor White (via ESPN) saying Houston will be submitting an application to be host city for the 2016 summer games:

Mayor Bill White says Houston will throw its hat in the ring as a candidate to host the 2016 Olympics.

The city will submit its proposal later this month to the United States Olympic Committee. The committee must still decide whether the United States will compete for the 2016 summer games.

"It's a big decision -- in part a decision based on the fact I think we have a fairly viable shot at it," White told Houston television station KRIV on Thursday.

White's decision comes one month after a delegation of the Olympic committee visited five cities, including Houston, on a fact-finding mission.

That visit from a USOC committee elicited complimentary words for Houston from USOC President Peter Ueberroth.

The Chronicle's David Barron has more information on the team putting together Houston's bid.

Thursday, June 8

Rainbow that set the sky on fire

This circumhorizon arc, as it is known, owes more to ice than fire. It occurs when sunlight passes through ice crystals in high cirrus clouds. It is one of 15 types of ice halos formed only when the most specific of factors dovetail precisely together.

This blanket of fire, covering hundreds of square miles, is the rarest phenomenon of them all. It was spotted in the US on the Washington-Idaho border around midday last Saturday.

Fresh


“Oh, lookie here! Strawberry pancakes! My favorite.”

“Can I take you’re order, Hon?”

“Yeah. About the strawberry pancakes, are the strawberries fresh?”

“Sure are, Hon.”

“Great. I’ll have the strawberry pancakes, but don’t put anything else on them like whipping cream or powdered sugar or strawberry syrup.”

“Well, Hon, that’s the way they come, with the syrup juice that is.”

“I thought you said the strawberries were fresh.”

“They are, Hon, fresh froze. Thawed ‘em out this mornin’ jus’ for you.”

“Ah. I see. On second thought, Ranch Breakfast Number Two looks good.”

“Good choice, Hon, we only use the freshest eggs.”

My superbright idea goes pffft

I've been working on a Top Secret Project this week. It was eating up key blogging time until -- whammo! -- I got home yesterday and picked up my mail. There was a glossy flyer for this! Somebody invented this thing before me! The Home Cryptex Device, as seen in the movie that came out before the Jennifer Aniston one! I wasted a whole week!

I feel ashamed and slightly soiled.

Hey, what about Cryptex salt-and-pepper shakers! Or the Cryptex weather witch?

Oh wait. Maybe Jennifer Aniston's tummy is the newest Cryptex.

Model


Okay, so some supermodel says she won't pose nude.

Fine. No problems here. Because a model models something. And if you're nude, you're not really modeling anything.

A model without clothes is a stripper just like a hooker who doesn't f**k is an escort.

Proof that Bush is beefing up the Border Patrol....

Wednesday, June 7

Butt Paste - Now there's a catchy name!

George Boudreaux is a man whose ingenious concoction brings comfort to scores of parents, babies and even the Louisiana State University Fighting Tigers.

George Boudreaux is the maker of Boudreaux's Butt Paste.

Boudreaux knows his Butt Paste might … uh … make a stink among the more refined rash sufferers among us, but he doesn't care.

He likes that fact that he's got a product with a name that gets people talking. Boudreaux, a Louisiana pharmacist, started making Butt Paste as a treatment for diaper rash in his family pharmacy decades ago, The Indianapolis Star reports.

But Boudreaux knew his Butt Paste could benefit the booties of more than just babies, and he started marketing it to hikers, bikers, joggers, cyclists, hunters, truckers and athletes. ESPN even cited the ointment as the secret weapon of the LSU football team to prevent chafing.

And though the Butt Paste still only takes a small share of the market dominated by bigger, badder butt salves, sales are growing — thanks in part to a name that no one will forget.

The Saffir-Simpson Scale

Hurricane intensity is measured by the storm's average wind speed. As most of us know, the Saffir-Simpson Scale divides hurricanes into 5 categories with Category 1 being the mildest and Category 5 being the most dangerous. But are you clear on how much damage each category can cause?


Click Here for an amimation that shows the typical damage caused by a hurricane at each of the 5 intensity levels.

An Explanation for Chocolate City

We all know that chocolate produces excess weight, but did you know that it can also generate electrical power?
Willy Wonka could have powered his Great Glass Elevator on hydrogen produced from his chocolate factory.
Microbiologist Lynne Mackaskie and her colleagues at the University of Birmingham in the UK have powered a fuel cell by feeding sugar-loving bacteria chocolate-factory waste. "We wanted to see if we tipped chocolate into one end, could we get electricity out at the other?" she says.

The team fed Escherichia coli bacteria diluted caramel and nougat waste. The bacteria consumed the sugar and produced hydrogen, which they make with the enzyme hydrogenase, and organic acids. The researchers then used this hydrogen to power a fuel cell, which generated enough electricity to drive a small fan (Biochemical Society Transactions, vol 33, p 76).
Well, no wonder why Ray Nagin wanted to make New Orleans a Chocolate City... he just wanted to turn the lights back on.

Glen Campbell meets Elvis Presley

I can't think of anything to say except this photo needs a good caption.

The Federal Marriage Amendment is stupid

I wish politicians on the Federal level would just shut the hell up about issues that belong to the states.

You and I can agree or disagree about whether or not homosexuals should be allowed to marry. I think they should. If two consenting adults want to screw up their lives, who the hell am I to tell them no? And why should the government be involved with marriages anyway?

Regardless of my opinion, this is a matter that should be left to the states. The US Constitution makes it quite clear:
Amendment X
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
I am not sure what part of that Washington politicians don't understand. This is a crucial amendment that is completely ignored by them whenever a "hot button" issue comes up. Take the abortion debate as another example. Just as some conservatives push the gay marriage issue on the national scene, some liberals push abortion. It should not be a Federal issue. If folks in Utah don't want abortion to be legal, we should accept that, just as we should accept Californians wanting to legalize gay marriages. If you don't like the policies in those states, move.

Funny money


Secret Service agents have confiscated 8,300 gospel tracts from The Great News Network in Denton, Texas. The reason: a person in North Carolina reportedly tried to deposit one at a bank. The tracts, which were created by Ray Comfort's Living Waters Publications, are designed to look like a million-dollar bill (a denomination of U.S. currency that doesn't exist) with a message of salvation on the back. Says Comfort, "If agents show a judge a copy of the $1 million tract, he would laugh till he cried and then, after catching his breath, he would thank the agents for a good laugh and then ask them to stop wasting his time."

Real body, fake crime scene

As part of her class on forensics, Florida high school teacher Sue Messenger creates mock crime scenes with fake skeletons and other evidence. But on a recent field trip both Messenger and her students were surprised to find a real body. The first thing we thought was, 'That's a real good dummy she set up,'" said one student. Police identified the body as a homeless man who apparently died of natural causes.

Pick-me-up news


If you're tired of all the grim news reports broadcast from the TV and printed in the papers, check out HappyNews.com, a website that promises to promote only positive news. Among the uplifting stories is a section devoted to heroes, such as a homeless man who returns a lost wallet containing $900.

Tuesday, June 6

Report: Google Spreadsheet coming


Google already has a nice word processor in the form of Writely, which it bought earlier this year.

Now, the Wall Street Journal ($$$) is reporting that Google's about to introduce a spreadsheet:

Google Inc. plans on Tuesday to release a Web-based spreadsheet application, according to people familiar with the matter.

Google Spreadsheet, which will be made available on a limited test basis, follows Google's March purchase of a company offering a Web-based word processor called Writely.

Any coincidence that this comes the week after Microsoft released beta 2 of Office 2007?

The masses still aren't able to access Writely at will, so I'm curious how "limited" this test will be.

If you want to try to register for the test, use this link: http://www.google.com/googlespreadsheets/try_out.html

Federal Government at work

5 million of our older Americans have not signed up yet for their Medicare, Part D, drug plan--they are old and confused. We are not going to grant them an extension.

However, 12 million illegal aliens are in our country and we are going to allow them to stay, protest, procreate, receive support monies, attend schools, avoid paying income taxes, have our teachers take 300 hours of ESOL (English as a second language) training at our expense, etc.

WE MUST REALLY DISLIKE OUR OLD PEOPLE! OR, WE MUST REALLY LOVE TACOS

Speaking of Tacos, here is Bush's new border security plan...

Nawlins Plan


I think a better design would have included a toilet.

Monday, June 5

The Promised Land

About 5,000 years ago Moses said, "Pick up your shovel, pack your ass, mount your camel, and I shall lead you to the Promised Land."


About 200 years ago, George Washington said, "Get off your ass, use your shovel, clear the land, grow plants for camels and it will be the promised land."

About a week ago, the Congress of the United States said "Si, Amigos, throw away your shovel, sit on your ass, light your Camels. We're giving you the promised land."

Thoughts To Ponder

Number 10 - Life is sexually transmitted.

Number 9 - Good health is merely the slowest possible rate at which one can die.

Number 8 - Men have two emotions: Hungry and Horny. If you see him without an erection, make him a sandwich.

Number 7 - Give a person a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a person to use the Internet and they he won't bother you for weeks.

Number 6 - Some people are like a Slinky .. not really good for anything, but you still can't help but smile when you shove them down the stairs.

Number 5 - Health nuts are going to feel stupid someday, lying in hospitals dying of nothing.

Number 4 - All of us could take a lesson from the weather. It pays no attention to criticism.

Number 3 - Why does a slight tax increase cost you $200 and a substantial tax cut saves you 30 cents?

Number 2 - In the 60s, people took acid to make the world weird. Now the world is weird and people take Prozac to make it normal.

Number 1 - We know exactly where one cow with mad-cow-disease is located among the millions and millions of cows in America but we haven't got a clue as to where millions of illegal immigrants and terrorists are located. Maybe we should put the Department of Agriculture in charge of immigration.

Bug in Your Ear


I thought it would be fun to fashion those Bluetooth wireless cell phone ear pieces into bug shapes.

You could have a spider or a giant ant, or a grasshopper or a roach, just to name a few. I’d pick the roach. How cool would that be to walk around with a roach in your ear and when a call came in it would pulsate with a blue light. Maybe the antenna could wave around, or the legs wiggle.

There you would be in Krogers picking out bananas that don’t contain tarantulas and right next to you this guy with a roach in his ear would start talking and the roach would be pulsating blue and wiggling for all it’s worth.

Now, what would be really cool would be for Chiquita Banana to make cell phones in the shape of tarantulas and have a promotional where shoppers would find them inside of bananas.

I’m a marketing genius. Madison Avenue, you can contact me at BR-549.

At 84, Marvin Zindler is still fighting for the little guy


The Houston Chronicle wrote a nice feature on Marvin Zindler and his career in TV consumer news:

"He can grow hair," Ward says, his eyes widening. "He's not bald. He just doesn't like his hair."
I didn't even know that.

Trading with the Enemy


The U.S signed a trade agreement moving Vietnam closer to acceptance into the World Trade Organisation. Vietnam is one of the last communist nations on this planet, along with the Island nation of Cuba. The main difference being that Cuba didn't kill 57,000 of our men.
It also paves the way for Vietnam to reach its goal of becoming a member of the global trading body before Hanoi hosts the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in November, which President Bush is scheduled to attend.
A vote in the U.S. Congress is still needed for the pact to take effect.

Deputy Trade Minister Luong Van Tu and Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Karan Bhatia signed the agreement during a ceremony that was attended by Trade Minister Truong Dinh Tuyen and Deputy Prime Minister Vu Khoan as well as U.S. Trade Representative-designate Susan Schwab.

Calling it a "historic step forward," Bhatia said the process had begun more than a decade earlier as Hanoi and Washington laid out a roadmap for normalization. "Today's signing is the culmination of years of hard work and preparation on both sides," he said.

Tuyen, who has been involved in negotiations for years, said it marked a "new step of development in Vietnam-U.S. relations."

The United States was the last country that Vietnam had to negotiate a bilateral treaty with for WTO access and it hopes to conclude multilateral talks by this summer.

But a final challenge remains: the U.S. Congress must vote to grant Vietnam permanent normal trading relations.
All this for cheap sneakers, and a slap in the face for those who sacrificed so much over there. Meanwhile Rumsfeld is developing military ties, and I can't have a good Cuban cigar.

The big boom theory


In what must have been the biggest explosion ever seen on the planet, researchers found a crater in Antarctica that was created by a meteor the size of Syndey. Scientists who found the crater say it could explain the global extinction in the Permian-Triassic period when all animal life on Earth died out, clearing the way for the dinosaurs. The also believe it probably created the continent of Australia, forcing it to break away from the existing land mass. “A meteor that size would have punctured right through the crust of the Earth and caused enormous damage to the planet," said Australian scientist Dean Archer. “In that period 95 per cent of life on Earth was destroyed.”