Tuesday, November 30, 2004

Pentagon Quietly Releases Study Critical of War on Terror

[my comment]
fffffFFFFFFUCKING duh! i could have told you this BEFORE the war! Ask ANY muslim ANYwhere and they could explain as much to you.
"terrorists hate our freedoms" my fucking ass, ya bullshit artist extraordanaire.
give me my fucking privacy and rights back! grr grr grr

[article snippet]
Pentagon Quietly Releases Study Critical of War on Terror
Meanwhile the Pentagon has quietly released a study that sharply criticizes the Bush administration's war on terror and its effect on the Muslim world. The Pentagon's report concluded "Muslims do not hate our freedom, but rather they hate our policies." The report goes on to state "The overwhelming majority voice their objections to what they see as one-sided support in favor of Israel and against Palestinian rights, and the long-standing, even increasing, support for what Muslims collectively see as tyrannies, most notably Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Pakistan and the Gulf states." The report was released late on Wednesday afternoon, the day before Thanksgiving.

male multiple orgasms

here i didn't think they existed and turns out i've already done it.
info here

I swear I didn't set out this morning to go research this.. just happened to read a much less interesting article that mentioned it.

god, i've gotta get back to work, CRAZY amounts of shit to do...

Sunday, November 28, 2004

did you know you can buy marijuana @ amazon.com?

This guy has a funny blog where he found an out-of-print book with a certain funny title... be sure to read the customer reviews ^o^

Friday, November 26, 2004

Mother of all disaster-photojournals: Chernobyl by motorcycle

This chick drove her motorcycle through chernobyl..
Sounds like the beginning to a joke doesn't it? It isn't. This chick is BAD-ASS. She's no fool either, she's familiar enough to have both permission, experience, and a geiger counter. The links at the bottom of the page are hard to see, but check out her photo-journal of her trip here












"This sculpture was in the center of the town, it was moved to the nuclear power plant after the accident. It is Prometheus stealing fire from Gods and giving it to the humans..."




She's Ukranian (I am too a bit, i think ^^), and lives near Kiev, and has another photo-journal of the WWI&II battlefields there that are still littered with destruction, and sometimes ammunition that's still live and dangerous. It's especially fascinating to me that it's so similar to civil war battlefields, but of an age of war that was the successor to the civil war's technology and tactics, and quickly joining it in sheer archaic-ness as it increasingly loses comparibility to modern wars. Her photojournal of Kiev is here













locals made a shovel of an old kraut helmet



kids playing football where once 100,000 people were thrown in mass graves

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

coconuts = fruity goodness & vitamin arrrr

Monday, November 22, 2004

History will do me justice

I got into a conversation with someone regarding the Civil War, and turns out he lives very close to Chickamagua, Murfreesborough, and Chattanooga, some of my very most favorite battlefields. The conversation yielded some fun links; the other person informed me of some local ghost stories regarding the battlefields:

The Bell Witch
Ol' Green Eyes (& more)


While on a road-trip passing through the area, I got to Murfreesborough about 2 am and desperately wanted to see it, but had no time to stay an extra day. so I stopped to tour the battlefields at Stones River, and creeped hours deep into the woods of the 'slaughter pen'. Reading the above links creep me out a little, which is funny, because at the time, I felt no fear over being there, just reverence for the soldiers and a place once so still, for an instant so important, and now still once more. the only thing i REALLY fear about the area are the nazi cops that nail you for u-turns on empty midnight roads -_-;;;; Still, Tennesee is such a beautiful place, I wish I had a reason to go there again.


The chat got me thinking again about another of my unsung heroes, Gen. Thomas. He was not only an extrordinary commander, but a great humanist as well. If he and his small force had not withstood an onslaught in which NEARLY EVERY confederate division was thrown against him (earning him the nickname 'the rock of chickamaugua") the union army would have been crushed, Atlanta would not have been captured (a much needed boost in a time of despair for the union), therefore Lincoln would have never gotten re-elected, and the South would have been given its' independence that winter. The citation below deals mostly with how his fame was undeservedly lost to history, but I provide a link below if anyone reading this cares enough to learn who he was and what he did.






"History will do me justice," General Thomas had once said when he felt he was being treated unfairly. Perhaps it was his inherent idealism that led him to believe history is a high court of appeals, for he has hardly been accorded his historical due in the seventy-odd years [now 132 years ] since his death. General Meade was cynical in the extreme on the same subject. "I don't believe the truth ever will be known and I have a great contempt for history," he said.

General Thomas applied modern technique to his methods of warfare; but his approach to the military profession was knightly; he believed in chivalry, honor, a code of loyalty among brothers in arms. In this medieval state of mind he could not visualize, as Meade did, the scramble for power among military men. He could not conceive of a real soldier, a West Pointer, stooping to intrigue and politics merely to advance himself - glory was to be won on the field, he believed, and not in whispered councils. He sacrificed his own ambitions to make certain he could not be accused of conniving to replace Buell and Rosecrans; and when it appeared to him that Schofield had done what he disdained to do, the, shock and anger of a brother officer betraying his caste was undoubtedly a contributory factor in his death. He held that such maneuvers for advancement were to be expected only of political generals, civilians temporarily in uniform. When he saw that Grant, Sherman, Sheridan and Schofield were bent on maintaining themselves in the highest posts of the Army, he could only hope that "history will do me justice." Certainly his fellow generals did not, for the most part.

Thomas died less than five years after the war ended, before the flood of memoirs came from generals' desks. Against their disparagements he could not defend himself from the grave and he would have had too much modesty and dignity to shout them down if he had been alive. Grant, Sherman and Sheridan in their autobiographies all covered one another with compliments and to a great extent ignored General Thomas. It probably seemed the safest course: too many people remembered his greatness, too many would point to achievements which could not be denied, to attempt in any other way to dim his reputation. Gamaliel Bradford noted in Union Portraits "Grant was apt to couple Thomas' name with some innuendo, as was Sherman."

After Sherman's Memoirs were published, General H. V. Boynton came out with a book entitled Sherman's Historical Raid; The Memoirs in the Light of the Record, in which he declared that Sherman was "intensely egotistical, unreliable and cruelly unjust to nearly all his distinguished associates. Our erratic general thrusts his pen recklessly through reputations as dear to the country as his own." Boynton cited the Official Records to show that Sherman belittled Thomas, Buell, Rosecrans, Hooker, Blair, Logan and Stanton and claimed "he repeatedly loads failures for which he was responsible now upon Thomas, now upon Schofield, now upon McPherson."

When Grant got around to writing his Memoirs, he was in a gentler frame of mind concerning Thomas. Grant wrote:

"As my official letters on file in the War Department as well as remarks in this book reflect on General Thomas by dwelling somewhat upon his tardiness it is due to myself as well as to him, that I give my estimate of him as a soldier. I had been at West Point with Thomas one year and had known him later in the old army. He was a man of commanding appearance, slow and deliberate in speech and action; sensible, honest and brave. He possessed valuable soldierly qualities in an eminent degree. He gained the confidence of all who served under him, and almost their love. This implies a very valuable quality. It is a quality which calls out the most efficient services of the troops serving under the commander possessing it.

Thomas' dispositions were deliberately made and always good. He was not as good, however, in pursuit as in action. I do not believe that he could ever have conducted Sherman's army from Chattanooga to Atlanta against the defences and the commander guarding that line in 1864. On the other hand, if it had been given him to hold the line which Johnston tried to hold, neither that general nor Sherman, nor any other officer could have done it better."

Among his other contemporaries, Generals O. O. Howard and Joe Hooker expressed themselves with unqualified praise of Thomas as a commander, both having served under him at Chattanooga and Atlanta. The sensitive Howard wrote: "His words and acts of confidence drew toward him my whole heart, particularly when I went into battle under him."

Hooker was a bitter man after the Civil War and he had nothing but contempt for Grant, Sherman, McClellan, Burnside and most of his fellow generals. In the last letter he wrote before his death in 1879, discussing the statue of Thomas to be unveiled in Washington with the Rev. William Earnshaw, General Hooker said: "I assure you it is the only equestrian statue in Washington that will be likely to receive the admiration of all who gaze upon it; and in my judgment the representative of the most gifted soldier this country ever produced, and the best man in all respects it has ever been my fortune to know."

Such a compliment was a rarity from a man who looked upon his fellow generals as a collection of blunderers, glory-grabbers and poseurs. That Hooker was able to utter such praise of another man was due not wholly to Thomas' ability and achievements as a soldier but also to his character. It was his character, as well as his unusual talents, that was responsible for the many victories he gave the Union.

General Thomas was the one military leader who never led his men into a defeat, and twice he retrieved the army from disaster while serving under another man. Fletcher Pratt in his analysis of the Civil War generals stated that their Southern opponents could always claim Grant and Sherman won their victories because of a large margin of superiority in men and resources, while Thomas alone was able to win with inferior materials.

Yet there is little to mark Thomas' passing in American life. In Washington, there is a greening bronze statue of him astride his horse at Thomas Circle, near which Mrs. Thomas kept an apartment with her spinster sister until her death in 1889. In the Confederate Museum at Richmond there is the sword he received for valor in the Mexican War from the citizens of Southampton County. Otherwise obscurity has claimed him. His hope that "history will do me justice" now sounds more plaintive than prophetic. His reward has been slight in consideration of all he suffered in his determination to uphold the Union. His sisters died in Virginia at the turn of the century, still bitter about what they viewed as his betrayal, his Virginia friends had turned from him, and he did not live long enough after the war for such wounds to be healed. And he died while trying to defend himself for what he should only have been praised.

The memory of General George H. Thomas lived longer in the hearts of the soldiers who served under him than in the minds of contemporary generals. His soldiers remembered his kindness, his consideration for their welfare, his skill and courage when he committed them to battle, and they passed this memory of him along to their children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren; they told of "Old Pap" when they themselves were ancient oddities to be paraded on Memorial Day. And that in itself is a full measure of glory.

Quoted from:

Connor, Richard: Thomas: Rock of Chickamauga, Prentice-Hall, Inc, New York, 1948, p.365-368.

Read more about Gen. Thomas here

Sunday, November 21, 2004

worst jobs in science

an article
on the worst jobs in science listed nursing, science teacher, and tech
help, no suprise, but the part i found interesting was the
congressional science advisor, for this paragraph here:



Placed as official advisers to our congressional representatives, these
fellows’ disillusionment is swift and merciless. “It’s an exercise in
futility to get science across in Congress,” says Raphael Sagarin, a
marine ecologist who just finished his year in D.C. “The side with more
power wins, not the side with the best data or the most cogent
argument.”




nnnngh

Friday, November 19, 2004

mousse's million dollar idea #2



-non-techie version-

There should be an easy way for people to put comics they like onto
their webpages. Newspaper comics are practially MEANT to be cut out and
put on refrigerators and cubicle walls, there should be an
internet-equivalent. It needs to be intuitive, and there needs to be a
balance between the original author's needs to protect copyright and
give due credit versus the linker's needs to share what they want
without too much advertizement and spam being thrown in as well.



-techie version-

There should be an extention/subset of RSS feeds for the purpose of
linking comics. Sort of a mix between comics, blogging, and
net-syndication. The hosting site would need to implement a feed that
provides a predictable URI-sequence (eg, http://mysite/11-04-11.xml)
and whose contents would be programatically limited to TWO IMAGE TAGS
and TWO LINK TAGS (one comic, one link to the comic's site, and one
allowable but preferably unused advertizement). The client would need
to have a consuming program that automatically generates a 'my comics
for today/this week' page based on the links the consumer has fed to
it. The consuming program would need to automatically rotate out old
comics, maybe provide a prioritizing feature to put certain comics at
the top, and most definetly a plug-in to the browser so that the user
need only click a link on the original comic's page to accomplish this.

Tuesday, November 16, 2004

photos of dc

oooooh more good photos. i loooove dc.
Max Lyon's Digital Image Gallery







Monday, November 15, 2004

a conspiracy theory i beleive - IP armageddon

brrr-rr-rr.



i don't find any big holes in this guy's reasoning, and it's scary shit.



M$ is transitioning from an IT to an IP company (intellectualproperty
can be anything patented), ESPECIALLY media formats, which sits them in
prime position to become big bro.



lord he'p us

old dirty bastard dead @ 35


old dirty bastard dead @ 35


no surprise, i suppose. he definetly liked to live on the edge. it's a
cryin shame he won't be around to create for us any longer. like andy
kaufman, he loved to blur the line between reality and theatrics.

"Recognize I'm a fool and you luuuuuuv me"

RIP Russel.


Art by the very talented Colin Thierot

Friday, November 12, 2004

Military Tanks Patrol Anti-War Protest in Los Angeles

my comment:

see, this looks to me like the protestors harassing the tanks. it's la
for chrissakes, they've sent out the tanks before, what with the
propensity to riot. all they do is drive by, and the protestors get all
in their face. if you're so for peace, lead by fucking example, and be
nice to those you disagree with.

stupid hippies, as cartman said, you want to save the world but all you do is smoke pot and smell bad ^_^





news clip:

Military Tanks Patrol Anti-War Protest in Los Angeles

And in Los Angeles, anti-war protesters there have expressed shock
after two military tanks appeared at a small anti-war demonstration
Tuesday night. [See Video Shot by LA Indymedia] The tanks drove by the
protesters, went around the block and then stopped directly next to the
scene of the protest in front of the Westwood Federal Building. The Los
Angles Police Department claimed the tanks belonged to the National
Guard and just happened to be driving by the scene of the protest. The
National Guard denied the tanks were theirs but said they might have
been Marine tanks. Earlier this week, the Washington Post reported that
as many as 4,000 combat troops may be deployed to the streets of
Washington during the inauguration of President Bush in January.



VIDEO LINK - la.indymedia.org/uploads/tanks-on-la-streets.mov

Thursday, November 11, 2004

rename dems/repubs as fairists/efficientists



they should rename the major political parties.

the root words in their names are no more indicative of their differences as 2 baseball teams named the bats and the gloves.



we should call republicans cold realists or efficient-ists.

democrats should be called compassionate diletants or fair-ists.



mother/father empathy/rationality artist/scientist dem/repub

is this duality as obvious to others as it is to me?

Wednesday, November 10, 2004

the forgotten injustices of all this are sickening

browsed some more on the mental hospital images..

wow...
the forgotten injustices of all this are sickening, surely this
is just the notable case, with thousands of similar cases. A 1930s
hollywood actress, committed to a sanitarium against her will by her
mother for hollywood indulgences (drugs, promiscuousness, whatnot). She
was given electroshock therapy, caged in cold water for hours, raped,
and eventually likely lobotomized via an icepick under the eyelid.

Ernest Hemmingway's death (somewhat subjective)

photos of an abandoned mental hospital & more


(Gary Union Station, IN)

This is the greatest site I've found since the Charlie Patton bio: http://www.darkpassage.com/


Photos from all sorts of spooky abandoned places, many with fascinating
histories, like the tunnels underneath NYC and Vienna, an abandoned
mental hospital, trainyards, ship graveyards, and more.

The
abandoned mental hospital in Hudson, NY is especially spooky, they
found the carcass of a predatory bird, mummified then locked in an old
desk drawer, and poem on an old half-destroyed painting in the
children's mortuary (upper right):


Let Conversation
Cease. Let Laughter
Flee. This is the Place
Where Death Delights
To Help the Living.


The owner calls his work "forensic archaeology", and now I have a name
for my interest. I've always been fascinated to see abandoned places,
the greater the decay & amount of clues to what once was, the more
fascinating. The echoes of forgotten people and emotions.

I
was already getting the urge lately to begin some photography of
Milwaukee; seeing this really increases that urge. During late
highschool and early college I was frequently sneaking into all kinds
of places, often enough with guard or camera security. I bore no emnity
to my potential pursuers and did no harm to where I went--only enjoyed
the challenge of going unnoticed and serenity of secret places left
unattended. It's been a few years since I've snuck into anything, and I
don't know of too much that isn't too risky here in Milwaukee. I wonder
how one could go about getting permission to explore and photograph the
abandoned Pabst buildings and whatnot... It would be all the more
interesting to do so alongside a historian who could recognize details
I can't.


(asphalt plant, NY)

Tuesday, November 09, 2004

political compass test - tolja ghandi was my hero


took the political compass test and scored
economic: -3.75
social: -3.25




which makes me a moderate leftist liberal (as opposed to a right-leaning authoritarian)

putting me in the company of ghandi, mandella, and the dalai lama.
but i knew that was my style of philosophy to start ^^

fascinating,
bush is more right-wing than schroeder.. please read the

site's
description of each axis's representation before judging that tho.
according to this i shoulda voted nader or cobb: kerry's position is no surprise to me, i knew i was ordering bush lite.




when i say "peace out!" i mean it, mofos!

Friday, November 05, 2004

3d election map vs satellite imagery at night



Thursday, November 04, 2004

Nixon administration's scrapped personality test


So apparantly, the Nixon administration commissioned the design of
this personality test, the 'Hartman Value Profile' to see whether you'd
likely end up in jail during your life. It was scrapped because it's
not too political or nice to be telling people they're born losers.
Interesting stuff.

Try it yourself: online Hartman Value Profile test

Here's my results,
which gives me high scores on most all fronts, with a HUGE exception of
anything self-oriented. On one hand, I agree, I sometimes have
difficulty trying to deduce people's opinion of me, but because the
checksum quotient at the end indicated the test was likely mis-taken, I
think perhaps I misinterpreted the instructions and ranked things like
universal harmony above personal happiness and crimes against humanity
worse than my personal unhappiness.





...I need 'meh' to be one of the 'current mood's

you damn dirty apes, you blew the election

i never liked those movies much at ALL, but i feel about like Heston did, pounding on the sand.

We who cared so much for "not Bush" have a huge responsibility over these next 4 years



I know I speak for half of us when I say:
"AAAAUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHH!!!!!
NOOOOOOOOOOOooooooonooonooonoooooooo*weepweepmoanmoangnashgnashsobsob*"
...I'm in no particular mood to be articulate about it because the
scope of my disagreements with the radial right is just so dizzying, I
can't fathom another 4 years... a WORSE 4 years omg the house and
senate are totally within their control, no balance of power this
time.. it just makes me ill. I was ill last election (I was in Florida)
knowing we'd somehow end up in Iraq (am I psychic?), but this time it's
our civil liberties that I'm deathly afraid for. Gays, abortion, the
war, these are all very important issues, but none are as important to
me as the age-old checks-and-balances and basic freedoms designed into
our republic: not just the problems at hand--but the governmental
processes we leave future generations to solve the issues of THEIR day
too.



I read a lot of people thinking/joking about going to Canada... it's
definetly tempting. I'm not quite ready to stop being an American
patriot yet, but if these 4 years go as I expect them to, I might.



We who cared so much for "not Bush" have a huge responsibility over
these next 4 years. Since there is no balance of power spead accross
the Presidency, Senate, or House, we must do the impossable and retain
this focus near-constantly as if the next election were 4 years long.
Write your congresspeople CONSTANTLY. Pay attention to their voting
records and major legislation (and please, read deeper than the name of
the bill). Join a website that serves issue-alerts to suit your
politics (I personally get alerts from moveOn, the ACLU and the EFF,
maybe about half of which I act on and write my Congresspeople--all
three have webportals that make it about a 3-click 2 minute operation)



The silver lining to this election is thus: we've had a HUGE turnout,
and all the right groups, the groups people have been struggling to
motivate for generations, came out in-force. Regarless of who wins in
the process, these groups have stood up and said "You had better cater
to our opinion, we're a voting force now!". I'd be curious to see if
there'll be any statistical corrolation between the number and scope of
curfew laws as impacted by the young voter turnout; same for black
issues.



So brace yourself everybody, it's going to be a hard 4 years, and there's nobody to keep Bush in check this time but us.



Lastly, a thought about majority rule: If 53f a kindergarten class
votes to play kickball every day at recess, and 47ote 4-square, is
the fair solution to always play kickball, or to merely play kickball
more often than 4-square?



(hmm, now that this is all written, i think i'll post this in some of the anti-bush group forums too...)

Wednesday, November 03, 2004

stats stats whoz got the stats

we all do. not that they're gonna change anything. sigh.

i know we can use them to prove anything, so i might as well join in the abuse.

According to CNN
82f Manhatten (ground zero) voted for Kerry. It's geographical
neighbors show similar numbers, and of course New York as a whole
went for Kerry.

The exit polls they also list are interesting. This is my favorite:

VOTE BY INCOME
BUSH KERRY NADER
Under $15,000 (8 36nbsp; 63nbsp; 0br>
$15-30,000 (15 42gbsp; 57gbsp; 0br>
$30-50,000 (22 49gbsp; 50gbsp; 0br>
$50-75,000 (23 56gbsp; 43gbsp; 0br>
$75-100,000 (14 55gbsp; 45gbsp; 0br>
$100-150,000 (11 57gbsp; 42gbsp; 1br>
$150-200,000 (4 58gbsp; 42gbsp; *

$200,000 or More (3 63nbsp; 35gbsp; 1br>