September 30, 2003
Is this for real? When I first saw one of the new commercials for Hungry-Man dinners I thought it was a parody. I kept waiting for the punchline but it never got there. For those of you who haven't seen one they feature 2 fat men talking about what they had for lunch/dinner. One had something like "Country Fried Beef Steak with Creamy Gravy, Mashed Potatoes, Green Beans & Cherry-Apple Crumb Dessert". The other ate a watercress sandwich and a glass of water, or some similar "fou-fou" food. The light eater is then blown away by an errant gust of wind and you get one of the two taglines ("good to be full" or "I like a lot of it").
No, no, no, no, no. It is not good to be full. It is good to be not hungry. It is bad to be full. That means you ate more than your gut can comfortably hold. You overate.
Swanson is actively pushing a line of food catering to fat people and encouraging them to get fatter. If a "lot of it" isn't enough, don't worry - they offer 4 dinners in "XXL" size. What's the next campaign going to be? "Eat til you puke, we'll make more?" How about "You're fat anyway, let's go with that?" Maybe some blatant truth in advertising like "Eat, you fat fuck! Eat!"
Just more proof on why advertisers rate between politicians and Reuters correspondents on the ol' Scum 'o the World scale.
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September 29, 2003
The reason? Tiny built-in cameras that are the latest cellular upgrade, and which give virtually anyone the potential to join the paparazzi ranks.
Can you see me now?
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When you visit the site be sure to check out the Bageldonut. It is wrong on several distinctly different levels.
(hat tip to G)
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September 26, 2003
Customs officers selected for search a male passenger who had arrived on a flight from Thailand on Monday 21 September. The snakes were discovered in packages strapped to the passenger's calves.
I don't even know how to comment on this one except to say that was one ballsy move!
(Hat tip to G for the link)
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"Anidroccg to crad cniyrrag lcitsiugnis planoissefors at an uemannd, utisreviny in Bsitirh Cibmuloa, and crartnoy to the duoibus cmials of the ueticnd rcraeseh, a slpmie, macinahcel ioisrevnn of ianretnl cretcarahs araepps sneiciffut to csufnoe the eadyrevy oekoolnr."
Scrambled internal letters make legible words. Simply inverting the internal letters makes words that are very difficult to recognize. Wierder and wierder.
(The source for all this is reportedly slashdot.org (for the original) and the University of British Columbia's Linguistics department (for the new one). I can't find either of them at either site so I can't verify but figured I should note that in the interest of fairness.)
UPDATE: I hate it when I get got and I definitely got got this time. Inverting the letters has no more effect on readability than scrambling, except that expected characters are not seen in the beginning of the word. The major thing at work here is word familiarity. The "invert" phrase above uses many words that are not common parlance. Yes, we know all of the words but they are not words that we commonly read. The English 101 paragraph used very commonly used words. The second factor is placement in context. In the English 101 example it is very easy to read the words in context based on the words around them as there are many "gimme" words used. That is, words with 5 or less characters that we recognize without actually having to read the word and whose readability is unaffected by misspelling. This second example is built to defeat that skill. They also throw in several misplaced commas to break it into illogical segments and make it even more difficult to read.
Case in point, in correctly spelled form the "invert" paragraph has a Flesch Reading Ease of 0.0 and the "scrambled" one has an Ease of 51. The "invert" uses big words (average of 6 letters per word) while "scrambled" uses small ones (average of 4 letters per word).
We hates the tricksy linguists, my Precioussss...
UPDATE2: MojoMark points out that this is on Snopes.
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September 25, 2003
They set to work. They found a neutron detector in an Idaho Falls scrap metal yard. Craig built a neutron modulator (which slows down the emitted neutrons so they can be detected) out of a few hundred spare CDs. They found a broken turbo molecular pump lying forgotten at Deseret Industries.
Too poor to buy pricey deuterium gas, Craig bought a container of deuterium oxide, or heavy water, for 20 bucks and came up with a way to make it a gas and get rid of the accompanying oxygen by passing it over heated magnesium filings.
...
About 30 such devices exist around the country, owned by such entities as Los Alamos National Laboratories, NASA and universities. ("I bet I'm the only high school student that has one," Craig Wallace said.)
Craig is a now sophomore at USU. I bet it wasn't too hard for him to get admitted to the physics program.
(Hat tip to G for the link.)
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September 24, 2003
Death math
(6 kids + (1 ATV / 1 Illegal road ride) * 0 helmets) + (1 drunk driver) = .8 kids + 5 charges of vehicular homicide
Jerome Francis saw him there that night giving his daughter CPR, futilely trying to save her life. His son already was dead. Driving home that night, Francis said he happened upon the scene as the first ambulance arrived.
"He said to me 'I killed my children,' and I didn't understand what he meant," said Francis. "He said: 'I let them ride on a 4-wheeler.' "
The online story has been updated so it no longer notes that the ATV was a single person vehicle, that they were illegally on the road or that none of the kids had a helmet. Yes, the driver was the final factor in the deaths but those parents are responsible for letting 6 children and young teens out on the road on an ATV.
Crazy Cats Charge Comely Coeds in Cobb County
"If you see one of these animals, leave it alone," he said. "Call animal control."
Students applauded their school's efforts to get the word out.
Erin Roon, a freshman nursing student from Augusta, is an animal lover with a cat at home.
"If I see a cat, my first instinct is to pet it," said Roon, 18. "Not anymore."
I told you cats were evil.
Do looks matter? Atlanta gals say Hell, yeah!
My trucker hat and mesh T-shirt don't matter anymore? Woo hoo!!
Criminal whines that she had to do time
She couldn't afford to pay the $852 in misdemeanor fines she had accumulated, so Municipal Court Judge George Barron put Byrd on probation and allowed her to pay the fines in 10 monthly installments.
...
Byrd, who is unemployed and receives food stamps and spotty child support payments, couldn't pay the fines, so she stopped showing up for her probation meetings. Eventually, she was arrested for violating her probation, and Barron sentenced her to 25 days in jail.
Here's an idea: Don't break the law!
Here's another one: When you break the law and get cited, stop breaking the law!
One more: After you continue to break the law and eventually get in so far over your head that the judge lets you pay your fines in installments, don't break still more laws by skipping your probation meetings!
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September 23, 2003
Resources
- Changes to Presidential Financing Eyed, AP article
- Q&A About the Presidential Public Financing Program, Bush campaign financing watchdog group (partisan group but this Q&A distills the program quite nicely)
- The Presidential Public Funding Program, Federal Election Commission government site
Background
The Presidential Public Financing Program is funded by taxpayers who check that $3 donation box on their federal tax returns. It does not increase individual tax burden, it simply takes $3 of taxes that would go to the general fund and earmarks them for this program. Participation has declined steadily since the programs inception, falling "from a high of 29 percent in 1981 to less than 12 percent today" (2).
The program was intended to reduce the disproportionate influence of wealthy contributors, reduce the demands of fundraising on candidates and assist candidates who did not have access to large sums of money. The actual program offers matching funds for primary candidates, grants for party Presidential nominating conventions and grants for general election campaigns of major party nominees and partial funding for qualified minor and new party candidates. It also imposes spending limits on campaigns that participate in the program. (3) (emphasis mine).
Step 1: Identify the problems (per the nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute)(1)
- "the program's perennial funding shortfalls put it at risk of insolvency by the 2008 election."
- President Bush has opted out of primary public financing for the 2004 campaign (as he did in 2000). John Kerry and Howard Dean are also considering skipping public financing. This "show[s] the system needs changes to become more attractive to candidates".
Step 2: Propose ways to fix the program (also per the nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute)(1)
- Raising the taxpayer checkoff to $5, generating an estimated $122.6 million more for the program.
- Giving primary candidates a 3-to-1 match for the first $100 of each contribution rather than the current 1-to-1 match for the first $250 of a donation.
- Raising the primary spending limit to the same amount as the general election, from the current $45 million to about $74 million.
- Letting a candidate who takes primary public financing spend the same amount as someone who doesn't.
- Allowing national party committees to spend an additional $15 million on their presumptive nominee's behalf during the spring and summer after the primaries.
Step 3: Bitch slap the 13-member task force of the Campaign Finance Institute that came up with this nonsense Fisk away
Problem 2: Wealthy and well funded candidates are opting out of matching funds for party primaries. Exactly how is this a problem? Say it again. Wealthy and well funded candidates are financing their own primary campaigns. How does this conflict with the stated goals of the program? The only reasonable explanation I can think of is that the Institute wants all candidates under the spending caps to prevent disproportionately robust campaigns from the big name candidates. That would come under campaign reform and is not in the scope of this program.
Fix 1: The main problems with the tax return check box are that people are unfamiliar with the problem. Many people either think this goes to reelect the current president (or party) and/or that it costs them $3. Raising this to $5 might bring in more for the program but not nearly enough as it does not address the central problem of taxpayer misconception. Better education and clearer description/instruction is the answer either in lieu of or in addition to this change.
Fix 2: This will increase the burden on the program by a significant amount. All minor contributions will triple in the amount of matching funds and it will not be difficult for fund raisers to get people to give less to take advantage of the factoring. This is an obvious attempt to make the program more attractive to prospective candidates in support of Problem 2, which is quite simply a bogus problem.
Fix 3: Another massive increase on the program burden to the tune of $19 million per candidate. Of course not all candidates will be able to take advantage of this increase, only the wealthiest and best funded ones. This might indeed attract a Bush, Kerry or Dean in support of bogus Problem 2 but will have a net affect of increasing the disparity between campaings of robust candidates compared to the rest. This would go directly against the premise behind bogus Problem 2, namely the leveling of the campaign playing field.
Fix 4: This one isn't too bad on its face. There is a maximum cap to how much the program will give a candidate so there wouldn't really be any additional exposure to program funds. It simply allows the candidate to spend more than the current limits without giving any more money from the program. Once again, though, this is done in support of bogus Problem 2 - attracting big money candidates to the program. This will allow candidates like Kerry and Dean to join the program, take matching funds and still spend as much as Bush, who is not participating. This does very little except to penalize the first candidate to opt out of the program by denying him the matching funds that will be used by the other big spenders.
Fix 5: Another one in support of bogus Problem 2. This does nothing to the program fund but makes the program itself more attractive to big party candidates.
Summary:
The essential problem is that the Institute task force is trying to morph the Presidential Public Financing Program into a bandaid for campaign reform. Campaign laws need to be changed but this is not the place to do it. By trying to shoehorn campaign control into the program these proposals will greatly increase the burden on the program fund while doing very little to address the absolute and concrete problem of the program's failure of solvency.
Strip off bogus Problem 2 and Fixes 2 through 5. Add educating taxpayers about the real effects of checking that contribution box on their tax returns. That is a viable solution to the real problems facing the Presidential Public Financing Program.
Note:
The Campaign Finance Institute is affiliated with George Washington University in DC and is not a political body. However, the task force members are very influencial in their fields and include "Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell; William Brock, a former Republican National Committee chairman; Carol Darr, former general counsel to the Democratic National Committee; and Richard Davis, a political consultant and adviser to Sen. John McCain." That last is of particular concern as Senator McCain is a sponsor of new campaign finance law. (1)
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September 22, 2003
But seriously now, did you know that there is a law on the books in Scotland that prevents a man from marrying the mother of his ex-wife while the ex-wife is alive? Did you know that they really do need that law?
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September 18, 2003
$239 million? Do you realize how much Canadian Skunk Weed that could have purchased!?!
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September 17, 2003
(Hat tip to Lovely Wife for the link.)
Incidentally, isn't it fun to say "peanut"? I like "walnut" too but "peanut" is just a little closer to naughty.
Q: What do you call it when you have two nuts in a urinal?
A: Peanuts
Q: What do you call it when you have two nuts on your chest?
A: Chestnuts
Q: What do you call it when you have two nuts on the wall?
A: Wallnuts
Q: What do you call it when you have two nuts on your chin?
A: A big fat dick in your mouth.
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Umm...
I'm not a marine biologist or anything but I could safely posit the cause of death as being "Chopped in half".
(Hat tip to Lovely Wife for the link.)
Update: The article now says that "the scientists" are blaming scientific experiments (presumably being carried out by "other scientists") of the Spanish Navy for the squid deaths. Spain has a navy?
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Click the banner to see more truth in advertising at Valley of the Geeks.
(Hat tip to G for the link.)
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September 16, 2003
It seems that the Canadian courts ordered that "patients should not be forced to get their marijuana from drug dealers on the streets" so Health Canada (motto "Socialized medicine at its finest!") gave a C$5.75 million (about $4.2 million real dollars) contract to have government weed grown. The problem (assuming our heads are far enough up our rectums not to notice any glaring problems yet) is that the weed blows. Comments from the first users include "Disgusting" and "It's totally unsuitable for human consumption".
The government of Canada spent C$5.75 (The "C" stands for "counterfeit", by the way) million to grow bad weed. How do you grow weed that is that bad? A good start would be to grow it "deep underground in a vacant mine section in Flin Flon, Manitoba". Yes, that's right. They are growing a crop of plants in an abandoned mine. While this might be a reasonable step for somebody trying to grow a cash crop of marijuana in the States, it does not seem quite so intelligent when you note that in this case the crop is not only legal but being grown under a government contract.
Okay, let's get off the idiocy of the farming and concentrate on the basic program. C$5.75 million (at today's exchange rate - tomorrow this could easily be eleventy billion) sounds like a lot, because it is a lot to us rational folk, but it's really not too bad for a government program. After all, this program will serve all of the marijuana using patients in Canada. Or not. Maybe it will only be servicing a handlful of people because only "Ten patients have registered with Health Canada to buy marijuana directly from the government to alleviate their medical symptoms. Another 39 applications are pending."
Yah. 49 people total, including applicants not yet approved, are reaping the benefits of this particular travesty of government idiocy. But they're not really reaping much since the weed is unsuitable for human consumption. A little basic arithmentic shows that the investment per participant is over C$117,346. That's close to 8 times what an average Canadian takes home in a year after taxes. (Note that this last statistic is an estimate. Canadian tax codes are so oppressive confusing that the average Canadian has no idea how much they take home after taxes.)
What's an unsatisfied customer to do? Well, "Wakeford and Barrie Dalley, a 52-year-old Toronto man who uses marijuana to combat the nausea associated with AIDS, are returning their 1-ounce (30-gram) bags, and Dalley is demanding his money back -- about C$150 ($110) plus taxes. Wakeford is returning his unpaid bill for two bags with a written complaint." Unfortunately, according to Health Canada spokeswoman Krista Apse "the department will not accept returns or provide refunds".
As I was a neighbor of Canada for many a year I feel deeply for our northern cousins. I will take it upon myself to solve their weedy woes. I will start a collection and when it reaches $29.99 (that's real currency, not funny money) I will personally send a subscription of High Times to Krista Apse. We'll send the free T-shirt to Jim Wakeford to help take the sting out of blowing his cash on that bad gubmint weed.
Update: I love my current job but if they need some Quality Assurance help up there I might be willing to relocate.
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September 15, 2003
And so the Bills register another dominating performance, pulling starters in the third quarter on the way to a 38-17 drubbing of Jacksonville. Life is good. Very good.
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This raises several questions. Okay, it raises one question. How retarded do you have to be to accept a $200 bill for payment? Now if this was a decent fake bill I could almost understand it. After all, there are very few cashiers at Food Lion who have ever seen a bill larger than $100. But this was not a decent fake bill - this was a fake bill that was an obvious joke. It has George Whatever Bush on it. It is signed by Ronald Reagan. Ronald Frikkin' Reagan! The reverse side has lawn signs at the White House with such gems as "We Like Broccoli", "We Like Ice Cream" and "No More Scandals".
So Food Lion is out $200 and hopefully one employee. I say hopefully regarding the employee but I'm actually not that hopeful. Chances are the idiot who accepted a $200 bill is still working at Food Lion. I mean, we're talking about a company with such woeful Human Resources that they hired someone dumb enough to accept a $200 bill. You can't take on faith that such a company would take an obvious step like firing a moron who accepts a $200 bill.
Of course the worst thing about all of this is far more personal. Worse than the expose on corporate idiocy. Worse than revealing the rampant idiocy prevalent in our work force. Worse even than wasting several minutes of your time on this post. No, the worst thing about this exposure on the fake $200 Bush Bill is that it's going to make it that much harder for me to pass off my $300 Ashcroft Bills.
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September 12, 2003
With a headline like that you'd exect two things. First, some sort of recollection or remembrance for 9/11. The article is full of well ripped anecdotes and soundbites of that. Second, you'd expect something about a new terror alert. I mean it's pretty blatant in the headline, right? Says it right there at the end "Amid New Terror Alert". Only problem is you won't see anything about any terror alert anywhere in the article. Nada. None.
Why do they have to pull crap like this? There's finally a Reuters article that's both respectful and decorous and they have to screw it up with a manipulated and phony headline.
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September 10, 2003
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