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Palin and Her Pastors

Posted on August 31st, 2008 at 16:40 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

[Quote:]

From an November 25, 2007 sermon: “The purpose for the United States is… to glorify God. This nation is a Christian nation.”

– David Pepper, senior pastor at Church on the Rock.

That’s something Palin will no doubt distance herself from shortly. After all, according to her the purpose of the United States is to benefit Alaska.


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Does she look seven months pregnant here?

Posted on August 31st, 2008 at 9:29 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

[Quote:]


High Resolution
Feb. 25—As NGA kicks-off its centennial celebration, the nation’s current governors “recreated” the 1908 photo during the annual governors’ meeting with the president.

Front Row (left to right): Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin…


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How fast does a politician start lying?

Posted on August 31st, 2008 at 9:23 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

For Palin the answer is:
[just a few lines into her nomination acceptance speech:]

I signed major ethics reform. And I appointed both Democrats and independents to serve in my administration. And I championed reform to end the abuses of earmark spending by Congress. In fact, I told Congress — I told Congress, “Thanks, but no thanks,” on that bridge to nowhere.

Bzzzzt.

[Quote:]

Here’s what she told the Anchorage Daily News on October 22, 2006, during the race for the governor’s seat (via Nexis):

5. Would you continue state funding for the proposed Knik Arm and Gravina Island bridges?

Yes. I would like to see Alaska’s infrastructure projects built sooner rather than later. The window is now–while our congressional delegation is in a strong position to assist.

So she was very much for the bridge and insisted that Alaska had to act quickly—the party of Ted Stevens and Don Young might soon lose its majority, after all. By that point, the project was endangered for reasons that had nothing to do with Palin—the bridge had become a national laughingstock, Congress had stripped away the offending earmark, shifting the money back to the state’s general fund, and future federal support seemed unlikely.


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Confessions of a porn addict pastor

Posted on August 31st, 2008 at 9:16 by John Sinteur in category: ¿ʞɔnɟ ǝɥʇ ʇɐɥʍ, Pastafarian News

[Quote:]

An Australian pastor who inspired hundreds of thousands of people with his fight against terminal cancer has admitted he faked his illness to hide an addiction to porn.

[..]

His deception was so great his wife quit work to care for him, he forced himseld to vomit regularly at night and even lost his hair to fool his family and the public about the extent of his illness.


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100 protesters taken to temporary center

Posted on August 31st, 2008 at 9:14 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

Police in riot gear surround protesters on 15th Street near Civic Center park in downtown Denver on Monday night.


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Mandatory evacuations to begin Sunday morning in New Orleans

Posted on August 31st, 2008 at 9:10 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin ordered a mandatory evacuation of the city beginning 8 a.m. Sunday but urged residents to consider escaping “the mother of all storms” before then.

“You need to be scared,” Nagin said of the Category 4 hurricane tearing along Cuba’s western coast. “You need to be concerned, and you need to get your butts moving out of New Orleans right now. This is the storm of the century.”

No, he’s not talking about Katrina. He’s talking about Gustav.


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Deliberations on the Palin pick.

Posted on August 30th, 2008 at 22:48 by John Sinteur in category: News


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Bristol Palin Pregnancy: Is VP Sarah Palin’s 5th Child Really Her Daughters?

Posted on August 30th, 2008 at 22:07 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

[Quote:]

Whoah! Talk about skeletons coming out of the closet! Sources are saying that Sarah Palin’s daughter, Bristol Palin, became pregnant, and that Sarah Palin pretended the baby was her own! This would have been her “fifth child” that has Down’s Syndrome. But is this true or just a rumor?

Probably not true – if it is, the election is effectively over.

update: the pictures are convincing, though…


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Stipe To Quit U.S.

Posted on August 30th, 2008 at 15:59 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

[Quote:]

R.E.M frontman MICHAEL STIPE has threatened to quit America if Senator JOHN McCAIN is elected U.S. President.

The singer – who has recorded a song for McCain’s Democratic rival Barack Obama – will move to the U.K if America picks the Republican candidate at the upcoming November (08) elections.

Stipe says, “He served his country and he did a good job as a serviceman, I will honour him for that, but he is not presidential material.”

He adds, “I’d have to move to England”.

Support for Obama increased tremendously in England just after this announcement…


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Comments:

  1. Yep, that’s the way to go. What did they tell him? “Good riddance” ?
    Seriously, it’s so ridiculous when these people “threaten” to leave the US. They leave, now what? Flaunting that he can afford it unlike 99% of the people?
    That he honestly does not give a shit about the US, and will just move away if there is something he does not like?

    I doubt that it will affect the US that much if he moves. I think you said something like this when that actor guy – one of the Baldwin’s I think – threatened to leave the US if Barack Obama gets elected.
    Neither of them would be a big loss.

Cartoons

Posted on August 30th, 2008 at 15:53 by John Sinteur in category: Cartoon


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Integrity Bank Becomes 10th U.S. Failure This Year

Posted on August 30th, 2008 at 13:01 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

Integrity Bank of Alpharetta, Georgia, was closed by U.S. regulators today, the 10th bank to collapse this year amid a surge in soured real-estate loans stemming from the worst housing slump since the Great Depression.


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Your Traditional Media at Work

Posted on August 30th, 2008 at 12:43 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

Here’s FOX News host Megyn Kelly Wednesday night during Joe Biden’s acceptance speech obviously paying rapt attention so she can thoughtfully analyze his remarks.


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Comments:

  1. Funny though it was not happening during the speech. It was happening during the background music. Not sure she was supposed to analyze the musac, was she? :)

Quotes

Posted on August 30th, 2008 at 12:34 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008, Quote

Obama chose Joe Biden as his running mate. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi praised Biden, calling him the “full package.” Now he’s getting phone calls from Senator Larry Craig.

—Jay Leno

“The night’s big event was Obama’s speech, in front of 75,000 enthusiastic supporters and eight confused Broncos season ticket holders.”

—Jimmy Kimmel


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A heartbeat away

Posted on August 30th, 2008 at 11:26 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008


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London from above, at night

Posted on August 30th, 2008 at 9:27 by John Sinteur in category: Great Picture

[Quote:]

With the end of the Olympics in Beijing, all eyes turned for a moment to London, site of the upcoming 2012 Summer Olympics. While looking for good photographs of London, I was contacted by London photographer Jason Hawkes, who had some wonderful images of London, seen from above at night (from a helicopter, to be exact) – some of which which he’s agreed to let me share here. From Jason: “Shooting aerial photography during the daytime had its own difficulties, you are strapped tightly into a harness leaning out of the helicopter, shouting directions through the headsets to the pilot. If shooting in the day can be difficult, night and the lack of light causes its own set of problems, but overcoming them is half the fun and the results can be stunning. I shoot at night using the very latest digital cameras, mounted on either one or two gyro stablazied mounts, depending on the format of the camera and length of lens I’m having to use.”

(18 more pictures at the link)


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Nederlander wint hoofdprijs in Googles Android-wedstrijd

Posted on August 30th, 2008 at 9:17 by John Sinteur in category: Apple

[Quote:]

De 27-jarige Eric Wijngaard uit het Friese dorp Waskemeer is een van de tien winnaars van de Android Developers Contest. Hij wint 275.000 dollar voor zijn programma Picsay, een applicatie om effecten aan foto’s toe te voegen.

Google schreef in november vorig jaar de prijsvraag uit om ervoor te zorgen dat er alvast wat 3rd party applications voor Android zouden zijn als de eerste telefoon met het mobiele besturingssysteem zou verschijnen. “Ik had nog nooit een mobiele applicatie geschreven, dus het leek me wel spannend”, vertelde de winnaar aan Tweakers.net. “Eigenlijk wilde ik liever voor de iPhone ontwikkelen, maar die sdk was toen nog niet uit.”

[..]

Hij weet nog niet wat hij gaat doen met het prijzengeld van omgerekend bijna 187.000 euro. “Ik heb een eigen bedrijf waarin ik kan investeren. Ik wil eerst zorgen dat Picsay goed gaat draaien op Android-telefoons. Ik wil eigenlijk Picsay ook geschikt maken voor de iPhone. Dat is goed mogelijk, denk ik.”

translation:

27 year old Frisian developer Eric Wijngaard won $275,000 in Google’s Android Developer Challenge for his ‘PicSay’ application.

In an interview with a Dutch website he says he likes Google’s SDK but “What I really wanted to do was develop an iPhone app. The iPhone SDK wasn’t out yet, though.”

Asked what he would do with the cash, his response was “I guess I could invest it in my software company, but first I want to port PicSay to the iPhone.”

Here’s a Google translation of the whole article.


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Cartoons

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 19:15 by John Sinteur in category: Cartoon


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McCain picks female running mate

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 18:50 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

[Quote:]

US Republican presidential hopeful John McCain has picked Sarah Palin, the female governor of Alaska, as his surprise running mate.

At 44, she is younger than Barack Obama and is credited with reforms during her first term, but she is relatively unknown in US politics.

McCain is betting the farm that the female Democratic PUMA voters who said they would vote for McCain will now really do it. Also, like many Alaska politicians these days, Palin is involved in an ethics scandal. Her sister was married to a state trooper named Mike Wooten. The two of them got divorced and were involved in a bitter child custody battle. Sarah wanted to help her sister so she asked the state commissioner of public safety, Walt Monegan, to fire Wooten. He refused, so she fired him. He protested so loudly that the Republican-controlled state legislature appointed a retired prosecutor, Steve Branchflower, to investigate whether she abused her power as governor. Needless to say, Monegan is about to get a small army of reporters camped on his doorstep.

Don’t get me wrong, on a PR level this is masterful for McCain. He’s killed all the momentum and press coverage about Obama’s amazing speech last night. So I really am amazed they think that one shot at gaining the press advantage was worth the most unbelievably inept VP pick I could have possibly imagined. If McCain wanted a former beauty queen with no experience and a criminal investigation on her record I don’t know why he didn’t just pick his own wife.


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Biometrics exhibit blushes over email snafu

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 18:38 by John Sinteur in category: Security

[Quote:]

The Wellcome Trust would like to apologise for any concern caused by the recent technical error in its Biometrics interactive exhibit at Wellcome Collection. The exhibit captures a person’s pulse rate, height, age, fingerprint and iris scan and generates a “biometric identity” expressed as a graphic icon. The user is then invited to receive a copy of their biometric identity by email.

It has come to our attention that a technical error has resulted in users of the exhibit receiving URL links to data sets of around 40 other users. These profiles do not contain identifiers such as names or email addresses.

The Wellcome Trust has investigated whether erroneous transmission of the data captured could constitute a breach of confidentiality or pose a security risk. It is satisfied that this is not the case.

To change your password, please contact your nearest ophthalmologist for an eye transplant. Also, please revoke your fingerprints…


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Excessive IP protection causes economic gridlock, says expert

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 17:33 by John Sinteur in category: Intellectual Property

[Quote:]

Intellectual property laws which were designed to protect inventors are actually stifling innovation, according to a leading US law academic.

[..]

“I discovered a paradox in the free market and it is this: usually private ownership creates wealth, but too much ownership has the opposite effect – it creates gridlock,” he said. “When too many owners control a single resource – it can be a patent, a copyright, land – when too many people control a single resource, co-operation breaks down and wealth disappears. Everybody ends up losing.”

Heller has expanded on his theory in a just-published book, The Gridlock Economy – how too much ownership wrecks markets, stops innovation and costs lives.

He uses the example of someone who has come up with a new medicine and is trying to get it to market. To do that they must use systems, processes and tests which are owned by other people.

“Imagine a drug developer walking into an auditorium and seeing 50 or 100 or several hundred patent owners, each with their essential patent on their lap, and the drug developer knows that unless he’s able to negotiate successfully with every single one of those patent owners, his drug can’t come to market,” said Heller.


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Fear and Loathing | Democratic National Convention

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 15:21 by John Sinteur in category: Great Picture, Indecision 2008

[Many pictures:]

We provide an outlaw view of the underbelly of the beast during the 2008 Democratic National Convention.

Such as this one:


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How low will the GOP go?

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 12:41 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

[Quote:]

How low will they go?

I don’t really have the answer, but my suspicion is that before this election season is done, right-wing Republicans will have hit new depths of campaign distortions and outright lies.

One prime example: The phony $3 bills that were being hawked by GOP volunteers out at the Evergreen State Fair in Monroe.

Featuring a picture of Barack Obama decked out in an Arab headdress with the words “da man” under his picture, the mocking merchandise was prominently displayed alongside the “proud republican” bumper stickers and the “Dino Rossi for Governor” paraphernalia.

In addition to perpetuating the lie that Obama is a Muslim, the fake bill also has some openly racist aspects to it.

Gerri Modell, the head of the Snohomish County Republican Party, says she had no idea how the bills magically appeared at the GOP’s booth.


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Student’s for McCain

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 12:20 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

Look at this product you can purchase from McCain’s official site:

The apostrophe has three uses:

1) to form possessives of nouns
2) to show the omission of letters
3) to indicate certain plurals of lowercase letters.

source

Okay, let’s see if there’s a comment from the McCain campaign:


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Comments:

  1. The McCain web site shows a picture without the apostrophe. Is the image faked or did they update the web site?

  2. They fixed it then, because the picture I show is one I copied off the campaign site myself. Good for them, at least they’re paying attention!

A Speech So Stirring It Converted Pat Buchanan

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 11:34 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008, Pastafarian News

[Quote:]

One last thing. Someone on the McCain team has already anticipated the connection between Moses/Joshua and King/Obama. It’s what was driving that weird ad from last month. People recognized the creepy messianic overtones and rightly saw it as a dogwhistle to the evangelical right. The use of Charlton Heston as Moses crossing the Red Sea was meant to inoculate evangelicals against recognizing in Obama the realization of Dr. King’s legacy. Irresponsibly, the McCain campaign raised the imagery of apocalypse and anti-Christ to blunt Obama’s ability to draw upon scriptural language and its particularly American transformations.

That’s why it’s astonishing for me to realize, just now, that Obama ended his speech with a dogwhistle so beautiful and so profound as to make a mockery of Michael Gerson‘s most sublte efforts. The final words of his speech were: “Let us keep that promise – that American promise – and in the words of Scripture hold firmly, without wavering, to the hope that we confess.” This is a quote from Hebrews 10, one that would (I think…a MeFite more pious than me can correct me if I’m wrong) have considerable resonance for evangelicals, since it precedes a very dramatic expression of God’s absolute sovereignty and the essential role of a Christian’s complete trust in God’s will.

The actual quote from Hebrews 10:23 is: “Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful”. In a speech whose theme is “promise” and which invokes King’s legacy of transforming the “promised land” into an American pastoral of freedom and equality, this quote does something quite profound. Obama speaks the first half of the quote, “the hope that we confess”, seeming to be burnishing his Christian credentials. But the second half of the verse “for he who promised is faithful” emphasizes in a very powerful way Obama’s message that his success is not about him. Those of us who are secular see him as an eloquent spokesman for our collective aspirations. But an evangelical could see him as the agent of divine providence. By ending his speech in this way, he challenges religious people either to deny the validity of his hope and his promise (something they cannot do without also denying the providential power of King’s legacy and his death), or to deny the faithfulness of the God who promises (something that would undo their own confession).

To an audience that is used to having its scripture invoked with a nudge and a wink, this beautiful citation is a kind of a puzzle, challenging them to meditate on the relationship between their faith and their citizenship, Barack Obama’s success and their idea of God’s will realized on the landscape of American politics. They may not wind up agreeing with him, of course. But they will still have been challenged to think in ways far more profound than ham-fisted apocalypticism and B-movie portrayals.

The Hebrews quote continues: “and let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near. ” This is as devastating a rejection of irresponsible invocations of the apocalypse as you could hope for.

And remember folks, our next president wrote this speech himself.


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Comments:

  1. Thank you. Well said.

Obama acceptance speech

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 11:15 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

Transcript below the fold;

Read the rest of this entry »


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Comcast to Cap Data Transfers at 250 GB in Oct.

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 9:58 by John Sinteur in category: Intellectual Property

[Quote:]

Comcast has confirmed that all residential customers will be subject to a 250 gigabyte per month data limit starting October 1.

“This is the same system we have in place today,” Comcast wrote in an amendment to its acceptable use policy. “The only difference is that we will now provide a limit by which a customer may be contacted.”

The cable provider insisted that 250 GB is “an extremely large amount of data, much more than a typical residential customer uses on a monthly basis.”

Actually, no, it isn’t an “extremely large amount of data”. It’s about one HD movie per day, and that makes this simply an attempt to cut off services like iTunes and Amazon Unbox, which are increasingly competing with Comcast in the “making content available” business.


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How Romney will save America

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 9:34 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008


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China and Iraq Reach $3 Billion Oil Deal

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 9:20 by John Sinteur in category: Mess O'Potamia

[Quote:]

China and Iraq have signed a $3 billion deal revising an earlier agreement for China’s biggest oil company to help develop the Ahdab oil field, an official at the Iraq’s Oil Ministry said Thursday.

The deal, restoring a project canceled after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, was signed late Wednesday by Chinese officials and Iraqi Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani.

Gee, and it only took a bit over 4,000 dead US soldiers to get to this point…


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A Biblical Seven Years

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 9:05 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

As I sat in my seat at the Bird’s Nest, watching thousands of Chinese dancers, drummers, singers and acrobats on stilts perform their magic at the closing ceremony, I couldn’t help but reflect on how China and America have spent the last seven years: China has been preparing for the Olympics; we’ve been preparing for Al Qaeda. They’ve been building better stadiums, subways, airports, roads and parks. And we’ve been building better metal detectors, armored Humvees and pilotless drones.

The difference is starting to show. Just compare arriving at La Guardia’s dumpy terminal in New York City and driving through the crumbling infrastructure into Manhattan with arriving at Shanghai’s sleek airport and taking the 220-mile-per-hour magnetic levitation train, which uses electromagnetic propulsion instead of steel wheels and tracks, to get to town in a blink.

Then ask yourself: Who is living in the third world country?


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Comments:

  1. If your answer is “I am.” and you live in the United States, speak out. Write a letter to the editor. Talk to your Mayor and Congressional representatives.

    It your answer is “I am.” and you live in China, better keep it to yourself, because Third World people get in trouble when they complain. Really serious trouble. Prison trouble.

  2. And if you do it in the US, and you accidentally you phrase it the wrong way, then you can get into trouble. Taser trouble. Prison trouble. Gitmo trouble.
    Denying the bad news is not the way. Acting on them is. So I would start to read the article attentively, for the real message is: We wasted 7 years. Don’t waste another seven.
    But then you can’t simply dismiss it, can you? :)

Cheney To Speak At Republican Convention From Section 109, Row 56, Seat 3

Posted on August 29th, 2008 at 9:00 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

[Quote:]

Vice President Dick Cheney’s office announced today that he will speak at the upcoming Republican National Convention in St. Paul, MN, offering farewell wishes and personal observations about John McCain to anyone in the vicinity of his seat in the upper balcony. “The vice president has prepared a number of remarks to mutter angrily during Sen. Tom Coburn’s speech,” Cheney spokeswoman Megan Mitchell said. “We cannot divulge the specifics of his address at this time, although I imagine it will begin shortly after he spots [Sen. Joseph] Lieberman.”


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