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Too Scary to Fly, Not Scary Enough to Arrest

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 20:08 by John Sinteur in category: Security, What were they thinking?

[Quote]:

Ten U.S citizens and residents, three of whom are veterans, are stuck abroad or cannot fly within or out of the United States because they are wrongly on a no-fly list, according to a federal lawsuit lodged Wednesday.

Some of them are in the USA, walking around freely. Apparently they cannot do any damage to anybody that way, but oh boy if they get aboard a plane!


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“This is rock and roll!”

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 20:04 by John Sinteur in category: awesome


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Comments:

  1. Awesome.

    Someone should make a response video doing the same thing on an iPhone. :)

No, this isn’t about a team to investigate sexual abuse

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 17:53 by John Sinteur in category: Pastafarian News

[Quote]:

Benedict XVI announced the creation of a new Vatican department dedicated to tackling what he called "a grave crisis in the sense of the Christian faith and the role of the Church."

Instead, it’s this:

[Quote]:

Pope Benedict XVI announced he is establishing a pontifical council for new evangelization to find ways "to re-propose the perennial truth of the Gospel" in regions where secularism is smothering church practice.

“I have decided to create a new organism, in the form of a pontifical council, with the principal task of promoting a renewed evangelization in the countries where the first proclamation of faith has already resounded and where there are churches of ancient foundation present, but which are living through a progressive secularization of society and a kind of ‘eclipse of the sense of God,’” he said.

I think it’s great news! Finally the Pope seems to recognize the Catholic Church is going the way of newspapers and rotary phones. Unfortunately they lost this battle when Gutenberg invented movable type. It’s a little late to start fighting.


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Pixels by Patrick Jean

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 17:46 by John Sinteur in category: Great Picture

We did something similar a while ago, although I can find it right now…


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Catholic Pride Marchers Turn the Tables on Church’s Banner Ban

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 15:46 by John Sinteur in category: Pastafarian News

[Quote]:

Next time, think it through and let the gays march already

Bsrbara Streisand effect in action…


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Vuvuzela-Konzert

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 13:29 by John Sinteur in category: ¿ʞɔnɟ ǝɥʇ ʇɐɥʍ


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Comments:

  1. Who says the Germans have no sense of humour?
    - But what do I know? I come from a country where we play the bagpipes….

  2. The american version of the vuvuzela is called a bugle.

First nation makes broadband access a legal right

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 13:28 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote]:

Finland has become the first country in the world to make broadband internet access a legal right for all citizens.

The legislation, which came into effect Thursday, forces telecom operators to provide a reasonably priced broadband connection with a downstream rate of at least one megabit per second (mbs) to every permanent residence and office, the Finnish government said in a statement.

I’m pretty sure the record companies are pissed off by this..


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Comments:

  1. If you think they’ll be pissed off because this would prohibit taking net access away from downloaders, I don’t see that. It’s pretty common to abridge people’s rights in pumishment–e.g. take away their freedom in jail.

  2. …After a conviction. I don’t see a three strikes law based only on accusation actually causing anyone’s broadband to get disconnected, which is how they’re doing it in Western Europe, right?

Cartoon

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 13:19 by John Sinteur in category: Cartoon


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Comments:

  1. I’m coming to the belief that just about every nation has a musical instrument to be ashamed of. Whether it’s the vuvuzela, the accordion, banjo, balalaika, etc… What difference does it make?

  2. I could tell you many fine and beautiful songs with all those instruments. I challenge you to find one nice vuvuzela song. Also, I don’t know of any situation where 50,000 people get together in a stadium and play random notes on their accordions, balalaikas, or banjos.

  3. Random notes? I only hear them play one note. Peuheuheuheuheuheuheuh…

  4. The vuvuzela is hilarious.

MSNBC’s Ratigan: Stock market an ‘obviously corrupt’ fraud

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 12:28 by John Sinteur in category: Robber Barons

[Quote]:

On his afternoon show Tuesday, MSNBC host Dylan Ratigan explained why he believes the usual explanations given in the media for why the stock market went up or down on a given day are nonsense.

"Seventy percent of the volume [of trades on the stock market] is computers that are run by the banks playing ping pong with stocks for 10 seconds at at time," Ratigan said.

"The stock market at this point, which used to be a reflection of the future value of actual businesses in this country, has been turned by our government and our banks into little more than a paper shredding facility [about which] we can make up reasons why it goes up and down," Ratigan said. "But when the computers … at the banks are controlling the action, most everything else is kind of silly."

Ratigan concluded that it’s time to create an "alternative investment structure" that would allow people to invest their money without putting it "into the obviously corrupt stock market in this country."


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Comments:

  1. Not a bad idea – starting an alternative market. I would think that its reach could/should be global, not just the US/developed economies. It should include many tiers to include investors from all income levels, including micro investors from developing countries. Comments?

  2. I would rather introduce regulation to make sure that the stock market gets back to fair conditions for all market participants. Better fix here whats already there than abandon it.

    In the context of High Frequency Trading, a transaction tax might not be a bad idea.

    When we now create an alternative market for investors; and this market proves to be profitable (why should someone invest money otherwise? When I don’t want to make a profit, I give my money to charity.) – what would happen? Our vampire banks would immediately occupy this alternative new market, and destroy it, again.

  3. I guess I am cynical that any such regulation can be implemented given the high degree of corrupt influence by the moneyed inside the regulatory organizations. And although I agree there is always a chance that as you put “Our vampire banks would immediately occupy this alternative new market, and destroy it…”, I think it is possible to build in the safeguards to prevent this from happening – at least over the near to mid term.

Microsoft Kin is dead

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 5:46 by John Sinteur in category: Microsoft

[Quote]:

117diggsdigg We’re learning this afternoon that Microsoft’s Kin line, for all practical purposes, is riding off into the sunset just a few short weeks after its release. Sources close to Microsoft tell us that Andy Lees has rolled Kin into the Windows Phone 7 team and has canceled the existing product’s launch later this year in Europe on news that sales weren’t as strong as expected. Speaking of sales, Verizon’s already-launched Kin One and Kin Two are soldiering on for the time being, but for how long is anyone’s guess.

[Quote]:

Apparently, the troubles started long before the swirling Pink phone rumors (and way before the name Kin was ringing in our ears). According to our source, the birth of these devices began with a decision at Microsoft to create a platform agnostic, cloud-centric featurephone. A featurephone that could be had at a relatively low cost, and sold to a burgeoning market of teens and young adults who had little need for a BlackBerry-level device (or pricing). The first step in the project was acquiring Danger to leverage the work it had done with the Sidekick platform, and aligning with Verizon as a launch partner who could offer attractive pricing plans for the devices to a big pool… and here’s where the trouble begins.

It seems that after doing some initial work on these phones based around Danger’s proprietary Sidekick OS, Andy Lees — the SVP of Microsoft’s mobile division — instructed everyone to go back to the drawing board and rebuild the OS based on Windows CE. It appears the company didn’t want a project that wasn’t directly connected to its Windows kernel.

As Gruber says: Steve Ballmer has no taste, so there’s no plan, so middle managers just run amok and waste hundreds of millions of dollars and years of time on projects like Kin.


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Comments:

  1. I think they ought to re-release it with a new name. Something snappy and memorable, like “Zune”.
    And then market it in a range of hip, groovy colours. Like brown.

  2. The headless giant tumbling around…

Sen. Russ Feingold: Standing Up to the Unholy Alliance Between Washington and Wall Street

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 5:40 by John Sinteur in category: Robber Barons

[Quote]:

Since the Senate bill passed, I have had a number of conversations with key members of the administration, Senate leadership and the conference committee that drafted the final bill. Unfortunately, not once has anyone suggested in those conversations the possibility of strengthening the bill to address my concerns and win my support. People want my vote, but they want it for a bill that, while including some positive provisions, has Wall Street’s fingerprints all over it.

In fact, reports indicate that the administration and conference leaders have gone to significant lengths to avoid making the bill stronger. Rather than discussing with me ways to strengthen the bill, for example, they chose to eliminate a levy that was to be imposed on the largest banks and hedge funds in order to obtain the vote of members who prefer a weaker bill. Nothing could be more revealing of the true position of those who are crafting this legislation. They had a choice between pursuing a weaker bill or a stronger one. Their decision is clear.

On this bill, like the others that preceded it, the biggest financial interests have won.


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G20 Toronto

Posted on July 1st, 2010 at 5:26 by John Sinteur in category: News


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