Saturday, September 27, 2008

Bacon rosebuds



I was inspired by this AntiCraft article* to make a bacon tiara for Zoe. She's quite a picky eater, but bacon is one of about thirty foods that she'll consume. I was hesitant to use TG-RM, seeing as there's no way to insure that at some point a kid, a dog, a cat, a husband, or a fish doesn't wander into the kitchen and get a whiff of something they shouldn't, so I decided to try it without chemical assistance. The tiara fell apart, but I think the roses came out OK. They're way too big for what would have been the tiara, though - the bacon squares would have needed to be about a quarter the size they were, and that would have been tough to work with.

I think I'm going to have to make some of these next time I make bacon-wrapped asparagus, and I think I'm going to have to break out the kitchen torch. The center of the roses weren't quite as done as I'd like.

*(via DPUD)

Monday, September 22, 2008

The aspens are starting to turn



The aspens are starting to turn at the higher elevations. Unfortunately, when we hiked this weekend I started out with an almost dead battery and only got one picture. This is on the Cow Creek Trail, on the way to Bridal Veil Falls.

Monday, August 4, 2008

A good case for beheading

A death row inmate is claiming he shouldn't face lethal injection because he's too fat to receive lethal injection.

In case you're not familiar with the case, in 1986, Richard Cooey and one of his buddies dropped a chunk of concrete off a bridge onto a car, then pretended to rescue the two girls, aged 21 and 20, inside. Cooey and his pal then took the two girls into the woods and proceeded to rape and torture them for three and a half hours. Then they beat and stabbed the girls to death.

So not only has Richard Cooey sat on death row longer than either girl's entire life, but he's been stuffing himself to the point where he thinks he should no longer be executed. I think a severe reduction diet, perhaps starting with losing his head, may be in order.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Woohoo!

I just booked Rhys's birthday party at Casa Bonita! I'm excited, he's excited!

Casa Bonita in Denver is WAY cooler than the one I grew up with in Oklahoma City. Except the food tastes exactly the same. But hey, I've never gotten food poisoning there!

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Why even bother getting a license?

I can't believe there's even a debate about this.

Apparently, if someone is pulled over in Denver and is an unlicensed driver, the police don't bother with impounding your car. Which means that unlicensed driver gets back in their car and continues driving unlicensed, and probably uninsured.

Four out of ten traffic stops in Denver are unlicensed, and so they're probably uninsured. Over 49% of traffic fatalities in Colorado involve at least one unlicensed driver.

There are a lot of things I love about Denver, but this isn't one of them. I'm guessing that the $210 a year we pay for uninsured motorist coverage would be at least a little lower if there weren't so many unlicensed drivers cruising around.

Apparently the City Council's argument is that police have better things to do than sit around waiting for a tow truck to show up. I know for a fact that at least one tow company that Denver uses generally shows up within fifteen minutes of calling - they do personal towing also and I've had to use them several times to tow cars to the mechanic. The longest wait I've ever had was twenty minutes. The City Council also argues that the law unfairly targets illegal immigrants. They're choosing to ignore that there's a reason the state doesn't give driver's licenses to illegal immigrants. It's because they're illegal. Not to mention, Denver already has awful traffic. If Denver police were allowed to be more diligent about taking unlicensed drivers' cars off the road, how long would it be before some of the traffic snarls would lessen? It's piecemeal, it's slow, but given the data, is it really too much to ask that driving in Denver requires a license?

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Zombie daughter



Taken before she did a faceplant while running down the sidewalk, giving herself a bloody nose, a scraped cheek, and yet another goose egg on her forehead. If she follows in her brother's footsteps, it will be several months before we have an outing that doesn't involve a goose egg.

Aronofsky directing new Robocop flick

Darren Aronofsky is on board to direct a new installment in the Robocop franchise, slated for release in 2010.
MGM is keeping the logline under wraps, but insiders say it will take the sci-fi vigilante classic in more of a noir direction.
I'm curious how a movie that was originally rated NC-17 for its glorious ultraviolence and gore could possibly get any darker.

There's no word yet on who is playing RoboCop. If Peter Weller doesn't at least have a cameo, I'll be disappointed.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Beyond wrong

MTV is remaking The Rocky Horror Picture Show. I have no idea what they're hoping to accomplish from this. The original movie wasn't that good, it's the experience of showing up in the middle of the night and yelling and throwing things that makes it enjoyable. So unless they've got theaters lined up willing to clean up the mess after every showing, they're not going to get an audience. And that's a best case scenario. The worst case scenario is they hack off a bunch of old fans and generate even more ill will.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Collective medicine

CodeProject nailed it with this tagline: "For those who prefer their medical information from a site anyone can edit".

OK, not anyone. You have to have an MD or PhD to edit content. But I can't wait for the flame wars. And you know they're going to happen. Take a look at the controversies surrounding Morgellons, or thyroid, or autism, or ADHD, and you're in for a preview of some of the fun that should be upcoming.

No media bias here...

There's a link on the front page of CNN to an editorial written by Glenn Beck, decrying the insane amount of glowing MSM coverage that Obama receives versus McCain's largely neglected campaign.

What are the odds that CNN put it on the front page to try to prove that they're not as biased as the AP, ABC, NBC, and CBS, all of whom are called out as biased in the commentary?

NPH will be on Sesame Street

Neil Patrick Harris will be on the next season of Sesame Street. I can't wait! And I'm sure Zoe can't wait either - she is a shoe freak from a long line of shoe freaks.

There's a preview on YouTube, but they're not allowing embedding.

McCain leading in Colorado

Despite the hype and hoopla over the Democratic National Convention being held here, McCain is now leading in the polls. I have to wonder if the protest shenanigans and all the chaos the convention is causing aren't going to drive Colorado right into the hands of McCain. There's certainly no 'as Colorado goes, so goes the rest of the country', but I think it would be a definite sign that Obama has problems if the movement toward McCain keeps up, especially given the strong liberal leanings of Denver and Boulder and most of the Ron Paul followers moving to follow Obama.

Not gonna name my child that...

When we chose our kids' names, we did so with some care. We tried to make the names not too freaky, and chose short names to give them a preschool advantage, since our eight-letter last name paired with a seven-letter middle name is enough for a young child to learn how to spell. Four letters (Rhys) for our son, three letters (Zoe) for our daughter, and we often just shorten her name to z. No D'Artagnon, no Krystynya, no Ford (although we told people for a while that Rhys was going to be Ford, just to get them to stop asking about baby names), no Se7en, and certainly no Talula Does The Hula From Hawaii.

I have to wonder what kind of adult life these parents thought their daughter would have, with a name like that. It's like naming your daughter after a teenage prostitute in a movie and being surprised that she turns out to be a drug-addled narcissistic schizophrenic who can't hold down a job. It's like naming your daughter Destiny or Neveah and being surprised that the tools of her trade are pasties and a brass pole. Who names their daughter 'heaven' backwards, anyway? What's the opposite of heaven?


(h/t AoS headlines)

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Cake wrecks

This site isn't helping my craving for buttercream.

Friday, July 18, 2008

Oh no they didn't...



This came across my husband's RSS feed as "New RIM jobs posted." I guess if you're not unembarrassed enough to apply for a RIM job, they don't want you.

Since they can't be armed, let's take away their protection against armed people

A school district in Louisiana has had problems with someone showing up to their school with a gun and a bulletproof vest, so now they're going to try to pass legislation to ban bulletproof vests from schools. They claim they can't punish the kid severely enough under the current laws, so they want to figure out another way to punish the next kid who dares show up to school in a bulletproof vest. Sheriff Ricky Adams, who's behind this nonsense, states: "We question the need for bulletproof vests in schools in the first place." Uh, maybe because you have people showing up to your schools with guns? I understand that you might not want students bringing their own guns to school for protection, but why on earth would you keep students from wearing something that might keep them from dying next time someone shoots up a school?

Shreveport's got a violent crime rate 1.72 times the national average. I can't wait to hear the campaign speech for the wastes of space in the Louisiana House that let this get out of committee: "In my last legislative term, I took steps to keep your children from protecting themselves!"

I wonder if they had permission to use this graphic...



Look familiar?

I don't mind snakes...

but I don't want to find one in my washing machine.

I have clothes waiting to be put in the dryer right now, and I'm not sure I can do it.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Things I wish I didn't have to say to my kids, part 1

I'm pretty sure this will end up being a regular series.

"Don't drink from your shoe, honey, it isn't clean."

"Hey, don't lick the walls!"

"Sweetie, use your fork, not your barrette."

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Image-only emails aren't helpful

To whoever sent me an email earlier this month, or maybe last month, for a girls night out charity benefit...

You sent the ad as an image to be downloaded from your site. Now, I'm sure this ad looks pretty, and you may get an idea of how many people are viewing it, but since there's no text whatsoever in it that's searchable, I can't find it now without going through every email I've received over the past several weeks. Which is a shame, because I really wanted to go to this and I've got a friend interested too, but I've spent twenty minutes or so looking for it and just can't find it.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Three to eight more weeks

I got the buccal swab (an oral swab like you see on the crime shows on TV, except you're supposed to swab each swab for ten seconds, and each in a different part of your mouth) kit in the mail today to do further typing to see if I'm a bone marrow match. Apparently I'm a match on HLA-A and HLA-B, which was all the typing information that was available from when I registered fifty million bajillion years ago. If I'm understanding the numbers correctly, there's about a 1 in 12 chance that I'll match enough to donate. Bonfils said that it takes three to eight weeks for the rest of the typing to be completed.

Did you know...

Did you know that if you wash a Sandisk Micro Cruzer 8GB thumb drive in the washing machine, then let it dry out, it just might still work?

I speak from experience on this one.

I love solid state technology. At the rate things are going, soon we'll have entire computers we can throw in the washing machine, and then we won't have to worry about our keyboards being germier than our toilet bowls.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

To a particular family member

Nothing that goes on in my life or the life of my family is any of your business. There is no reason for you to visit my blog several times a day, or at all. It's unhealthy. We are all much happier that we have no contact, and we want it to stay that way.

You are not welcome here. I don't know how to make it any clearer.

One...

of these kids is not gonna have nearly as much trouble learning how to spell his name as the other.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

I can haz beanz?

Oh good god...


If 'I can haz beanz' turns up as an advertising slogan, I'm suing the hell out of Heinz, if only to make them stop.

(h/t The Drawn Cutlass)

Friday, July 11, 2008

That was unexpected

I just got a call saying I'm a possible match for someone in need of a bone marrow transplant. When I registered, I never thought that would happen, given that my genetic line is pretty mongrel.

The first rule of secret action camp is....

...you don't talk about secret action camp.
In Denver this weekend, a group of anarchists who have pledged to disrupt the Democratic National Convention will hold a secret action camp to learn about medical training and legal rights and to practice nonviolent tactics.
Uh, guys, putting up a myspace calendar and having your demonstrations announced isn't the best way to surprise people with your actions. Now we're expecting you to make spectacles of yourselves during the convention, which means that if the cops don't arrest your whiny disrupting asses as soon as you look cross-eyed at a single delegate, they're not doing their jobs. As a matter of fact, I'd be surprised if they haven't infiltrated your group and pick you all up on conspiracy charges before the convention. Let's see how well your anti-anxiety medications work against that thought, eh?

As much as I dislike what the Democratic Party has become, especially over the last twenty years, I don't want to see convention business disrupted. Heckled, sure, but let the conventioneers get their business done. Having the power to choose our candidates, even with the lousy choices we have this election cycle, is what keeps the rest of us from having to become mired in the day-to-day crapfest that is politics.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

E.T. has the answer to the energy crisis

And he better speak up quick, cause I like me some gas-guzzling SUVs.
Last night, Peckman attended a gathering on the Auraria campus, which was attended by more than 400 people, in which the founder of The Disclosure Project asserted that the government has been concealing clean energy technologies used by UFOs.
I haven't quite decided if this guy's for real or not. He's charging $5 a head to come hear him speak, so if he can interest a couple of hundred people into coming to hear the lunacy, he's making a thousand bucks a night. That's more than many of us could hope to make doing anything legal. And he's shilling quite a number of publications and DVDs on his website.

Screwing corpses is bad, m'kay?

I can't believe this actually had to go to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Justice Patience Roggensack, writing a majority opinion with three other justices, said state law bans sexual intercourse with anyone who does not give consent whether a victim is dead or alive at the time. Dead bodies obviously can't give consent, she said.
This seems so painfully freaking obvious. But what's even more shocking is that apparently it's still legal to screw dead bodies in something like half the states, according to the article.

Is this one of those painfully obvious things you don't think you have to talk to your children about, but really needs a sit-down? "Johnny, let's discuss the ethics of digging up dead bodies..." I'm looking forward to having this discussion at my dinner table, let me tell you.

Maybe this is what happens when you show your kids Mr Happy Face videos at the tender age of four.

Another side effect of the ethanol fiasco

Apparently an increase in corn production is causing the Gulf of Mexico's dead zone to grow larger.
Scientists are testing for 'hypoxia'- the lack of oxygen in water. It's caused by an overabundance of nutrients -- things like nitrates and phosphorous -- that flow out of the Mississippi River.
...
Scientists said a virtual dead zone exists between 5 and 30 meters below the ocean surface and it's getting bigger because of this year's flooding in the mid-west coupled with increased corn production.

"If fish and other animals are mobile, they'll leave the area. But the things like clams and mussels and worms that can't leave the area, they'll die," Pride said.

And further down in the article:
Scientists said a tropical storm or hurricane would decrease the dead zone because it would stir up ocean waters.
So just to make sure I understand this...

The production of ethanol, which was ramped up to 'solve' the nation's fuel crisis, is not only causing global starvation because corn production that would have gone toward feeding the hungry is now going into fuel, but it's also causing a decrease in sea life, which is also a source of food, because it's causing runoff in the ocean.

But we can fix the dead zone problem if a hurricane goes through the Gulf of Mexico and stirs the pot. The increase in hurricanes is due to 'climate change', right? Does this mean that we need 'climate change' to repair the side effects of the fuel crisis?

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Beer ads in the hands of kids


I know the Rapids game tonight was sponsored by Tecate - but who thought it was a good idea to allow Tecate to advertise on Thunderstix, a product largely employed as a noisemaker by the four-to-twelve crowd? Little soccer ball clappers with the Tecate logo were also being passed out. This is placing beer ads right into the hands of kids that are not even going to be legal to drink for at least ten years. Or does Tecate make some non-alcoholic beverage I'm not aware of?

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Iran would kill me for this post

Steven M. Nielson pretty much covers it all.
Forget that the Iranian Parliament is guilty of funding the corruption of a generation, by airing children's shows that promote suicide bombing as a means to an (un)holy end for the sake of defending their Islamic Republic. Forget that they are responsible for terror training funding throughout the world. And forget that they are the epitome of corruption of civilized society... But let one blogger attempt to speak out against that corruption, and the state will have their heads (literally).
At what point do we step in to save the life of someone who puts it all on the line to speak out against his government? We waited entirely too long to step in the way of Saddam Hussein and the mass murder and torture he put the people of Iraq through - if America had finished the job during the First Gulf War, we could have done so without having to run a second front in Afghanistan and may have even averted some of the terrorist activity that Hussein sponsored in the form of $25,000 payments to Palestinian homicide bombers. Wouldn't it have been nice to have an ally in the Middle East, in the form of a democratic Iraq, during the strikes against Afghanistan? Instead, we allowed Hussein to consolidate his power by silencing all dissenting groups through chemical warfare and mass murder. We're about to let Mahmoud Ahmadinejad do the same thing. As long as the silencing starts on a small scale, maybe we won't notice.

Four years of blind adoration

GOPpundit at ColoradoPols.com attended both the recent McCain and Obama appearances here in Colorado. He noted an interesting difference between the two events.
On the one hand you have Obama who took precisely zero public questions and did not hold a single event open to the public. On the other hand you have McCain holding a townhall that burst at the seams where he proceeded to take question after unscripted question.

The Democratic National Committee has rented Invesco Field for Obama's acceptance speech. (How they're going to pay for this, I have no idea, given their economic woes and the $3 million price tag to rent Invesco.) The CEO of the convention makes the following claim (emphasis mine):
Leah Daughtry, the chief executive officer of the national convention, says the decision to allow more people to witness the historic speech highlights the fundamental differences between Obama and Republican John McCain and shows that Obama is more inclusive.

I'm so glad that inclusive means getting to gaze speechless upon the face of the Messiah.

Not nearly enough

A JeffCo school board member Vince Chowdhury repeatedly slaps and chokes his daughter for apologizing to him, then threatens his wife that she'll be next, and he gets off with a misdemeanor harassment plea, on a one-year deferred sentence. Did I mention this guy is also running for a seat in the Colorado House of Representatives? Mount Virtus has an interesting take on who is asking him to resign what.

A protective order was supposed to keep Vince Chowdhury away from his family after he assaulted his daughter. The next day, he started emailing his wife, and was arrested again. The charges have been dropped as part of the plea agreement.

Chowdhury claims that the charges and conviction have no impact on his school board position or on his House campaign. This throws up a red flag for me - I would think that if this were the first time Chowdhury had assaulted his daughter, it would be so life-shattering for someone who's supposedly such an upstanding citizen that he would immediately step down - if he were the man he has pretended to be, he would recognize that he's not fit to be in a position of authority over anyone, let alone the children of Jefferson County.

Chowdhury has asked for a second chance - I would hope that he would recognize that he threw away that second chance when he continued to harass his wife in violation of the protective order and was allowed to plea out.

Monday, July 7, 2008

Chocolate cake in five minutes

In your microwave, even. And in a single mug. So the only dirty dishes are a mug, a fork to stir, and a fork to eat with, assuming you don't turn it out onto a plate to eat it.

I think I'm going to make this tonight and top it with cool whip and cherry pie filling.

Update: Way too sweet, awful texture.

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Happy belated Independence Day

I had planned on getting some good fireworks shots and then doing a late post last night, but I got out of the house without my memory card for my camera. And then I was thinking about writing some profound post about how that's a metaphor for how it seems that our country is forgetting how hard it was to win and keep independence and so now we're willing to just forget about it and hand over our economic system to the next Jimmy Carter and hand over our freedom of speech and religion thinking that if we're just nice enough then certain groups won't want to fly planes into our buildings, but it's just not flowing today.

Friday, July 4, 2008

$800K

That's what it's worth if a doctor cuts off your naughty bits, guys. At the tender age of 33.

An older article says it wasn't even an accident:
Surgeon Naum Ciomu, who had been suffering from stress at the time, had been operating on patient Nelu Radonescu, 36, to correct a testicular malformation when he suddenly lost his temper.

Grabbing a scalpel, he sliced off the penis in front of shocked nursing staff, and then placed it on the operating table where he chopped it into small pieces before storming out of the operating theatre at Bucharest hospital.

This guy needs to get married quick so he can have a reason for never having sex again.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Charbux closing 600 stores

70% of which opened after 2006.

I've got mixed feelings about this. On the one hand, Starbucks did for frufru coffee drinks what Microsoft did for the PC - make it accessible to every shlub on the street. On the other hand, both indie coffee shops within walking distance of my house have closed down, after Starbucks opened locations across the street. In the case of the first one, Starbucks actually opened TWO across the street - one in the grocery store, one in the grocery store parking lot. The second one, which frankly wasn't that good anyway but it was nice having someplace close, closed down when Starbucks announced that they were opening one in the grocery store in the same strip mall and one across the street.

And both of those shops closed down with me having punch cards full for free drinks, dammit!

It's like their trying to do what McDonalds did in the 80s - you never have to drive more than a mile for one. Given that there are ten in my zip code alone, and my zip code is partially rural, I think it's easy to say we've reached frufru saturation. And I never thought I'd be saying that, but a big part of the frufru coffee experience is tied to having a real barista prepare your drink, and I'm not getting any fancy latte art or any variety in my cardboard charbux.

I've lost some respect for Christopher Hitchens

S. Weasel got it absolutely 100% perfectly right.

Given that more journalists, and more American soldiers, have been waterboarded than terrorism suspects, I think we can safely refer to waterboarding as recreation that occasionally has a practical purpose.

Why you never buy clothing for your kids in a language you don't understand

and other Engrish fun.

I guess it's official...

Google is indexing Flash. Yahoo soon to follow.

They've been playing with this for a while. I first noticed Flash searches coming up a few weeks ago. We had a client present us with a very detailed 27-page document containing content for his website. After spending probably 40 hours on his project, including structuring the website around the outline of his content, something just wasn't sitting right with me on the content. I started Googling some of the distinctive phrases, and lo and behold, the entire thing had been ripped from a Flash site in the UK. We'd had discussions about this before, about the ethics of presenting other sites' work as his own, and had told him previously that we just weren't going to rip off other sites. A few days after the original ethics discussion, he mumbled something about needing to make a few text changes, but didn't mention that we were going to have to restructure the ENTIRE FREAKING WEBSITE. When Rich sent him an email about our discovery (I was too furious, we've been swamped and the last thing I needed to find out was that I'd wasted large amounts of time), he claimed that he'd never intended for the 27-page document to be the actual website content, but that he really needed the websites we're doing for him up in a hurry. We still haven't received new content.

This isn't the first time we've had funny business with a website. We had a small business a while back that hadn't finished paying us for the work we did for him. About a year after we did a site for him, we got an email from a guy claiming that he had taken over the company and needed the website rebranded for his new needs, and it needed to be done as quickly as possible, so how much? After several emails back and forth, and calling someone that worked for the original company, we established that not only had the guy not taken over the company, but he had been in talks with the company to buy the rights to their website and then hire us to rebrand it, after he'd paid the company enough money so that they could pay us for the outstanding bill.

And then there was our dentist, who had a web designer offer to rework a website he'd done for another dentist (essentially, just change the names and some of the text) for the low low price of something like $6,000.

A lot of this leaves me wondering - at what point does the template a web designer uses to build a website stop, and the content owned by the customer begin? One of the big time-savers on doing design work is being able to reuse code, and maybe even tweak some existing graphic arts work to make it fit the new project (it's amazing what a new color scheme will do for a site). But at what point are we stealing from our old clients to save time on new projects?

They can always print more money...

Except in Zimbabwe.

Unexpected preemie news

Although your pre-term baby may be a handful as a child, with behavior problems and difficulty in school, a new study shows that preemies are actually less likely to actually turn criminal.

The article I linked above is very confusing to me, since it seems to contradict itself several times. My decision to actually post something about this stemmed from the notes at the bottom of the article, where ways to decrease the risk of popping out a preemie are discussed. Um, if a baby born preemie is less likely to land in the slammer, wouldn't that mean having a preemie is a good thing?

Computer repair is about to get much more expensive

A new law in Texas requires PC techs to also carry a private investigators license. How this insane law was passed is beyond me. The relevant portion of the statute states:

(a) Unless the person holds a license as a security services contractor, a person may not:
(1) act as an alarm systems company, armored car company, courier company, guard company, [or] guard dog company, locksmith company, or private security consultant company;
(2) offer to perform the services of a company in Subdivision (1); or
(3) engage in business activity for which a license is required under this chapter.
...
(b) For purposes of Subsection (a)(1), obtaining or furnishing information includes information obtained or furnished through the review and analysis of, and the investigation into the content of, computer-based data not available to the public.
That college kid down the street that fixes your computer for beer money when you've been surfing porn sites and picked up some nasty bug? He now is required to either have a criminal justice degree or apprentice for three years before he can lay a finger on your keyboard.

Monday, June 30, 2008

If you needed any more indicators of his huge ego...

I don't even know what to call him, he's changed his name so many times. But he's suing because they recorded a tribute album for his birthday.
Fifty artists who recorded Prince covers in honor of His Purpleness' 50th birthday June 7 have been slapped with a lawsuit by the short-tempered star. His lawyers now demand that all copies of the tribute be destroyed.

Someone's having a party

Some dude was busted with over half a ton of fireworks, safely stored in his home garage. The guy's alarm system went off, and when the police showed up, the police "noticed" the garage full of fireworks.

The fireworks were taken to a secret location to be destroyed.

My gut is telling me that the destruction doesn't involve...whatever it is that one would use to neutralize fireworks without detonating them. I'm too lazy to actually look it up.

Wild horses?

Another reason to get rid of all the unions

The union that covers city employees in Baraboo, WI has filed a grievance that their workers were not called first to sandbag the town during the recent floods. They are demanding that the city employees be paid overtime to compensate for the lost hours of work. An in-depth rant is available at Badger Blog Alliance, it's worth a read.

Wisconsin is a forced union state, as is Colorado. Frivolous grievances like this, as well as some of the shenanigans that have been going on here, highlight how hard it would be to have any self-respect and remain in a union. As an announced retaliation for right-to-work being put on the ballot this November, unions here have put initiatives on the ballot that will kill many small businesses, such as requiring raises to match cost of living, requiring that small businesses with more than 20 employees provide health insurance, and trying to do away with at-will employment. I presume they are planning on shutting down the small businesses, then picking up the battered bruised remnants as even more union workers who will be grateful to have someone protecting them.

Governor Ritter has repeatedly referred to this retaliation as a stand-off, with two groups having guns at each others' heads. I see it more as a hostage situation - the unions are holding voters' livelihoods hostage by threatening lethal retaliation.

(h/t BitchGirls, who summed it up: EVIL.)

Update: when I saw this headline, I thought at first that is said, "Union wants to pay for sandbagging" and thought that maybe a union had offered to do something nice for a change.

Can I get one for my home office?

Makes my two-monitor setup look shabby. OK, my two-monitor setup IS shabby right now, seeing as my second monitor is kinda pink-tinted on one side and has horizontal bright lines running across it.

(via Codeproject, which is kind enough to drop geek tidbits into my inbox once a day. There's never been a day when they haven't included at least one thing worth reading. Which is more than I can say for Amazon, who decided after I ordered some Spanish books for the kids that I needed Spanish translations of everything on my wish list.)

Losing doesn't do much for your image

Not only is the Hillary Clinton Nutcracker now selling at a third of its original price, but it's also on Amazon's 4-for-3 list. Not that it's going to prompt me to buy one; she doesn't seem to know which nuts to crack. Like a cheating husband's.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

I learned something new today

I learned that, unlike the Copeland Falls trail in Wild Basin, you can't just walk a short distance from the top of Alberta Falls and be back at the main trail. Don't even try it.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

The states know carbon offsets are crap

In more rollicking DNC fun, the organizers are upset because only three states have agreed thus far to pony up the green to make their delegates' trips green - they're refusing to shell out the cash for carbon offset credits to cover the emissions caused by coming to Denver.
The DNC's director of greening, Andrea Robinson, estimates that each delegate's trip to Denver will generate roughly 1 ton of carbon. About 5,000 delegates will attend.
Uh, what's a Director of Greening? Oh, looks like her main qualification is being able to make numbers look good - she was in charge of making Live Earth look like it was carbon neutral. There's something very nose-in-the-air about creating lots of waste and then pretending that throwing money at it excuses it. Oh, I forgot to mention her other qualification: she's an actress. That cinches it for me.

Hey, I compost, does that mean I qualify for some of that crazy carbon offset money? A little hint to our new Overlord of Greening: just because balloons are compostable (and apparently these aren't) doesn't mean they'll actually end up being composted. Although since you're planning on digging through the trash at each and every event, you can at least pretend that the balloons will compost.

This is almost as good as when a Democrat gets caught for tax evasion.

Update: It just occurred to me, since Andrea Robinson is so closely linked to Al Gore, and Al Gore's deep pockets seem to be where some of the crazy carbon offset cash is disappearing to, is there any chance she's getting some sort of reward for her troubles?

Friday, June 27, 2008

Wall-E

My husband took our five-year-old son to see Wall-E tonight. Afterwards, hubby said that he thought the movie was a little too scary for our son, that the female love interest was a little too free with the blasters. I'm hoping they didn't sit in on Wanted by accident.

Reverse discrimination at work

The Denver Post has pointed out yet another way Colorado is trying to stick its foot in it for the Democratic National Convention - the DNC has set up rules for the demographics of delegates that Colorado has apparently failed to meet. It seems that there are too many men selected as delegates, which means that a male delegate must step down and allow a female alternate to move up to delegate position. The male moving down puts the balance of the alternates out of whack, so a male alternate must also step down and allow a female who wasn't even chosen to be a delegate or an alternate to take his place. Which means that some dude just lost his ticket to the convention, all because he has the wrong parts.

I hope that male alternate who's losing his spot at the convention will think long and hard next an affirmative action vote comes his way.

I wonder if there's a M-to-F transsexual who's been counted as his birth gender in the alternates pool? If they moved her up and counted her as a her instead of as a him, it could fill the requirement that the genders be balanced, and the gender balance would remain the same for the alternate pool. Plus the Dems could score another hypocritical point with the gay community, pretending that they're doing something positive for gays instead of being self-serving.

(h/t Joshua Sharf)

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Seems to be a trend...

Apparently national parks are a popular suicide destination. I don't know if the article's author knew about the incident up at Pikes Peak yesterday, which apparently turned out to be a lovesick teen whose girlfriend had just dumped him. Smart girl, that one, dumping him before he decided to take her with him. The kid's OK, despite it taking eight hours to get him off the mountain.

I was going to track down an email address for the author of the article to let him know about the suicide attempt on Pikes Peak, but it turns out he's an AP reporter, so fuck him.

Gila Weiss wants your money

Gila Weiss of My Shrapnel is riding in the Wheels of Love Charity Bike Ride to benefit Alyn Hospital. Gila is one of the most interesting survivor-of-terror bloggers out there, and Alyn Hospital is definitely a worthy cause - it's a hospital in Jerusalem that treats children and teens, regardless of their ethnicity, and specializes in survivors of terror attacks.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

One reason I'll miss Bill Gates...

The man can write an email.

Via CodeProject.

Planning a trip into Chaos Canyon...

Rhys and I are going on our first real hike of the year this weekend, in a loop from the Glacier Gorge trailhead, up past Alberta Falls, between the Glacier Knobs, up to Lake Haiyaha and possibly to the top of the Chaotic Cascades. We'll return by taking the trail back down between Dream and Nymph Lake, down to the Bear Lake trailhead. We've hiked the Nymph/Dream/Emerald Lakes trail before, so I don't feel disappointed that we won't be hiking up it again - although it is very pretty, it is extremely crowded and does not make for a peaceful hike. I'd recommend it before hiking Hallett Peak, though, because you get a good look at what you'll be tackling.

I'm hoping Rhys is in the mood to scramble the Glacier Knobs - there's supposed to be a nontechnical route up each one, and rock scrambles seem to perk him up. The downside is that the Glacier Knobs are still early in the hike, so if he gets worn out scrambling I'm going to hear about it the rest of the trip.

And in other stupid car news...

Man runs himself over by remote.

Maybe the guy who drove off Pikes Peak can blame it on a manual transmission and a remote starter.

Not the way to do it

From the Denver Post:
A motorist at the summit of Pikes Peak appeared to have been trying to commit suicide when he ran off the end of the parking lot and plunged at least 800 feet this afternoon, according to El Paso County rescuers.
Bad idea. Very bad idea. For one, the fact that Pikes Peak is crazy crowded means that someone's going to see you doing it, so you're quite likely to get rescued if you're even remotely alive - which increases your chances of living life as a semi-vegetable, conscious of what's going on around you but unable to actually do anything about it other than grunt when you mess your pants.

But more importantly, a medical search and rescue costs big bucks. They won't charge you for search and rescue if you're able to walk out under your own power (although I'm not sure if that applies to having gotten yourself into someplace stupid on purpose), but as soon as they have to do a medical evacuation, you're paying. And it won't be cheap. Although it wouldn't surprise me if they'll charge you the SAR fee even if you are able to walk out on your own, just for being an idiot.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Ended up in Winter Park today, kinda by accident. Had a very good cup of coffee at Rocky Mountain Roastery. The kid who was working there was amazingly polite and tolerant of the kids dripping popsicle all over the store.

How does one end up in a mountain town two hours away by accident? The same way one ends up in Cheyenne.

Monday, June 23, 2008

It's all about perspective

"He accidentally truncated the entire ***** table (whether ***** have been met or not met over the past two years). But, that's not the problem...."

When you hear that, you know something really bad happened.

So this is what I've been listening to lately...

Brokenkites.

Electronica that's not quite trance. I've been listening to their stuff for days, haven't gotten tired of it yet. It's good music to work to, not spastic or distracting.

So why now?

Why start a blog now? I've been commenting on various other blogs for years, started and abandoned several blogs. Anyone who knows me will tell you I'm overly opinionated. And I've got more fake pretend internet friends than I think I ever knew in the real world, and most of my meatspace friends get updated through email anyway, so it would only make sense for me to update them all at once.

Maybe a better question is, why not before? Well, despite all the personal details that I've revealed online about various details in my past, I'm a pretty private person. I'd be willing to bet that most of my fake pretend internet friends have much of an idea of the recent events that have led me to compulsively check on everyone I ever knew. And I'd be willing to bet that many of my meatspace friends have not much of an idea of what I do at a computer. (no, I'm not running a midget porn shop or hacking into the Pentagon.) But I haven't felt the urge to post any of this stuff online in one place until recently, when I realized that I'd lost touch with some people who were really important to me and maybe lost a little of myself along the way too. I also couldn't decide what direction to take a blog in - but I guess this doesn't have to have a direction. Or more accurately, the direction is me.

So if you've found this, say hello or f&$# you or something - just don't be silent. None of you will agree with everything I have to say, but that doesn't mean there's nothing here for you. Well, OK, at this point there's nothing here for you, because there's nothing here. But hopefully there will be soon.

Tap Tap Tap

Is this thing on?