2002 History Copyright © 2002-2004 Joseph Palmer. All Rights reserved Welcome Back to 2002, now get informed.
An example of
blog information. Again, read it
but verify before using any of this data. Ask yourself the legal question: CUI BONO ?
I
know from experience that even mentioning income distribution leads to angry
accusations of "class warfare," but anyway here's what the (truly)
nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office recently found: Adjusting for
inflation, the income of families in the middle of the U.S. income distribution
rose from $41,400 in 1979 to $45,100 in 1997, a 9 percent increase. Meanwhile
the income of families in the top 1 percent rose from $420,200 to $1.016
million, a 140 percent increase. Or to put it another way, the income of
families in the top 1 percent was 10 times that of typical families in 1979,
and 23 times and rising in 1997. ... But as I've said, both casual observation
and the Poole-Rosenthal numbers tell us that the Democrats haven't moved left,
the Republicans have moved right. PAUL KRUGMAN in the New York Times January 4, 2002
Nobody
is proposing raising taxes, but some fiscally prudent voices have been raised
on behalf of postponing some of the generous tax cuts the Republicans gave to
the rich in April. You may think Americans are smart enough to tell the
difference between raising taxes and postponing tax cuts, but apparently
Republicans don't. You can already see what a great political debate this is
going to be.
Molly
Ivins -- You do that voodoo economics so well
Yeah,
some debate. "Does not." "Does too." That's not news, and
when you see that kind of 'entertainment dressed as news' on TV, switch to the
Food channel, fire up your computer and get some real data from the
Congressional Budget Office. For example;
Increasing
the after-tax income of businesses typically does not create an incentive for
them to spend more on labor or to produce more goods and services because
production depends on the ability to sell output.
What
it is about, and what the public will get to hear and read about in wrenching
detail over the coming months, is how business gets done down in Texas. How a
small group of business leaders exert enormous clout over Bush and his team in
getting the rules changed to their benefit.
It
will explain why Bush has locked up presidential records, locked out any voices
opposed to his pro-business agenda and rammed through an expensive economic
plan that wiped out the budget surplus but to date hasn't had any positive
effect on the economy. It will explain what influence Enron Chief Executive Ken
Lay and his advisers had with Cheney and his energy taskforce when they met six
times last year while the vice president was putting together the
administration's energy policy.
And
it will explain why Bush is now thinking about acting on a proposal from that
very taskforce that seeks to roll back a key provision of the Clean Air Act
that helps keep factory pollution down by requiring new controls when old
plants are upgraded.
David
Callaway, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Scroll
down to "PDA, Handheld, and Mobile Wireless"
Also,
you should know this: when they announced the award for best of show overall
the speaker said the following: "this year's winner was a surprise to many
of the judges - there was RAGING debate, some fist fighting, and many of the
judges feel that the runner simply got robbed. All of the judges wanted to take
home the product of the runner up - which was...Danger's hiptop"
--
From Renee, at the Consumer Electronics Show Awards
A
little known fact is that Moxi (Rearden Steel) was right next-door to Danger on
University Avenue in Palo Alto
.
January
12, 2002
No
more predictions
Spencer Abraham's Dream Car
Meanwhile,
the administration is getting rid of the only program that seemed to be making
any headway — a joint industry-government undertaking begun by Vice
President Al Gore called the Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles. Mr.
Abraham belittled the program because it had no chance of reaching Mr. Gore's
lofty target of a commercially viable car that could get 80 miles a gallon by
2004.
The
New York Times
I
went to the auto show in San Jose on Sunday, and was disgusted that nearly
every passenger car was listed on the 19-23 (city) MPG range. I didn't even look at SUVs. It's 2002, and
cars are getting the same milage they got in 1982. Don't buy them.
A
Silicon Valley funeral for Be Inc
The
cheeky REGISTER has coverage of the Be auction.
For
myself, I was on my way out the door, but turned back. It was just too depressing.
Enron:
A Scandal So Good That It Hurts
You
could wish you were high-minded in this age, but weren't you looking for 25%
gains on your retirement holdings too? It didn't matter if a company made
something, only if it made something happen. It mattered less whether a deed
was right than whether you were "in" or "out."
Where
is the smoking gun?
It's
in our hands.
JOHN
BALZAR in the LA Times
Maybe
it's not so much a smoking gun, as it is a double-edged sword.
To
date, I've read nothing that leads me to believe that the administration nor
the members of Congress, nor members of the Senate have broken the laws of the
land. Their role was to change the laws -- so that companies like Enron, the
"Seventh largest US Corporation" could pay less taxes than I do
personally, by washing their 'profits' through 881 offshore subsidiaries.
It
makes me mad as hell. Enron got to where it was through secrecy and obfuscation
of their real financial conditions.
In
this election year, we see secrecy and obfuscation from the White House. Dubya
had a fit when it was leaked that should we retaliate against the terrorists,
they would try to hit us again. Let's think about that.
A)
We Do Nothing -- the terrorists try again.
B)
We Hit Back -- the terrorists that are left try again.
Dubya
blew a fuse over something leaked that is so freaking obvious to the American
people -- 'the people that he trusts', and don't even get me started about the
administration's energy policy -- the one with Kenny-boy Lay's finger prints
all over it...
Then
there's the little matter of an executive order that hides twelve year old
Presidential documents from the public, and the Justice Department issuing
guidelines crippling the freedom of information act...
Maybe
it's just me, but draining Social Security buy running deficits into the future
-- to pay for tax cuts to the Enron set... That sounds a lot like the Enron
401K plan.
WHAT
HAPPENED TO THE SURPLUS?
As
the graph on the next page shows, over the past year the Congress and the
President agreed to legislation that reduced the surplus by a total of $2.3
trillion over the ten-year period from 2002 to 2011. The tax cut accounted for
72 percent of these costs.
The
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities has taken a look at what happened to the
surplus.
The
CBPP is highly respected by both the left and the right. Unlike the mass media
networks, they are proud to fire up the spreadsheets and really get to the
bottom of the numbers. (It's "follow the money", right?) Well, It's OUR money.
Pay
Attention.
Do
the Right Thing
The
comment period closes Monday morning for expressing your opinion of the DOJ's
tentative settlement with Microsoft.
It's
really quite easy, (and critically important) that you comment. Just send an
email to microsoft.atr@usdoj.gov (subject = 'Microsoft Settlement') You don't
need to say anything more than;
I
am opposed to tentative settlement of the United States vs. Microsoft antitrust
lawsuit.
Follow
that with your full Name, City, State, and any affiliation you might have with
the case. (For myself... well, I worked at Be, Inc.)
There's
more info here. January 27, 2002
Energy
"Crisis" Was A $71 Billion Hoax, And It's Not Over, Report Says
The
Foundation for Taxpayer & Consumer Rights has issued a report on the
California Energy Crisis.
You
know... regulation sounds really good to me just now.
Enron's
not the only rotten apple in this barrel.
Secrets
WASHINGTON
-- NEWS organizations do not have the right to attend upcoming depositions in
the continuing antitrust battle between the nine hold-out states and Microsoft,
a U.S. District Court judge ruled.
Infoworld
Yahoo
Finance reports that today the Dow dropped 247 points on Fears of Accounting
Irregularities.
I'm more worried about regulation Irregularities.
Public
Comments
Some
of the public comments opposing the DOJ settlement on the Microsoft case have
been made available on the openlaw website. There's several comments linked,
comprising several hundred pages of comments in total. Provisions of the
proposed settlement are shown to be ineffective in preventing future violations
of the Sherman Act, and some of the provisions amount to permission to violate
the Act.
Especially
amusing was the chart on page 41 of the ProComp analysis which shows the twenty
step path that an Independent Software maker would have to tread to receive
APIs from Microsoft.
What
seems to get lost in the mainstream press is that the findings of Judge Jackson
were fully upheld by the District Court of appeals -- in other words, every
judge
who examined this case has found Microsoft to be in violation of the Sherman
act. I cannot see how justice can be served by the imposition of a settlement
which essentially requires Microsoft to not violate the Sherman Act. This
equates to: "You have broken the law, and now your doom shall be -- to
stop violating the law. (Oh and we've changed the law, so that some actions
that were found to be violations by learned judges in two courts will now be
ignored.)
It's
clear that the Bush DOJ would prefer that this case had never happened. As
evidenced by the linked comments, the proposed settlement offers far less to
the public -- even after two courts have ruled on the matter -- than would be
just.
I
fear the proposed settlement is , like Enron, a system of a larger problem; the
extraordinary, un-checked, un-balanced powers of Large Corporations.
The
worst part of this case is that Microsoft didn't need to commit these acts.
They have smart people, good technology, and a war chest that gives them the
resources to win a clean race, without resorting to illegal actions.
I'm
looking to read Tunney act legal comments in favor of Microsoft, so if you know
where they might be found, let me know.
February
10, 2002
Microsoft's
Political Donations
Judge
Kollar-Kotelly heard that total donations to political donations from Microsoft
and its employees to political parties, candidates and PACs in the 2000
election cycle amounted to more than $6.1 million. During this period,
Microsoft and its executives accounted for $2.3 million in soft money
contributions, compared to $1.55 million by Enron and its executives for the
same period.
By
Matt Loney ZDnet (UK)
Comments
on the United States v. Microsoft Settlement
The
DOJ has posted the 47 major comments they recieved as provided by the Tunney
act.
Focusing
only on preventing a repetition of the unlawful actions Microsoft took in
1995-98 is like negotiating an end to World War II by letting the Germans keep
Paris as long as they promise to rebuild the Maginot Line.
--From
the Software and Information Industry Association's comment
Be
Sues Microsoft, Alleges 'Destruction'
MENLO
PARK, Calif. (Reuters) - Be Inc. , the failed maker of a computer operating
system hailed by some as a high-powered rival to Microsoft Corp.'s dominant
Windows platform, said on Tuesday it is suing the software giant for allegedly
destroying its business through anti-competitive practices.
Reuters,
via Yahoo!
Disclosure:
I still hold some BEOS Shares.
The
PDF of the filing can be found at the Be website. The game is afoot!
March
11, 2002
XHTML
1.0 STRICT
More
puttering with the HTML. I've re-designed and recast my home page into XHTML
1.0 Strict. It should display a working page for everyone, (Yes, you too,
Lynx users)
but those with older, non-standards compliant browsers may see a few visual
artifacts.
Journalism
& Democracy
Government
can send us to war, pick our pockets, slap us in jail, run a highway through
our garden, look the other way as polluters do their dirty work, take care of
the people who are already well cared for at the expense of those who can't
afford lawyers, lobbyists or time to be vigilant. It matters who's pulling the
strings.
--
Bill Moyers in The Nation
Gateway
bows to Microsoft's power
Gateway
also faulted another provision of the new licensing agreement, which requires
PC makers to pay a Windows royalty on every PC shipped, even if it didn't
include Windows. To top it off, to qualify for market development funds, PC
makers have to put a Microsoft OS on every PC. As a result, trying to sell
non-Windows PCs, or even PCs without software, is a financial loser for
computer makers. --Joe Wilcox at
ZDNet News
A
"financial loser"? Try: "textbook example of monopoly
maintenance".
Any conceivable fair resolution of this case must prevent Microsoft from having
any say in what other operating systems an OEMs might provide to their
customers
An
Oil Company Proves Bush Wrong On Climate Change
Speaking
at Stanford Business School on March 11, 2002, BP chief executive John Browne
announced that his company had met its self-imposed target for reducing
greenhouse gas emissions -- nearly eight years ahead of schedule, and at no net
cost to the company.
...Browne
set another first in the energy industry by pledging to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions from his firm's operations by 10 percent below 1990 levels by 2010,
nearly twice the average cut called for by the Kyoto Protocol. At Stanford, he
revealed that "we've delivered on that target," well ahead of time.
BP had reduced emissions by more than nine million tons below their 1990 level.
tompaine.common sense
Wealth
Versus Health
True,
skeptics have raised a few questions. Given that we face a major new demand on
the budget, shouldn't we reconsider a tax cut proposed in more peaceful times?
(Instead, the administration wants to make the tax cut permanent.) Don't taxes
normally go up in wartime, as a matter of shared sacrifice? And isn't it a
little strange, given all the martial rhetoric, that the administration's
recent 10-year budget proposal allocated more money to a second round of tax
cuts ($665 billion) than it did to new defense spending ($625 billion)?
By
PAUL KRUGMAN in the New York Times
Did
you know:
If you connect the dots between Enron, Anderson, "The Energy Policy"
and the Bush Whitehouse, you get a picture of last year's tax cuts?
Fanime
2002 Buttons
This
is the artwork for the butons I gave away at the Fanime Fanfic Panel. I'm
having a lot more fun with Photoshop since Matias showed me a couple of
tricks...
For
this image, I scanned and scaled some Manga images, than created paths on a
layer to do the lines. Even with a Graphire Graphics Tablet I can't do lines
very well, so the paths let me fiddle with the lines until I get what I want
(and no erasing!). Then I did a "stroke path" onto a new layer which
produces the nice lines. Each of the major elements (like faces, hair and
clothes) are then paint bucketed onto individual transparent layers.
The
real trick is then to turn on "Lock Transparent Pixels", which
automatically prevents you from painting outside the lines. This makes adding
the highlights in the hair, or adding shadows on the face really easy, since
you can use gianormous brushes without messing up your layer outlines.
I
LOVE Photoshop 7.0!
Connecting
the Dots
For the last couple of days in the US, the for-profit commercial news
services have been falling over themselves to cover the 'news' than the (Texas)
Whitehouse had (vague) warnings months before the terrorist attacks. Most of
that info has been percolating on the web, in great detail, so it didn't come
as much of a surprise to me. Nor do I imagine the scene where Dubya's munching
pretzels in a briefing and suddenly makes the connection between an FBI report
from Arizona, and one from Minnesota. By all accounts those reports never
crossed his desk. And anyway, it's not his job to say "Hey, what if these
two reports are connected?" That's for the FBI and CIA and other more
exotic members of the intelligence alphabet soup.
It
strikes me as so ironic, that the very same for-profit press that bent over
flat backwards for Dubya on the 2000 campaign, the Florida debacle, Enron, Tax
Cuts, and multiple assaults on personal and constitutional rights has suddenly
developed a spine on this issue.
They
were far too kind to Dubya on things that really were his fault, and now they
are being far too hard on him for something that is not. I've had a
"Baking Accident" with the file structure on the site, (I didn't know
CuteFTP could do that!) everything was saved but may not be where it's supposed
to be. Expect things to return to normal (such as it is) over the next couple
of days.
Gaming
the System
Were
Californians profligate wastrels? In 1998 California ranked 46th in the nation
in per capita energy usage. By 2001, they had moved to 49th. Long before the
Enron gouge, state and local governments were offering subsidies and rebates
for energy conservation measures such as insulation, fluorescent lighting, and
alternate energy sources such as solar panels and wind. California already led
the nation in energy saving programs.
So
not only did corporate America cheat California, but their right-wing media
toadies lied about us in the bargain.
Gaming
the System by Bryan Zepp Jamieson in American Politics Journal
Zepp
nails it on the head. California was pillaged by Enron et.al. while the White
House stood by, with the FERC acting as lookout.
It's
practically un-American to be in favor of "Big Government". Over the
last few years we've been warned that somewhere in a faceless building in Washington
DC sits a bureaucrat (probably the co-chair of the department of redundancy
department) who has nothing better to do than make our lives miserable.
That
said, I'm much more concerned about the imbalance between our elected*
Government and the power of mega-corporations, (including the mega-corps that
own those media outlets that warn us all about the evils of big government).
Our founding fathers did not anticipate Santa Clara County vs. Southern
Pacific Railroad.
The balance of power so enduringly crafted in 1789 between the Judiciary,
Executive and Legislative branches did not anticipate corporations with the
economic, political and media influence of an Enron, Carlyle Group, Newscorp,
Clear Channel, GE, or Microsoft.
In
Enron vs California we have a case where Enron has brazenly committed acts that
would make organized crime blush. Billions of dollars have been pillaged, with
a nod and a wink from the very government agencies charged with protecting us.
Enron wasn't locked down, not one person has been marched off in handcuffs.
Enron used rooms full of traders to obfuscate their crimes, then hid the money
behind hundreds of off-shore special purpose entities.
Where
in the constitution do we find these special purpose entities? (And where can I,
a simple citizen get one?) Where is the balance of power to corporations that
can pump millions of dollars into the political process?
Where
is the balance of power to a Microsoft who has been found to be in Violation of Sections 1 and 2 of
the Sherman Act. (Note: Microsoft can't even technically be called GUILTY, since guilt is a
criminal concept, reserved for acts like sharing MP3s.) Even though the
district court found numerous violations of law, and the circuit court upheld
on appeal all of the district court's findings of fact, and most of the
findings of law, and the Supreme Court refused review, Microsoft still has the
resources to stiff-arm the Justice Department. It's chump change to Microsoft.
They have 40 BILLION dollars in cash. This lawsuit is costing them about what
an anchovy pizza costs the average American, and they are probably deducting
the cost.
"His
economic plan could fit on the back of a shampoo bottle: 'Cut taxes, increase
spending, borrow, repeat,' "---
---"If
he keeps repeating that plan, he will surely endanger Social Security benefits
and slow our economy to a halt, just when we need the most economic strength we
can muster to fight and win the war on terrorism." Joseph I. Lieberman
quoted in the Washington Post.
Another
Republican Presedent, another huge debt. (But this time, just in time for the
baby boomer's retirement!).
Doesn't
anyone in the Republican party know how to run a spreadsheet? Doesn't anyone in
the White House recognise that basing ten-year budget projections on the tax
returns of the one year in history where Nasdaq went "tulip bulb" is
bad economics?
One
theory holds that by cutting taxes, the Republicans are placing the Government
on a starvation diet, with the final goal "to shrink government to the
size where you can drown it in a bathtub."
Well,
the Government was already small enough to miss the clues leading up to
September 11th. The Government is already small enough to not notice that Enron
(Once 7th in the Fortune 500) was a giant ponzi scheme. The Govenrment is
already small enough to miss the pillage of the California energy Market. The
Government is already small enough to be pushed arround by Microsoft.
What
happens to you and me when the the bathtub is finally filled?
Long
Term Planning
An
entomologist at New College, Oxford ("New" because its only a few
centuries old), discovered beetles infesting the oak beams supporting the roof
of the Great Hall. It was fairly urgent that these be replaced before the roof
collapsed -- but anyone who has looked at the price of oak lately can tell you
that this was not something the college budget was prepared for.
Since
oak from a commercial supplier was out of the question, someone suggested that
the college Forester be sent for. His job was to administer the various
scattered tracts of land that had been deeded to the college when it was
founded. The trustees hoped he might know of suitable trees on college land.
It
turned out that there was indeed a suitable stand of mighty oaks. They had been
planted when the college was founded, and down the centuries each Forester had
told his successor: "You don't cut those oaks; those are for when the
beetles get into the beams in the Main Hall."
,
2002
From
time to time I find new sites that have linked to mine. Today I discovered
Donna's Journal.
(In
case you're wondering, The test said I was Hiyama Hikaru.)
In
the year 2000, the California state tab for electricity was seven billion. In
the following year, the state paid more than ten times as much. "Serves
you right, California, for not building more power plants," said the
critics. But power enough is available from outside the state. And just where
did that extra seventy billion go -- cash extracted from the citizens and
shopkeepers throughout this state? Largely to Bush's and Cheney's Enron pals in
Texas.
Ernest
Partridge, in Democratic Underground
Have
you read that over the weekend the administration woke up and recognized that
global warming is real? Not that they want to do anything about it...
Now
I wish they'd take a look at Mr. Partridge's article on economics.
June
4, 2002
Flunking
Ecology 101
I
spoke too soon. The Washington Post now reports that Dubya is rejecting the EPA
report on global warming.
Prediction:
Just like the ANWAR impact report, we'll see a new assesmemt of the global
warming data within two weeks.June 4, 2002
Surfing
in Deep, Deep Water
Once
in a great while I'll come across a website where content comes before style,
where the author digs deep enough to expose the roots of the issue. The Online
Gadfly is one of those sites.
Backlinks
Fanfic
Links in German from kreienkamp.net
Bei
der Seasons Serie handelt es sich um eine Sammlung von romantischen
Kurzgeschichten, die das Näherkommen von Ranma und Akane im Verlauf der
Jahreszeiten zum Thema haben ...
Seasons
Serie--epische? No way!
Filings
in the Microsoft Case
The
for-profit news outlets (You know, the ones who live on ad revenue) will
condense this info down to perhaps five paragraphs, or a 20 second spot on the
evening news. (As long as there were no cats stuck in trees today)
OR,
you could bypass the filters and read the very same documents that the
reporters will skim to do their stories:
Proposed
Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law:
From
Microsoft (Defendant)
From
The Litigating States (Plaintif)
Note,
the US attorneys General are clever boffins where it comes to law, but not so
clever where it comes to web standards. I can't give you a full URL to the
paperwork since their web server chokes on the encoding for the ampersand.
Go
to the page above, the documents are listed under "Litigating States v.
Microsoft, Remedies Proceedings"
Welcome,
Greenland!
I
checked my logs today, and found a hit from Greenland
Now
I just need one from Antarctica...
My
flight between Minneapolis and Phoenix passed near Show Low, This was one (the
smaller) of two fire fronts visible from the air.
y
4, 2002
Congress
shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or
the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government
for a redress of grievances.
II
A
well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the
right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
III
No
Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent
of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.
IV
The
right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,
against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no
Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or
affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the
persons or things to be seized.
V
No
person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime,
unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising
in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time
of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence
to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any
criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be
taken for public use, without just compensation.
VI
In
all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and
public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime
shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously
ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the
accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory
process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of
Counsel for his defence.
VII
In
suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty
dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a
jury, shall be otherwise reexamined in any Court of the United States, than
according to the rules of the common law.
VIII
Excessive
bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual
punishments inflicted.
IX
The
enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to
deny or disparage others retained by the people.
X
The
powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited
by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NARA,
The National Archives and Records Administration has a fine website, with
sections dedicated to The Charters of Freedom.
July
8, 2002
Backlinks
"Blair,
Bush and [French President] Jacques Chirac were discussing economics and, in
particular, the decline of the French economy. 'The problem with the French,'
Bush confided to Blair, 'is that they don't have a word for entrepreneur'
Across
the Pond, Bush Gets Quayled -- Washington Post
Enronomics
Six
months ago, it intentionally understated its operating red ink by a whopping 60
percent, or roughly $60 billion. When it finally faced a portion of the truth
this week, its deep aversion to the truth assumed awesome proportions. To mask
its medium-term problems, it loaded expenses into this year's accounting
period, ostensibly to make the outlook for next year less gloomy. However, in
doing so, it also made assumptions about revenues and expenses through the rest
of this decade that set off gales of laughter among those who watch these
numbers for a living.
Sleeping
giant of a scandal By Thomas Oliphant, in the Boston Globe
I'm
shocked, shocked--I tell you--to find accounting irregularities in the Bush
Budget.
July
21, 2002
The
president's new pitch
Bush,
the president, is trying to lead the charge toward "Corporate
Responsibility." But Bush, the businessman who felt right at home in that
Wild West world of wheeling and dealing, needed the weight of his family name
to survive a series of questionable corporate deals that made him a small
fortune and left investors holding a near-empty bag.
The
president's new pitch By William Walker -- in the Toronto Star
Everything
you know is wrong.
Okay,
not everything, but this Reason article takes the old QWERTY - Dvorak argument
to task.
Next
thing you know we'll find out that function keys on the left are superior. (I'm
still using Omnikey keyboards, both at work an at home.
President
George H. W. Bush called Reaganomics "Voodoo". Now President George
W. Bush is giving us Voodoo II. This Enron system of accounting hides the truth
by juggling two sets of books. It is like paying off one credit card with
another.
By
Ernest Hollings in The Financial Times of London
Now
we know why Bush pushed so hard for his* tax cuts so early in his
administration. He had to get them into law before starting the second half of
his plan--raising the national debt.
See,
a large national debt works the same way as a tax cut--a tax cut for the rich.
Here's how:
Case
1: Budget in the black, minimal working debt. In this case, progressive income
taxes cover the operational budget, and flat social security and Medicare
payroll taxes pay for... Social Security and Medicare.
Case
2: Budget in the red, large national debt. In this case, progressive income
taxes are not enough to cover the operating budget, so we (our elected
representatives) borrow some of the social security money to pay interest on
the debt. This has a three pronged effect; First, Social Security is under
funded, leaving a huge mess for the next generation of workers and retirees.
Second, the lowest income citizens pay a higher percentage of the operating
budget, making a mockery of progressive taxation. And third, the lion's share
of that debt is sold, providing a risk-free investments, to wealthiest
citizens, removing that capitol from private investment, (where it would have
been used to create jobs). Oh, and that interest on the debt paid by taxes on
miners and firemen and cops and the rest of us? -- that interest is paid to
wealthiest citizens who can afford to buy up that debt, and to them it's tax
free income.
The
loop is closed, public debt makes the rich richer.
*
Okay, the tax cuts are not just for Dubya, they also benefit Kenny boy, and
Poppy, and Dick, and a few of their friends.
P.S.
There's a fourth prong, keeping the country in debt does have an effect on the
budget, there's simply no money is left over for infrastructure or social
programs, like national health coverage, or senior prescription drug coverage,
but that's a different debate.
Myself,
I want to hear the arguments and trade-offs before I'd vote for such programs,
but with the treasury empty (and renting space) those arguments have been
foreclosed.
**
Except for sports venues. Seems like we manage to find the tax money to buy
baseball parks...
Weblog
I
spent the day building a macro weblog cgi, so now I don't have to type in any
html when I add an entry.
I
know there are weblog tools out there, but I kind of enjoy mucking around in
xhtml and perl cgi, and I like knowing how my site works. (And besides, since
I'm militant about html and css, I can do things my way)
This
also signals a shift in the content of the site, since it's a lot easier for me
to add stuff, I'll probably be mixing in more informal content between the
serious stuff.
I've
been thinking about adding another column to the layout, but I've not found a
three column site that I liked with 'contents' - 'weblog' - 'content', so for
now I'll try this with intertwingleing.
There's
more in it, please stay tuned...
August
5, 2002
I
think not.
The
Register reports that if you download sp3 for Win 2K, Microsoft wants the right
to automaticaly do undefined updates to your machine. The EULA would legaly permit
Microsoft to do just about anything they want.
Sorry,
Bill. No. I'm not driving a jukebox here. I have hundreds of hours of work in
some of the cad files I have, what if your software decides I don't have the
rights to my own work, and deletes it? And don't get me started on Palladium.
One thing is for sure, if that pig flys there will be a huge sucking sound as
people rush to go out and buy computers, computers that are compatable with
non-Palladium software.
Clueful
Janis
Ian has published two positively brilliant articles about the music industry,
and the internet;
THE
INTERNET DEBACLE - AN ALTERNATIVE VIEW
FALLOUT
- a follow up to The Internet Debacle
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
Memory Hole
s
Brendan Nyhan pointed out in Salon, if you go to the O.M.B.'s Web site now you
find a press release dated July 12 that is not the release actually handed out
on that date. There is no indication that anything has been changed, but the
bullet point on sources of the deficit is gone. By PAUL KRUGMAN in the New York Times
August
8, 2002
Hiptop
er... Sidekick in the Wall Street Journal
It
resembles neither a traditional PDA nor a traditional cellphone. Instead, it
looks like a bar of soap with tapered ends, or a small Nintendo Gameboy.
WALTER
S. MOSSBERG in the Wall Street Journal
Okay,
here's my story:
On
the Friday before my first day at Danger, I was standing in the shower, looking
at the bar of soap in my hands. I'd learned about the Danger device / hiptop /
sidekick during my interviews, and I was thinking about all of the ways that a
keyboard could be exposed from an object the size of a bar of soap. (1) I'm not
sure if that's where Mr. Mossberg got the soap idea....
I
imagined sliding out the keyboard in a little drawer, but that puts all the
weight out of your hands. (In an odd way, a wet bar of soap is an ideal model,
since the slightest imbalance will cause it to slip. After about 10 minutes (Or
two gallons, your milage may vary) I fell on the idea of a single axis rotation
of the hinge to reveal the keyboard.
Later
that morning I went up to the Danger offices to sit in on a meeting -- just to
get a feel for the place, and sitting on the table in the glass conference room
was a post-it note pad. (No soap.) I peeled off a chunk of sheets, then drew a
keyboard on the remaining pad, then demonstrated the idea by rotating the top
of the pad. The room got rather quiet...
ANYWAY,
that's my story, and I'm sticking to it.
It
was created by Danger Inc., an upstart Silicon Valley firm staffed with
veterans of Apple, General Magic and other innovative companies.
BTW,
one of those innovative companies was Be, Inc. (R.I.P.) Danger may have more
employess who are ex-Be than we have from any other company.
(1)
At this point, if I'm telling the story in person, I usualy joke about
thinking, 'Oh man, I'd better not drop this!'.
BTW,
one of the reasons I've been mucking arround in my weblog code is that I can
now update from my Hiptop, err.... Sidekick.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Update
2002.10.02
Yo, Metafilter! I really can't lay claim to the "form factor". I do
claim the idea of the rotating screen, but in a way, that's like claiming the
idea of going to the moon...
A
whole lot of work by people a whole lot smarter than me went into making that
sodden rotating screen idea become reality. (Thanks, Andy & Bill!)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Practicing
Class Warfare
The
Associated Press recently released a study providing evidence that, while they
may not have increased pork barrel spending, they certainly took actions that
proved financially beneficial to the more affluent suburbs and GOP leaning farm
areas. (1) This resulted in an average of $612 million more in federal spending
last year in districts represented by Republicans than those represented by
Democrats.
Practicing
Class Warfare by Rebecca Knight in Buzzflash
Knight's
articles are wonderfully footnoted, with direct links to the source articles.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
August
in Texas again
Or
Don't
spill a single drop!
Dubya's
back at the ranch, and that puts me in mind of a television "news"
piece from last year:
Dubya
was giving the press a tour of the ranch, and they stopped in an arroyo. Dubya
pointed to the rocks above describing the waterfall that appeared seasonaly. It
was a place he liked to go to have a good think.
"I
like to think about economics here", said he.
As
the camera panned the dry stream bed, my first thought was, "Yeah, trickle
down economics".
August
9, 2002
(Bad)
Forum
A
media guide says the participants on the eight panels will have "diverse
points of view," but the White House official acknowledged that there are
limits. "I don't think there's any point in picking someone who has the
opposite point of view," the official said.
Bush
Economic Forum to Exclude Critics, Officials Say
By
Mike Allen in the Washington Times
Better
leave your calculators and spreadsheets behind, it's vacation time, time to get
back to the heartland. (you remember the heartland, that's where Newt &
Sons. is sending that extra $612 million per congresional district.)
Yup,
It's high time for a good old-fasioned economic pep rally! It's be great! we'll
have marching bands (Oh you betcha!) and pom-poms and everyone will be filled
with that old Harvard Business School spirrt:
Insider
Trading— cook the books
Ignore
the SEC's dirty looks!
If
numbers look bad— blame the masses
must
be the workers— lay off their asses!
If
company books are rotten to the core
The
answer is— we need another war!
Tax
cuts— Tax cuts— Tax cuts YAY!
—
jpalmer
See,
that's all it will be, really, since there won't be anyone there who disagrees
with theRepublican Playbook.
August
10, 2002
It's
the FUTURE, Stupid.
The
coming end of the petroleum age involves much more than the question of whether
or not we continue to drive SUVs. Petroleum is the source of plastics,
medicines, and other industrial and consumer products too numerous to mention.
But most significantly, petroleum is the foundation of industrial agriculture.
Thus the threatened depletion of this vital resource entails nothing less than
the issue of how we or our children and grandchildren will eat— how we
will survive.
...
Now
geologist Kenneth Deffeyes (a former colleague of Hubbert), in his new book Hubbert's
Peak
(Princeton University, 2001), foresees a decline in world oil production as
early as 2004. Numerous analysts, publishing in such prestigious peer-reviewed
journals as Science, Nature and Scientific American, concur, setting the peak at some time
within this decade. (World-Watch, March/April, 2002, pp 33--4)
The
oil trap By Ernest Partridge
Following
that peak in production, we'll see crude oil prices rise, higher and higher,
disrupting the economic ecologies of industry after industry.
We're
not going to run out of oil, it's just going to become economicaly obvious that
we no longer have oil to burn.
In
the meantime, the automakers fire up the spreadsheets and determine that
maximal profits are made by selling SUVs, and by buying off congress to keep
those pesky CAFEstandards (frozen since 1985!) from gettingin the way.
It
makes my engineer's brain swim, just thinking about it. All of the
technological advances in materials, manufacturing, and computer control, and
we still only demand the same milage as 1985.
We
can clearly see the bend in the road, yet the VP's energy report (now with 50%
more oil lobby content!) says stay the course, a billion pints of light
(crude). And this from a White House that in early 2001 squinted into the
future and foresaw that massive tax cuts were desperately needed for 2011, six
years after this presidential term.
It
makes me want to spit.
August
11, 2002
The
GOP knows you don't need a fresh $170 billion to catch a few thousand
terrorists. The party's broader post-9/11 strategy is to use such hikes to run
out the clock on social justice in the next few years, until the baby boomers'
costly retirement makes any new spending initiatives impossible. If the defense
budget can't be challenged, Bush will be able to take $170 billion a year
permanently off the table for domestic purposes - enough to pay for universal
health coverage, urban school improvement and much more.
Time
for Kerry-McCain investigation of defense program
By
Matthew Miller, Tribune Media Services
August
13, 2002
Loose
grip on reality
AUSTIN,
Texas — Some days, you have to believe right-wing ideologues have lost
touch with reality completely. Their latest proposal to prevent future Enrons
is— ta-da!— cut the capital gains tax.
Molly
Ivins inworking for change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
Big News from Waco!
"I
can assure you one thing that, ahh, if somebody broke the law they're gonna be
held accountable"
Dubya,
in Waco this morning, sitting over a sign that reads 'Corporate Responsibility'
(Transcribed word for word off my Tivo)
Size
of Tax Code
The
number of words in the tax code has been steadily increasing. In 1955, there
were 409 thousand words in the Internal Revenue Code, and 40 years later in
1995 there were more than 1.4 million words. Today, there are more than 1.6
million words. The number of sections in the code has been rising even faster
than the word count.
Word
counts alone would not be convincing, but a survey of the code's sections and
subsections completes the picture of growing complexity. In 1954, there were
103 sections; today, there are 725. That's an increase of 604 percent.
Fromhttp://www.taxfoundation.org
That's
a lot of tax code, something on the order of 8,000 pages. Somewhere in there is
the tax code that applies to ordinary folks; wage income, interest and dividends,
deductions— the basis of the 1040 tax form. (Who can guess, maybe 200
pages that cover 98% of individual tax returns?)
The
rest of that tax code was bought and paid for by special interests, and that's
the problem. A lot of what we think of as corporate malfeasence is legal, and
in spite of the comforting words that Dubya said this morning, no one will be
"held accountable" for having 800+ offshore special purpose entities
if they show, in that other 7,800 pages of tax code, a stay out of jail card.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I
have the economic pep rally on c-span, and at about 10:15 Dubya took a powder
to get back to his vacation, promising that he would look over the summaries of
the comments. (Me thinks Al Gore would have chosen to listen and participate in
the forum over a quick nine holes in the Texas heat.)
August
14, 2002
Bubble
Capitalism
People
do not live and work in order to buy stocks. People exist in complex webs of
relationships with family, work, community and many other rewarding adventures
and obligations. The larger purpose of the economic order, including Wall
Street, is to support the material conditions for human existence, not to
undermine and destabilize them.
AnEditorial
of The Nation
I
wish I'd said that.
August
15, 2002
shread.net
This
is what that little camera on the Hiptop is for. I can't get over how a journal
entry that doesn't have a picture seems so empty.
Jp
wireless
August
16, 2002
I'm
a Garage Kit Action Hero!
In
typical Danger style, each employee who had been with the company for more that
two years got something special today! That's me in the middle, and Brian with
the twezers, Vic, and Dave (holding the outsized anti-personel FPGA)
August
18, 2002
Neil
Finn's One All
I'm
not sure how to do this. In this age of rap, Britany, boy bands, and
metal-sound-alikes it's like finding an alien artifact.
Holding
this CD in my hands, it's easy to get worked up about this recording, because
it's proof that in spite of the spreadsheet driven record companies*, great
music hasn't disapeared. (It appears to have just changed its address to New
Zealand.) *Funny how you can swap those four words around and get the same
feeling.
Fortunately,
One All
is its own antidote. The songs take over, drowing my nostalgia for a time when
great records were more frequent than birthdays.
August
23, 2002
Linkronicity
It's
been a week of weird new links. First it was Music All Morning over at WRRV,
then came metafilter and now even pixelsurgeon(Great name, that.)
I
have no idea how it happens, but every now and again someone discovers my paper
airplanes and for a week afterwards I get a whole load of hits from links like
these.
BTW,
If you've never tried them, please do. It's a lot of fun for the price of a
piece of paper.
August
24, 2002
The
Best Kept Secret (Service)
One
of largest demonstrations ever in Stockton invisibleto Bush.
I
wonder if he knows that people are taking to the streets? I remember on
inauguration day that his parade route was lined with protesters, so many that
the major networks had a hardtime keeping them off-camera. The barking heads of
network news did comment however, they thought it was bad form to protest on
such an occasion, after all, they'd managed to put Florida behind, why couldn't
everyone?
Since
that day, protesters are kept in 'Free Speech zones',well out of sight (and
mind), all preseumably to prevent Dubya from glimpsing a child carrying a
"You have no mandate" sign.
That's
no secret.
Even
more links!
Celetukers
A Community weblog in Indonesia, and Fidido a Fark look alike from from Brazil!
August
25, 2002
Physician,
Heal Thyself
The
other day I found a hit from a feed from pixelsurgeon, but when I went to check
out the root site. It came up blank.
You
know with a name like pixelsurgeon, you'd think that the site would pass the
W3C HTML Validation Service
Well,
I looked again today hoping to read it, and again it was blank. Then I thought,
well I'll try another browser (Interent Explorer). Wha'd'ya know, the site came
up.
August
27, 2002
Trees
cause forests, and forests cause forest fires, so....
A
final thought: Wouldn't it be nice if just once, on some issue, the Bush
administration came up with a plan that didn't involve weakened environmental
protection, financial breaks for wealthy individuals and corporations and
reduced public oversight?
Bush
on Fire By PAUL KRUGMAN in The New York Times
September
1, 2002
Worldcon
I
got to hearDavid Brin and Orson Scott Card speak yesterday at WorldCon in San
Jose.
It
was supposed to be a reading, but Brin forgot his reading glasses, so he spent
more time (even into Card's scheduled time) speaking off the top of his head,
which was more than fine with me.
Brin
had two major themes on his mind. The first was the demographics of Science
Fiction prose fandom. A quick look around the con demonstrated his point; I saw
very few faces that were too young to have watched Armstrong take the first
steps on the moon. Maybe it was the high admission prices to the con, but I'm a
afraid its more than that.
Brin
pointed out that our culture has embraced Science Fiction. It has. Take a look
at your Movie or TV listings, or at your DVD or videogame collection.
Unfortunately, while the ideas (if not the ideals) of Science fiction have
become mainstream, written science fiction has not found the same acceptance.
I
myself grew up on science fiction, reading Asimov, Clark, Biggle and Heinlein
late into the night. As a teen I found it a bit subversive, since it was my
introduction to "adult" fiction. Even now I prefer stories that are a
little too optimistic for the mainstream.
Digitaly
we can create any any person, any place, any time, any universe. What did they
do in Final Fantasy? they created a destroyed New York.
—
My rant from yesterday
Brin
looks out at the graying crowd and wonders where the Science Fiction readers of
tomorrow will come from. He has a point, (and a fine website). For my part I
will be adding a section to my site where I recommend my favorite books for
young adult readers.
His
second theme was about privacy and freedom. He pointed out that there are two
groups on the privacy side, one side wanting to place the strong encryption
tools into everyone's hands, so we can prevent our public servants from prying,
the other side wishes to erect a wall of regulations to restrict the activities
of our public servants. He pointed out that either way, they will get our
information, and that the real problem is not us keeping secrets from the
powerful, but the powerful keeping secrets from us.
That
point rang like a bell in my head.
David
Brin is one of my favorite authors, and now that I've heard him speak, I think
he's one of the great minds of our age.
Orson
Scott Card
Card
had news about the Ender Movie, it's in progress, but as he said, it isn't a
sure thing until it's in theaters. He then read from something he called
"Polish Boy". Card's a great reader, and the story was quite good.
I
love many of Cards books, and I wish we'd have had time for questions. Card is
a Mormon, and has written books about the founding of the Church, but he has
also written fiction where the actions his characters is in opposition to the
values of his church. (Or any other religion, for that matter)
Maybe
it's a stupid philosophical question, but I've never heard an author speak to
the issue....
September
4, 2002
We
pretend he won the election, he pretends to represent us.
Question:
Who actually received the most votes in Florida's 2000 presidential election?
Answer:
Al Gore. State election officials ultimately declared George W. Bush the winner
by a margin of 537 votes, but during and after the election dispute, questions
remained about the uncounted ballots of 175,010 voters, ballots that had been
rejected by error-prone tabulating machines employed in many Florida counties.
Confusion and conflict, much of it generated by partisan intrigue, prevented
these ballots from being counted during the election controversy. However, in
2001 every uncounted ballot was carefully examined in a scientific study by the
University of Chicago, which concluded that when all the votes were counted,
more votes had been cast for Gore than for Bush.
Clearing
up the election that won't die by Lance deHaven-Smith in the Tallahassee
Democrat
September
5, 2002
mikepop
meets hiptop
Mike
over at Bedope has ahiptop weblog!
Be
sure to have a peek athipshakeas well.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Say
WHAT?
WASHINGTON
(AP) - Citing constitutional concerns, Vice President Dick Cheney ( news - web
sites) and the White House are refusing to turn over information in two
lawsuits against the Bush administration's energy task force.
Cheney
Won't Release Energy Papers By PETE YOST, Associated Press Writer
Are
you kidding me? Those meetings should have been on c-span.We're not talking
about national security here, we're talking about policy of the executive
branch of our
government.
November
is near. You know what to do.
September
10, 2002
Rats
in the Woodpile
We've
got rats in the woodpile, but let's not burn down the manor house to get them.
Perhaps
what we need is an Office of Homeland Freedom.
The
sing-songy refrain of "national security" has served as the constant
accompaniment to the Bush administration's domestic response to the horrible
events of Sept. 11. It is the justification for executive orders, policy
changes and federal legislation that have eroded civil liberties once held
inviolate in this country.
Reflecting
on rights lost in the past year
Some
of the fundamental changes to Americans' legal rights by the Bush
administration and the USA Patriot Act following the terror attacks:
Overview
of Changes to Legal Rights
September
11, 2002
The
Gettysburg Address
Four
score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new
nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are
created equal.
Now
we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation
so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great
battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as
a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation
might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.
But
in a larger sense, we can not dedicate— we can not consecrate— we
can not hallow— this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who
struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract.
The world will little note, nor long remember, what we say here, but it can
never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be
dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far
so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task
remaining before us— that from these honored dead we may take increased
devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of
devotion—that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died
in vain—that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of
freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people,
shall not perish from the earth.
Abraham
Lincoln, November 19, 1863, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
September
19, 2002
'Even
if Iraq managed to hide these weapons, what they are now hiding is harmless
goo'
The
Guardian (UK) Has a Q&A with Scott Ritter, a former US Marine, and weapons
inspector in Iraq.
September
21, 2002
Murdoch
plan for 'Pop Idol' president
A
RUPERT Murdoch television game show could choose the next president of the
United States, according to the Drudge Report.
The
internet news magazine yesterday said the US cable channel FX was planning an
ambitious, two-year endeavour that will culminate in the American public at
large voting on a "people's candidate" to stand for president of the
United States in 2004.
During
subsequent episodes, the Drudge Report said, candidates will square off in
numerous competitions, including debates. The number of semi-finalists are to
be whittled down each week, based on live audience response and
telephone/internet voting.
From
theScotsman
When
I first read about this in the Drudge Report* my reaction was "You've got to be kidding me, this
is the worst idea in the history of civilization."
*Visits
to the Drudge Report are a dirty pleasure of mine. Matt Drudge picks his
stories and writes his headlines with a right wing slant, (hey, that's where
the money is!) and he reports as much on Hollywood as he does on politics, but
he never misses the big story of the moment, even if the big story of the
moment doesn't agree with his politics. (You know what they say about
Journalists, they eat their own.)
But
then I got to thinking... what could actually happen? What if there really was
such a show? What would happen if the right kind of people made it past
Murdoch's casting couch, and into the cast? Looking at the kind of people who
are chosen for Real World, Big Brother, and Survivor, we could have
something very good for our republic....
There's
one thing to be said about the other reality shows, they always try to put
together an interesting cast... They try to cast someone who is gay, an African
American, an Asian American, someone devoutly religious, a veteran, and a
grandparent... (but never on Real World, of course.)
"Who
wants to be President?" would have these people too. But since the show
would be a political podium from the start, it's probable that the folks who
made it onto the show would be articulate, with a flair for the dramatic turn
of phrase.
No,
I don't really think that anyone picked by a game show will become president.
(Oh, why, why do I shudder so as I write those words?) But on the other hand, I
think that bringing the unscripted, unvarnished un-polled views of — for
lack of a better phrase — ordinary American citizens onto the political
discourse might be a very good thing indeed.
For
years we've let the inside-the-beltline press report the horse race, and we've
let political candidates get away with presenting the same 40-minute canned
speech, day after day, crafted and tuned by poll - wizard Wormtongues.
I
for one would love to see the mainstream candidates forced to respond each week
to the issues brought up by our "Who wants to be President?" cast. In
fact, I have an idea:
What
if "Who wants to be President?" ran for 45 minutes, followed by 15
minutes, split up between the major party candidates. What a sight that would
be, instead of campaigns buying commercials, supporters could buy commercials
during the campaign.
I
hereby announce my candidacy for "Who wants to be President",
representing the "I'm Just A Simple Country Engineer" Party. My
platform is the restoration of the balance of power between the private,
(that's you and me) public (that's business and corporations) and the
government (you know who).
My
campaign motto?
Vote
Bush Off the Island!
September
22, 2002
Sen
to Chihiro no Kamikakushi
I
saw the movie (screened as Spirited Away here in the USA) yesterday, presented
with Japanese soundtrack, with laser-scribed subtitles in English.
It's
simply the most visualy stimulating and beautiful film I've ever seen. That the
plot was simple, and fairly linear, was the only indication that Spirited
Away is
not aimed at an adult audience.
The
soundtrack was finely balanced, and in a way almost transparent, in that unlike
nearly every recent Hollywood movie*, it did not sound trite or tired, nor did
it call attention to itself, but the movie would be greatly diminished without
it.
*I
don't know about you, but lately many film scores sound to me like a bad cross
with recessive genes from John Williams and tin-pan alley. (Except Danny Elfman
scores, which are full of humor and joy.)
Hayao
Miyazaki has once again raised the bar. Go see this movie.
September
24, 2002
Flying
in Circles
Last
week I received a interesting entry in my Guest Book, I'm going to re-produce
it here, then reply;
Me
and my sons appreciate the nifty paper airplane instructions. However, if the
emotional, irrational political/philosophical sentiments expressed on other
areas of this site applied to flight dynamics, we would all be road tripping
across the globe until the end of time. Thank God for the immutable principles
of physics, which are oblivious to useless liberal ideology. Couldn't fly
without the right wing. hahaha
PapierBaron
Dear
Mr. PapierBaron
It
brings me much joy to hear that you and your children enjoyed the planes, and
thank you for taking the time to comment on the rest of the site.
It's
funny that you should make an analogy between flight dynamics and politics,
because, in fact, I apply the same principals to both.
In
the case of paper airplanes, I refine my planes by testing design after design,
learning from each experiment. Since I'm seeking balanced designs, I cannot
reject a candidate plane on a single toss. I re-examine its flight
characteristics over and over until I am satisfied that either it works the way
I want, or it doesn't make the cut. I learn as much (or more) from failed
designs as I do from successful ones.
In
the case of my political and economic thought, the development process is much
the same. While I don't get to do direct experimentation on the political
world, (just as well for all of us, eh?) I do get to observe the dynamic
political systems from afar, both with my own eyes, and with the eyes of
observers from all across the political spectrum.
The
question is, who's data do I believe? While both the far left, and the far right seem
equally distant from where I stand, I can not reject their most earnest ravings
without wondering if there might be some truth there to be found. Neither
extreme ever seems to present arguments that go beyond echoing ten second sound
bites, and that's where they lose me. The proof, as they say, is in the
pudding, not in the menu.
I
watch the political coverage on Sunday morning, but it sometimes seems that
reasoned discourse has been replaced by circus maximus—the louder you
shout—the higher the ratings, the more often you say something, the truer
it becomes.
My
most reliable sources are a rare breed, those journalists who are willing to
take up a calculator, and see if the numbers really add up. These Journalists
are unafraid of the boring task of checking facts and historical data. I'm an
engineer by trade, show me the numbers.
Finally,
my political opinions are refined when I convolve information from these
sources against my own personal beliefs, and in a word, I believe in the
future. I believe that mankind must remain on this Earth yet for billions of
years, and it is my solemn duty to them (and by extension, to all of you today)
to leave this Earth a better place.
You've
seen, with your own eyes, that proof of what happens when I apply my principals
and methods to the design of paper airplanes, I invite you to re-examine my
views on other subjects knowing that I've come by them in a similar way. ^_^
Yours
Truly,
Joseph
Palmer
September
24, 2002
Judge
Concludes Energy Company Drove Up Prices
"El
Paso Pipeline withheld extremely large amounts of capacity that it could have
flowed to its California delivery points," Judge Wagner said in the
ruling. El Paso's actions significantly increased the price of natural gas
flowing to California, he added, and "substantially tightened the supply
of natural gas at the California border."
By
RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. with LOWELL BERGMAN in The New York Times.
I
told you so!
There's
a lot of shoes left to drop. The next really big one will be the pipline
companies that have manipulated the price of natural gas.
From
my weblog entry for May 18,2001
September
25, 2002
Stringent
Tests
Physics
Life, a website started yesterday by the Institute of Physics, brings out the
subversive side of science by encouraging students to flick rubber bands at
each other, use their mobile phones to play computer games, and construct a
paper aircraft which, as stringent tests conducted by The Times proved, will
fly across even the largest classroom. The ten-step guide should provide hours
of innocent enjoyment to students seeking a distraction from their textbooks.
Nigel
Hawkes for the (London) TIMESONLINE
A
week or so ago I got a request to reproduce one of my paper airplane designs in
a press relese promoting www.physics.org, an educational site. Normally I
refuse all commercial requests (and I've had some doozys) but I bend that rule
for education related requests.
Well,
The Times of London decided to try out the plane, and did a nice story about
the site. Since then, I've had over 4000 hits from www.physics.org!
I'm
still waiting to get slashdoted....
September
30, 2002
www.hardocp.com
www.hardocp.com
is pointing a zillion hits to the Paper Airplanes right now... I really really
wish they would have waited a little while, since there's going to be really
big news soon
------------------------------------------------------------------------
At
least on paper, it's the only way to fly
SCIENTISTS
have produced plans for what may be the perfect paper aeroplane. Designed by
American Joseph Palmer, the PL-1 glider resists stalling and flies smoothly
with a simple toss.
Sun
Herald 29/09/2002 Cost - $1.10 361 words
Sun
Herald (Sydney Australia)
Well,
golly. Yesterday I couldn't even spell scientist and now I are one.
I
do wish they'd have asked permission before printing my work, and I'm really
not happy about them now asking for money to see my work...
Update:
6:12 PM I still think they should have asked, but I'm not nearly as miffed
about it as the previous paragraph might lead you to think.
Update
9:00 PM. The Sun Herald wrote to tell me that they have removed the article
from their web store. This seems a fair solution, in that they will no longer
charge for the design.
I
hope they drop theirtucker in the billabong. ^_^
Update
9:00 PM. Oh never mind....sorry 'bout that billabong crack.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Today's
Jing Jing fortune: You will soon receive an unusual proposition.
October
1, 2002
Radio
Interview
I
got interviewed by ABC Radio in Sydney Australia this afternoon (morning their
time). No, not about the Sidekick, it was about my paper airplanes! Now I'm
getting a pile of guestbook entries from all over Eastern Australia.
I've
even got some blowback from down under from the www.hardocp.com link
yesterday... today I'm getting hits from www.overclockers.com.au/Umm, G'day,
mates!
I
visited Australia about 10 or 12 years ago, and now I want to go back.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
It
was twenty years ago today...
I've
been informed that twenty years ago today the first CD player went on sale. I
hope that's a good omen for the Hiptop, Er... Sidekick.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HARDWARE
- MUST SHIP TODAY*
The
Hiptop is released!
For
the last two plus years Danger has been beavering away in anticipation of this
day. Needless to say, yesterday we were all bouncing off the walls like
expectant fathers, (except the folks actually envolved in the press release,
who were "in the delivery room")
This
morning you can walk into a T-Mobile store and buy one.
The
Dangerites will be hanging at the T-Mobile store at 165 University Avenue in
Palo Alto this morning (they open the doors at 9:00 AM), if you're in the area
drop by — rumor has it that store will be receiving extra units. (I
really wish I could have mentioned that yesterday — when I got an extra
5000 hits from hardocp)
Google's
News Search on T-Mobile Sidekick
The
Register It's a fair cop, Andrew. ^_^
*
From a sticker on my guitar in my office
October
2, 2002
Now
why won't the one about becoming wealthy come true?
I
wonder if Monday's Jing Jing fortune:
You
will soon receive an unusual proposition.
is somehow linked to the Radio Interview I did...
I
got another email this morning—this time from Australia's West coast
network...
You
know, I'm really going to have to re-think my copyright policy. In the end I'm
just trying to prevent someone else making money on them (Goodness knows I don't...)
I'm
now leaning towards letting newspapers and general educational magazines run
the designs—as long as they first ask permission and protect my
copyright. (I may ask for a copy of the publication in payment ^_^) I really do
plan to keep them up on the web for free, so you can see how having them
published in a book might cause the publisher to frown upon my website...
Hmmmm....
October
4, 2002
Lloyd
Biggle, Jr. (1923-2002)
Dr.
Lloyd Biggle, Jr., Ph. D., musician, author, and internationally known oral
historian died September 12, 2002, after a twenty-year battle with leukemia and
cancer.
Science
Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America
I
know it's not exactly news, but I only heard last night.
Lloyd
Biggle Jr. was one of my favorite authors, and "Monument"is my
favorite book of all time. It's the one book that I pick up at used bookstores
just to give to people. I find myself reading it at least once a year, usualy
on a sultery summer afternoon, with a jar at my elbow. It's one of the finest
ways to spend a day. (I'd love to see an anime of it one day...)
Wildside
Press is reprinting some of his science fiction novels and they can often be
found in better used bookstores. I have them all, and can recomend each and
every one.
I
don't feel like I'm saying enough here, since his books have had a profound
influence on my own meager writings, and on my life.
Goodbye,
Lloyd, I'm a better man for having known you.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
During
the Persian Gulf War, the United States was able to convince Saddam Hussein
that the use of weapons of mass destruction would result in his being toppled
from power. This time around, the object of an invasion of Iraq is to topple
Saddam Hussein, so he has no reason to exercise restraint.
U.S.
Senator Robert C. Byrd
October
5, 2002
Site
of the day
Joseph
Palmer's Paper Airplanes
Step
by Step instructions that show how to make a world record breaking paper
aeroplane.
www.iinet.net.au
Um,
Guys, I'm really really honored to be your site of the day, but... I didn't
design the world record breaking paper aeroplane. That's Ken Blackburn.I link
to his site from mine, but that's as close as I am to the world record.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bush
tax 'cuts': A dirty deal for the middle class is coming
The
dirty secret of Bush's tax cut is that while ordinary income tax rates were
reduced across the board, the rates and terms of the alternative minimum tax
went unchanged. Taxpayers in the middle classes looked at the new, lowered
rates promised under Bush's package and anticipated their benefits. But many of
them did not realize they would answer instead to this different tax formula.
Last
year, barely 2 percent of the nation paid these alternative rates. By 2010,
they will apply to a majority of people earning between $50,000 and $100,000
and 95 percent of those who earn between $100,000 and $500,000, according to
the tax center's study.
BY
JOHN BALZAR / Los Angeles Times
You
can go right to the source: The Tax Policy Center and read their report:The
AMT: Out of Control
What's
critical to remember is that a huge chunk of the predicted "surplus"
(remember that surplus?) came from tax revenue scheduled to come in under the
present wording of the AMT laws.
This
train wreck was cynically scheduled in the Bush 2001 tax cut bill, and now the
Whitehouse is pushing to make the irresponsible cuts in that bill permanent.
They have to hurry, because soon millions of additional taxpayers will be
facing the horrifying complexities of filing the AMT, and will demand change.
It
is unconscionable a taxpayer with ordinary income, a mortgage, and some mutual
funds should find themselves lumped in with the ultra-rich taxpayers with their
off-shore special purpose entities, and their oil depletion allowances, and
their clever Aurthur Anderson accountants. The middle class will flood
Washington, and AMT will have to change.
But
not just yet, not until Dubya locks in his tax cuts...
Get
Registered.
Get
Informed.
Vote.
October
13, 2002
Why
the CIA thinks Bush is wrong
...the
senator's hardman approach paid off when the director of the CIA admitted that
the only reason Saddam would use WMDs against the United States was if he was
backed into a corner -- due to a strike by the American military -- and
realised he was about to fall. Saddam, Tenet was saying, would only become the
nightmare that Bush envisaged, if Bush attacked him first.
The
Sunday Herald
Clear
and convincing evidence that this week's vote was a stampede to stupidity.
October
12, 2002
The
Silenced Majority
...Americans
can stop America's next war as they have stopped similar planned or actual
idiocies in the past. That the Bush clique pays scant heed to Arab and Muslim
concerns, has no time for "euro-wimps" and other appeasers is
brutally clear. But domestic public opinion is a different story - and that
story is changing. Slowly, inconsistently but palpably, ordinary Americans are
making their voices heard. ...
The
voice of America by Simon Tisdall in The Guardian
I'd
like to thank one of my Senators, Barbara Boxer, and my Congressman, Mike Honda
for voting against giving Dubya-oh-seven a license to kill.
It
frightens me that Dubya has been granted such power over the rest of the world,
a world which held so very little interest for him, that prior to becoming
president, he didn't even have a passport.
Well—
now he's got the biggest six(megaton)-shooter in the west, and what does he do?
Does he mosey on down to the UN, to let them know that he'll be standing behind
them? No. Does he tell them that "If the Iraqis refuse t'let y'all inspect
under any stone, that stone will be pounded into dust?" No. What does he
do?
Bush
Plans Two-Week Campaign Tour
President
Bush will hit the road for 14 straight days before the Nov. 5 elections,
stopping in as many as four states a day during a taxpayer-subsidized campaign
spree that appears unconstrained by preparations for war.
By
Mike AllenWashington PostStaff Writer
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
Dinosaur War - To Protect Corporate Profits
Nonetheless,
corporations have claimed the human rights the Founders fought and often died
to bequeath to living, breathing humans. And, using those rights, they've
usurped our government to the point where our domestic policies are now based
on what's best for the corporations with the largest campaign contributions,
and our foreign policy has become a necessary extension of that.
by
Thom Hartmann in Common Dreams
October
14, 2002
CompUSA
Ad!
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Connecting
Dots
Do
you remember that one of the very first acts of Dubya's Whitehouse was to seal
the records of the Reagan/Bush administration? I guess it just wouldn't do to
have historians, reporters and, well, us voters learning the sordid details of
our envolvement in Iraq.
Secrecy
is the kriptonite of democracy.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
But
now let's list exactly what we really must forget if we are to support this
madness. Most important of all, we must forget that President Ronald Reagan
dispatched a special envoy to meet Saddam in December 1983. It's essential to
forget this for three reasons. First, because the awful Saddam was already
using gas against the Iranians - which is one of the reasons we are now
supposed to go to war with him.
Second,
because the envoy was sent to arrange the re-opening of the US embassy, in
order to secure better trade and economic relations with the Butcher of
Baghdad.
Third,
because the envoy was - wait for it - Donald Rumsfeld. Now you might think it
strange that the US's defence secretary, in the course of one of his folksy
press conferences, hasn't chatted to us about this interesting tit-bit.
Lest
we forget: the Bushes' history is one of support for tyrants, betrayal and oil,
oil, oil
Business
Report
Cape
Town, South Africa
October
15, 2002
State
of Texas General Services Commission
Yo,
Texas, What's up with all these hits? (The last 3 digits have been changed to
protect the guilty.)
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:32:09 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:32:09 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:32:21 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:32:26 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:32:29 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:32:32 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:32:51 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:32:55 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:33:00 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:33:08 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:33:15 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:33:16 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:33:47 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:33:58 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:34:15 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:34:34 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:35:23 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:35:31 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:36:57 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
Tuesday,
15-Oct-2002 15:36:57 EDT - 168.49.220.xxx -
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bali
proves that America's war on terror isn't working
...That
meant, among other things, a new alternative energy strategy, aimed eventually
at weaning the west off oil. No longer would the US and others need to
manipulate the Middle East just to safeguard their petrol supply. They could
let the peoples of the Arab world choose their own governments for once. The US
would move its troops out of Saudi Arabia, healing one of the sores Bin-Laden
most likes to inflame: the presence of "infidels" on holy Muslim
soil. And Washington would pick up where Clinton left off, devoting serious
political muscle to the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. Genuine movement in
that area would instantly rob the Islamists of one of their greatest recruiting
pitches.
Jonathan
FreedlandThe Guardian
If
you read one article today, read this one. Here in the US, the jingoistic
cheerleading has all but drown out this sort of analysis.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In
a related matter, I've read that both Toyota and Honda will be selling/leasing
fuel cell vehicles 'by the end of the year'. Scientific American reports that
the cost of hydrogen is about 130% that of gasoline, per mile. Would you pay
30% more at the pump to walk away from the Middle East? (And have cleaner air,
while we're at it?) It's inevitable, and not so far away.
October
17, 2002
In
Deep Voodoo
In
other words, the governing economic theory is a dogma, without what Freud
called a "reality principle a cognitive device whereby "the real
world" can significantly impact and correct the dogma. Case in point: the
doctrines of "supply side" and "trickle down," whereby a
cut in taxes and diversion of still more wealth to the wealthy "must"
result in economic growth, enhanced revenues, and improved standard of living
for all. It was tried in the Reagan administration and, as we well know, failed
spectacularly, as the national debt tripled. But never mind that, say the true
believers. When the Clinton administration rejected "supply side" theory
and raised taxes, two ex-Professors of Economics, Dr. Phil Gramm and Dr. Dick
Armey, predicted economic catastrophe. Their dogma so stipulated. Instead, the
federal budget once again showed a surplus, and the United States enjoyed a
decade of unprecedented prosperity. Unfazed by this compelling evidence, the
Bush economists reinstated "supply side" economics (what Poppy Bush
called "Voodoo economics" before he joined the Reagan team) and,
well, you know the rest. As true dogmatists, conservative "supply
side" economists prefer not to be "confused by the facts."
Instead, they believe their own propaganda and adhere faithfully to their
doctrines. When reality is found to be inconvenient, they proceed to
"invent" a more congenial "reality." These are paradigmatic
"post-modernists" for whom "reality" is simply what they
want it to be. Scientific evidence, history, practical experience, even common
sense, be damned.
Dr.
Ernest Partridge in Democratic Underground
Turn
off the TV, and read Dr. Partridge's work. There's more truth here that you'll
get in a year of CNN.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abracadabra,
Why Iraq! Because of Economic Decline in Bush Country
According
to Wilshire Associates, close to $8 trillion in investor wealth—greater
than the $6.62 trillion national debt—has evaporated since the spring of
2000. That means the US stock markets lost an amount equal to three-quarters of
what the world's leading economy produced in the past year. By my calculations—
since the newspapers and securities firms refuse to report this decline, acquiring
figures and using one's calculator are the only way to find out exactly what
has happened—the
$8 trillion decline in wealth means that an amount roughly equal to $29,5000
per person has disappeared into the pit of the plummeting stock market.
(Emphasis
added—J.)
Huck
GutmannCommon Dreams
Well,
It looks like we're on the Road to Recovery, but unfortunatley, that road leads
through another recession.
October
23, 2002
Well,
things have really returned to normal. That big bump in traffic started with a
link from www.hardocp.com.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Boeing
Bird of Prey
Boeing
Bird of Prey aircraft -- (Photo Boeing)
Boeing
has announced the "Bird of Prey", a new advanced stealth aircraft.
I
think it looks a little like PL2 Don't you think?
I
used to see a lot of hits from boeing.com in my hitlogs for my paper
airplanes—I wonder where the Boeing engineers got the idea for downward
winglets? ^_^
October
25, 2002
Minnesota
Senator Paul Wellstone 1944 - 2002
A
light in the darkness has been extinguished. CNN has the details.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aguirre
said aggressive prosecution is the only way to prevent continued public losses
in deregulated markets. "There were scores and scores of people involved
in this illegal activity," he said. "What we need is for some of
these traders to do some serious jail time."
Also
on trial as a result of Beldon's plea is the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC), which is charged with enforcing "reasonable"
rates, but which failed to intervene as the California crisis dragged on. Since
then, critics say the agency has failed to punish clear cases of misconduct.
"The big effort at the FERC to preserve the innocence of the key players
has just taken a big hit," said McCullough, the Portland analyst.
A
Switch for Enron by Charles Rappleye in the LA Weekly
It
could happen to you.
The
most damaging weeks of the "crisis" in California were from when the
Supreme Court ended the recount in 2000, to when Jim Jeffords walked across the
isle in the Senate. These 'trading companies' had their boney fingers around
the necks of California's Power Grids and Natural Gas Piplines, and they want
more. They want water systems, and sewer systems, and cable tv and satellite,
and if they could swing the deal with Dubya, the very air we breathe. (Okay,
they can't really get all the air, but they seem intent to lobby to change the
rules to pollute the stuff they can't control.)
Next
month, Dubya isn't on your ballot, but you have a chance to stop the other
Enrons from attacking your state.
Vote
Democtatic.
October
28, 2002
Cronkite
warns Iraq conflict (could) cause WWIII
Cronkite
said storming Iraq with military force would result in World War III.
He
said journalists face the problem of protecting people's rights while at the
same time trying to gather all facts so the story can be told.
"We
can't do that unless we have the facts to work with," he said.
Cronkite
said he is appalled that the media is not permitted to accompany U.S. troops in
action.
"We
might have thought we did in the Persian Gulf War because they permitted us to
cover briefings and talk with troops before actually going into combat,"
he said. "But even then, censored officers stood within ear range."
Journalists
couldn't report any losses in combat, so the history of the Persian Gulf war is
incomplete, he said
The
Battalion Texas A&M's News Source
That's
World War Three. For real. Not the book. Not the Movie. Not the video game.
October
29, 2002
Yipes!
Help!
I've fallen into thememepool
November
1, 2002
Brer
Microsoft Thrown In Briar Patch!
No
surprises here, the inJustice Department's proposed settlement has been rubber
stamped. Read about it in The Register or if you prefer, the leagalese.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hiptop
Meets Amazon!
T-Mobile
Sidekick with Camera Attachment (T-Mobile)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A
Plea for Divided Government
A
list from www.buzzflash.com
While
Bush has been President:
Unemployment
has risen from 3.9% to 6.0%;
42
States will or expect to make Medicaid Cuts;
41.2
Million People in America Have NO Health Insurance;
Number
of Americans living in Poverty rises for first time in eight years;
Bush
Budget Will Spend the Entire Social Security Trust Fund Over Next Two Years;
"Consumer
Comfort" has dropped from +20 to -20 in one year;
49%
of Americans Are "Dissatisfied With The Way Things Are Going in the United
States at this time," up from 29%;
Bush
Budget Posted First Deficit Since 1997, Predicted Deficits Until 2005;
98%
of Pension Funds expected to be Under-Funded;
"Consumer
Confidence" continues to drop;
U.S.
debt will have "Major International Consequences."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
That
way lies disaster.
The
most disturbing story I've seen lately was about the administration's efforts
to pressure the CIA to stop their pesky reports that 1) there is no known
connection between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda, and 2) Saddam will likely only
use any weapons of mass destruction if we attack him. It's never useful to
force your intelligence agency to twist the evidence to suit the policy you've
already chosen. That way lies disaster.
Hobbling
down the homestretch By Molly Ivins in www.workingforchange.com
November
2, 2002
Please
Vote for Democrats in Congress and the Senate
Reason
#1 We need an Independent Commission to investigate Sept. 11. We need to know
what really went wrong, if we want to prevent it from happening again. The
Whitehouse whines "It'll git in the way of our war on terra!",
maybe—but Dubya, so does flitting around the country in Air Force One.
Reason
#2 We have lost our credibility in the rest of the world. Kyoto. Test Ban
Treaty. ABM treaty. World Court. Dubya turned his back on the rest of the world,
and they've noticed. On Iraq, we have a coalition of two, and my friends in the
UK say that if push comes to shove, there will be a call for new elections.
Then we go it alone.
Reason
#3 The Securities and Exchange Commission couldn't find gambling in Las Vegas.
This agency which is supposed to protect us from the Enrons, WorldComs, and
Aurtur Andersons. Just in the news, The SEC chairman, Harvey Pitt, skipped over
John Biggs, (a real reformer) in favor of William Webster. Of course, when the
commission voted, only Pitt knew that Webster's had connections to a company
being sued for fraud. Fox, meet henhouse.
Reason
#4 It's The Economy, Stupid . . . (Loads of links!) Dubya put tax cuts for the
top 1% ahead of everything else. Maybe the top 1% are happier paying less taxes, but
they'd be richer
still if the economy were doing well.
Reason
#5 Do Lower Taxes Mean Faster Economic Growth? If you watch The West Wing, you'll know what I'm
talking about when I say "Ten Word Answer". Dubya asserts that
reducing taxes at the high end of the scale makes more jobs. Sounds logical,
but there's simply no evidence to support it. A business will hire only when
they believe that another employee will bring in more profit.
Follow
the money.
If
the owner of, say, the local auto dealership took a look at his paystub, do you
think he'd really say; "Oh! Hey!, my salary hasn't changed, and our sales
haven't changed, but I'm personally taking home some more money, so let's add
another employee to the payroll!"
Now
on the other hand, if the economy isn't dragged down by interest on the debt
(put there because Dubya's only economic plan is to cut taxes on the wealthy)
there's a lot more people coming in the front door, looking for cars. That's
the time to add another employee to the payroll.
November
4, 2002
Vote
Democratic
I
was hoping to have some brilliant plea for sanity, some words that would ring
as true as Gettysburg Address, or the preamble to the constitution, but I
don't.
All
I can say is I'm just a simple country engineer, and my heart and my calculator
tell me our nation is going the wrong way.
Tomorrow,
we have a chance to vote for a divided government.
Tomorrow,
we have a chance to put people ahead of big business.
Tomorrow,
we have a chance slow the mad rush to war in Iraq.
Tomorrow,
your vote matters.
November
5, 2002
Good
News 18:00 PST.
Harvey
Pitt had resigned as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
A
real debate.
I
watched the Coleman-Mondale debate this evening. (Thanks, Tivo!) I think both
candidates made points, and depending on your political bent, you might declare
either one the "winner", but most of all, It was so refreshing to see
the candidates themselves driving the debate, with the modators all but
disapearing from view.
Try
to catch a replay on C-Span. This is how debates should be.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
One
more thing, I was listening in on c-span3 this afternoon, they were re-playing
hearings on the reporting of Election 2002. One after another the heads of
networks, and the head of the Voter News Service grovled about having got every
prediction of every race right except one, Gore-Bush in Florida.
These
guys were falling overthemselves to apologise for predicting that Gore had won.
The
one thing that didn't come out in the hearings, was that the polsters got it
right! More people did try to vote for Gore, and had it not been for
Butterfly ballots, or the flawed lists that took away the right to vote of
largely Democratic leaning voters...
November
6, 2002
Unstructured
Thoughts
The
democrats (Okay, WE democrats) took it on the chin yesterday, and I've had
enough time and scotch to make a couple of observations.
1)
It's not enough to wave our arms and point at the holes Dubya's punching in the
bottom of the boat.
2)
It doesn't matter that punching holes in the bottom of the boat is a really bad
idea. Dubya's convinced it's the right thing to do, and people do like a man
who sticks to his convictions.
3)
Chasing behind him with a bucket of plugs and a hammer only gets you called an
obstuctionist.
4)
Holding the punch while Dubya swings the hammer is the worst idea of all. Are
you listining to me, McAuliffe, Daschle, and Gephardt?
------------------------------------------------------------------------
panis
et circenses
Yesterday
Americans went to the poles and voted, and our least qualified, least
constitutionally legitimate president in history will now be free to prosecute
his oil war in Iraq, appoint far-right-wing judges, and bankrupt the treasury
to comfort the comfortable.
It
makes me want to spit.
panis
et circenses
Is latin for "Bread and Circuses" a palliative offered especially to
avert potential discontent -- Merriam Webster's
November
8, 2002
CNN
at the UN
The
UN is getting ready to vote, and CNN has it live, sort of... Jean-David
Levitte, the French Ambassador, one of the permanent members of the security
council was speaking, but not on CNN. On Levitte was on the screen, but Wolf
Blitzer was talking.
It
was not a good translation. In fact, none of what Blitzer was saying was
comming from the French Ambassador.
Thank
goodness for C-SPAN. They had the live feed, from the UN, with UN translators.
November
9, 2002
OKONOMIYAKI
IN SAN JOSE!
Hiroshima
Okonomiyaki House is opening a shop on Williams Avenue at Winchester! (It's
like 300 steps from my front door... )
This
shop specializes in a healthy Hiroshima Style; a thin crepe of batter layered
with vegetables, noodles, toppings and sauce, low on oil and added fat. I'll
post a full review when they open.
November
11, 2002
Behind
the Smile
There
is a method to the G.O.P.'s tax cut madness, beyond the obvious benefits to the
very rich. Conservatives have long reasoned that the only way to destroy
popular programs that actually help ordinary Americans (Social Security,
Medicare and so on) is to starve the government of the money needed to pay for
them.
...The
way to cripple such programs without openly opposing them is to bleed the government
of the money to pay for them. With the prospect of budget deficits stretching
far into the future, and with the first wave of baby boomers already well into
their 50's, the day of reckoning for Social Security and Medicare is not far
off.
From
Behind the SmileBy BOB HERBERT in the New York Times
There's
more. (Isn't there always more?) More and more of your tax dollar will be going
ONLY to pay interest on Dubya's exploding debt.
November
17, 2002
A
Little History
Certainly
the media showed its soft side last week. As George W. Bush piously observed
Veterans Day, media pundits somehow restrained themselves from pointing to the
irony that the U.S. Commander-in-Chief, who's sometimes referred to as a
"former fighter pilot," has an embarrassing military past. His
records show that for months at a time during the Vietnam War, Bush could be
classified as, at best, "absent without leave" (AWOL) or, at worst,
as an army deserter.
...It's
not that the media are not hard on military laggards. While there were only 49
media stories about Bush's military past during his presidential campaign,
there were a whopping 13,641 media reports on Clinton's Vietnam-era draft
dodging during his first presidential race, according to former Clinton aide
Paul Begala.
"What
did Dubya do in the war, daddy?" — an editorial in the Toronto Star
Please
note that this artical was published in Canada. 49 vs 13,641. Where's that
"Liberal Media" when you need them?
November
20, 2002
Idiot.
One
Democratic senator who voted for the domestic security department said he and
his colleagues were exasperated by Mr. Byrd's delaying tactics on this and
other measures.
"More
and more of our members feel he's dragging it on and on ad infinitum, which is
not necessary," that senator said. "Make your point. Have a vote. And
move on. He's not willing to do that. He's from a different school. At some
point you have to say, 'Enough is enough.' "
Byrd,
at 85, Fills the Forum With Romans and Wrath By JOHN TIERNEY inThe New York
Times
His
point is this; you're voting to eviscerate the Constitution, you're in a damned
hurry, and you don't even know what is in the bill. This bill started out at
less than 50 pages, and has ballooned to 484. You never read it, let alone
pondered the effects.
Move
on? More likely future generations will seek out your grave just to spit upon
it.
November
21, 2002
Almost
there: a commercially viable fuel cell
Berkeley
Lab researchers have developed a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) that promises to
generate electricity as cheaply as the most efficient gas turbine.
Their
innovation, which paves the way for pollution-free power generators that serve
neighborhoods and industrial sites, lies in replacing ceramic electrodes with
stainless-steel-supported electrodes that are stronger, easier to manufacture,
and, most importantly, cheaper. This latter advantage marks a turning point in
the push to develop commercially viable fuel cells.
Science
BeatBerkely Lab
November
22, 2002
I
told you, I told you twice.
The
evidence, a transcript of a tape-recorded telephone conversation between an
employee at Williams Companies, the Tulsa, Okla. based energy company, and an
employee at a Southern California power plant operated by Williams, shows how
the two conspired to jack up power prices and create an artificial electricity
shortage by keeping the power plant out of service for two weeks...
But
here's the real tragedy. The evidence has been under seal and in the possession
of President Bush's Federal Energy Regulatory Commission; the governing body
that is supposed to make sure power prices is just and reasonable, for more
than a year.
Bush,
Cheney and the Great Rip-Off of California Ratepayers by JASON LEOPOLD in
www.counterpunch.org
I
wonder when the FERC was going to get arround to telling us.
November
26, 2002
Low-Income
Taxpayers: New Meat for the Right
And
the truth is, low- and middle-income people do pay a lot in taxes. They just
don't happen to pay the taxes that supply-side conservatives want to cut.
The
Journal's editors make only a passing comment on payroll taxes. But the basic
FICA tax takes a much bigger share from middle and low incomes than from large
ones. The 6.2 percent tax applies on incomes up to $84,900, meaning that if you
make that or less, you pay the full 6.2 percent. But Richard Sims, the policy
director of the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, took the recently
published example of a top CEO who earned $122.5 million in 2000 and calculated
that his FICA tax rate was 0.00043 percent. Lucky ducky.
Sims
also notes that sales and excise taxes hit hardest at low- and middle-income
people who have to spend most of their earnings on taxable items, can't save a
lot, and don't put much of their money into financial, accounting and legal
services, which generally aren't taxed.
According
to Sims's figures, the bottom 20 percent of Illinois residents pay 10.8 percent
of their income in sales and excise taxes, compared with only 1.4 percent paid
by the top 1 percent of earners. In California, the comparable figures are 7.4
percent and 1.0 percent; in Arizona, 8.1 percent and 1.2 percent; in Colorado,
5.1 percent and 0.8 percent.
By
E. J. Dionne Jr. in the Washington Post
December
2, 2002
Toyota,
Honda deliver first hydrogen cars
Toyota
and Honda on Monday delivered their first market ready zero-emission
hydrogen-powered fuel cell vehicles.
The
University of California got the first two Toyota hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles,
which have a range of 180 miles and a top speed of 96 mph.
In
Los Angeles, Honda Motor Co. delivered its first street-certified
hydrogen-powered fuel cell car to Mayor James K. Hahn. The City of Los Angeles
is leasing five Honda fuel cell test vehicles for "real world"
driving by city staff.
From
Salon.com
Remember
this day. 50 years from now you can look back and remember that with very
little fanfare, the world began the change from oil to hydrogen.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In
eight months, I heard many, many staff discussions, but not three meaningful,
substantive policy discussions. There were no actual policy white papers on
domestic issues. There were, truth be told, only a couple of people in the West
Wing who worried at all about policy substance and analysis, and they were even
more overworked than the stereotypical, non-stop, 20-hour-a-day White House
staff. Every modern presidency moves on the fly, but, on social policy and
related issues, the lack of even basic policy knowledge, and the only casual
interest in knowing more, was somewhat breathtaking-discussions by fairly
senior people who meant Medicaid but were talking Medicare; near-instant shifts
from discussing any actual policy pros and cons to discussing political
communications, media strategy, et cetera. Even quite junior staff would
sometimes hear quite senior staff pooh-pooh any need to dig deeper for
pertinent information on a given issue.
John
DiIulio, former member of the Bush Administration, in a letter to Esquire
Magazine.
And
these people are running the country?
December
3, 2002
In
Media Res
This
week Al Gore said the obvious. "The media is kind of weird these days on
politics," he told The New York Observer, "and there are some major
institutional voices that are, truthfully speaking, part and parcel of the
Republican Party."
The
reaction from most journalists in the "liberal media" was embarrassed
silence. I don't quite understand why, but there are some things that you're
not supposed to say, precisely because they're so clearly true.
By
PAUL KRUGMAN in The New York Times
Gore
spoke the 'obvious' in the New York Observerread it for yourself.
December
4, 2002
INVENTING
INVENTED THE INTERNET!
No
one said Boo about Gore's remark. Then, the RNC spin-points arrived:
Invented
the Internet?
Gore's recent statement to the New York Observer referred to precisely this
kind of press coverage. Invented the Internet is an obvious case in which
"Republican talking points" were deftly "injected" into the
work of the mainstream press. No one-no one!-said a word about Gore's
remark at the time it was made. But when the RNC sent out its points, pundits
simply ran to recite them. And so it went, throughout the campaign, as the RNC
scripted your hapless press corps. Indeed, there's long been a phrase for such
work of this type. As the RNC sent out its points, the press corps became
useful idiots.
Bob
Somerby at the Daily Howler
Bob
Somerby's Daily Howler is always good. He has a calculator, and access to
LexisNexisand he's not too lazy to use them.
December
6, 2002
Oh-oh.
Duck.
U.S.
Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill and the White House's top economic adviser,
Larry Lindsey are resigning at the request of the White House in a shakeup of
the Bush administration's economic team. O'Neill's departure had been
predicted, because he did not get along well with Republicans in Congress, and
never had the full support of Wall Street.
CNN.com
Okay,
so two of the architects of the train-wreck tax cut have resigned. I wonder if
they finally fired up a spread-sheet, and found that no matter how they work
the numbers, this track ends in a mire, and told their boss. (Why do I suspect
their replacements will call for tax cuts to fix the deficit?)
What
worries me the most this morning is the timing of the announcement. Dubya's
Whitehouse normaly hides its bad news at the end of the day Friday, (so as to
fall into the usually ignored Saturday news cycle).
Watch
out for some other "news" scheduled to push this off the evening
news.
December
10, 2002
Curious
Lee
The
Curious Leewebsite is filled with wonderful photos. I discovered his sitefrom
his stunning weblog entriesover at Hiptop Nation.
I've
never been a big fan of the little camera that comes with the Hiptop, (I've
been a Nikon man for literally 30 years) but Lee proves that it's not the
camera, it's the photographer.
December
11, 2002
Now
THIS is what flash is for: http://dubyadubyadubya.com
Thanks,
Donna!
December
13, 2002
Kissinger
Quits As Chairman of 9/11 Panel
WASHINGTON
— Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger stepped down Friday as
chairman of a panel investigating the Sept. 11 attacks, citing controversy over
potential conflicts of interest with his private-sector clients.
Associated
Press as reported in the Washington Post
December
15, 2002
How
did Iraq get its weapons? We sold them
THE
US and Britain sold Saddam Hussein the technology and materials Iraq needed to
develop nuclear, chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction.
Reports
by the US Senate's committee on banking, housing and urban affairs —
which oversees American exports policy — reveal that the US, under the
successive administrations of Ronald Reagan and George Bush Sr., sold materials
including anthrax, VX nerve gas, West Nile fever germs and botulism to Iraq
right up until March 1992, as well as germs similar to tuberculosis and
pneumonia. Other bacteria sold included brucella melitensis, which damages
major organs, and clostridium perfringens, which causes gas gangrene.
By
Neil Mackay and Felicity Arbuthnot in The Sunday Herald
You
know, I really expect that the complete declaration of WMD by Iraq will be
leaked to the Internet, probably by Iraq itself. I caught a few minutes about
the declaration on C-span, and one of the things mentioned was that the
declarations document the disposition of the materials in question, from
purchase to destruction.
This
could prove very embarrassing to America, to be both the creator of
Frankenstein's monster, and the torch-carrying vigilante mob bent on his
destruction.
It
would be an Irony indeed, should that detailed WMD sourcing information leak
out of Iraq, after Dubya took unprecedented measuresto assure that it wouldn't
leak from the US side.
December
16, 2002
Twice
in the past two decades, supply-siders have tried to prove that a booming
economy can be created by deep tax cuts— resulting in more tax
revenue—buttressed by ending mettlesome federal oversight and
bureaucratic regulations.
Unfortunately,
the Republicans' attempts to do this have left taxpayers saddled with hundreds
of billions of dollars of debt, fomented waves of corporate corruption and may
end up costing pension funds and small investors trillions of dollars.
Voodoo
economics, 21st century style
Son
of a Gingrich, grandson of a Reagan
By
Stephen P. Pizzo in SFGate.com
Next
time you're in the oval office, pick up Dubya's magic "8-Ball",and
remove little "More Tax Cuts" note he's taped over the window.
I'd
love to be there to see the look on his face the next time he shakes it and it
comes up "My sources Say No."
December
18, 2002
CNN:
Mice, tablet, wireless dominate year
Peter:
Did you see the CNN Article?
Me:
No, what's it about?
Peter:
Let's see, there's the mapping of the mouse genome, they found water on mars,
there's a new genus and species of man, and the Hiptop...
Me:
You've just written my weblog entry for today.
December
12, 2002
Yellow—Chapter
11
I've
released a new chapter of "Yellow".
I
know it's not much, and sorry it's taken so long. I'll put up the unstyled
version later, when I have a little time.
There's
also another change, the format now leans more on the style sheets, and yes,
it's still xhtml 1.0 valid
Rakhalhas
updated his Penultimate Ranma Fanfic Index to include the latest chapter of
Yellow, and I'm seeing a ton of new hits. No comments, but lots of hits. (Hint,
Hint)
December
20, 2002
Lott
Mess Monster
Lott's
stepping down, but fortunatly for the republicans, a replacement majority
leader has been located in Dubya's pocket.
CNN
has the sordid details.
December
20, 2002
The
WIRED Rave Awards
The
WIRED Rave Awardscelebrate innovation and the individuals transforming commerce
and culture. These innovators in business, science, politics, art,
entertainment, and design are The People Changing Your Mind.
To
identify this year's nominees, WIRED has assembled an esteemed international
jury of visionaries who, along with the editors of WIRED, form the Brain Trust
for the WIRED Rave Awards. The nominees for 2002 have, in the collective view
of the Brain Trust, contributed to the creative evolution of their craft or
field.
WIRED
is honored to present the WIRED Brain Trust and The People Changing Your Mind:
the nominees for this year's WIRED Rave Awards.
Matias
Duarte (Danger), Andy Johnston (Function Engineering) and myself (Danger) have
been nominated for the HipTop in the "Industrial Designer" catagory.
I'm
humbled and honored to be among such nominees.
December
25, 2002
Merry
Christmas!
December
29, 2002
El
Portal de Ranma Y Akane
www.elportalfics.comhas
completed the translations for all of the colors stories, including the latest
chapter of Yellow. Thanks, Danae!
It
never ceases to amaze me... I had a look thru the hit logs of the folks who've
read the latest chapter of Yellow, and found hits from all over the world. The
UK, Canada, and Australia I can understand, after all, we all speak the same
language (sort of) but I still see hits from Poland, Japan, Slovinia...
I
guess it really is a small world, after all. (Now try and get that dang song
out of your head!)
December
30, 2002
Japanese
Ranma Fansites
Even
if you can't read much Japanese, (like me) it's worth bumbling arround these
sites and randomly following the links to the artwork.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Up
To You
UP
TO YOU has a lot of shuojo inspired Ranma Images. It's a mystery that
Ranma and Akane can come thru in a totaly different drawing style. The site is
blind-frame based, which makes it harder to navigate, so I've selected a few of
the most interesting frames:
A
common element of the sites I've located is collections of Hit Graphics. I'm
not sure if they are done by the site author, or by the guests.
Gallery-Top
guides you to each of the individual pages. click the coffee cups to enter each
gallery.
Nabiki's
Room Is worth the visit for the title image alone! The expression is perfect Nabiki.
Make
sure to check out the images in Nabiki's Room Gallery. I like the polaroid
photo-album layout.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1/2
Haku
The
1/2 Haku homepagemay be sparse, but hides some surprises. (Click the
"Attention Please" animated Icon at the bottom)
Perhaps
the most startling discovery is the Pictures page. These images were apparently
created by guests using a java based paint application, right there on the
page. There is something primative, yet provacative in the designs. I really
love some of these, like the muted one of Ranma in a pink dress (Number [69])
and the near scribble of Akane (Number [69]), but my favorites are (Number
[65]) Akane and (Number [60]) Ranma. Don't forget to click the button at the
bottom of the page to see more images!
No
web site would be complete without a page of LinksEven the link banners are
beautiful!
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bulb
BulbOpens
on a christmas message (At least for now).
If
you like that image, you'll love the others linked from the Illustrations page.
(Click the orange stars)
The
Novelspage links to Fanfiction! (And I love the background image). Some of the
stories are illustrated, follow the link marked 3/16.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Polish
Last
but not least is a site curiously named Polish. The graphic links are in
English, so it's an easy site to navigate. There are tons of images in the
gallery. Have fun!
December
31, 2002
Rebuilding
the Food Pyramid
The
dietary guide introduced a decade ago has led people astray. Some fats are healthy
for the heart, and many carbohydrates clearly are not.
Scientific
American
I'm
shocked, shocked, I tell you! It looks like Doctor Dean Edell has it right in
his book: Eat, Drink, and Be Merry(Highly Recomended.)
Links
of the world:
[Suddenly
everything...] [Leon Friedman -- The American Prospect] [News.com] [Bill Moyers
-- Keynote Address ] [Fark.com] [Nyanko-web] [ Antarctic Webcam] [ Steve's
Anime Links!] [Fronz.net Quotes] [Danger Coverage] [Danger Coverage] [Iceberg
Lettuce] [The Smirking Chimp - Political News Digest] [Avant Stellar Keyboard]
[142 Key Programable Keyboard!] [The Spark Gender Test] [New York Times Danger
Coverage] [The New Republic Online] [ BeatCraft ] [Thanks BeBox photos] [The
stories: Jan's Anime Pages] [Jan's links] [A Fan's View] [Fanimecon Fanfic
Panel] [The Ranma Fanfic Awards][The REGISTER] [US Treasury Public Debt
website.][Lights of America] [Anipike] [How to draw Manga][Digital Knight
Communications] [DKC Links] [Ranma & Akane Together 4-ever FanFiction Guide]
[Bridget & Jamie's Fanfics and food] [Links of doom] [Sumo Senshi - MAKE
UP!]] [MisterPants] [New Blood Productions] [The Most Influential Ranma
Fanfiction Authors of the 1990's][Copyright 101: A Brief Introduction To
Copyright For Fan Fiction Writers] [Legal Fictions: Copyright, Fan Fiction, and
a New Common Law ] [hello kitty mobile][Danger Research (My new job)]
[Rothenburg ob der Tauber] [Microsoft Case Links] [Courtney Love does the math]
[Carlsen Comics] [Wildside Press] [KAXE Radio][Scripting News] [XHTML
Introduction] [XHTML Spec.][HTML Tidy] [W3C Validation]
Copyright
© 2002-2004 Joseph Palmer. All Rights reserved