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User Journal

Journal Journal: Allergies: What's Left Won't Kill Me (Not A Guarentee) 3

If I remember way back, I had a bad bout of allergy problems that started all of a sudden. Well I haven't talked about them, but the allergies still are there. In October, after blood testing results, I eliminated all wheat products from my diet. This hurts. I LIKE bread. I LIKE pasta. I LOVE rolls with lots of butter. I LOVE gravy smothering a good stew or mashed potatoes.

But in the interested if being able to open my eyes and not scratch my skin off entirely, I eliminated all wheat from foods I ate. But the problems remained. Random bouts of eyes swelling shut. Constant itching. Constant eczema on the order of the "medium" case pictured at the Wikipedia link.

So two weeks ago my wife and I re-read through the blood work to find some of the other allergens and exactly how intense each reaction was. It turns out that wheat was near the bottom and I had far worse reactions to two other very common substances. Eggs where the worst, followed by milk and then wheat.

So we took the all encompassing step of eliminating all of those foods from my diet. Nothing with eggs, milk, or wheat. Try eating out anywhere with those allergies. Even the gluten free menus at the larger chain restaurants won't help you there. Only the big ones seem to have caught on to the portion of the population that has such unnecessarily strict dietary requirements.

Of all the foods I will miss..... of all the foods I ate with reckless abandon..... of all the foods I combined with any other food as often as possible.... of all the foods that delighted my taste buds..... I will miss cheese the most.

What an amazing food. So much variety. So much nutrition. So many flavors. Exotic Greek feta. Soft Havarti. Crisp mozzarella. Spicy blended pepper jack. Smooth cream cheese. Tasty cottage cheese.

I will miss putting cheese on salads, chips, potatoes, sandwiches, bagels, crackers, burritos, and on and on. I used to go through a 32 oz baby loaf of cheese in just two weeks. R.I.P. poor cheese slicer. To the back of the kitchen implements drawer you go. May be one day science will find a way to provide my body with the ability to digest and enjoy the many flavours of cheese.

Jason

Businesses

Journal Journal: Ethanol Fuel: Unlikely Foes 5

I have been studying the ethanol production process for quite a while because it is the subject of my first feature length / made for TV production. So naturally when I ran across a Slashdot Frontpage article about EtOH I was interested. Get the article from the source.

This is market economics at work. Here is the gist: The Fed takes our money in the form of taxes, and then gives out some of that money as subsidies to foster behavior / activities it wants to see. By it, I mean the massive government bureaucracy. Part of the problem with EtOH production is that the raw products needed are being taken from other production flows to satisfy this new demand. Nothing unusual there. The down side comes in that by offering the subsidies for a specific product, the government is effectively raising the cost of production for all other industries that need the same materials by not also providing them with free money. Very interesting in deed. Am I in favor of the subsidies? I don't know yet. I stand to profit from the growing EtOH trend through the production of my informative product (which isn't just a How-To but also include blueprints, part lists, yield calculators, and loads of other resources) but there are some issues with the industry. Give it a read.

Jason

Education

Journal Journal: Read This To Feel Real, Real Stupid (I did) 3

From the front page of Slashdot.org

So remember that kind in high school that got all A's, went to Interlochen, and was on the chess team? Well he or she might also be the one that showed that in many cases it [Loop homology] is isomorphic to the Hochschild cohomology of the fundamental group, or who built their own mass spectrograph.

Reading through this list of the top winners is like reading through the unfortunately long list of toddlers that can kick your ass in a fist fight. That is to say, it is depressing. Wow.

Jason

Editorial

Journal Journal: Idaho's Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter

Reason has a good article on C.L. "Butch" Otter, Idaho's mostly Libertarian, but still somewhat Republican governor who was elected this fall. In reading more about him, I find that his politics match fairly close with my own, except on a few social issues (but those are the same social issues I hold that contrast with most Libertarians).

The article provides a quick biography and personal history, including the infamous "tight jeans contest" and party that led to his DUI conviction.

Worth a read for anyone interested in learning about one of the more libertarian states in the Union.

User Journal

Journal Journal: DC Gun Ban Overturned: Commentary 4

Linked from here is an article in Reason Online talking about the basis for the recent federal appeals court reversal of the Washington D.C. gun ban.

I'll summarize a few points. Do I personally have the freedom to say what I want, ie freedom of speech? Yes. And what grants me that right? The US Constitution Amendment 1, says "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech" (first clause omitted because it is the freedom of religion clause). This gives me an individual right to the freedom of speech based on my inclusion into the group of all citizens that this applies to. Numerous case law has established this. I also have a personal freedom of religion, and the freedom to practice such, and I have that freedom as a result of my inclusion in the group of all citizens that this is granted to.

And so it follows for each and every amendment. The personal rights are granted as well as the group rights. What then gives gun ban proponents the indication that when the 2nd Amendment says "...the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." that it applies differently? That Amendment DOES provide supporting evidence for this clause when it says "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State," but that has not nullified the right granted in the second part.

If you have the time, the article is worth a quick read.

User Journal

Journal Journal: New Program Says I'm a Heretic 7

EDIT: BBC != Ch4. Fixed.

I bring you (via this alert reader) a very compelling piece of journalism & film by Channel 4 in the UK. The program interviews a lot of top scientists and draws some pretty scary conclusions. If you watched An Inconvenient Truth then you will will enjoy this presentation, but go there with an open mind because fundamental assumptions will be challenged. Just cozy up some time and watch it here or at the same reference in the above article.

I'll avoid any discussion in this journal because I don't want to taint any opinions before watching this film.

Jason

Media

Journal Journal: Al Gore's Un-Green House: 20x Energy of National Average 12

Did you know that according to the Tennessee Center (which dug up some utility records) Al Gore's personal mansion consumes 20 times the energy of the average American home, which according to Al Gore's own numbers, consumes more on average than other homes in the world. According to the article, "The average household in America consumes 10,656 kilowatt-hours (kWh) per year, according to the Department of Energy. In 2006, Gore devoured nearly 221,000 kWh--more than 20 times the national average. Last August alone, Gore burned through 22,619 kWh--guzzling more than twice the electricity in one month than an average American family uses in an entire year. As a result of his energy consumption, Gore's average monthly electric bill topped $1,359." That is $29,268 a year for those of you at home with out calculators.

So I did some searching, looking up the Davidson County Assessors office, looking up a certain owner named Albert Gore Jr, and noticed his parcel. I won't provide any direct links to any of those sites, but any reasonably smart monkey and Google can find the address and look up the property information. That "house" by the way, is a 10,010 ft^2 (finished, the unfinished area is 13,461 ft^2) mansion built in 1914.

This property contains 2.09 Acres of land mainly classified as RES with a(n) RY SING FAM style building, built about 1915 , having FRAME exterior and ASPHALT roof cover, with 1 unit(s), 20 total room(s), 5 total bedroom(s), 8 total bath(s), 2 total half bath(s), 0 total 3/4 bath(s). The Building Value $2,124,400; Land Value $897,000, and a Total Value $3,021,400

So Mr. The-Earth-Is-Burning-Up is running around complaining about MY energy use while consuming 20 times the average home AND while flying in a private jetliner and being driven to the airport in a motorcade of SUVs. I just did a quick look at my gas and electric bills. My gas usage for last month (the coldest of the month) was 78 therms, costing me $103. My electricity usage in August (most use of the air conditioner) is around $120 (cannot remember the amount of Kw used) but tapers off to $30 in the fall/winter/spring months.

My electric utilities are about as "green" as Gore's (80% of Idaho's power is generated from Hydro, probably near the same for Tenn. because of the extensive TVA system) and I run a total yearly utility cost of around $900 (rounded UP to nearest hundred dollars) which compared to Gore's yearly gas / electricity bill of $29,200 (rounded DOWN to nearest hundred dollars), I run a very green 3.08% of his home energy consumption.

To be fare, he has a (finished) 10,010 ft^2 nearly 100 year old mansion and I have a 15 year old 1250 ft^2 (finished) starter home (with a cheap 60% efficient forced air gas heater) (and brand new door seals I just put in) in the 'burbs. Lets look at consumption based on a per square foot basis to compare apples to apples. My home costs $0.72 per ft^2 per year to run and his costs $2.91 per ft^2 per year. That still means that Al Gore consumes 404% per ft^2 compared to me (or I consume 25% compared to him).

So don't try to scold me for being ecologically damaging. Despite the economic fallacy of recycling, I still do recycle most of the feasible items. Despite living in the suburbs I still carpool when possible and live =2 miles from my work. Despite being a white, male, socially conservative, economically libertarian, practicing big game hunter, evangelical Christian, and everything else Greenpeace / PETA / etc stand against... I am doing my part to live an ecologically sustainable lifestyle and bucking their stereotypes.

In fact, stay tuned to this journal / blog for news of two video productions I have in pre-production both about ecologically sound and (more importantly) economically sound

User Journal

Journal Journal: Jumping Ship to Multiply 12

So if you haven't heard enough about multiply, then look it up (no links necessary). I'm over there as are a bunch of others from the journal crowd here at slashdot. the main features that I like: invite only "groups" and it can aggregate journals from blogger, Livejournal, and others. So far it looks robust enough and doesn't seem to be annoying, except the emails for every message you have (couldn't they batch that? or just provide an on-site in-box?).

no more double posting. All I have to do is post in LJ, and multiply gets it (unless I include a special <-- multiply --> tag.

Check LJ under this same user name or hit up multiply. Not everything on LJ will be on multiply because I have real space friend on LJ and we talk there too. I'm probably not going to be around here much. have fun ya'll.

jason

Slashback

Journal Journal: Firehose Suddenly Visible To My Account? 6

So I'm looking at slashdot and suddenly I see a link for this "FireHose" thing which I thought was a subscriber feature. What the heck is it and how did it suddenly show up? Is this a new feature pushed out from subscribers to the unwashed masses? Or did someone send me a subscription with out me noticing it?

Any ideas?

By the way, this will likely be another "Journal Friday" where Jason posts a lot of catch up journals, as well as fixing hte number problems from the Volcano SO2 emission story the other day.

jason

Enlightenment

Journal Journal: Car SO2 Emissions vs Volcanoes - Al Gore vs Facts 7

EDIT: entire article content yanked due to some math flaws and CO2 vs SO2 number problems. I'm going to recalculate and repost when I can find the corrected data. Sorry for the confusion and stay tuned

The Media

Journal Journal: The "Support the Troops But Not The Mission" Bullshit 7

Thanks to this journal regarding this bit of reporting by NBC regarding soldiers opinions on the "We support you but not the mission" fad with the some of the anti-war crowd.

I suppose those individuals taking this stance haven't ever been in a situation where people revile you while professing to support you. Police work is one of those professions. No one wants to see an Officer. They hate Officers. Unless their sorry ass is in trouble or got ripped off, etc. Then they can't say enough about Law Enforcement. Too slow. Out chasing speeders instead of catching the "real criminals" (who are also speeders you dip-sticks). Never around when you need them. Paid too much to do too little.

Tell you what. I'll put a set of clothes on you that makes you look like the KKK, and then I'll put you in LA. Now go do your job of (anything really: how about side walk vender) with out getting your ass shot. Now you get paid just $20 / hr but you have good medical benefits. Is it worth it?

Ok. Now put on some camo, go to Iraq, and try to get to century old enemies to quit blowing the hell out of each other. Now have dozens of "important" senators and reps deride what you do while supposedly paying lip service to you. You cannot separate the person from the job when the job is soo closely linked to the very survival of the person. The job becomes the person, for better or worse.

jason

User Journal

Journal Journal: Skeptic Revamps $1M Psychic Prize 11

Amusing and interesting all in one! Go read the article at the source but if you don't want to give Wired any page hits (or are lazy), I'll quote it below. The gist is that a magician, a practicer of slight of hand not the paranormal, got fed up with psychics and their tricks and ploys bilking the unsuspecting public so he offered up a cash prize to anyone that can prove their claim of supernatural abilities.

The result? The crazies come out of the shadows. Guys that think they can teleport things randomly. Guys that claim to be able to transmit their thoughts to a receiving party. You guessed it. Good 'ol fashioned crazy folk. But that wasn't his target. He wants to take on the big money mediums that talk to the dead, bend spoons, etc. The pot got bigger, topping 1 million bigger, thanks to an anonymous donor.

He has a staff of people just to deal with the crazy people trying to get the money, or trying to be reaffirmed that their diagnosable disorder is real and not just them being nuts (one lady claimed to not be human because of the secret service...... wtf?).

Favorite lines from the article...

  • If you're an undiscovered psychic, soothsayer, dowser or medium, time may be running out for you to put your supernatural powers to the test and claim a million dollar prize. But you already knew that, didn't you?
  • A Nevada man legally named "The Prophet Yahweh" planned to seize the prize for charity by summoning two spaceships to a Las Vegas park last year, but negotiations broke down when he announced he was bringing several armed guards to the demonstration
  • the foundation has to deal with the thorny dilemma of where to draw the line between upholding its commitment, and potentially exploiting or feeding someone's mental illness
  • Using resources freed up by dropping unknown and mentally ill applicants, Randi hopes to make things uncomfortable for his real prey: the high-profile psychics who make their living off a credulous public, and who so far won't touch the Million Dollar Challenge with a 10-foot dowsing rod.

Do I believe in such things? Surprisingly the answer is a resounding.... maybe. Ancient Egypt's priests turned their own staffs into snakes (too bad they were eaten by Moses' staff-turned-snake) and I believe there are demons on earth. I have no problem believing that these same demons would love to trick a person into serving them / Satan just so the person could have a nifty trick to do for friends, etc. Do I think any of these are from angels / God? No. Why? Because God has all of creation as witness to his powers and he needs a cheap parlor trick like he needs another person shouting "God hates fags."

By Kevin Poulsen| Also by this reporter
02:00 AM Jan, 12, 2007

If you're an undiscovered psychic, soothsayer, dowser or medium, time may be running out for you to put your supernatural powers to the test and claim a million dollar prize.

But you already knew that, didn't you?

Ten years after stage magician and avowed skeptic James Randi first offered a seven-figure payday to anyone capable of demonstrating paranormal phenomenon under scientific scrutiny, the 79-year-old clear-eyed curmudgeon is revising the rules of his nonprofit foundation's Million Dollar Challenge to better target high-profile charlatans, and spend less time on unknown psychics, who too often turn out to be delusional instead of deceptive.

"We can't waste the hundreds of hours that we spend every year on the nutcases out there -- people who say they can fly by flapping their arms," says Randi. "We have three file drawers jam-packed with those collections.... There are over 300 claims that we have handled in detail."

A skeptic since his teen years, Randi launched his challenge in 1964, after growing outraged with fake mediums and fortunetellers using simple conjurers' tricks to prey on the public. A challenge was an efficient alternative to trying to prove a negative: Instead of traveling the world investigating and debunking miracle workers one-by-one, an unclaimed cash prize stands as a fact on the ground -- an immovable obstacle around which anyone purporting supernatural powers must eventually navigate.

The challenge started small. Randi initially offered $1,000 of his own money to anyone who could read a mind or bend a spoon under controlled conditions. He later upped the ante to $10,000, but still didn't get a lot of takers. "There wasn't much interest in $10,000, and frankly I couldn't afford more than that," he says.

Then in 1996, an unnamed donor contributed a million dollars to the cause. Today the James Randi Education Foundation has an office in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and a small staff to keep pace with a steady stream of applicants, all supported by member contributions, grants and the interest off the million bucks, which remains unclaimed.

Currently, claiming the money takes a few steps: An initiate first has to submit a notarized application, agree with the foundation on a test protocol, then pass a preliminary test administered by independent local investigators. Should the would-be psychic pass the first test, under the agreed-upon rules, all that remains is to repeat his or her success in front of Randi -- then, poof, a psychic millionaire is born.

In 10 years, though, nobody's passed the preliminary exam. The most recent one was administered in Stockholm in October, when Swedish medium Carina Landin tried to identify the gender of the authors of 20 diaries by touching the covers. She got 12 right; 16 was the agreed-upon threshold for success. (The foundation plans to re-administer Landin's test following revelations that several of the diaries were older than stipulated in the protocol.)

Before that, the last preliminary test was in July 2005, when a Hawaiian psychic named Achau Nguyen traveled to Los Angeles to demonstrate he could mentally transmit his thoughts to a friend in another room. Under the watchful eyes of paranormal investigators, a video camera and a small audience, Nguyen selected 20 index cards from a deck of 30 and focused on the words written on each of them in turn -- while one floor below his "receiver" wrote down the wrong word, 20 out of 20 times.

These tests, however unsuccessful, represent the cream of the crop for the Million Dollar Challenge -- polite, sincere applicants able to agree to a reasonable testing protocol. The vast majority of the people applying for the money don't get that far.

A Nevada man legally named "The Prophet Yahweh" planned to seize the prize for charity by summoning two spaceships to a Las Vegas park last year, but negotiations broke down when he announced he was bringing several armed guards to the demonstration in case any "negative personalities" showed up. An inventor who claimed to have built a device that could sense the psychic distress of an egg about to be dropped into a pot of boiling water recently abandoned his application when the foundation suggested the egg be threatened by a hammer instead, in case the invention was really just detecting steam.

"One a week gets as far as a protocol negotiation, and then drops off," says Jeff Wagg, who administers the challenge.

Those are the easy ones. In some of the applications, perhaps most of them, the foundation has to deal with the thorny dilemma of where to draw the line between upholding its commitment, and potentially exploiting or feeding someone's mental illness. The demarcation is inherently tricky, since the entire theatre of paranormal testing is located in the realm of extra-rational belief.

A San Francisco woman, for example, was determined to prove that she wasn't human. She had trouble articulating why she believed that, but somehow the Secret Service was involved. In a more recent application, a New York state man claimed that he could summon the appearance of small objects while walking down a road. "The results are plain to see and obviously appear by themselves, in various random arrangements," he wrote the foundation. "I will these phenomenon into being, and/or they happen because of my physical presence alone, therefore I claim to have these powers."

What a psychiatrist might interpret as a warning sign for schizophrenia, the James Randi Educational Foundation is obliged to take seriously. After all, who's to say that random objects teleporting into existence is any more unlikely than Uri Geller telekinetically bending a spoon? But at some point, the process becomes distasteful.

"If we get them to go to a challenge and they lose, we're exposing someone who had serious mental illness," says Wagg. "That doesn't do us any good, and it doesn't do them any good. It doesn't prove anything."

Culling these applications from the process is a major goal of the revamped rules, which take effect April 1st.

Starting then, the challenge will be closed to undiscovered psychic talent; to submit an application, the aspirant will have to demonstrate a "media profile" -- television reports, newspaper articles or a reference in a book that chronicles his or her extraordinary abilities.

"We're not going to deal with unknown people who have silly claims," says Wagg. "Let's say, somebody claims they can walk on water. We'll say, prove it to somebody else first. Get on the local news. Then bring it to us."

The applicant has to back up those press clippings with validation from the hallowed halls of academia. "They have to get some academic to endorse their claims," says Randi. "And that academic is not the local chiropractor or some such thing." The academic also has to stand behind the endorsement when contacted by the skeptics.

With the new criteria in place, the foundation will, at its option, dispense with the preliminary test and move right to the money game.

Using resources freed up by dropping unknown and mentally ill applicants, Randi hopes to make things uncomfortable for his real prey: the high-profile psychics who make their living off a credulous public, and who so far won't touch the Million Dollar Challenge with a 10-foot dowsing rod.

Randi says he'll start actively investigating professional mind-readers and mediums for proof of criminal fraud, or opportunities for civil lawsuits. Like Elliot Ness stalking Al Capone, he's not above busting a psychic for tangential infractions like tax code violations or an SEC matter.

At the same time, the foundation will choose six to eight high-profile targets each year, meticulously outline their claims, and then call them out one-by-one.

"We're going to pick people every year and hammer on them," says Wagg. "We're going to send certified mail, we're going to do advertising. We're going to pick a few people and say, we are actively challenging you. We may advertise in The New York Times. This will make the challenge a better tool, to be what it is supposed to be."

The foundation will launch this public-shaming initiative with a list of four targets, including self-proclaimed medium John Edward, and daytime talk show darling Sylvia Browne, who claims she can tell the future and see angels.

Browne is one of the United States' best known psychics, a best-selling author who frequently appears on Montel Williams and CNN's Larry King Live. In a 2001 appearance on Larry King, goaded by Randi, she seemed to agree to take the Million Dollar Challenge. She later backed away in an open letter to Randi on her website.

"As the saying goes, my self worth is completely unrelated to your opinion of me, and I've worked far too hard for far too many years, and have far too much left to do, to jump through hoops in the hope of proving something you've staked your reputations on mocking," she wrote. "I have no interest in your $1 million or any intention of pursuing it."

That's a disappointment, because if Browne's claims were ever to stand up to a scientific test in an adversarial process, it would be an unprecedented event in modern history, potentially changing our scientific understanding of the universe. Instead, you can buy a psychic phone call with her for $700.

Unlike Browne, Edward has never flip-flopped on the Randi test. He won't do it. In an appearance on CNN Headline News last October, he dismissed the notion with a quip. "Would I allow myself to be tested by somebody's whose got an adjective as a first name?" he said -- a reference to Randi's stage name, "The Amazing Randi."

CNN host Glenn Beck didn't press Edward for a serious answer. Instead he asked Edward about the time he contacted his mother beyond the grave -- "What was that like?" -- then opened the phones to callers looking for psychic advice. Edward specializes in passing messages between bereaved family members and their deceased loved ones; he told the first caller that someone in his family has cancer.

Edward didn't respond to an e-mail query for this story; Browne didn't return a phone call, and neither responded to several minutes of intense concentration. The other two psychics in Randi's fantastic four are Israeli spoon-bender Uri Geller and James Van Praagh, co-executive producer of CBS' Ghost Whisperer.

The media's lightweight treatment of professional psychics is a deadly serious matter to Randi. "People like Sylvia Browne have a very high profile, and she's always going to be on Montel Williams and she's going to be on Larry King," he says. "And they know what's going on, they're smart people. They know what's going on and they don't care."

Riled by clips like Edward's Headline News appearance, Randi's made media skepticism the theme of the 5th annual The Amazing Meeting in Las Vegas, a four-day skepticism conference kicking off Jan. 18 at the Riviera, where the full details of the revamped Million Dollar Challenge will be revealed to 800 attendees without the gift of prophecy.

Democrats

Journal Journal: "New Direction For America" - Down Apparently 14

Spotted this letter to the editor thanks to this post by ncc74656.

To the editor:

        So, the Democrats promise "A New Direction For America."

        The stock market is at a new all-time high. America's 401(k) plans are back in positive territory. A new direction from there means, what?

        Unemployment is at 25-year lows. A new direction from there means, what?

        Oil prices are plummeting. A new direction from there means, what?

        Taxes are at 20-year lows. A new direction from there means, what?

        Federal tax revenues are at all-time highs. A new direction from there means, what?

        The federal budget deficit is down almost 50 percent, just as predicted over last year. A new direction from there means, what?

        Home valuations are up 200 percent over the past 3.5 years. A new direction from there means, what?

        Inflation is in check, hovering at 20-year lows. A new direction from there means, what?

        Not a single terrorist attack has taken place on U.S. soil since 9/11. A new direction from there means, what?

        Osama bin Laden is living under a rock in a dark cave, having not surfaced in years, if he's alive at all, while 95 percent of al-Qaida's top dogs are either dead or in custody, cooperating with U.S. intelligence. A new direction from there means, what?

        Several major terrorist attacks have already been thwarted by U.S. and British officials, including the recent planned attack involving 10 jumbo jets being exploded in mid-air over major U.S. cities in order to celebrate the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. A new direction from there means, what?

        Just as President Bush told us on a number of occasions, Iraq was to be made "ground zero" for the war on terrorism -- and just as President Bush said they would, terrorist cells from all over the region are arriving from the shadows of their hiding places and flooding into Iraq in order to get their faces blown off by U.S. Marines rather than boarding planes and heading to the United States to wage war on us here. A new direction from there means, what?

        Now let me see, do I have this right? I can expect: The economy to go south; illegals to go north; taxes to go up; employment to go down; terrorism to come in; tax breaks to go out; Social Security to go away; and health care to go the same way gas prices have gone.

        But what the heck. I can gain comfort by knowing that Nancy P., Hillary C., John K., Edward K., Howard D., Harry R. and Obama have worked hard to create a comprehensive National Security Plan, Health Care Plan, Immigration Reform Plan, Gay Rights Plan, Same-Sex Marriage Plan, Abortion-On-Demand Plan, Tolerance of Everyone and Everything Plan, How to Return all Troops to the United States in the Next Six Months Plan, A Get Tough Plan adapted from the French Plan by the same name, and a How Everyone Can Become as Wealthy as We Are Plan.

        I forgot the No More Katrina Storm Plan.

        Now I know why I feel good after the elections. I am going to be able to sleep so much better at night knowing these dedicated politicians are thinking of me and my welfare.

        Mark Wilson
        HENDERSON

Announcements

Journal Journal: The L Word 9

Now that I got your attention with a header you thought would lead you to a discussion on hot steamy lesbian sex.... sorry to disappoint you. But while you are all excited, might I draw your attention to this journal which found a nifty article.
Updated Link. Sorry Ces. I forgot the link back!

Ron Paul, a long time Republican Texas congressman is running for President again, this time as a Republican. If you read that last sentence closely you will the inherent question... What did he run as last time if it wasn't as a Republican?

Libertarian. Thats what. He describes himself as a life long Libertarian running as a Republican and is "routinely ranked either first or second in the House of Representatives by the National Taxpayers Union, a national group advocating low taxes and limited government."

I'll let you read the rest of the article. Lets just say that any other candidate would have to match a lot of Paul's voting records to get my vote away from Ron Paul. Yes I know he has two first names and some news prick will coyly bring that up as if it matters.

Texas Congressman Ron Paul files for GOP presidential bid
JOE STINEBAKER
Associated Press
HOUSTON - Ron Paul, the iconoclastic nine-term congressman from southeast Texas, took the first step Thursday toward launching a second presidential bid in 2008, this time as a Republican.

Paul filed incorporation papers in Texas on Thursday to create a presidential exploratory committee that allows him and his supporters to collect money on behalf of his bid. This will be Paul's second try for the White House; he was the Libertarian nominee for president in 1988.

Kent Snyder, the chairman of Paul's exploratory committee and a former staffer on Paul's Libertarian campaign, said the congressman knows he's a long shot.

"There's no question that it's an uphill battle, and that Dr. Paul is an underdog," Snyder said. "But we think it's well worth doing and we'll let the voters decide."

Paul, of Lake Jackson, acknowledges that the national GOP has never fully embraced him despite his nine terms in office under its banner. He gets little money from the GOP's large traditional donors, but benefits from individual conservative and Libertarian donors outside Texas. He bills himself as "The Taxpayers' Best Friend," and is routinely ranked either first or second in the House of Representatives by the National Taxpayers Union, a national group advocating low taxes and limited government.

He describes himself as a lifelong Libertarian running as a Republican.

Paul was not available for comment Thursday, Snyder said.

But he said the campaign will test its ability to attract financial and political support before deciding whether to launch a full-fledged campaign. Snyder said Paul is not running just to make a point or to try to ensure that his issues are addressed, but to win.

Paul is expected to formally announce his bid in the next week or two, Snyder said.

Snyder said Paul and his supporters are not intimidated by the presence of nationally known and better-financed candidates such as Sen. John McCain of Arizona or former Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachusetts.

"This is going to be a grassroots American campaign," he said. "For us, it's either going to happen at the grassroots level or it's not."

Paul limits his view of the role of the federal government to those duties laid out in the U.S. Constitution. As a result, he sometimes casts votes that appear at odds with his constituents and other Republicans. He was the only Republican congressman to vote against Department of Defense appropriations for fiscal year 2007.

The vote against the defense appropriations bill, he said, was because of his opposition to the war in Iraq, which he said was "not necessary for our actual security."

User Journal

Journal Journal: [Wii] WiiConnect Problem Solved 1

So I spent some time looking up the error codes with my wife shouting out the numbers and me searching nintendo.com for answers. Most of hte problems seemed to be DNS and connection related so I tried a few solutions all at once. I enabled port forwarding for the Wii on 4 specific ports that the web site mentioned and i stuck the wii in a DMZ. Hopefully it is secure enough to take the exposure.

That seemed to fix the problem os now I have a wii online! I forgot to bring my console ID to work so I'll have to remember to post it when I'm at home.

Now I just need to get the stupid news channel to work. nothing seems to respond there. i try to connect, it says it needs to look or an update. it checks, and there are no new updates. so i guess wii news is not ready yet.

I'm still addicted to wii tennis and have the added elbow pain to prove it. i am finally getting the hang of the power server, but rarely need it to beat the computer. I hit pro and am actually aroudn level 1890 give or take and can usually beat the computer miis (playing at level 2000 or so) in straight sets. computers are predictable, but i'm also friggin good now. :-) I usually play as both characters on my team so i can do some killer combos. hard server from back, returns i taken by front player who shoots it back to opponent rear to the far left, that player returns to my front who quickly shoots a cross court past their front player to hte far side for the score.

Advantage Front.

jason

jason

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