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Thursday, December 25, 2003

It's Christmas

Rather than rant about the crass over-commercialization of Chirstmas or lament those of us who might be lonely this season, I'll just say this:

Peace on Earth, goodwill towards Man everywhere.


To the troops and my fellow veterans, I also say:

Thank you.

Of The Troops, For the Troops.
This we'll Defend.
Uno Ab Alto (One over all).
Non sibi sed patriae (Not for self, but country).
Semper Fidelis (Always Faithful).
Semper Paratus (Always Ready).

Friday, December 12, 2003

Texas Last Meals Removed From Web Site

I recently talked about the last meals requested by inmates in the Texas Penal System. It seems that the website I found which gave the information is being removed because of public outcry. I say bullshit. That's just TOO "PC". These are simple PUBLIC RECORDS the state of Texas lists. The article I read even mentions that this is the #1 question asked of the officals there. Makes me wonder how many people really did complain.

Grr. It disturbs me that this sort of information, which is something a lot of people are curious about, is being made difficult to find out just because a few people find it disturbing. (Fortunately, they will still give you the details if you contact them and ask because, after all, this is public record.) Here's a news flash, people: If you're offended by something, don't look at it. From Robert Mapelthorpe's Piss Christ to swaskitas which appear in Microsoft fonts derived from Japanese font sets, where the symbol is associated with luck. If it offends, don't look.

We cannot censor that which makes us uncomfortable. We cannot pretend history doesn't exist. If that happens, we become nothing more than a contemporary Stalinistic state which eliminates that and those who we find offensive and unpallatable. The swastika, in it's context, can be a symbol of evil or luck. Let us teach the difference between them.

By the way, if you want the list of last meals, I copped it from Google's cache. Get it now before it expires or email me. Link to the right.

Wednesday, December 10, 2003

Religious selectors...

From the same site which gave the Presidential matches, I found which religious belief system best matches mine:

According to the SelectSmart.com Belief System Selector, my #1 belief match is Neo-Pagan.
What do you believe?
Visit SelectSmart.com/RELIGION

Which LotR character best fits you?

Gimli

Gimli Gloin's son

If I were a character in The Return of the King, I would be Gimli, a Dwarf and handy with an axe when orcs are about.

In the movie, I am played by John Rhys-Davies.

Who would you be?
The Return of the King Test with Perseus Web Survey Software

7 days till the U.S. premiere!

Tuesday, December 09, 2003

Who would you best like to see as President?

1. Your ideal theoretical candidate. (100%)
2. Dean, Gov. Howard, VT - Democrat (66%)
3. Kucinich, Rep. Dennis, OH - Democrat (59%)
4. Libertarian Candidate (56%)
5. Edwards, Senator John, NC - Democrat (55%)
6. Clark, Retired General Wesley K., AR - Democrat (52%)
7. Gephardt, Rep. Dick, MO - Democrat (50%)
8. Kerry, Senator John, MA - Democrat (46%)
9. Sharpton, Reverend Al - Democrat (42%)
10. LaRouche, Lyndon H. Jr. - Democrat (33%)
11. Bush, President George W. - Republican (32%)
12. Lieberman, Senator Joe, CT - Democrat (31%)
13. Moseley-Braun, Former Senator Carol, IL - Democrat (27%)
14. Phillips, Howard - Constitution (19%)

Go here to take the quiz and see your choices: SelectSmart.com 2004 Presidential Candidate Selector

I was a little disappointed to see my personal preference, Wesley Clark, at #6. But discounting my ideal candidate and the Libertarian candidate as very unlikely possibilities, Wes moves up to #4. Taking out Dean as the likely candidate for President, Wes moves up to #3 behind Edwards and Kucinich. That leaves him on the short list for VP, which is a good thing. A Dean/Clark ticket would get my vote any day.

And it's my favorite FLW building, to boot....

falling_water
YOU ARE:
Falling Water - Bear Run, PA

- You think sex is very special and should be
performed on specific occasions. When you do
get laid, you are ALWAYS in sync with your
partner.


Which Frank Lloyd Wright architectural design are you?
brought to you by Quizilla

Soup and Football

I encourage everyone to go and provide a can of soup to those who are in need. You can do it from your computer by visiting the Chunky website. Click on your favorite team (the Lions, of course) and Campbell's Soup will donate a can to charity. They'll donate 5,000,000 cans of soup in the end. This, of course, is just a gimmick and a fun game. I was happy to see the Lions are 14th out of 32 teams, with 63,487 cans/votes. The Green Bay Packers are in total domination, having garnered nearly 400,000 cans/votes. I guess if it can't be my beloved and maligned Lions, it should be the Pack.

So go vote for the Lions!! Now!!

Tuesday, December 02, 2003

The Last Will of Charles Lounsberry

This came across one of the lists I'm on and I've saved it for a long time. Though this is actually a piece of prose and not a legal document, it still touches upon a lot of the things that people should think about in their lives beyond the material. An article discussing the history of the "will" can be found here.


The Will of Charles Lounsberry Made While He was in the Asylum at Dunning

I, Charles Lounsberry, being of sound and disposing mind and memory, do hereby make and publish this, my last will and testament in order, as justly as may be, to distribute my interests in the world among succeeding men.

That part of my interest, which is known in law and recognized in the sheep-bound volumes as my property, being inconsiderable and none account, I make no disposition in this, my will. My right to live, being but a life estate, is not at my disposal, but these things excepted, all else in the world I now proceed to devise and bequeath.

ITEM: I give to good fathers and mothers in trust for their children all good little words of praise and encouragement, and all quaint pet names and endearments, and I charge said parents to use them justly, as the needs of their children shall require.

ITEM: I leave to children inclusively, but only for the term of their childhood, all and every, the flowers of the field, and the blossoms of the woods, with the right to play among them freely according to the customs of children warning them at the same time against thistles and thorns. And I devise to children the banks and brooks and the golden sands beneath the water thereof, and the odors of the willows, that dip therein and the white clouds that float high over the giant trees. And I leave to children the long, long days, to be merry in, in a thousand ways, and the night, and the moon, and the train of the Milky Way to wonder at, but subject, nevertheless, to the rights hereinafter given to Lovers.

ITEM: I devise to boys all the usual, idle fields and commons where ball may be played; all pleasant waters where one may swim; all snow-clad hills where one may coast; and all streams and ponds where one may fish, or where, when grim winter comes, one may skate, to have and to hold these same for the period of their boyhood. And all meadows, with the clover blossoms and butterflies thereof; the woods with their appurtenances, the squirrels and the birds and echoes and strange noises, and all distant places which my be visited, together with the adventures there found. And I give to said boys each his own place at the fireside at night, with all the pictures that may be seen in the burning wood, to enjoy without let or hindrance, and without any encumbrance or care.

ITEM: To lovers, I devise their imaginary world with whatever that may need, as the stars of the sky, the red roses by the wall, the bloom of the hawthorn, the sweet strains of music and aught else they may desire to figure to each other the lastingness and beauty of their love.

ITEM: To young men, jointly, I devise and bequeath all boisterous, inspiring sports of rivalry, and I give them the disdain of weakness and undaunted confidence in their own strength. Though they are rude, I leave to them the power to make lasting friendships, and of possessing companions and to them exclusively, I give all merry songs and brave choruses to sing with lusty voices.

ITEM: And to those who are no longer children, or youths, or lovers, I leave memory, and I bequeath to them the volume of the poems of Burns and Shakespeare and of other poems, if there be others to the end that they may live the old days over again, freely and fully without title or diminution.

ITEM: To our loved ones with snowy crowns, I bequeath the happiness of old age, the love and gratitude of their children until they fall asleep.

Monday, December 01, 2003

I'm a geek who digs electricity.

Nicked, as usual, from my friend celtie.


Which Historical Lunatic Are You?
From the fecund loins of Rum and Monkey.

You are Nicola Tesla, inventor of the Tesla Coil!

A minister's son from Simljan in Austria-Hungary, you were precocious from an early age. At three you could multiply three-digit numbers in your head and calculate how many seconds visitors to your home had lived. In awe of your older brother Dane, you shot a pea-shooter at his horse, causing it to throw him and inflict injuries from which he later died. This tragedy haunted you ever after. You frequently suffered bouts of illness with hallucinations throughout your life. During one affliction of cholera, you encountered the writing of Mark Twain, with whom you were later to be close friends. Later, another, this time mystery, illness inexplicably heightened your senses to a painful extent, only relenting when you hit upon the idea of the alternating current motor.

You developed an aversion to human contact, particularly involving hair, and a fear of pearls; when one would-be lover kissed you, you ran away in agony. Later, you insisted that any repeated actions in your day-to-day life had to be divisible by three, or, better yet, twenty-seven. You would, for example, continue walking until you had executed the required number of footsteps. You refused to eat anything until you had calculated its exact volume. Saltine crackers were a favourite for their uniformity in this respect. In the midst of important work, you forgot trivial details such as eating, sleeping or, on one memorable occasion, who you were.

Your inventions, always eccentric, began on a suitably bizarre note. The first was a frog-catching device that was so successful, and hence so emulated by your fellow children, that local frogs were almost eradicated. You also created a turbine powered by gluing sixteen May bugs to a tiny windmill. The insects panicked and flapped their wings furiously, powering the contraption for hours on end. This worked admirably until a small child came along and ate all the creatures alive, after which you never again touched another insect.

Prompted by dreams of attaining the then-ridiculed goal of achieving an alternating-current motor, you went to America in the hope of teaming up with Thomas Edison. Edison snubbed you, but promised fifty thousand dollars if you could improve his own direct-current motor by 20% efficiency. You succeeded. Edison did not pay up. It was not long until you created an AC motor by yourself.

Now successful, you set up a small laboratory, with a few assistants and almost no written records whatsoever. Despite it being destroyed by fire, you invented the Tesla Coil, impressing even the least astute observer with man-made lightning and lights lit seemingly by magic. Moving to Colorado Springs, you created a machine capable of sending ten million volts into the Earth's surface, which even while being started up caused lightning to shoot from fire hydrants and sparks to singe feet through shoes all over the town. When calibrated to be in tune with the planet's resonance, it created what is still the largest man-made electrical surge ever, an arc over 130 feet long. Unfortunately, it set the local power plant aflame.

You returned to New York, incidentally toying with the nascent idea of something eerily like today's internet. Although the wealthiest man in America withdrew funding for a larger, more powerful resonator in short order, it did not stop you announcing the ability to split the world in two. You grew ever more diverse in your inventions: remote-controlled boats and submarines, bladeless turbines, and, finally, a death ray.

While whether the ray ever existed is still doubtful, it is said that you notified the Peary polar expedition to report anything strange in the tundra, and turned on the ray. First, nothing happened; then it disintegrated an owl; finally, reports reached you of the mysterious Tunguska explosion, upon which news you dismantled the apparatus immediately. An offer during WWII to recreate it was, thankfully, never acted upon by then-President Wilson. Turning to other matters, you investigated the forerunner of radar, to widespread derision.

Your inventions grew stranger. One oscillator caused earthquakes in Manhattan. You adapted this for medical purposes, claiming various health benefits for your devices. You found they let you work for days without sleep; Mark Twain enjoyed the experience until the sudden onset of diarrhoea. You claimed to receive signals in quasi-Morse Code from Mars, explored the initial stages of quantum physics; proposed a "wall of light", using carefully-calibrated electromagnetic radiation, that would allegedly enable teleportation, anti-gravity airships and time travel; and proposed a basic design for a machine for photographing thoughts. You died aged 87 in New York, sharing an apartment with the flock of pigeons who were by then your only friends.

Ridiculed throughout your life (Superman fought the evil Dr. Tesla in 1940s comics), you were posthumously declared the father of the fluorescent bulb, the vacuum tube amplifier and the X-ray machine, and the Supreme Court named you as the legal inventor of the radio in place of Marconi. Wardenclyffe, the tower once housing your death ray, was dynamited several times to stop it falling into the hands of spies. It was strangely hard to topple, and even then could not be broken up.

I am a geek.

You are 57% geek
You are a geek. Good for you! Considering the endless complexity of the universe, as well as whatever discipline you happen to be most interested in, you'll never be bored as long as you have a good book store, a net connection, and thousands of dollars worth of expensive equipment. Assuming you're a technical geek, you'll be able to afford it, too. If you're not a technical geek, you're geek enough to mate with a technical geek and thereby get the needed dough. Dating tip: Don't date a geek of the same persuasion as you. You'll constantly try to out-geek the other.

Take the Polygeek Quiz at Thudfactor.com



celtie found it, I stole it. She's only 38% geek. She keeps her geekness in check, which is probably a good thing, since she has the capacity, should she decide, to WAY outgeek me. And that's a compliment.