1.15.2009

Flying Vehicles - the Jetsons are here






Icon Aircraft is the new company involved in the future of flight. It seems that the days when the Jetsons fly everywhere with their vehicles are here. Just imagine the future flying highways along with flying traffic and commercial signs. I can see that day is just around the corner...


The model in the picture in the ICON A5. You can take it for a drive, swim or fly. Ahh, and even in your trailer...





The World is full of good intentions...but it aint enough


BIG IN JAPAN


By Kyung Lah

TOKYO, Japan (CNN) -- A 54-year-old Japanese father was arrested after he tried to help his son pass an exam by impersonating the young man and taking the test for him, police said Thursday.
The father, who was not named, put on glasses and straightened his hair to look more like the picture on his son's identity card, said Masaaki Nakamori, a police official in the Nara prefecture in western Japan.
But as he took the test while trying to make sure the examiners didn't get a good look at him, one official noticed that the man looked much older than the picture on the card, Nakamori said.
The father then apologized and confessed. Police said the man runs a company that distributes medicine and had passed an exam in August to earn a license to handle drugs
The man used the ruse because he wanted his son to work alongside him, Nakamori said. The son did not know of his father's intention, he said.
Police expect to charge the man with forging official documents. They are unclear if the man will lose the license he rightfully obtained for himself.

1.13.2009

Giants out of the NFL playoff pictures



Now that the GMen are out of the playoff pictures in the NFL...


I think the superbowl will be Steelers and the Eagles, with the Steelers taking it all the way, MVP: Ben Rothelisberger

Obama orders to close Guantanamo Bay






Just read the news that president elect Barack Obama has order Guantanamo Bay Prison closed. Does that mean that US will withdraw from Cuba? Or even possibly early terminate the lease agreement between the 2 countries.

Interesting facts: Cuba has only cashed one check paid by the US for the usage of the land in Guantamo Bay. Does consideration in a ongoing legal relationship require just accepting one payment? Does that sole payment validates 30 years of lease agreement? Hmm...I think Castro is a numbnut!

In 1986, Guantanamo became host to Cuba's first and only McDonald's restaurant, as well as a Subway.[23] These fast food restaurants are on base, and not accessible to Cubans. It has been reported that prisoners cooperating with interrogations have been rewarded with Happy Meals from the McDonald's located on the mainside of the base.[24]
In 2003, Guantanamo opened a combined KFC & A&W restaurants at the bowling alley and a Pizza Hut Express at the Wind Jammer Restaurant[citation needed]. All the restaurants on the installation are franchises owned and operated by the Department of the Navy.[25] All proceeds from these restaurants are used to support morale, welfare and recreation (MWR) activities for service personnel and their families[citation needed].

During the Spanish-American War, the U.S. fleet attacking Santiago retreated to Guantánamo's excellent harbor to ride out the summer hurricane season of 1898. The Marines landed with naval support, requiring Cuban scouts to push off Spanish resistance that increased as they moved inland. This area became the location of U.S. Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, which covers about 45 square miles (116 km²) and is sometimes abbreviated as GTMO or "Gitmo".

By the war's end, the U.S. government had obtained control of all of Cuba from Spain. A perpetual lease for the area around Guantánamo Bay was offered February 23, 1903, from Tomás Estrada Palma, an American citizen, who became the first President of Cuba. The Cuban-American Treaty gave, among other things, the Republic of Cuba ultimate sovereignty over Guantánamo Bay while granting the United States "complete jurisdiction and control" of the area for coaling and naval stations.

A 1934 treaty reaffirming the lease granted Cuba and her trading partners free access through the bay, modified the lease payment from $2,000 in U.S. gold coins per year, to the 1934 equivalent value of $3,086.36 in U.S. dollars, and made the lease permanent unless both governments agreed to break it or the U.S. abandoned the base property. Since the Cuban Revolution, the government under Fidel Castro has cashed only one of the rent checks from the US government. The Cuban government maintains this was only done because of "confusion" in the heady early days of the leftist revolution, while the US government maintains that the cashing constitutes an official validation of the treaty. The remaining uncashed checks made out to "Treasurer General of the Republic" (A position that has ceased to exist after the revolution) are kept in Castro's office stuffed into a desk drawer.[5]

Chavez´s referendum Part IV




Another election brought to you by Chavez. Maybe he forgets that the legitimacy of a government does not only come from electoral votes. Specially when considering that the Electoral Power (in our case the National Electoral Council, autonomous power granted by the Constitution) is absurdly controlled by the Venezuelan Presidency. One can only see examples of the past 3 Presidents of the Electoral Power, after having pleased Chavez, have bagged a Supreme Court Justice (Francisco Carrasquero), National Direction of Chavez´s party, ex Vice Presidente, now elected Mayor of Libertador Municipality (Jorge Rodriguez) and another one as Minister.

The levels of complacency in the National Electoral Council to Hugo Chavez has been exaggerated. The abuse of power of the Venezuelan Presidency has also been grose. One must imagine the level of control of Hugo Chavez towards the Board of the National Electoral Council.

Chavez´s new plan is to ammend the Constitution. His first original plan was solely to ammend the articles relating to the possibility of enabling the President to continously run for election. According to Chavez the President can run for office (reelection) in an indefinite manner. His rationale, at that time, is that he was the only one who could guarantee peace in the country, in an plausible all out war between the haves and the havesnot. The argument is awful and pretends to make a mockery of Venezuelas present. Having seen the reaction even in his own party (psuv), Chavez has recently changed plans and has presented the ammendment for all politicial officials in the Country. Chavez went on National Television and argued that he had made a mistake and now tries to present the ammendment in more apeassed fashion.

Chavez´s new referredum is schedule for Febuary (suprisingly fast!) and the question that the National Assembly has drafted to present in the referendum is as follows (my free translation, huh!)

Spanish
¿Aprueba Usted la ampliacion de los derechos politicos de los venezolanos y venezolanas en los terminos comtemplados en la enmienda de los articulos 230, 160, 174, 192 y 162 de la Constitucion Boliviariana de la Republica de Venezuela, tramitada por iniciativa de la Asamblea Nacional al permitirse la postulacion para todos los cargos de eleccion popular de modo que su eleccion sea expresion exclusiva del voto del pueblo?
English
Do you approve the enlargement of the political rights of venezuelans and venezuelannes in the terms provided in the ammendment of articles 230, 160, 174, 192 and 162 of the Bolivarian Constitution of the Republic of Venezuela, filed by initiative of the National Assembly in order to permit the proposal for all popular elected officers in a manner that their election is an exclusive expression of the vote of the people?


What really gets my attention is that the language of the question is highly judgemental when it suggests that the ammendment enables the vote to be the "exclusive expression of the people". Also the question for the referendum does not address the fact that it was proposed by the Presidency and not the National Assembly. But seriously, what does exclusive expression of the people entail? This is outrageous!!!.......or very funny!
My take is that Chavez will loose the referedum. Not by a landslide though. After that one could only imagine where is Tibisay Lucena´s next (chavista) gig?

1.12.2009

Avila TV infringes Venezuelan privacy rights





Watching yesterday our infamous presidente, el Comandante Hugo Rafael, made a piece on his weekly television address (alo presidente) concerning a recent trip made by Venezuelan opposition leaders to the island of Puerto Rico. Following a journalistic interview made by Avila TV (another State own media television outlet, along with VTV, Antv, Vive, Vale tv) to J Borges, O Barboza, J Planas and Globovision manager Alberto Ravell.


The interview is made from what we can see as Inmigration control (some sort of a queue to present passports) where the Avila TV reporter approached the traveling politians, asking them how was their trip to Puerto Rico apparently paid by the US State Department. What really got my attention was that the reported cited inteligence sources from the Soviet Union. The knick of the matter is if it where true about the trip, how can a reporter approach civilians and inquire them in an overly sarcastic and ironic tone about their trip and air it on national television? Either way his intention is to infringe their privacy right and expose them on national television.
What is more, how can an elected official in Venezuela use public resources to, at a minimum level, infringe privacy rights provided under the Venezuelan Constitution under article 60. What happens if the official is the President, who pretends to mock these Venezuelan citizens by labeling them as pitiyankees, or should I say petit yankees...


This is just another evidence of the lack of rule of law in my country. Endorsed specially from the Venezuelan Presidency. It seems that the lack of rule of law is politics as usual here...


What would you do or who would you be if you had a Second Life?

I would be anyone but myself, possibly a rock and roll musician or an olympic athelete...dgc


Italian Woman Explores Prostitution Via Second Life (from wired.com)

Say what you will about the gameplay potential of Second Life, but there's no denying its potential as a fascinating sociological petri dish. To wit: Green Pixel's interview with "Palela Alderson," an Italian woman who explores her prostitution fantasies via Linden Labs' online world, and makes a bit of cash in the process.
The 26-year-old "Alderson" (pictured at right) is employed as a communications professional by day, but at night, like some kind of Freudian superhero, she dons her virtual persona and sells faux sex for 2,000 to 3,000 Linden Dollars a pop (the equivalent of $9 to $13 USD).
The motivation, Alderson claims, is a long-standing fascination with prostitution in the real world.
"We have street prostitution here in Italy, and I have always wanted to be one of them," she tells Green Pixels. "As a teenager I would watch these sexy women walking the streets, waiting for the cars to stop, teasing the guys, and then hopping in and getting out sometime later. I'm not sure why I find it such a turn-on."
Alderson's urges originally led to reality's version of the world's oldest profession, but, she says, that choice was a dead end.
"In the end, I refused all the dates I got," she says. "It wasn't that I didn't want to do it, not at all. It was because I was afraid of being discovered by my family. They would have never accepted it, and I didn't want to hurt them or make them ashamed of me."
After realizing the potential in Second Life's virtual sandbox however, Alderson turned to Linden Labs' program to explore her fetish. "I set myself up immediately as an online escort. It took a little while to learn how to do things, but within a few days I had my first client."
Most intriguingly, Alderson sees no disconnect between her virtual persona and herself, unlike many people who roleplay a certain personality archetype in a virtual world.
"In Second Life I look similar to the real me, even if I don't use the red hair extensions every day," Alderson says. "I try to minimize the differences between real life and Second Life -- my avatar looks like me because it's me that's doing these things, not a character or an actress."

Two Great CDs for 2009










Starting 2009 my best 2 albums:






Kings of Leon, Only By Night






The Roots, Rising Down (with my favorite drummer Ahmir Questlove Thompson!!)

Massive Attack Live with Me Video




Saw a video of Massive Attack, Live with Me (from Bristol, UK). The video basically starts with a women in her late 20s or early 30s coming out of work on a regular work day. She drops by a liquor store and buys some beer and a bottle of vodka. She gets to her apartment and starts drinking the beer, finds that she prefers the bottle of vodka, starts drinking....finishes drinking the whole bottle and rans out of her apartment, walking drunk and roaming the streets to later find herself asleep on a park bench...


This video gets me thinking about the pain and suffering that sometimes invades my soul and that drinking is not a solution. I have lived through this in New York City in 2001 and in London in 2006, thank God I didnt end up on a park bench. Drinking just merely soothes our selfbeing for a couple of hours, only to find that afterwards our emotions are just stronger and bolder. Its like craving water and drinking sand to quench the thrist...it only gets worse! Alcohol can be a social lubricator but in deed is not a solution in itself...


Kudos to Massive Attack!...And to Terry Callier (US Jazzist and friends with Curtis Mayfield) who sings the vocals on this great track


the Coase theorem


What Coase originally proposed in 1959 in the context of the regulation of radio frequencies was that as long as property rights in these frequencies were well defined, it ultimately did not matter if adjacent radio stations would initially interfere with each other by broadcasting in the same frequency band. The station able to reap the higher economic gain of the two from broadcasting would in this case have an incentive to pay the other station not to interfere. In the absence of transaction costs, both stations would strike a mutually advantageous deal. Put differently, it would not matter whether one or the other station had the initial right to broadcast; eventually, the right to broadcast would end up with the party that was able to put it to the most highly valued use. It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Radio waves. ... This page deals with property as ownership rights. ... A radio station is an audio (sound) broadcasting service, traditionally broadcast through the air as radio waves (a form of electromagnetic radiation) from a transmitter to an antenna and a thus to a receiving device. ... For the record label, see Incentive Records. ...
Coase's main point, clarified in an article published in 1960 (Coase 1960) and cited when he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1991, was that transaction costs, however, could not be neglected, and therefore, the initial allocation of property rights mattered in the presence of side effects (externalities). In essence, the normative conclusion most often drawn from the Coase theorem is that the property rights should initially be assigned to the actors gaining the most utility from them. The problem in real life is that governments most often do not know ex ante the most valued use of a resource. The Nobel Prizes (Swedish: ) are awarded for Physics, Chemistry, Literature, Peace, and Physiology or Medicine. ... Ex ante is a Latin term meaning beforehand. Ex ante evaluations deal with forecasting and forecasted returns on invested money. ...
Another, more refined normative conclusion also often discussed in law and economics is that government should create institutions which minimize transaction costs, so as to allow misallocations of resources to be corrected for as cheaply as possible. Law and economics, or economic analysis of law is an approach to legal theory that applies methods of economics to law.


...

Stephen Breyer and the last 10% (or bureaucratic tunnel vision)



Stephen Breyer holds one of the major problems in Regulation is the effectiveness of the regulatory constraint against the objective of regulation. Its rationale even though consistent with its action can be deem overly ambitious or extremely ineffective, specially when considering other goals of the regulator.


The problem in the U.S. regulatory system (or any other), as Breyer sees it, is an overwhelming preoccupation with "the last 10 percent." To illustrate the point, he vividly describes a case from his circuit in which the government tried to enforce the total cleanup of an already mostly clean waste dump at a cost of about $9.3 million. The law seemed to require this huge expenditure, although everyone concerned agreed that the site was clean enough for children to play there safely for 70 days each year and even to eat small amounts of contaminated dirt with no significant adverse effects. Perversely, moreover, the site was one where no children ever had played or were expected to play, and the estimated risk could have been reduced by the less costly expedient of burning the soil.

LSE


Juliette Lewis






• All that schooling never prepares you for the reality of life.
• I've been drug-free for ten years and I resent, especially in the rock 'n' roll world, the 'tell us some drugs and sex stories' attitude, It's real boring. It's not radical to take drugs anymore...there are no more excuses.
• Just 'cause I'm in the same age bracket as Johnny Depp and Leo Dicaprio doesn't mean we all screw together.
• What I get in rock 'n' roll that I don't get in movies is that connection with people. With music it's instantaneous, and just to watch people light up, it's really amazing. I love that connection.
• I don't make an effort to be sloppy. I just don't consider a perfect hairdo and a perfect face to be beautiful. If I had my way I'd dress myself and do my own makeup for magazine shoots.
• What I get in rock 'n' roll that I don't get in movies is that connection with people. With music it's instantaneous, and just to watch people light up, it's really amazing. I love that connection.
• Do you all know who Juliette and the Licks are? We're all just a bunch of actors! We act like we're in a band.
• It was traumatic and lovely, ... My character is always trying to get his attention, and I think she feels connected to him because the town judges her for whatever reason and thinks she's a trollop, a tramp, whatever you want to call her.
• I knew I could live no other way, that the one thing I wanted was to act and do it well.
• I just couldn't say no. The material is so provocative and visceral that I'm really excited to do it.
• I think I can be beautiful with all the little stuff done, and I can be ugly. A lot of attractive actresses can't be ugly.
• We have some mutual friends in common in the skate-rebel-punk-weird world.
• I try to bring a fearlessness to it. It makes sense that I do music. I have a really solid band. I have to do this and I'm not going to stop so I don't even care. Whoever wants to talk shit, so be it. I say: bring it on!
• The thing is, I want to play real characters and not all girls can be pretty. The thing is, you get these girls who say 'I'm a character actor' then you see them in a role and nothing has really changed but the outfit.
• I always look to play complicated characters. I like to emote. When I play a part, I like to portray what the inside of a character is, and often it's in conflict with the outside. I like that challenge.
• Like everybody I have many different sides.
• You know I've done some really embarrassing, cringey things by trying too hard. But it's only through experience that you learn to settle down and tone it down a notch, to just own it.
• As early as when I was five or six I wanted to perform.
• Being that we're both Method actors ... ... Basically it's like, 'Ten, nine, eight, seven — do we go out now? — six, five ...'
• The worst thing you can do to a kid is tell them that their dreams are invalid.
• I don't want to be famous as a movie star and have the whole world love me, I want to be a creative actress.
• I collect clothes-they keep building and building. I buy them instead of having them washed.
• Fame can be just so annoying because people are so critical of you. You can't just say, 'hi'. You say hi and people whisper' man did you see the way she said hi? What an attitude.
• [about Scientology] I am no longer stuck in the bottomless pit of despair and apathy. Having achieved the state of Clear is the single most important thing that I've done for myself. It has allowed me to experience life in a way I only imagined.
• People say I'm cocky, but am I supposed to sit here and be insecure and not know where my future's going or not realize that moviemaking is the greatest thing to happen to me?
• Being beautiful can be a curse, especially if you want to be an artist and create.
• The bravest thing I ever did was continuing my life when I wanted to die.
• I kind of imagine myself at eighty, a cat lady.
• Because I'm not perfect looking, I get to play better roles.
• I'm like a medium. The music just passes through me and it's electric, I can't help but get turned on.
• Success is a nice by-product but what I really want is work.


Number of news stories from 1998 to Election Day 2000 containing “George W. Bush” and “aura of inevitability”: 206
Amount for which Bush successfully sued Enterprise Rent-A-Car in 1999: $2,500
Year in which a political candidate first sued Palm Beach County over problems with hanging chads: 1984
Total amount the Bush campaign paid Enron and Halliburton for use of corporate jets during the 2000 recount: $15,400
Percentage of Bush’s first 189 appointees who also served in his father’s administration: 42
Minimum number of Bush appointees who have regulated industries they used to represent as lobbyists: 98
Years before becoming energy secretary that Spencer Abraham cosponsored a bill to abolish the Department of Energy: 2
Number of Chevron oil tankers named after Condoleezza Rice, at the time she became foreign policy adviser: 1
Date on which the GAO sued Dick Cheney to force the release of documents related to current U.S. energy policy: 2/22/02
Number of other officials the GAO has sued over access to federal records: 0
Months before September 11, 2001, that Cheney’s Energy Task Force investigated Iraq’s oil resources: 6
Hours after the 9/11 attacks that an Alaska congressman speculated they may have been committed by “eco-terrorists”: 9
Date on which the first contract for a book about September 11 was signed: 9/13/01
Number of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and North African men detained in the U.S. in the eight weeks after 9/11: 1,182
Number of them ever charged with a terrorism-related crime: 0
Number charged with an immigration violation: 762
Days since the federal government first placed the nation under an “elevated terror alert” that the level has been relaxed: 0
Minimum number of calls the FBI received in fall 2001 from Utah residents claiming to have seen Osama bin Laden: 20
Number of box cutters taken from U.S. airline passengers since January 2002: 105,075
Percentage of Americans in 2006 who believed that U.S. Muslims should have to carry special I.D.: 39
Chances an American in 2002 believed the government should regulate comedy routines that make light of terrorism: 2 in 5
Rank of Mom, Dad, and Rudolph Giuliani among those whom 2002 college graduates said they most wished to emulate: 1, 2, 3
Number of members of the rock band Anthrax who said they hoarded Cipro so as to avoid an “ironic death”: 1
Estimated total calories members of Congress burned giving Bush’s 2002 State of the Union standing ovations: 22,000
Percentage of the amendments in the Bill of Rights that are violated by the USA PATRIOT Act, according to the ACLU: 50
Minimum number of laws that Bush signing statements have exempted his administration from following: 1,069
Estimated number of U.S. intelligence reports on Iraq that were based on information from a single defector: 100
Number of times the defector had ever been interviewed by U.S. intelligence agents: 0
Date on which Bush said of Osama bin Laden, “I truly am not that concerned about him”: 3/13/02
Days after the U.S. invaded Iraq that Sony trademarked “Shock & Awe” for video games: 1
Days later that the company gave up the trademark, citing “regrettable bad judgment”: 25
Number of books by Henry Kissinger found in Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz’s mansion: 2
Number by then–New York Times reporter Judith Miller: 1
Factor by which an Iraqi in 2006 was more likely to die than in the last year of the Saddam regime: 3.6
Factor by which the cause of death was more likely to be violence: 120
Chance that an Iraqi has fled his or her home since the beginning of the war: 1 in 6
Portion of Baghdad residents in 2007 who had a family member or friend wounded or killed since 2003: 3/4
Percentage of U.S. veterans from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan who have filed for disability with the VA: 35
Chance that an Iraq war veteran who has served two or more tours now has post-traumatic stress disorder: 1 in 4
Number of all U.S. war veterans who have been denied Veterans Administration health care since 2003: 452,677
Number of eligibility restrictions for admission into the Army that have been loosened since 2003: 9
Percentage change from 2004 to 2007 in the number of Army recruits admitted despite having been charged with a felony: +295
Date on which the White House announced it had stopped looking for WMDs in Iraq: 1/12/05
Years since his acquittal that O. J. Simpson has said he is still looking for his wife’s “real killers”: 13
Minimum number of close-up photographs of Bush’s hands owned by his current chief of staff, Josh Bolten: 4
Number of vehicles in the motorcade that transports Bush to his regular bike ride in Maryland: 6
Estimated total miles he has ridden his bike as president: 5,400
Portion of his presidency he has spent at or en route to vacation spots: 1/3
Minimum number of times that Frederick Douglass was beaten in what is now Donald Rumsfeld’s vacation home: 25
Estimated number of juveniles whom the United States has detained as enemy combatants since 2002: 2,500
Minimum number of detainees who were tortured to death in U.S. custody: 8
Minimum number of extraordinary renditions that the United States has made since 2006: 200
Date on which USA Today added Guantánamo to its weather map: 1/3/05
Number of incidents of torture on prime-time network TV shows from 2002 to 2007: 897
Number on shows during the previous seven years: 110
Percentage change since 2000 in U.S. emigration to Canada: +79
Number of the thirty-eight Iraq war veterans who have run for Congress who were Democrats: 21
Percentage of Republicans in 2005 who said they would vote for Bush over George Washington: 62
Seconds it took a Maryland consultant in 2004 to pick a Diebold voting machine’s lock and remove its memory card: 10
Number of states John Kerry would have won in 2004 if votes by poor Americans were the only ones counted: 40
Number if votes by rich Americans were the only ones counted: 4
Portion of all U.S. income gains during the Bush Administration that have gone to the top 1 percent of earners: 3/4
Increase since 2000 in the number of Americans living at less than half the federal poverty level: 3,500,000
Percentage change since 2001 in the average amount U.S. workers spend on out-of-pocket medical expenses: +172
Estimated percentage by which Social Security benefits would have declined if Bush’s privatization plan had passed: –15
Percentage change since 2002 in the number of U.S. teens using illegal drugs: –9
Percentage change in the number of adults in their fifties doing so: +121
Number of times FDA officials met with consumer and patient groups as they revised drug-review policy in 2006: 5
Number of times they met with industry representatives: 113
Amount the Justice Department spent in 2001 installing curtains to cover two seminude statues of Justice: $8,650
Number of Republican officials who have been investigated by the Justice Department since 2001: 196
Number of Democratic officials who have been: 890
Number of White House officials in 2006 and 2007 authorized to discuss pending criminal cases with the DOJ: 711
Number of Clinton officials ever authorized to do so: 4
Years since a White House official as senior as I. Lewis Libby had been indicted while in office: 130
Number of U.S. cities and towns that have passed resolutions calling for the impeachment of President Bush: 92
Percentage change since 2001 in U.S. government spending on paper shredding: +466
Percentage of EPA scientists who say they have experienced political interference with their work since 2002: 60
Change since 2001 in the percentage of Americans who believe humans are causing climate change: –4
Number of total additions made to the U.S. endangered-species list under Bush: 61
Average number made yearly under Clinton: 65
Minimum number of pheasant hunts Dick Cheney has gone on since he shot a hunting companion in 2006: 5
Days after Hurricane Katrina hit that Cheney’s office ordered an electric company to restore power to two oil pipelines: 1
Days after the hurricane that the White House authorized sending federal troops into New Orleans: 4
Portion of the $3.3 billion in federal Hurricane Katrina relief spent by Mississippi that has benefited poor residents: 1/4
Percentage change in the number of Louisiana and Mississippi newborns named Katrina in the year after the storm: +153
Rank of Nevaeh, “heaven” spelled backward, among the fastest growing names given to American newborns since 2000: 1
Months, beginning in 2001, that the federal government’s online condom fact sheet disappeared from its website : 17
Minimum amount that religious groups received in congressional earmarks from 2003 to 2006: $209,000,000
Amount such groups received during the previous fourteen years: $107,000,000
Percentage change from 2003 to 2007 in the amount of money invested in U.S. faith-based mutual funds: +88
Average annualized percentage return during that time in the Christian and Muslim funds, respectively: +11, +15
Number of feet the Ground Zero pit has been built up since the site was fully cleared in 2002: 30
Number of 980-foot-plus “Super Tall” towers built in the Arab world in the seven years since 9/11: 4
Year by which the third and final phase of the 2003 “road map” to a Palestinian state was to have been reached: 2005
Estimated number of the twenty-five provisions of the first phase that have yet to be completed: 12
Number of times in 2007 that U.S. media called General David Petraeus “King David”: 14
Percentage change during the first ten months of the Iraq war “surge” in the number of Iraqis detained in U.S.-run prisons: +63
Percentage change in the number of Iraqis aged nine to seventeen detained: +285
Ratio of the entire U.S. federal budget in 1957, adjusted for inflation, to the amount spent so far on the Iraq war: 1:1
Estimated amount Bush-era policies will cost the U.S. in new debt and accrued obligations: $10,350,000,000,000 (see page 31)
Percentage change in U.S. discretionary spending during Bush’s presidency: +31
Percentage change during Reagan’s and Clinton’s, respectively: +16, +0.3
Ratio in 1999 of the number of U.S. federal employees to the number of private employees on government contracts: 15:6
Ratio in 2006: 14:15
Total value of U.S. government contracts in 2000 that were awarded without competitive bidding: $73,000,000,000
Total in 2007: $146,000,000,000
Number of the five directors of the No Child Left Behind reading program with financial ties to a curriculum they developed: 4
Amount by which the federal government has underfunded its estimated cost to implement NCLB: $71,000,000,000
Minimum number of copies sold, since it was released in 2006, of Flipping Houses for Dummies: 45,000
Chance that the buyer of a U.S. home in 2006 now has “negative equity,” i.e., the debt on the home exceeds its value: 1 in 5
Estimated value of Henry Paulson’s Goldman Sachs stock when he became Treasury Secretary and sold it: $575,000,000
Estimated value of that stock today: $238,000,000
Salary in 2006 of the White House’s newly created Director for Lessons Learned: $106,641
Minimum number of Bush-related books published since 2001: 606
Number of words in the first sentence of Bill Clinton’s memoir and in that of George W. Bush’s, respectively: 49, 5
Minimum number of nicknames Bush has given to associates during his presidency: 75
Number of associates with the last name Jackson he has dubbed “Action Jackson”: 2
Number of press conferences at which Bush has referred to a question as a “trick”: 14
Number of times he has declared an event or outcome not to be “acceptable”: 149
Rank of Bush among U.S. presidents with the highest disapproval rating: 1
Average percentage of Americans who approved of the job Bush was doing during his second term: 37
Percentage of Russians today who approve of the direction their country took under Stalin: 37

Roll the Dice! by C Bukowski


Roll the Dice!
by Charles Bukowski

if you’re going to try, go all theway

otherwise, don’t even start.

if you’re going to try,

go all theway.


this could mean losing girlfriends,

wives, relatives, jobs

and maybe your mind.


go all the way.

it could mean not eating for 3 or4 days

it could mean freezing on a park bench

it could mean jail,

it could mean derision,

mockery, isolation

isolation is the gift,

all the others are a test of your endurance,

of how much you really want to do it


and you’ll do it despite rejection

and the worst odds

and it will be better than anything else you can imagine.


if you’re going to try,

go all the way.

there is no other feeling like that.


you will be alone with thegods and the nights will flame withfire.


do it, do it, do it

do it

all the way, all the way.


you will ride life straight to perfect laughter, it’s the only good fight there is.



Hug O War! by S Silverstein
I will not play at tug o' war
I'd rather play at hug o' war,
Where everyone hugs
Instead of tugs
Where everyone giggles
And rolls on the rug,
Where everyone kisses
And everyone grins
And everyone cuddles
And everyone wins.

Recifer




recifer
Through the halls I wonder
as such I know not, or probably looking for eyes,
blue
and not looking for sins of life
forms yet.

I came across consistency and morrow

Through the halls that made my feel nothing like
I am
Or probably having in regard that I am not that,
Sooner more than later, I will be gone
for good, and command only more dreams of hearts
and song.

Stories across these halls that makes me feel
Anguished of humans not
but reality of volatile conversations
of beings knowning not the essentials
of mere human nature.

Probably they pretend not being part of such matter
Awful deep presarios, or business like
contract bearing liabilities in mind while negotiation
in good faith, supposedly.
(But I am as they, as they are me)

Flow that people comment to my self, in this halls
as not burnened by acts of feels
that nature is in itself contradictory
Consistent like flow, and people going by
and being cause of convenience and not pure
seamingly shyness of heart, and not to bear
against all such dreams.

Procuring shields, and swords of life
for the same subject-matter
of going on and not knowing when.
Locke's sensation and reflexiveness

However, and in all probabilities, laughter for songs
and rhymes of inconsistency
of looking and knowing not what, but needing not rather,
deep inside
that something, of hills of conformity, of rest
and not better being for self in quest.

Such disertations along with my remeniscent dream of charcoal love
that transforms into something rather, nevertheless the hand that graps it,
dear love
Makes me what I am not, and hence all the rest
is me

Sensations of an improvisational heart is not mine
On the contrary holding never patterns in mundane acts,
but mine heart is holding eternal reign over the rationel's endless trial
of relation
for my brainly questioning should be left
alone itself for enjoing the structure of theories on the path
of the heart.

Bottom as the end, my heart holds office
and not during my alone decision, but it is not
left to earthly possesinal links
or dazed instincs of competional stories
or positions
in mind.

Do not go, while I am watching you
I want to feel, this feel that makes me fall under control
of my emotional memories
I can dream you, like an era.

But if you go, decide whether you should hold and
look back.

Are you Drinking? by Charles Bukowski
Are You Drinking?

washed-up, on shore, the old yellow notebookout againI write from the bedas I did lastyear.will see the doctor,Monday."yes, doctor, weak legs, vertigo, head-aches and my back hurts.""are you drinking?" he will ask."are you getting yourexercise, yourvitamins?"I think that I am just ill with life, the same stale yetfluctuatingfactors.even at the trackI watch the horses run byand it seemsmeaningless.I leave early after buying tickets on theremaining races."taking off?" asks the motel clerk."yes, it's boring,"I tell him."If you think it's boring out there," he tells me, "you oughta beback here."so here I ampropped up against my pillowsagainjust an old guyjust an old writerwith a yellownotebook.something is walking across thefloortoward me.oh, it's just my catthistime.


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