Hypocrisy…

These guys have it:

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Where I stand

With the Democratic Convention over and the Republican Convention almost finished, I figured it was time to lay out where I stand on the issues at hand, and hopefully explain why I’m voting the way I am.

The economy is the #1 issue in my mind.  Foreclosures are affecting everyday people, but is the government helping them?  Nope.  They’d rather bail out the big lending companies who wooed the uniformed consumer into accepting loan terms the banks knew the people couldn’t pay. They banked on being able to foreclose on a house and resell it for a profit.  Well, they are foreclosing all right, but they aren’t making a profit because there are too many homes.  So the government has to use our tax dollars to keep the shysters in the business of foreclosing on more unsellable homes, thus putting hard working people out of something they were convinced they could afford.  It’s time to help the people, and not the big banks who made shady deals.  However, this help should not be in the form of government money.  It should be in the form of educating the consumer on fiscal responsibility so they can recognize what they can and cannot afford.  “Introductory rates” and adjustable rate mortgages are very suspect at almost any time.  It’s too bad banks did the hard sell, and consumers were gullible enough to believe them.

Oil:
Allow expanded drilling, but keep funding alternative sources of energy.   If energy independence is our goal, then we must have other sources besides oil.  Aside from the obvious “green” choices of wind, wave, etc., nuclear is a clear option.  However, the liberal hippies keep yelling “NIMBY” to the waste products, which are minuscule compared to the tons of carbon dioxide and other pollutants fossil fuels dump into our atmosphere.

Which brings us to climate change:
I’m of the mindset that humans aren’t the primary cause of global warming.  To believe such is the height of arrogance.  See that big flaming ball in the daytime sky?  That’s a huge freaking fusion reactor that could wipe us out with one massive flare.  It’s been scientifically proven that small fluctuations in solar output can have massive effects on our planet.  That,  in my meteorological educated opinion, is the primary cause of climate change, and there’s jack squat we can do about it.  However, I do believe we are a contributing factor.  Carbon dioxide from burning fuels, cutting down forests, and methane from super farms retain heat.  Nitrous oxide and sulfur dioxide (NOx and SOx as my chem teacher in high school used to say) are harming our forests.  Non-biodegradable trash is filling our dumps and being tossed on the roadsides by stupid people.  Thus, we must limit our contributions to both climate change and pollution.  It’s not just good for us, it’s good for the Earth as a whole.

International relations:
Bush and his policies of torture, abolishing Habeus Corpus for “enemy combatants” (which also applies to US citizens), spying on US citizens without warrants, and putting commercial interests before diplomacy has caused the US to fall from it’s original high standing in the international community.  Even Canada issued a warning to it’s people that the US practices torture and not to travel here.  We must repair this, and McCain’s policy of “100 years” in Iraq, “Bomb, bomb Iran,” and bullying Russia will not help us.

Finally, abortion:
The “abortion issue” isn’t about abortion.  That’s what the neo-cons and christian conservatives want it to be about.  The “abortion issue” is about personal choice in health care.  Do you want big bad government telling you what medical procedures you can and cannot have performed on you?  That’s the BIG PICTURE that keeps getting glossed over with “pro-life” v. “pro-choice” and all their rhetoric.  Keep government hands off our health choices!

I don’t trust Obama.  Hell, i don’t trust any “politician” to do anything but whatever will get them nice chunks of money from the PACs, and maybe the occasional gift on the sly.  However we only have two choices.  One is furthering policies that placed us in our mess, one is advocating “change.”

As I have stated previously, I agree with Larry Hunter:

These past eight years, we have spent over a trillion dollars on foreign soil – and lost countless lives – and done what I consider irreparable damage to our Constitution.

If economic damage from well-intentioned but misbegotten Obama economic schemes is the ransom we must pay him to clean up this foreign policy mess, then so be it. It’s not nearly as costly as enduring four more years of what we suffered the last eight years.

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Penn and Teller call “BS” on Environmental Hysteria

Please take a look at this video.  It shows how ridiculous the whole environmental hysteria movement is.  The petition to ban “dihydrogen monoxide” is quite amusing and shows these people usually don’t know what the heck they are talking about.

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The summer movie season so far…

Thus far this season I have seen Iron Man, Wall-E, Hellboy 2, and The Dark Knight.  Here’s my take on them in the order which they were seen:

Iron Man

Excellent flick.  Robert Downey, Jr. made this film.  He was Tony Stark. His chemistry with Gwyneth Paltrow was excellent, but I wished they had found another actress as I can’t quite see the object of Shakespeare’s affections as Pepper Potts.  Tying Stark with the “war on terror” was an interesting twist, and sent a bit of a message while still having enough “boom” to not appear heavy-handed.  I give Iron Man a 9 (out of 10).

Wall-E

A bleak, brown, dirty vision of Earth 700 years from now.  A depressing, but believable image of humans 700 years from now.  Robots exploring sentience, or going crazy because of it.  And finally, the simple act of holding hands.  If you don’t mind getting beat over the head with environmental, health, and “bad big business” messages, you might enjoy the cuteness and slapstick humor of Wall-E.   Kids will enjoy the movie anyways.  My grade:  7.

Note:  The short “Presto” gets a 10.  It’s the best part of the whole show.

Hellboy 2

An enjoyable, visual feast for eyes, with enough humor to make sure people aren’t too scared.  Ron Perlman becomes Hellboy as much as Downey, Jr. became Tony Stark.  His relationship with Liz (Selma Blair) reaches new levels, all of which are familiar to just about any couple who have spent significant time together.  Abe Sapien (Doug Jones) is the geek who doesn’t quite know how to handle his emotions, and his “vent” session with  Hellboy involving Tecate beer and Barry Manilow will become one of those classic film clips that will be played over and over again.   Score:  8.

The Dark Knight

Wow.

I really don’t know what else to say, but I’ll try.

All the Oscar hype you hear about Heath Ledger?  Believe it.  He remakes the Joker into something so sinister, you’ll laugh, then wonder why the hell you’re laughing at, no, along with something so evil, so wicked, so insane, so… brilliant.   I’ve always believed there’s a fine line between genius and insanity.  The Joker doesn’t walk the line, he plays jump-rope with it, cackling with glee while he does it.

Christian Bale tries to be the lead, but this film belongs first to Ledger, then to Gary Oldman as Lieutenant Gordon.  Then again, everyone contributed in some way, even the lowly sergeant who makes a terrible choice to give in to revenge.  One review I read remarked that “everyone has a back story,” and now I see what he meant.  Everyone, from Batman, to the lowly minion, contributes to the overall depth of the story.  Christopher Nolan has created another masterpiece.

A definite 10.  Probably one of the best films I’ve ever seen.

p.s. – This film will go over the heads of anyone under the age of 12.  Although it is PG-13, it only got that way because of the lack of visible blood.  “People will die,” the Joker says, and people do die.  People are forced to make life and death decisions.  It’s heavy, heavy stuff.  Speaking as the father of a 13 year-old who is pretty smart, don’t take the kids until you’ve seen it yourself.

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Former Reagan staffer is voting for…

Obama.

I’m a lifelong Republican – a supply-side conservative. I worked in the Reagan White House. I was the chief economist at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce for five years. In 1994, I helped write the Republican Contract with America. I served on Bob Dole‘s presidential campaign team and was chief economist for Jack Kemp‘s Empower America.

This November, I’m voting for Barack Obama.

John McCain would continue the Bush administration’s commitment to interventionism and constitutional overreach. Obama promises a humbler engagement with our allies, while promising retaliation against any enemy who dares attack us. That’s what conservatism used to mean – and it’s what George W. Bush promised as a candidate.

Finally, he echoes what conservatives like me are thinking:

These past eight years, we have spent over a trillion dollars on foreign soil – and lost countless lives – and done what I consider irreparable damage to our Constitution.

If economic damage from well-intentioned but misbegotten Obama economic schemes is the ransom we must pay him to clean up this foreign policy mess, then so be it. It’s not nearly as costly as enduring four more years of what we suffered the last eight years.

That’s why, as a registered Republican, I’m voting for Barack Obama as well.

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It’s happening again

Remember in the run up to the Iraq war how we were fed misinformation leading us to believe Iraq had Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD), several different ways of distributing it, and were supplying it to terrorists?

If so, then this should sound familiar:

In court documents and in statements by his attorney, the former CIA officer contends that his 22-year CIA career collapsed after he questioned CIA doctrine about the nuclear programs of Iraq and Iran. As a native of the Middle East and a fluent speaker of both Farsi and Arabic, he had been assigned undercover work in the Persian Gulf region, where he successfully recruited an informant with access to sensitive information about Iran’s nuclear program, Krieger said.

The informant provided secret evidence that Tehran had halted its research into designing and building a nuclear weapon. Yet, when the operative sought to file reports on the findings, his attempts were “thwarted by CIA employees,” according to court papers. Later he was told to “remove himself from any further handling” of the informant, the documents say.

 But wait, it gets worse:

In the months after the conflict, the operative became the target of two internal investigations, one of them alleging an improper sexual relationship with a female informant, and the other alleging financial improprieties. Krieger said his client cooperated with investigators in both cases and the allegations of wrongdoing were never substantiated. Krieger contends in court documents that the investigations were a “pretext to discredit.”

Krieger maintains that his client is being further punished by the agency’s decision prohibiting him from fully regaining his identity. “He is not even allowed to attend court hearings about his own case,” Krieger said.

 Source:  Washington Post

Once again, the policy of “tell us what we want to hear” comes into play.  Only this time, people aren’t letting it just slide by as fact.

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Intel skips Vista

It’s one thing for some company to say there’s no compelling reason to switch to Windows Vista, but when that company is Intel

“This isn’t a matter of dissing Microsoft, but Intel information technology staff just found no compelling case for adopting Vista,” the person said.

An Intel spokesman said the company was testing and deploying Vista in certain departments, but not across the company.

Ouch.

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Bill Gates’ Software Philosophy: Why fix bugs when we can deliver features?

Finally, an explanation for why Windows Vista is such a train wreck:

“The reason we come up with new versions is not to fix bugs. It’s absolutely not. It’s the stupidest reason to buy a new version I ever heard. When we do a new version we put in lots of new things that people are asking for.  And so, in no sense, is stability a reason to move to a new version.  It’s never a reason. “

Bill Gates, in an interview with German weekly magazine FOCUS (nr.43, October 23,1995, pages 206-212)

 

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Close the “Enron Loophole”

What is the “Enron Loophole?”  It was an amendment in the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 which allowed electronic futures trading to be deregulated. This allows speculators and traders to operate without oversight, or “in the dark” as the term goes.

Congress recently tried to close the loophole with an amendment to the recent Farm Appropriations bill, but President Bush vetoed it, and the senate failed to get the 60% needed to override a Republican filibuster. Thus, the loophole remains, and the speculators keep running up the price of oil without any reigns what so ever.

Countdown with Keith Olberman explains it better than I can, as well as how John McCain has “flip-flopped” on first his opposition of the loophole in 2002 (“We’re all tainted,” he said then) to his current apparent support to keep the loophole in place (he voted against the Farm Appropriations bill, and is proposing solutions other than closing said loophole):

The “Enron Loophole” must be closed.  There must be transparency in the online futures markets.  Say what you will about “gub’ment meddling with markets,” I’d rather have some regulation (mainly transparency) than what is currently happening with no regulation.

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Help set a record!

Download Day - English

June 17th is the official release date for Firefox 3, and Mozilla is out to set a record for the most downloads in one day. Help set a world record by downloading Firefox and giving it a try.

While no browser is truly secure, Firefox is more stable and secure than Internet Explorer, and more compatible with websites than Safari/Webkit (at least in my experience).  I have used Firefox since it was first known as “Phoenix” years ago, and I plan to install Firefox 3 on all of my computers.

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