09 February 2010

Why We Love the Rude Pundit

Nothing to see here, move along
Because he writes stuff like this:
See, Sarah Palin is graded on the hot chick curve. Men wanna f%$# her and women with low self-esteem wanna be her, so whatever she does just affirms that she is hot and f%$#able and gets to travel. If she looked like Kay Bailey Hutchison, we wouldn't even be talking about her. Palin knows it. And she wields her sexuality like a distraction while she magically steals attention from those smarter than her.

It ain't just Palin. Let's face it: if Hillary Clinton had looked like Sarah Palin, she'd be president. And if Barack Obama had looked like Dennis Kucinich, he would not. But, Jesus, you could argue there was substance there. It's a sad fact of America in the 21st-century that shallowness is a quality and depth makes you an out-of-touch elitist.
(%%# mine)

He cuts to the core of the issue here: that there are an awful lot of people in the United States who think that the manner of selecting our leaders should involve no more intellectual rigor than selecting Miss Alaska (and by the way, she lost that one too).

Oh, For Pete's Sake!!!!

It's snowing again …………… Hard.

They are predicting another 18-24 inches over the next 24 hours.

Please make it stop!

08 February 2010

Really Bad Ideas: Dodge/Chrysler Edition

No, this does not look macho!
I know that it's kind of like shooting fish in a barrel, but the idea that Dodge will reinvigorate interest in it's muscle cars with "Furious Fuchsia" special edition Chargers is just too stupid to ignore.

Fuchsia? Seriously?

What the hell were you thinking?

Seriously, real men don't even know the world fuchsia.*

This is an aesthetic right up there with the AMC Pacer.

Sharon looked at the picture, and said that she, "Wouldn't be caught dead in it," so the minivan driving mother segment doesn't like it either.

*Full disclosure: I'm not a real man, even if I do detest quiche, and I can't spell fuchsia.

Love of my life, light of the cosmos, she who must be obeyed, my wife.

Hmmm…………Who Could it Be?

Could it be ………… the Mossad?
Mahmoud Al-Mabhouh was one of the founders of Hamas' Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, and was believed to be a major conduit of weapons to Gaza.

On January 19, he was found dead in his hotel room, and authorities in Dubai are saying that he was done by a hit squad with "European passports", and these people were already out of the country before the body was discovered.

Among other oddities: His bodyguard was not with him because the plane was full, which is kind of a "WTF" thing.

Additionally, the cause of death is unclear, with reports, according to the Wiki, of suffocation, electrocution (unlikely, it's a stupid way to off someone), and, "a heart-attack inducing drug".

What is interesting (quoting the Wiki) is just how much Hamas is not on the same page about this:
Hamas officials made diverse and conflicting statements regarding the circumstances of their leader's death. On the day of the incident, Hamas' armed wing, the Al-Qassam Brigades, announced that he died of terminal cancer in a hospital in the United Arab Emirates.

On 29 January, top Hamas official Mahmoud al-Zahar said that it was possible that members of the entourage of Israeli infrastructure minister Uzi Landau were involved in Mabhuh's death. Landau was visiting the United Arab Emirates at the time for a renewable energy conference. Landau dismissed the claim, stating that his delegation was in Abu Dhabi, some 120 km from Dubai, and was escorted by 8-man UAE security team at all times.

Also on 29 January, Hamas' deputy politburo chief Moussa Abu Marzouk said, "Mossad agents are those who assassinated al-Mabhouh".

On 2 February, Hamas representative in Lebanon Osama Hamdan said that Palestinian Authority security forces might have been involved in the death. He stated that "The Palestinian Authority security forces are pursuing [our] fighters and they have killed dozens of them since 1994." The same day, Haaretz reported that a Hamas investigation suggested Mabhuh was assassinated by agents of an Arab government, and that al-Mabhouh was wanted by Egypt and Jordan.
Seeing as how his "day job" was running a textile firm, I see only four possibilities, the Mossad, some sort of internecine warfare amongst members of Hamas, some sort of natural death while in a sexually compromised position (which would explain the absence of body guards as well as the confusion from Hamas), or the textile industry in Syria is more cut-throat than I previously understood.

My money is on the Mossad.

That whole "silk merchant gone bad" thing ……… not so much.

Matt Taibbi Nails it Again

He discusses the fact that John Thain, the man who spent over a million dollars rehabbing his office at Merrill Lynch while conspiring to conceal losses from Bank of America shareholders has now been appointed CEO of troubled business lender CIT.

Matt Taibbi asks the question that this raises, "Man, exactly what do you have to do to become unhirable in this country? Eat Christian babies on CNN?"

It's true. As Mr. Taibbi notes, the "Genius" behind the LTCM fiasco is still getting to make his money playing with other people's money.

This is all about corruption and nepotism.

Just Read Krugman

Here is the last line, "Well, America is not yet lost. But the Senate is working on it."

Just go read it.

Economics Update

Normally, I don't talk stock prices, particularly the Dow, which is an arbitrary and not particularly accurate metric of the stock market, but the fact that the DJIA closed below 10,000 today has a significant effect on the thinking of the markets, or at least on the thinking of the financial journalists.

On the other hand we do have some good signs, most notably that the interest rate premoum on junk bonds appears to be falling, which generally implies that financing is becoming more available.

Additionally, it appears that some sort of deal is in the offing with the EU to bail out Greece, which has driven voth the Yen and the dollar lower, because investors are not looking so hard for safe havens.

As is the norm, the falling dollar has driven oil higher.

Representative John Murtha Dead

Following complications of gall bladder surgery.

He was 77.

Posted via mobile.

OK, SNL Still Has It

Saturday Night Lives take on an "Even Tempered Apology from White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel":

If Eliot Spitzer Is Our Savior, We Are Screwed

But it appears to me that he's the only figure out there who gets what is wrong with the system (30:54):



No one else describe the problems so simply and completely, and it's clear that there is no one else in the public policy sphere gets is willing or able to see this.

Unfortunately, he'll always be the guy who paid a hooker, so he's too toxic to ever hold public office ever again.

07 February 2010

A Good Start

Click for full size
H/t War is Boring
How do you know if a government policy is disastrous?

Well, there are any number of indicators, but the one that has a 100% record on predicting f%$#ed up policy is if it's Dick Cheney's idea.

Well, one of his ideas, back when he was Secretary of Defense was that "non core" military functions, like cargo transport, feeding the troops, and maintenance, should be outsourced to the private sector.

We all know how well that works. It's so bad that even the US Air Force, the poster child for letting contractors run wild, is bringing its sustainment activities in house: (paid subscription required)
The U.S. Air Force is beginning to reclaim government management over upkeep of its large fighter, transport and, eventually, unmanned aircraft fleets, a move that could stunt efforts from companies looking to reap high profits from the maintenance business.

The Air Force is moving away from the contractor logistics support arrangements , popular in the 1990s, in which the government paid a premium for industry to handle product support duties, including oversight of touch labor and supply-chain management. During this post-Cold War period, the Pentagon downsized the workforce equipped with these skills in hopes that industry could oversee these tasks at lower costs and more efficiently. However, under Defense Secretary Robert Gates, this trend is reversing, and the government is now insourcing jobs in acquisition and sustainment; top Air Force officials say they expect savings.
If the policy has proved to be a disaster of such epic proportions that even the boyz from Colorado Springs* have decided that the possibility of plush jobs after they retire as generals cannot excuse it, then you just know that Cheney was part of the original decision.

Of course, the private contractors maintain that they will be cheaper (they aren't), and that the government will find it tough to attract talent (Nope, once you take this in house, you get the people who previously worked for the government, then went to work for LockMartBoeinThrup, but have now been laid off), but mostly, they are screaming that they want their money.

Sorry, but you had your chance, and you f%$#ed it up. You're fired.

*I mean the USAF, not Focus on the Family, though sometimes it is hard to tell them apart.

Big Surprise

Former Liberian President, and mass murderer, Charles Taylor is saying that he did mining deals with Pat Robertson in exchange for his lobbying Bush and His Evil Minions for support:
Former Liberian president Charles Taylor, testifying in his war crimes trial in The Hague on Thursday, said that his government had awarded American televangelist Pat Robertson a gold mining concession in 1999 and that Robertson later offered to lobby the Bush administration on the government's behalf.

The revelations came in the midst of Taylor's U.N.-backed trial on 11 counts of committing war crimes and crimes against humanity during Sierra Leone's 1990s civil war. Taylor is accused of directing a Sierra Leonean rebel group, the United Revolutionary Front, in a campaign aimed at securing access to the country's diamond mines. The rebel movement stands accused of committing mass atrocities in the West African country in the late 1990s, including the mutilation of thousands of civilians.
Here's hoping that the war crimes tribunal comes after Pat Robertson, whose association with Taylor has been common knowledge for at least a decade.

Of course, Robertson will never see the inside of a court room, because the United States won't turn over anyone for war crimes, because we're big enough not to play by the rules, so all that we will hear from him on this is his spokesman's denial.

Our Financial Crisis, Brought to You by the WTO

There are a lot of people out there who think that free trade will always do all kinds of good things: It creates peace, it creates democracy, it keeps your daughter from dating the guy with the tattoos and piercings.

I'm not one of these people.

First, I think that we have yet to see an economy becoming a developed economy with a large middle class in a free trade environment, and second, I think that a bad free trade deal is worse than no, or a more limited, free trade deal.

Well it appears that on March 1, 1999, the United States signed onto a free trade deal that mandated the sort of reckless deregulation that has nearly destroyed out economy:
But the U.S. is not being sold out in a vacuum.

On March 1, 1999, countries accounting for more than 90 per cent of the global financial services market signed onto the World Trade Organization’s Financial Services Agreement (FSA). By signing the FSA, they committed to deregulate their financial markets.

For example, by signing the FSA, the U.S. agreed not to break up too big to fails. The U.S. also promised to repeal Glass-Steagall, and did so 8 months after signing the FSA.

Indeed, in signing the FSA and other WTO agreements, the U.S. has legally bound itself as follows:
  • No new regulation: The United States agreed to a “standstill provision” that requires that we not create new regulations (or reverse liberalization) for the list of financial services bound to comply with WTO rules. Given that the United States has made broad WTO financial services commitments – and thus is forbidden by this provision from imposing new regulations in these many areas – this provision seriously limits the policy [options] available to address the current crisis.
  • Removal of regulation: The United States even agreed to try to even eliminate domestic financial service regulatory policies that meet GATS [i.e. General Agreement on Trade in Services] rules, but that may still “adversely affect the ability of financial service suppliers of any other (WTO) Member to operate, compete, or enter” the market.
  • No bans on new financial service “products”: The United States is also bound to ensure that foreign financial service suppliers are permitted “to offer in its territory any new financial service,” a direct conflict with the various proposals to limit various risky investment instruments, such as certain types of derivatives.
  • Certain forms of regulation banned outright: The United States agreed that it would not set limits on the size, corporate form or other characteristics of foreign firms in the broad array of financial services it signed up to WTO strictures …
  • Treating foreign and domestic firms alike is not sufficient: The GATS market-access limits on U.S. domestic regulation apply in absolute terms; that is to say, even if a policy applies to domestic and foreign firms alike, if it goes beyond what WTO rules permit, it is forbidden. And, forms of regulation not outright banned by the market-access requirements must not inadvertently “modify the conditions of competition in favor of services or service suppliers” of the United States, even if they apply identically to foreign and domestic firms.
In other words, the problem isn’t just that Congress and the White House have sold out to the Wall Street giants.

The problem is also that the U.S. has signed WTO agreements that have given the keys to the too big to fails, and have neutered their regulators. Even if some politicians tried to stand up to Wall Street – or even if we “throw out all of the bums” currently in political roles – the U.S. would still be locked into the WTO’s scheme for helping the financial giants to grow ever bigger and to take ever-bigger and ever-riskier gambles.
Yet another reason to oppose the so-called "Doha" round, which promises to deregulate financial services even further.

What has gone on at the WTO is that it has been functioned as a prostitute for elements in our economy which do not produce tangible goods, finance, insurance, entertainment, patent holders, etc. at the expense of absolutely everything else in the economy.

It's killing us.

AESA Radar Enters Flight Test on F-16

Northrop Grumman is now flying its Scalable Agile Beam Radar (SABR) on a USAF F-16.

The interesting question here is how much this will influence current F-16 operators who are currently considering purchasing the F-35.

I think that it is likely that the capabilities of an avionics suite installed on an F-16 can come close to that installed in a JSF: Even with an advanced sensor suite, it's clear that the F-16 will be less than ½ the price, and less than ½ the direct operating costs.

Additionally, any avionics package is far more open to the development of national systems and upgrades, and the ability to operate 2-3 times as many aircraft, particularly if the nation expects to operate largely in coalition action or counter-insurgency scenarios, might very well deliver superior results on the battlefield.

Have I Mentioned that I Love Alan Grayson*

He lays into Pat Robertson's comment on Haiti and the devil, and further notes that the religious right, and particularly Pat Robertson's supporters have achieved none of their goals, specifically a constitutional amendment against gay marriage, and a ban of abortion, and he asks, "What about your own pact with the Devil? How's that worked out for you?" (3:07)

I don't think that everyone should be like Alan Grayson, but I think that it's essential that the Democrats have a few of these sorts of firebrands to describe the wrong that the Republicans do in stark and moralistic terms.



*In a 110% purely heterosexual kind of way, of course, as the General would say.

Signs of the Apocalypse

First, and most visibly, it's the fact that the New Orleans Saints are now the world champions, having won the Super Bowl.

Secondly is that fact that David Stockman, one of the young Turks at the core of the "Reagan revolution," he was Budget Director during Reagan's first term, is arguing that the government should tax the financial sector to shrink its size:
While supply-side catechism insists that lower taxes are a growth tonic, the theory also argues that if you want less of something, tax it more. The economy desperately needs less of our bloated, unproductive and increasingly parasitic banking system. In this respect, the White House appears to have gone over to the supply side with its proposed tax on big banks, as it scores populist points against the banksters, too.

Not surprisingly, the bankers are already whining, even though the tax would amount to a financial pinprick — a levy of only 0.15 percent on the debts (other than deposits) of the big financial conglomerates. Their objections are evidence that the administration is on the right track.

Make no mistake. The banking system has become an agent of destruction for the gross domestic product and of impoverishment for the middle class. To be sure, it was lured into these unsavory missions by a truly insane monetary policy under which, most recently, the Federal Reserve purchased $1.5 trillion of longer-dated Treasury bonds and housing agency securities in less than a year. It was an unprecedented exercise in market-rigging with printing-press money, and it gave a sharp boost to the price of bonds and other securities held by banks, permitting them to book huge revenues from trading and bookkeeping gains.
Stockman is suggesting that people who he saw in the 1980s as the epitome of the heroes in Ayn Rand's fiction should be taxed with the explicit aim of shrinking their size, because the business they do does not serve the public good.

This is a refutation of the "Objectivist" philosophy at the core of much of Mr. Stockman's public life, which saw the glorification of greed as a force for good, and a legitimate basis for public policy decisions.

People Who Don't Get It

Click for full size
He's smiling because he's taking your money.
About 4 weeks ago, Segway, the folks who make the geeky little scooter, was sold to a British investor, and as a result, the earlier investors will lose their money, to the tune of something over $150 million dollars.

Well, Mercury News Columnist Chris O'Brien looked at what happened, and waxed poetic:
In this case, though, what's fascinating is not just the money, but who gave it. Jeff Bezos of Amazon chipped in. And closer to home, so did venture capitalist Doerr and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.

I'm not gloating over their failure. Their successes have made them legends, and for good reason. It turns out, though, that despite their foresight and immense personal fortunes, they remain human and fallible. Just like the rest of us.

You see, they didn't just think the Segway would be successful.

They expected it to change the world. In a hype-filled month such as this, during the lull between the Google Nexus One and the Apple iSlate, it's good to be reminded how rare it is for such lofty expectations to be met.
Why did people believe this? Because Dean Kamen was a "Genius".

He had at the time designed the AutoSyringe, an automated injection/infusion device, a mobile dialysis machine which was highly commercially successful, along with the iBot, an all-terrain wheel chair.

I remember when the Segway was called "It", and later it was called "Ginger", and when people like Steve Jobs and Jeff Bezos were saying that it was going to change the world.

Then "It" came out, and it was just an electric scooter, and kind of a dorky one at that.

The turn of events with the Segway, where it is largely reduced to punchline (see Paul Blart: Mall Cop) is not surprising.

What is surprising is not that a bunch of people thought that it would be a commercial success, which didn't happen, or the initial investors would have gotten their money back, but rather that somehow or other people came to believe that it would literally change the world.

If there is a lesson to all this it is that the folks who are giants in Silicon Valley and related industries are not any more likely to see the next big thing than anyone else, and that they are where they are because they got lucky.

Ouch

I think that I pinched a nerve or threw out my back shoveling snow.

In either case, my right hip/sciatic nerve is killing me.

I Lived There

Middletown, Connecticut, that is.

I lived there for a year when I designed equipment to, among other things, cut new assholes on dead things (see bottom video), and now I've heard that there has been a massive explosion at a Kleen Energy Systems power plant under construction there, and there have been fatalities.

It appears that they were purging gas lines in an enclosed building, and the gas ignited.

News report is the top video.


Accident


"Bung Dropper," which will be used on my daughter's prospective suitors.

Sometimes, I Just Don't Give a Sh%$

Click for full size
I do this for shopping lists all the time!
And it aggravates me no end when the liberal blogosphere sends me marching orders* to talk about something that I really don't give a sh%$ about.

Case in point, Sarah Palin's use of notes scribbled on the palm of her hand for the softball Q&A following her speech at the Teabagger convention.

People make notes. People make notes in the palms of their hands, yours truly included.

Even if Sarah Palin were to memorize the Congressional Record, she would still be a moron with narcissistic personality disorder.

Yes, it reinforces the meme, but it really means very little.

*There are no actual marching orders, it's satire. I am making fun over the entire tempest in a teapot aspect of this. There is so much wrong with Sarah Palin, it seems to me to be shooting fish in a barrel.

Stephen Andrew Wakefield Acted Unethically

Medical regulators in the UK have now ruled that Stephen Andrew Wakefield acted unethically in the conduct of his study linking vaccinations and autism.
The doctor who first suggested a link between MMR vaccinations and autism acted unethically, the official medical regulator has found.

Dr Andrew Wakefield's 1998 Lancet study caused vaccination rates to plummet, resulting in a rise in measles - but the findings were later discredited.

The General Medical Council ruled he had acted "dishonestly and irresponsibly" in doing his research.

, Dr Wakefield said the claims were "unfounded and unjust".

The GMC case did not investigate whether Dr Wakefield's findings were right or wrong, instead it was focused on the methods of research.

During the two-and-a-half years of hearings - one of the longest in the regulator's history - he was accused of a series of charges.

'Callous disregard'

The verdict, read out by panel chairman Dr Surendra Kumar, criticised Dr Wakefield for the invasive tests, such as spinal taps, that were carried out on children and which were found to be against their best clinical interests.

The panel said Dr Wakefield, who was working at London's Royal Free Hospital as a gastroenterologist at the time, did not have the ethical approval or relevant qualifications for such tests.

The GMC also took exception with the way he gathered blood samples. Dr Wakefield paid children £5 for the samples at his son's birthday party.

Dr Kumar said he had acted with "callous disregard for the distress and pain the children might suffer".
(emphasis original)

It's likely that they will pull his certification to practice medicine, though this might not mean much, as Wakefield left the UK, and now practices in the United States.

His research, which was not merely bad, but corrupt, had sickened thousands of children who were either not vaccinated, or caught disease from their unvaccinated friends. (vaccines are not 100%, and the loss of herd immunity is a serious issue)

Additionally, Lancet has already rescinded the original article.

One hopes that he ends his life in jail, because he wasn't just wrong, he pushed forward his bogus study in the hopes of making money from an equally bogus therapy that he had patented.

[on edit]
A sharp eyed reader noticed that I got his name wrong. I have corrected, but have left the original strike through to show what a complete prat I am.

US Healthcare in a Picture

Click for full size
Life Expectancy vs. Healhtcare Spending
It's been all over the net, and I thought that this would be a useful pic.

Best healthcare in the world, my ass.

06 February 2010

Brazil Fighter Competition Update

We have a report from the Brazilian Newspaper Folha de S. Paulo reporting that there will be 36 Dassault Rafales purchased at $175 million each, ($6.2 billion) and this constitutes a $2 billion price cut in the deal.

On the other hand, the Brazil defense ministry had denied that any formal decision has yet been made.

$175 million each? Great googly moogly, for a few bucks more they could buy the F-22, if it could be sold, and if the production tooling still existed.

The New Supreme Court Official Photo

Taken just after their vote on the Citizens United case, which allowed unlimited corporate campaign donations:



Someone at the by invitation only Stellar Parthenon BBS received this via email.

Another Day

Another test failure from our missile defense program:
The Air Force says a missile-intercept test failed when a long-range missile launched from California missed a target missile launched from a Pacific island because of radar problems.

Death Spiral, JSF Edition, Chapter 2 of Many

Well, this week, SecDef Robert Gates has just fired the program manager for the JSF program, Major General David Heinz, and is withholding millions of dollars in performance fees to the prime contractor, Lockheed-Martin, because of schedule and budget slips, citing a "troubling performance record." (see also here, here, and here)

Lockheed-Martin's response has been nothing short of delusional, at least as described by Steve O'Bryan, L-M VP for "business development and customer engagement" for the JSF, ":
Gates' actions, in O'Bryan's view, "reflected the commitment of the U.S. government to the F-35... the program is fully funded, with more development funding and more robust leadership." The decision shows that the aircraft is "relevant today, and that the customer wants the jet right now."
I'm beginning to think that part of the reason that this program is over budget and behind schedule is that Lockheed Martin has, and so the tax payer is paying for, a, "vice president for business development and customer engagement on the JSF program".

It seems to me that this is a rather high falutin, and likely highly paid, position for what amounts to a PR flack with heavy duty knee pads.

Misapplication of resources may be a part of the problem, and Mr. O'Bryan's continued employment does not seem to me to be an example of "spending smart."

Of course, the USAF chief of staff is similarly sanguine, suggesting that the delays in the pro will only raise unit cost in the immediate term, because, like no other program before it, the delays will increast the cost only, "for a period," and he does not see a Nunn-McCurdy breach in the costs.

It makes me want to quote that Samuel L. Jackson speech from Pulp Fiction again, because it's clear that they want to f%$# the taxpayer like a bitch.

There are people who recognize the truth, like the Director Of Operational Test & Evaluation (DOT&E), who says that even with a flawless program, there will be a slippage of at least 18 months on the program, but that a flawless program is extremely unlikely, since things like the idea that modeling and simulation can reduce testing are unlikely to succeed.

Of note in the DOT&E report:
  • LRIP configuration is not yet defined.
  • Clutch heating on the STOVL variant
  • Increases in weight and landing speeds means that tires are running into their thermal limits for the carrier (F-35C) version.
  • Software instability
  • They aircraft is pulling out many of its survivability features, fuel check valves in the engine nozzle and fire extinguishers, to reach the specified weight.
Additionally, it now appears that the F-35C fuselage is under-strength:
Lockheed Martin Corp. is fixing a structural weakness in the Navy version of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter that limits the jet’s ability to launch from aircraft carriers, according to a company spokesman.

Engineers in July discovered a “strength shortfall” in an aluminum structure in the aircraft’s center fuselage that helps absorb stresses during a catapult takeoff, Lockheed spokesman John Kent said today in an e-mailed statement.
Additionally, it appears that the carrier model may be too hot, literally for carrier decks:
The Pentagon’s Gilmore said in his report that the engine and power-systems’ exhaust on the Navy and Marine versions is powerful enough to pose a threat to carrier personnel. The blasts also may damage shields used to deflect heat on the deck, including on the CVN-21 carrier, the Navy’s most expensive warship.

“Early analyses of findings indicate that integration of the F-35 into the CVN-21 will result in damage to the carrier deck environment and will adversely affect hangar deck operations,” Gilmore wrote.
<snark>Actually, it's not a worry, since their new electromagnetic catapults don't work anyway. </snark>

Another Reason for the Islamic World to Hate Us

We are trying to poison them.

You see, Vegemite is now Halal:
VEGEMITE has gone halal in a bid by food giant Kraft to make the national "treasure" available to Muslim Australians.

The label on Australia's most famous spread has changed in recent months to include halal certification in a move some have described as "ridiculous" political correctness.

"Islamic communities are proud Australians and they want to be able to eat our national icon as well," Kraft spokesman Simon Talbot said.
I think that this qualifies as chemical warfare.

True Dat



H/t ELP Defens(c)e Blog

This is Wicked Cool

It's a P-38 training film, from 1943:



It's 34 minutes long, but worth it.

Why People Hate Bankers

Because their systems are patently unfair.

Case in point, AIG, which is owned by the US government, gave retention bonuses to employees who no longer work there:
A substantial number of AIG's Financial Products employees set to get some $195 million in retention payments no longer work with the bailed out insurer, sources familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.
It's clear that such behavior not only does not serve society, but it does not serve the share holders or the company.

This is a crooked game, and it needs to be shut down.

I'm going long on pitchforks and torches.

Snopocalypse Videos

For your amusement:


Jim Kosek Needs to Switch to Decaf


That's the 3rd largest snowball fight I've ever seen.

Remember the Auschwitz Sign Theft

In December, some Jamokes stole the sign over the gate of Auschwitz, the one that said "Arbeit Macht Frei," basically saying (it was a lie) that work would set the inmates free.

I remember reading about it, and thinking that I would wait a couple of days until the full story played out.

I wasn't sure if this was a stupid prank, something involving organized antisemitism, or something falling into the middle ground, where the history Polish anti-Semitism could be inferred from the incident, but there was no some grounds for doubt.

Well, 2 months later, and the story has played out, and Mithras has nailed what happened in just 28 words (+ title):
Turns Out, It Was Anti-Semites
The guy who commissioned the theft of the Auschwitz sign is a Swedish neo-Nazi. The Poles who stole the sign for him say They Were Just Following Orders.
(emphasis mine)

Ok, Maybe Not "Meh"

Click for full size

That mound with the wiper blades is a 1996 Honda Odyssey


The lump in the center left is a trash can


Back Yard
When I wrote about the Snopocalypse, I said, "meh".

OK, not so much.

I managed to get the back door open by about a foot, and then had to shovel the stoop to get the door open the rest of the way, and it's still snowing.

Also: this is not the light and fluffy snow. This is heavy and sticky.

Maybe the kids will do a snow man, but I'd give less than 50-50 that there will be school on Monday.

Again, apologies for the crappy cell phone camera pix.

We have plenty of food, and if it stretches on for weeks, a very fat cat who looks good for stewing.

(Not really, the cats are family, and besides, they are not kosher)