Posts Tagged ‘News’

Hollywood’s next offer to aid BP?

Well, it has come to this…

After failing to get BP on-board with James Cameron and Kevin Costner, Hollywood has recruited another celebrity humanitarian with extensive experience that would greatly aid BP in plugging its leak:   Richard Gere

Richard Gere (right) and Lemmiwinks jr. (left)

Richard Gere (right) and Lemmiwinks jr. (left)

Well, we can only hope Richard Gere can finally help BP plug the leak. He is confident that his way will work better than the golf ball technique BP used early in the tragedy. Clearly the voice of experience!

Posted: June 12th, 2010
Categories: Blog, News
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Hele mei hoohiwahiwa Mahu a me Mahu’s la male’ana

From MSNBC.msn.com

HONOLULU – Hawaii is a step closer to joining a small group of other states in allowing same-sex civil unions.

In a move that still needs the governor’s signature to become law, the House of Representatives Thursday night approved a measure that has drawn some of the state’s biggest protest rallies.

Republican Gov. Linda Lingle hasn’t said whether she’ll reject it or sign it into law but her office said later that she will carefully review the bill.

The House voted 31-20 in favor of the legislation, which had been stalled but was unexpectedly revived on the last day of this year’s legislative session. The Senate passed it in January.

The measure would grant gay and lesbian couples the same rights and benefits that the state provides to married couples.

If approved, Hawaii will become one of six states — along with California, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon and Washington — to grant essentially all the rights of marriage to same-sex couples without authorizing marriage itself.

Five other states and the District of Columbia permit same-sex marriage: Iowa, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Connecticut.

The Aloha State has been a battleground in the gay rights movement since the early 1990s.

A 1993 Hawaii Supreme Court ruling nearly made Hawaii the first state to legalize same-sex marriage before voters in the state overwhelmingly approved the nation’s first “defense of marriage” constitutional amendment in 1998.

The measure gave the Legislature the power to reserve marriage to opposite-sex couples. It resulted in a law banning gay marriage in Hawaii but left the door open for civil unions.

This year the issue has proven divisive in Hawaii with religious groups arguing that civil unions are a step toward legalizing same-sex marriage. During one of the biggest ever state rallies, several thousand people protesting the measure rode buses to the Hawaii Capitol last year following Sunday church services.

The gay and lesbian community urged lawmakers to act on their principles rather than back down in the face of public pressure from opponents threatening to vote them out of office.

Civil-union supporters wearing rainbow-colored leis, or flower necklaces, jumped and screamed for joy outside the House chamber following the vote.

“Hawaii is the Aloha State, and this vote shows that the greater community has love and acceptance for everyone,” said supporter Van Law.

Disappointed civil union opponents wearing red “iVote” buttons as a warning to legislators this election season quickly departed the Hawaii Capitol, with only a few lagging behind.

“Civil unions are a step down the very slippery slope toward legalizing same-sex marriage,” said Rachel Nakasaki, a Christian who believes traditional marriage between a man and a woman should be preserved.

Hawaii’s civil union legislation appeared to be dead in January, when the House didn’t take a vote on the measure and postponed it indefinitely out of fears that Lingle would veto.

The issue was revived Thursday after every other bill introduced this year had been acted on. Democratic House Majority Leader Blake Oshiro made the motion to reconsider the bill, although the House fell three votes short of the two-thirds majority needed to override the governor.

The bill was written so that civil unions would be available to both same-sex and opposite-sex couples to avoid claims of discrimination.

“Equality feels really good,” said Suzanne King, who said Hawaii would recognize her Massachusetts marriage to her partner as a civil union if the bill becomes law. “It allows us to strengthen our family.”

If Lingle vetoes the bill, it’s unlikely lawmakers would return to the Capitol to try to override her. They lack enough votes, and it’s an election year where legislators are hesitant to take stands on contentious social issues unless they’re forced to, as they were during Thursday’s roll-call vote.

“I’m looking forward to not coming back,” said Democratic Speaker of the House Calvin Say.

Posted: May 1st, 2010
Categories: Blog
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‘Microchips like little beepers that the Government puts into your vaginal-rectal area’

from Political Insider:

Delusions, the Legislature and an implanted microchip

We often say that insanity reigns at the state Capitol.

But when we do, we do not literally accuse the people inside of letting their grip on reality slip. We simply mean that our ability to fathom their motives, or their ability to express them, has fallen short.

Referring to a politician as delusional is simply entertaining hyperbole. But it is something that becomes much less funny when a truly tortured soul bears her torment.

Last Wednesday, the House Judiciary Committee entertained SB 235, the bill sponsored by Sen. Chip Pearson (R-Dawsonville) to prohibit the involuntary implantation of microchips in human beings.

In Gov. Roy Barnes’ stump speech, the bill has become a routine example of the Republican tendency to attack problems that don’t exist, and ignore the ones that do. Besides, Barnes argues, if someone holds him down to insert a microchip in his head, “it should be more than a damned misdemeanor.”

Three states have instituted bans, and others have considered the legislation. In Virginia, a bill supporter declared microchips to be the “666″ mark of the beast referred to in the Book of Revelation.

Pearson has said his motivation isn’t biblical or religious – that he is simply working in advance of technology’s next assault on personal privacy. Not unlike limiting the uses of DNA testing by health insurance companies, he argues.

At the House hearing, state Rep. Ed Setzler (R-Kennesaw), who is shouldering the legislation in the House, spoke earnestly for better than a half hour on microchips as a literal invasion of privacy.

He was followed by a hefty woman who described herself as a resident of DeKalb County. “I’m also one of the people in Georgia who has a microchip,” the woman said. Slowly, she began to lead the assembled lawmakers down a path they didn’t want to take.

Microchips, the woman began, “infringe on issues that are fundamental to our very existence. Our rights to privacy, our rights to bodily integrity, the right to say no to foreign objects being put in our body.”

She spoke of the “right to work without being tortured by co-workers who are activating these microchips by using their cell phones and other electronic devices.”

She continued. “Microchips are like little beepers. Just imagine, if you will, having a beeper in your rectum or genital area, the most sensitive area of your body. And your beeper numbers displayed on billboards throughout the city. All done without your permission,” she said.

It was not funny, and no one laughed.

“Ma’am, did you say you have a microchip?” asked state Rep. Tom Weldon (R-Ringgold).

“Yes, I do. This microchip was put in my vaginal-rectum area,” she replied. Setzler, the sponsoring lawmaker, sat next to the witness – his head bowed.

“You’re saying this was involuntary?” Weldon continued.

The woman said she had been pushing a court case through the system for the last eight years to have the device removed.

Wendell Willard (R-Atlanta), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, picked up the questioning.

“Who implanted this in you?” he asked.

“Researchers with the federal government,” she said.

“And who in the federal government implanted it?” Willard asked.

“The Department of Defense.”

“Thank you, ma’am.”

The woman was allowed to go about her business, and the House Judiciary Committee approved passage of SB 235.

Posted: April 29th, 2010
Categories: News, Politics
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Learn to be a Ghost Hunter! or just a whackaloon measuring electromagnetic disturbances

article from omaha.com

Learn to be a ghost hunter

KEARNEY, Neb. (AP) – People who believe in ghosts will have the chance to learn how to hunt for them in Kearney beginning this month.

The Buffalo County Historical Society has partnered with Midwest Paranormal Investigators to offer “ghost-hunting classes and investigations.” The first one will be held April 30.

Subsequent classes will be held the last Friday of each month through at least September. The classes and investigations will be held at historical buildings in Kearney.

The fee to participate is $50 and includes a class and subsequent investigation.

Registration forms are due to Jennifer Murrish of the Buffalo County Historical Society at least a week before each class. To receive a form, call her at (308)234-3041.

Oh, would I give ANYTHING to be able to attend these ghost hunting classes if not for just the hilarity of such ridiculousness.  Modern day snake-oil salesman profiting off the silliness that people get out ignorant fantasy.

Posted: April 21st, 2010
Categories: Blog
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Omaha’s War on Crime: Fear anyone that is Brown

From Action 3 News KMTV.com:

Omaha’s War on Crime: North & South Join Force

Omaha, NE – On the heels of bloodshed and bullets, dozens of community members try to get a handle on the danger.  That includes Grace United Methodist Church Pastor Alberto Silva,

“There’s a lot of graffiti in South Omaha, there’s a lot of gang activity, there’s a lot of things that can be addressed if we’re just willing to help one another,” says Pastor Silva.

Silva and his church group “El Puente” are joining forces with Pastor John Voner and “Enough is Enough.”  The coalitions train volunteers how to confront violence on the streets and fight it.  The pastors hope, with word that north and south join forces, the city will unify in the fight against crime.

Pastor Silva says, “Whatever they’re doing in North Omaha that’s working, we should do in South Omaha.  Whatever we’re doing in South Omaha that’s working, they should mirror in North Omaha.”

Armed with prayer and programs, the coalitions take first steps to help each other and the community.  A prayer march is planned for this Saturday at South High School.  “El Puente” means “The Bridge” in Spanish.

Pastor Silva believes the march will help bridge a gap between communities.  “I think the unique quality of it all is the coalition of African Americans and Latinos and people from South Omaha and North Omaha, ” says Pastor Silva.

*shakes head*  Idiots!  Lately violence has surged in North Omaha to the point that every night there is a shooting victim and more often than not there are multiple shootings with most of them lethal.  It has gotten so bad that the area where I used to live, up until January of this year, is now part of “places you dont want to find yourself at night” and that was a wealthy and predominantly safe neighborhood (72nd and Blondo).

I now live in South Omaha which is overwhelmingly populated by Latinos. There is no violence except for scattered reports of gas-station robberies that are usually committed by North Omaha residents venturing south. A white person — hell, a white 8-yr old girl — could walk around after dark and feel reasonably safe.  The contrast between these two communities is ridiculously noticeable… and yet the white community of Omaha that usually avoids both minority populated areas always proves to be oblivious to such stark differences between a latino and a black neighborhood. To ignorantly assume they are even remotely similar in safety is just so embarrassingly racist.

I attended the Cinco de Mayo festivities last year that transformed South Omaha into one gigantic carnival. The police presence was ridiculous. There were snipers positioned on rooftops and not only local police scattered throughout the crowd but also the most amount of federal agents (they wear bullet-proof vests with “Federal Agent” imprinted on them so we all are fully aware who they are) that I have ever seen outside of Washington D.C..

Why?    Nothing even remotely dangerous happened.

I remember living in Detroit and attended the mass Fourth of July fireworks show at Hart Plaza which usually draws close to a million or more people into that tiny park in the heart of Downtown Detroit.  Detroit is famously bad… its been the murder capital for so many years and only recently misses that top spot due to its vastly shrunken population in recent years. Everyone felt perfectly safe… though smartly prepared should anything bad actually happen.

It just seems odd and very troubling to me how bigoted and ignorant people in power still exist to be in America. It’s ridiculous how flighty, paranoid, and wimpish white americans have become. It really is embarrassing.

Posted: April 21st, 2010
Categories: Blog, News, Ramblings
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Honor Student suspended from school because of “Finger Gun”.

Zero Tolerance policies are always ridiculous. I question the sanity of any teacher that would flip out at finding herself in the crossfire of a finger gun shoot-out. As a teacher, she should have used that as a teachable moment for the child and explained how something like that would be inappropriate at school… but no…instead she chose to flip out and pretend to be afraid for her life.

Posted: April 20th, 2010
Categories: News
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What is this? Part Deux: Electric Boogaloo

Update:  7:00 am  4/16/10

The new design is starting to take shape visually as well as an actual gameplan for what I even want to accomplish here is starting to sink in.

Goal:
I have long since become bored with the typical blog-format and have also become far too busy in other areas for any realistic attempt to run a daily posted blog that is worth routine visits.  Also, the insanity that Internet Marketing and Advertising has become is just too strange for a right-brainer such as myself.    SO…

With a new design comes a new focus:  a personal web presence that acts as a portfolio first and social networking place for me to play second.

I have begun to upload a smattering of things that I have written — some published, some never to be published, and some that are just strange but need a page for themselves instead of creeping into other future ideas.  If there is not much here yet, there soon shall be!  It is just a matter of time to wrangle them up and copy/paste, retype, or figure out the best way to link to their officially published sources.

For the first time for any of my websites/blogs, I am locking the content up to make it just a little more work to violate the various licenses, copyrights, or more importantly- protect the stuff I haven’t officially protected or published with protection.  Now, I hardly worry about such things but by doing so, this allows me to post content that I would have been nervous to before. This will allow for more content and a win/win for everyone!

Once again, pardon the dust as it shall certainly take a while to make this place what it should be.  I have started this one completely and utterly from scratch so things are slightly more interesting than just slapping a new WP theme on and moving widgets around, ha!

Posted: April 16th, 2010
Categories: Blog
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What is this? This Place has Changed!

Pardon the mess… I am in the process of completely redoing this blog.

Coming soon:

  • a full portfolio of my writing, articles, art, music, whatever i feel like showing off.
  • back to regular blogging… either daily or pretty close to daily.
  • integration with social networks like facebook so that this website doesn’t get lost just because everyone uses facebook these days.
  • pics, photos, pixels arranged in a pattern to show off images, etc.
  • better tweaking of the stylesheet because im not digging some of the uppercase usage.
  • more of me… because you know you want me.

so yeah… you thought i forgot about this place?  well, i didn’t.  i only neglected it in order to knock it’s inflated sense of self-worth down a few pegs.  i suppose now it might be time to feed and water it again.

Posted: April 16th, 2010
Categories: Blog
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