Saudi Men

What a surprise! This story isn’t on CNN, MSNBC, ABC or USAToday. I didn’t bother searching CBS or NBC.
– – – – –
A campaign on Facebook is calling for Saudi men to beat women who plan to drive cars in a protest next month, AFP reports.
“The Iqal Campaign: June 17 for preventing women from driving” advocates a cord be used to beat women who plan to drive. Women are not allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia.

Some 6,000 people have “liked” the campaign on Facebook. It was created in response to female activist Manal al-Sharif, who created a page calling for Saudi women to defy the driving ban on June 17.

Her page was taken down following her arrest for driving May 22 in the Saudi city of Khobar. A petition has been launched to release al-Sharif from jail, garnering more than 300 signatures, according to AFP.

Saudi Arabia is the last country in the world to ban women from driving.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/05/25/saudi-facebook-campaign-calls-men-beat-women-drivers/#ixzz1NOvY7qUm

Pigs at the Trough

Democrats Say U.S. House Victory Sends Message on Medicare

This article is deeply disturbing.  Republicans are going to have to spend a lot of money educating people. It’s cheap to spread FUD. It’s costly to educate. Maybe the country will need to go into default before people will realize the money is gone.

I’m really turned off by our senior generation. They have turned into a bunch of beggars. Pigs at the feeding trough. They don’t care what happens to the kids they spawned as long as they get their checks. Certianly, I’m not talking about everyone over 60. But if you voted Obamacare. If you are for increased benefits to yourselves. If you want to maintain the status que–I’m talking to you.

“It is difficult to comprehend the vastness and variety of payments the Treasury must make every day. Here are just a few samples: On May 2 it paid out $6.4 billion in interest on the debt, $4.5 billion to retired federal workers, $3.7 billion to military retirees, $2.6 billion to house the indigent and $1.6 billion in federal salaries, among other things. On May 3, the Treasury paid $21.8 billion to Social Security recipients, $1.6 billion to Medicare providers and $1.6 billion to vendors that sold supplies to the Department of Defense.

On most days, the Treasury does not take in enough in taxes to cover its payments. On May 2 it took in almost $26 billion, but on May 3 it took in less than $4 billion. Through May 3 the Treasury had received a little less than $1.3 trillion in taxes for fiscal year 2011, but had made payments of almost $7 trillion. The reason the payment number is so large is because it includes funds that were paid to Treasury’s lenders, whose bonds matured and needed to be paid off. Redemptions to owners of Treasury bonds eat up a vast amount of its cash on a day-to-day basis.” http://www.edmondsun.com/opinion/x898208609/To-raise-or-not-to-raise-the-debt-ceiling

This is no different than a family going to Best Buy to buy a big screen TV. They buy it on time requiring interest and principle payments over time. They then go get a credit card to make the monthly payments. Sound irresponsible? That is what our government is doing. So what’s the big screen TV? That’s certainly a matter of opinion but it’s built into every single bill. The US doesn’t just buy a car. They get the sunroof, CD changer, tinted windows and spinner rims. We pimp out everything. We have ZERO money for museums, tax credits for low flow toilets or subsidizing sugar growers.

Can’t resist

I listen to Colin Cowherd in the morning on my way to work. One day he was talking about everything on the Internet being negative. I realized that 95% of the time I want to post something, it’s because I’m ticked. I have to say, his words have kept me from making a lot of posts. However, I can’t resist today.

I’ve got two vcr’s that have every feature known to man. The one even burns DVD’s. But here’s the rub. They have all the controls on the remote. They only have open, stop and play buttons on the machine. Everything else is on the remote. Well guess what? I’m missing one of the remotes and the other one is broken. I might as well toss both machines in the garbage. They are worthless. The other day I wanted to watch a DVD that had two movies on it. Since I didn’t have the remote I couldn’t switch to the movie I wanted to watch.

Are these manufacturers completely clueless or are they doing it on purpose like Apple not putting a USB port on the iPad 2? Sorry I had to squeeze that one in.

Is this a bad toupet or what?

Birth Certificate

When I played soccer as a young boy. I couldn’t play unless I had an original copy of my birth certificate.

I guess Obama didn’t play soccer.

Do you fight fire with fire?

I just saw some deeply disturbing images that made me want to cry, lash out and fight. There were two images. The first was an artist rendition of a partial birth abortion. The second was an actual image of the result.

To some extend I feel like I need to parade such images in front of liberals to shame them. Showing such a horrendous scene to it’s supporters would be shameful to them. The goal of course would be to change their beliefs and behavior. However, something inside me tells me it isn’t the right thing to do.

Animals over humans

I read the article on about Dr. Gael Yonnet and his dog Elon. Elon was given to Dr. Yonnet, who is paralyzed, by Canine Companions for Independence. After 18 months they decided to take him back.

Quote, “the organization said Yonnet’s lifestyle and job were endangering the dog because he didn’t keep Elon on a leash, especially on trips to the mountains.”

First, that is silly. The mountains are full of families camping with small children. Dogs love the hills.

Second, I seriously don’t understand people who put animals over people. I love animals but I believe the needs of humans outweigh the needs of animals. Is everyone at CCI vegetarians?

I guess you have the right to do what you did but the result will be:
– CCI looking extreme like PETA
– CCI contributions will go down
– A dog is miserable living in a cage at the kennel where it is being kept
– A dog and his human companion will both feel lonely for each other

I remember hearing about a local DJ who went to the local SPCA to adopt a cat. He was asked details about the house where the cat would live. They didn’t like his answers and refused to let him take the cat.

Unfortunately I’ve met a number of animal lovers who clearly think more of animals than humans. Weird.

The Bubble Boy

What kind of society is this guy looking for? He’s a complete socialist. He loves government. Yet he wants perfection. He thinks an individual is entitled to $150,000 because of an simple accident. Could he work on an assembly line and never make a mistake?

As far as safety goes, making sandwiches is pretty far down the list with regards to expecting perfection. I have a higher quality expectation of brake shoe, detonation cap, traffic light assembly line works.

Can we even blame the person who made the sandwich? I guarantee they were not pitting olives for his sandwich. They were reaching into a container filled with olives that were no doubt from a can. If he’s gonna sue someone, it should be the olive provider. But wait, is it really their fault? They can’t hand search ever can for pits. It’s the maker of the olive pitting machine that should be sued.

I just don’t see how his socialist views can possibly mesh with his opinion that something as small as an olive pit making its way into a sandwich should result in $150,000 payment.

Mr. Kucinich, life is about living and living is dangerous. You can’t sue for every hazard. This would isn’t perfect. Nothing in it is perfect. Every machine contains defects. Even if something was perfect, everyone and everything is in a state of atrophy is deterioration.

After this embarrasing display of judicial frivolousness would anyone want to serve him in a restaurant? Would anyone want to be his doctor? Would anyone want to fix his car? Would anyone want him on their property?

Perhaps Mr. Kucinich would prefer to live in a bubble where is environment can be closely monitored and screened for hazards.

Wake-up Ohio and vote out this bozo.

Cheeky? Kucinich Sues for ‘Oral Injuries’ From Errant Olive Pit
Published January 26, 2011 AP

Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio

It’s the pits to break a tooth while eating. Just ask Rep. Dennis Kucinich.

The Ohio Democratic representative is suing House cafeteria service providers for $150,000 for allegedly selling him a sandwich wrap with a stray olive pit in it.

Kucinich, who ran for president in 2008, said in a Jan. 3 lawsuit filed in the Superior Court for the District of Columbia that the pit caused “serious and permanent” damage to his mouth and wellbeing.

He said he is entitled to recover damages, “including but not limited to past and future dental and medical expenses, compensation for pain, suffering and loss of enjoyment and other damage.”

Global Bologna

Eight Botched Environmental Forecasts

By Maxim Lott

Published December 30, 2010

A new year is around the corner, and some climate scientists and environmental activists say that means we’re one step closer to a climate Armageddon. But are we really?

Predicting the weather — especially a decade or more in advance — is unbelievably challenging. What’s the track record of those most worried about global warming? Decades ago, what did prominent scientists think the environment would be like in 2010? FoxNews.com has compiled eight of the most egregiously mistaken predictions, and asked the predictors to reflect on what really happened.

1. Within a few years “children just aren’t going to know what snow is.” Snowfall will be “a very rare and exciting event.” Dr. David Viner, senior research scientist at the climatic research unit (CRU) of the University of East Anglia, interviewed by the UK Independent, March 20, 2000.

Ten years later, in December 2009, London was hit by the heaviest snowfall seen in 20 years. And just last week, a snowstorm forced Heathrow airport to shut down, stranding thousands of Christmas travelers.

A spokesman for the government-funded British Council, where Viner now works as the lead climate change expert, told FoxNews.com that climate science had improved since the prediction was made.

“Over the past decade, climate science has moved on considerably and there is now more understanding about the impact climate change will have on weather patterns in the coming years,” British Council spokesman Mark Herbert said. “However, Dr Viner believes that his general predictions are still relevant.”

Herbert also pointed to another prediction from Viner in the same article, in which Viner predicted that “heavy snow would return occasionally” and that it would “probably cause chaos in 20 years time.” Other scientists said “a few years” was simply too short a time frame for kids to forget what snow was.

“I’d say at some point, say 50 years from now, it might be right. If he said a few years, that was an unwise prediction,” said Michael Oppenheimer, director of Princeton University’s Program in Science, Technology and Environmental Policy.

Of course, Oppenheimer himself is known for controversial global warming scenarios.

2. “[By] 1995, the greenhouse effect would be desolating the heartlands of North America and Eurasia with horrific drought, causing crop failures and food riots…[By 1996] The Platte River of Nebraska would be dry, while a continent-wide black blizzard of prairie topsoil will stop traffic on interstates, strip paint from houses and shut down computers.” Michael Oppenheimer, published in “Dead Heat,” St. Martin’s Press, 1990.

Oppenheimer told FoxNews.com that he was trying to illustrate one possible outcome of failing to curb emissions, not making a specific prediction. He added that the gist of his story had in fact come true, even if the events had not occurred in the U.S.

“On the whole I would stand by these predictions — not predictions, sorry, scenarios — as having at least in a general way actually come true,” he said. “There’s been extensive drought, devastating drought, in significant parts of the world. The fraction of the world that’s in drought has increased over that period.”

That may be in doubt, however. Data from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center shows that precipitation — rain and snow — has increased slightly over the century.

3. “Arctic specialist Bernt Balchen says a general warming trend over the North Pole is melting the polar ice cap and may produce an ice-free Arctic Ocean by the year 2000.” Christian Science Monitor, June 8, 1972.

Ice coverage has fallen, though as of last month, the Arctic Ocean had 3.82 million square miles of ice cover — an area larger than the continental United States — according to The National Snow and Ice Data Center.

4. “Using computer models, researchers concluded that global warming would raise average annual temperatures nationwide two degrees by 2010.” Associated Press, May 15, 1989.

Status of prediction: According to NASA, global temperature has increased by about 0.7 degrees Fahrenheit since 1989. And U.S. temperature has increased even less over the same period.

The group that did the study, Atmospheric and Environmental Research Inc., said it could not comment in time for this story due to the holidays.

But Oppenheimer said that the difference between an increase of nearly one degree and an increase of two degrees was “definitely within the margin of error… I would think the scientists themselves would be happy with that prediction.”

Many scientists, especially in the 1970s, made an error in the other direction by predicting global freezing:

5. “By 1985, air pollution will have reduced the amount of sunlight reaching earth by one half.” Life magazine, January 1970.

Life Magazine also noted that some people disagree, “but scientists have solid experimental and historical evidence to support each of the following predictions.”

Air quality has actually improved since 1970. Studies find that sunlight reaching the Earth fell by somewhere between 3 and 5 percent over the period in question.

6. “If present trends continue, the world will be … eleven degrees colder by the year 2000. This is about twice what it would take to put us in an ice age.” Kenneth E.F. Watt, in “Earth Day,” 1970.

According to NASA, global temperature has increased by about 1 degree Fahrenheit since 1970.

How could scientists have made such off-base claims? Dr. Paul Ehrlich, author of “The Population Bomb” and president of Stanford University’s Center for Conservation Biology, told FoxNews.com that ideas about climate science changed a great deal in the the ’70s and ’80s.

“Present trends didn’t continue,” Ehrlich said of Watt’s prediction. “There was considerable debate in the climatological community in the ’60s about whether there would be cooling or warming … Discoveries in the ’70s and ’80s showed that the warming was going to be the overwhelming force.”

Ehrlich told FoxNews.com that the consequences of future warming could be dire.

The proverbial excrement is “a lot closer to the fan than it was in 1968,” he said. “And every single colleague I have agrees with that.”

He added, “Scientists don’t live by the opinion of Rush Limbaugh and Palin and George W. They live by the support of their colleagues, and I’ve had full support of my colleagues continuously.”

But Ehrlich admits that several of his own past environmental predictions have not come true:

7. “By the year 2000 the United Kingdom will be simply a small group of impoverished islands, inhabited by some 70 million hungry people … If I were a gambler, I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000.” Ehrlich, Speech at British Institute For Biology, September 1971.

Ehrlich’s prediction was taken seriously when he made it, and New Scientist magazine underscored his speech in an editorial titled “In Praise of Prophets.”

“When you predict the future, you get things wrong,” Ehrlich admitted, but “how wrong is another question. I would have lost if I had had taken the bet. However, if you look closely at England, what can I tell you? They’re having all kinds of problems, just like everybody else.”

8. “In ten years all important animal life in the sea will be extinct. Large areas of coastline will have to be evacuated because of the stench of dead fish.” Ehrlich, speech during Earth Day, 1970

“Certainly the first part of that was very largely true — only off in time,” Ehrlich FoxNews.com. “The second part is, well — the fish haven’t washed up, but there are very large dead zones around the world, and they frequently produce considerable stench.”

“Again, not totally accurate, but I never claimed to predict the future with full accuracy,” he said.

Hate courtesy of the Huffington Post

The Huffington Post picked up the AP story on the tabernacle fire in Provo. There were 598 comments on the story. Here are a few:

  • Who cares?
  • Oops. (from a Huffington Post Moderator)
  • GOOD!!!
  • It’s punishment to the Mormons for Prop 8!  And I’m only half-jokin­g….
  • New Rule: Organizati­ons that don’t pay taxes to a government have no right to expect services provided by that government (such as firefighte­rs).
  • Historical from what standpoint­? I’m not a fan of religions to begin with, but how the mormons get any credibilit­y is beyond my grasp.
  • How does any cult gain credibilit­y: longevity.
  • Hmmm, that’s a shame.
  • Old Mormon hymn: “The spirit of God like a fire is burning …”
  • Rather less upsetting than seeing an outhouse burn.
  • I wish I could feel more sympathy.. but the whole Mormon Church, funding Prop 8 in California­.. leaves a bad taste in my mouth.
  • Heavens I hope noone’s magic underwear was singed.
  • Awe… too bad so sad.

Thankfully, there were some comments that were blocked. There were many comments justifying their comments because of California’s Prop 8.

Something tells me that if a gay/lesbian center had burned down in Salt Lake, you wouldn’t find such comments in the Deseret News.